Woo.
Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 12:37 pm
Because there is none.awip2062 wrote:But I wonder why some scientists refuse to allow the teaching of the scientific evidences against evolution.
Sure, there are things in biology that have yet to be scientifically explained. But those things are not evidence against evolution. They're not evidence for or against anything, other than perhaps the limits to our present knowledge. And that is the context in which students are told about them. And they are told - there's no cover-up - although for many cases it's more of a college thing than high school. High school science is more about what we know (and how we know) than what we don't, after all. Students don't need to know much about the gaps in our knlwledge till it's their turn to try to fill one or two: when they're choosing a PhD subject, for instance.IF they are so sure that evolution is real, then why will they not allow the teaching of those things and merely say, we don't understand why we have these results, but we are sure that in time with better science, we will find out why they show up and they will prove evolution as well.
Could you be specific?And why is it that when I was in university things that had clearly been proven to have been falsified to prove evoluion, were still being taught as true?
Other than one or two Jews and Muslims, I'm aware of no such scientists.And why don't they teach that there ARE non-Christian scientists who do not believe in evolution?
The damage to students' education that would inevitably result from the teaching of creationism instead of science.What is the evolution camp so afraid of?
By that argument, life itself is impossible. But luckily, the argument is flawed.awip2062 wrote:As far as evidences against evolution go, they ARE out there, but those who espouse evoltuion don't teach them. One of them is the second law of thermodynamics. It states that although the total amount of energy remains constant, the amount of usable energy is constantly decreasing. This law can be seen in most everything. Where work is done, energy is expelled. That energy can never again be used. As usable energy decreases, decay increases. Herein lies the problem for evolution. If the natural trend is toward degeneration, then evolution is impossible, for it demands the betterment of organisms through mutation.
No. Piltdown Man was a hoax, indeed, but it was never "taught as true" after it was demonstrated to be a fake. Furthermore, outside of the UK it was never taken all that seriously by the scientific establishment, on account of it not being consistent with the other evidence of other fossils' morphology and geographical location.Some things that have been taught as true after they had been shown to be hoaxes were:
Piltdown Man:
Not so. This claim apparently arises from an editorial in Nature which said: "More than five hundred articles and memoirs are said to have been written about Piltdown man."No fewer than 500 doctoral theses were written on the subject.
If so, what of it? As long as those 30 individuals were from the same species, the reconstruction is valid.Lucy. I remember seeing a copy of her in the Tar Pit museum in Los Angeles. Turns out her skeleton was actually put to gether from 30 individuals
Haekel, a scientist that came up with the theory of embryonic recapitulation which sserts that the human fetus goes through various stages of its evolutionary history as it develops in the 1860s. He made drawings of eight different embryos in three stages of development to prove his claim. A few years later his drawings were shown to have been fabricated, and the data manufactured. He blamed the artist for the discrepancies, without admitting that he was the artist. But still I was taught in university in the 1990s that this really happens.
Claiming not to be a creationist doesn't mean he isn't one. I hadn't heard of Robert Locke, but a bit of Googling suggests he is or was editor of Front Page magazine, and that the quote you provide is from a review he wrote of Denton's and Behe's books.You may be aware of no scientists other than Christians, Jews, and Muslims. For example, there is Robert Locke, a definitively non creatioinist, who states:
I AM NOT A CREATIONIST, and must confess that until recently, I
treated people who questioned evolution with polite dismissal. But
there has recently emerged a major trend in biology that has been
suppressed in the mainstream media: evolution is in trouble. More
importantly, this has absolutely nothing to do with religion but is due to
the fact that the ongoing growth of biological knowledge keeps
producing facts that contradict rather than confirm evolution.
Chemists? Why would they?Active research scientists who deny evolution are not as rare as you think, but I will agree that they are rarer amongst biologists. Chemists, however, see the problems with evolution more easily.
There's only so many hours you can keep a kid in the classroom. Shoehorning non-science into science classes squeezes out the science.What damage comes to student's education be teaching creationism or intelliget design WITH evolution? That is what was at issue here. Not suppressing evolution, but teaching multiple views.
True, other than th euniverse itself.awip2062 wrote:As far as the earth being an open system, yes, it is. There is no such thing as a truly closed system in nature.
On average, taking the Sun and everything in its sphere of influence, including the Earth and life on this planet, entropy is indeed increasing.The point about entropy there though was that things are decaying, not becoming more complex.
CrystallisationWhen have you ever seen evidence of things becoming more organized?
Precisely: you have to work. That is, you need to input energy, just as the Sun's input of energy is used by life to locally decrease entropy.Don't our daily experiences show that things become less so? Do you have to work to keep your yard messy or neat?
It doesn't require them to do anything of the kind. There's nothing in the ToE that says that complexity must increase.Evolution requires organisms develop new specializations and become new creatures.
It is. But there's no barrier to prevent its ongoing change from proceeding till its descendants are no longer TB.We don?t see this though. For example, with all the talk of the TB bacterium "evolving", it is still a TB bacterium.
But they differ enough from wolves that they ahve their own Linnean classification.With all the breeding we have done on dogs to make new breeds, they are as yet still dogs.
Again, evolution does not require any increase in information.Not only are they still dogs, but the purebred dogs have LOST genetic information, not gained it in becoming purebred.
True. But keep breeding them for a few hundred-thousand years (which is about as long as we've been domesticating dogs, iirc), and you'll be able to produce much more variation.You will not end up with a great diversity of features on the puppies of two purebred Dobermans,.
Eventually, you could. You just need a lot of patience - regardless of whether you start form pure-bred Dobermanns or from a pair of stray mongrels.No matter how much you breed them, those Dobes simply will not give you the blue tongues like Chows have or the beaver-like tail of the Labrador.
Since most of the research in this area goes in th eopposite direction (starting form a genetic disease and looking for the mutation(s) to blame), the data is skewed.Now, I know that evolutionists say that mutation is the way it happens, but how many negative, and in fact disease or death causing mutations have scientists documented and how many positive, helpful ones have they found?
Nor in America. I have the text of a creationist book from 1922 which dismisses Piltdown as a fake, and which correctly describes how it was done. The scientific establishment abandoned Piltdown long before 1953 due to it having become anomalous with the other fossils then known.As far as Piltdown not being taught as truth after it was shown to be false?.maybe not in the UK, DA.
Strange.... Why can't you get in?I can't get into talkorigins.org, although I have tried. I am unable to verify from any other source, that there were no theses written on it. Please link me to those, if you will.
I still haven't found anything on this 30 individuals thing. But could you be confusing Lucy with the new(ish)ly discovered Kenyanthropus platyops, of which "fossils of more than 30 individuals [were found] in 1998 and 1999." (source)One of the many problems with Lucy is that the 30 or so individuals were not of the same species. Even Richard Leaky (a well-known secular scientist) believes that at least two or three species were combined in her formation.
Indeed, Haeckel was wrong about that. At best, he over-stated the case. But his theory is not the Theory of Evolution.The problem with Haeckel's recapitulation theory is that although something may look like another, is it that other thing? Not necessarily. Human beings simply do not go through all the stages of evolution in the womb.
Right, but the point is that those structures are identical to those in fish embryos - which do develop into gill slits.Sure, there are slits near the beginning stages of a human's life, and they look similar to gill slits, but we never have gills.
I've not found much info on Berg, but Fix has his own theory that no-one takes seriously except him, and Grasse did not deny evolution. He disputed the mechanism for it, that has since been (and for that matter was already) supported by overwhelming evidence.So?how about Leo Berg, William Fix, Pierre Paul Grass?. Not all men I agree with on all things, but men who are more than scientific journalists.
Hm. I thought you had something or someone specific in mind.As far as chemists, why do they see it more? I don't know. I have heard it hypothesized, but a chemist, that it is because they deal in mathematics wherein truth is so much harder to debate. But, that is only one person's opinion.
Actaully, it is not an uncommon belief that there are many universes.Devil's Advocate wrote:True, other than th euniverse itself.awip2062 wrote:As far as the earth being an open system, yes, it is. There is no such thing as a truly closed system in nature.
CrystallisationWhen have you ever seen evidence of things becoming more organized?
It doesn't require them to do anything of the kind. There's nothing in the ToE that says that complexity must increase. [/quote]Evolution requires organisms develop new specializations and become new creatures.
It is. But there's no barrier to prevent its ongoing change from proceeding till its descendants are no longer TB.[/quote]We don?t see this though. For example, with all the talk of the TB bacterium "evolving", it is still a TB bacterium.
But they differ enough from wolves that they ahve their own Linnean classification. [/quote]With all the breeding we have done on dogs to make new breeds, they are as yet still dogs.
Again, evolution does not require any increase in information.[/quote]Not only are they still dogs, but the purebred dogs have LOST genetic information, not gained it in becoming purebred.
True. But keep breeding them for a few hundred-thousand years (which is about as long as we've been domesticating dogs, iirc), and you'll be able to produce much more variation.[/quote]You will not end up with a great diversity of features on the puppies of two purebred Dobermans,.
Eventually, you could. You just need a lot of patience - regardless of whether you start form pure-bred Dobermanns or from a pair of stray mongrels.[/quote]No matter how much you breed them, those Dobes simply will not give you the blue tongues like Chows have or the beaver-like tail of the Labrador.
Since most of the research in this area goes in th eopposite direction (starting form a genetic disease and looking for the mutation(s) to blame), the data is skewed.pNow, I know that evolutionists say that mutation is the way it happens, but how many negative, and in fact disease or death causing mutations have scientists documented and how many positive, helpful ones have they found?
I will accept the statement.And in fact the vast majority of mutations are neither beneficial nor harmful. I have heard it said (and I wish I had a source for this) that the average human has some 300 mutations, not including those inherited from his or her parents.
This is survival of the fittest and I have no trouble with that overall. It does not show change of one species to another, however, so it does not prove macro-evolution.Any brood of offspring will have a range of characteristics, which will be broader than the differneces between its parents. (I, for instance, am taller than either of my parents, or any of my grandparents.) That range will be due to the neutral mutations. If, for some reason, the environment changes such that the animal is not quite suited to it, then somewhere in the range of characteristics of the next genertion will be individuals who are even more unsuited to the environment, and others who are better suited to it. The latter group will be more likely to survive and reproduce, passing on their genetic differnece from thier parents to their offspring. That's all there is to it.
Nor in America. I have the text of a creationist book from 1922 which dismisses Piltdown as a fake, and which correctly describes how it was done. The scientific establishment abandoned Piltdown long before 1953 due to it having become anomalous with the other fossils then known.As far as Piltdown not being taught as truth after it was shown to be false?.maybe not in the UK, DA.
I dont' know. The server may have been down? *guesses*Unfortunately, not all secular texts dismissed it as a fake, and I was taught it in school.
Strange.... Why can't you get in?I can't get into talkorigins.org, although I have tried. I am unable to verify from any other source, that there were no theses written on it. Please link me to those, if you will.
Isn't his problem with macro-evolution, or am I confusing him with someone else?I still haven't found anything on this 30 individuals thing. But could you be confusing Lucy with the new(ish)ly discovered Kenyanthropus platyops, of which "fossils of more than 30 individuals [were found] in 1998 and 1999." (source)A slit is a slit. So the fish one grows into a gill, how is that showing evolution in a human embryo?No. If I remember, I may look the information up and link you.
Right, but the point is that those structures are identical to those in fish embryos - which do develop into gill slits.Sure, there are slits near the beginning stages of a human's life, and they look similar to gill slits, but we never have gills.
I've not found much info on Berg, but Fix has his own theory that no-one takes seriously except him, and Grasse did not deny evolution. He disputed the mechanism for it, that has since been (and for that matter was already) supported by overwhelming evidence.So?how about Leo Berg, William Fix, Pierre Paul Grass?. Not all men I agree with on all things, but men who are more than scientific journalists.
Yes, these seem to get quite long. But discussion is good.That was a long post.
Maybe God created us over a long period of time via evolution although the future exists now in endless demensions and you could still say *poof* we existI believe in the foolish miracle of a loving G-d who created everything there is in six days simply by speaking.