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PBS Offers Intelligent Design Documentary
CREATION - Evolution Headlines ^ | 04/28/2003 | Illustra Media/CREATION - Evolution Headlines

Posted on 05/02/2003 10:26:29 AM PDT by Remedy

According to Illustra Media, the Public Broadcasting System uploaded the film Unlocking the Mystery of Life to its satellite this past Sunday. For the next three years, it will be available for member stations to download and broadcast. In addition, PBS is offering the film on their Shop PBS website under Science/Biology videos (page 4).

The film, released a little over a year ago, has been called a definitive presentation of the Intelligent Design movement. With interviews and evidences from eight PhD scientists, it presents strictly scientific (not religious) arguments that challenge Darwinian evolution, and show instead that intelligent design is a superior explanation for the complexity of life, particularly of DNA and molecular machines. The film has been well received not only across America but in Russia and other countries. Many public school teachers are using the material in science classrooms without fear of controversies over creationism or religion in the science classroom, because the material is scientific, not religious, in all its arguments and evidences, and presents reputable scientists who are well qualified in their fields: Dean Kenyon, Michael Behe, Jonathan Wells, Steven Meyer, William Dembski, Scott Minnich, Jed Macosko, and Paul Nelson, with a couple of brief appearances by Phillip E. Johnson, the "founder" of the Intelligent Design movement.

Check with your local PBS Station to find out when they plan to air it. If it is not on their schedule, call or write and encourage them to show the film. Why should television partly supported by public tax funds present only a one-sided view on this subject, so foundational to all people believe and think? We applaud PBS's move, but it is only partial penance for the Evolution series and decades of biased reporting on evolution.


This is a wonderful film, beautifully edited and shot on many locations, including the Galápagos Islands, and scored to original music by Mark Lewis. People are not only buying it for themselves, but buying extra copies to show to friends and co-workers. Unlocking the Mystery of Life available here on our Products page in VHS and DVD formats. The film is about an hour long and includes vivid computer graphics of DNA in action. The DVD version includes an extra half-hour of bonus features, including answers to 14 frequently-asked questions about intelligent design, answered by the scientists who appear in the film.


This is a must-see video. Get it, and get it around.


Intelligent Design Gets a Powerful New Media Boost 03/09/2002
Exclusive Over 600 guests gave a standing ovation Saturday March 9 at the premiere of a new film by Illustra Media, Unlocking the Mystery of Life. This 67-minute documentary is in many ways a definitive portrayal of the Intelligent Design movement that is sweeping the country. Intelligent Design is a non-religious, non-sectarian, strictly scientific view of origins with both negative and positive arguments: negative, that Darwinism is insufficient to explain the complexity of life, and positive, that intelligent design, or information, is a fundamental entity that must be taken into consideration in explanations of the origin of complex, specified structures like DNA. The film features interviews with a Who's Who of the Intelligent Design movement: Phillip Johnson, Michael Behe, Jonathan Wells, Paul Nelson, Stephen Meyer, Dean Kenyon, William Dembski, and others, who explain the issues and arguments for intelligent design as the key to unlocking the mystery of life. The film also features nearly 20 minutes of award-quality computer animation of molecular machines, manufacturing plants, and storage libraries of elaborate information - DNA and proteins at work in the cell, climaxing with a dazzling view of DNA transcription and translation.
In his keynote address, Dr. Paul Nelson (who appears in the film), gave reasons for optimism. He said that Time Magazine, usually solidly Darwinian, admitted just last week that these Intelligent Design scientists may be onto something. U.S. News and World Report is also coming out with a piece on I.D. And Stephen Meyer, who also appears in the film, could not be at the premiere because he was on his way to Ohio (see next headline), armed with copies of the film to give to the school board members. Nelson said that scientists should not arbitrarily rule design off the table. "Keeping science from discovering something that might be true is like having a pair of spectacles that distorts your vision," he said. "It does profound harm to science." He described how Ronald Numbers, evolutionist, once told him that design might be true, but science is a game, with the rule that scientists cannot even consider the possibility of design; "that's just the way it is," he said. (See this quote by Richard Lewontin for comparison.) Yet design is already commonly considered in archaeology, cryptography, forensics, and SETI, so why not in biology? Apparently this arbitrary rule has become a national controversy. Intelligent Design, says Nelson, is finally removing a "rule of the game" that is hindering science. If the reaction of the crowd at the premiere luncheon was any indication, Unlocking the Mystery of Life has launched a well-aimed smart weapon at the citadels of Darwinism.

We highly recommend this film. Copies are just now becoming available for $20. Visit IllustraMedia.com and order it. View it, and pass it around. Share it with your teachers, your co-workers, your church. You will have no embarrassment showing this high-quality, beautiful, amazing film to anyone, even the most ardent evolutionist.

 

 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: creation; crevo; crevolist; evolution
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TO ALL ardent FOSSIL THUMPERS:

PUBLIC B.S. "gets it" - Intelligently Designed Films

Why can't you?

Answer:

The evolutionist strawman, indoctrinated with circular reasoning, fed with half-truths, conditioned to side-step, unbearably burdened with proof, extrapolated circumstantial evidence into a spontaneously generated smokescreen and follow one of their own red herrings right off the bluff into the bandwagon. Momentarily dazed and not to be deterred; strawman finally comes to his senses and commences an ad hominem, argumentum ad populum, loaded with ridicule, non-sequiturs, attempted humor and glittering generalities - repeatedly citing Big Lie authorities, to intimidate anyone disagreeing with the Best-in-Field Fallacy, of 'particles to people' EVOLUTION.

A Theory of Biblical Creation

Media Bias Stifles Creationists' Scientific Findings, Perspective He explains that the secular media -- which he describes as atheistic and anti-Christian -- publishes most anything it can that appears to indoctrinate people and "hits against the Bible."

CREATION : EVOLUTIONARY ARROGANCE (SHAMAN ALERT) One writer laments that even after the pope reaffirmed the commitment of the Catholic Church to evolution in 1996,

40 percent of American Catholics in a 2001 Gallup poll said they believed that God created human life in the past 10,000 years. Indeed, fully 45 percent of all Americans subscribe to this creationist view.12

But why would the public favor creation? Only a statistical minority of the "general public" attends church and Sunday school. Could it possibly be that evolution is so contrary to evidence and common sense that people intuitively know that evolution is wrong? And could it be that many of these have studied the evidences for themselves and thereby found that evolution is not really scientific after all?

Loosening Darwin's GripA poll released in May 2002 by Zogby International found that nearly eight out of every 10 Ohioans supported the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms where Darwinian evolution also is taught. A survey by The Plain Dealer newspaper in Cleveland offered similar findings: 74 percent of Ohioans said evidence for and against evolution should be taught in science classrooms, while 59 percent said intelligent design should be included in origins study.

How Does the World View of the Scientist & the Clinician Influence Their Work? Some, like Thomas Kuhn in his widely quoted "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions," have argued that the scientific process is less than an objective critical empirical investigation of the facts. They claim the work of scientists is greatly influenced by their culture, by social and psychological environment, by what Kuhn calls the "paradigm"--that is to say, the preferred or prevailing theories, methods and studies of that particular discipline, and above all by their world view--their specific beliefs about "the order of nature." Kuhn writes that two scientists with different views of the "order of nature" . . . see different things when they look from the same point in the same direction . . . they see different things and they see them in different relations to each other." And we might add that they tend to see and to accept those data that conform to or make sense in light of their world view. So evidence exists that the world view of scientists and the presuppositions that view implies may influence not only the problems scientists choose to investigate but also what they actually observe and fail to observe.

1 posted on 05/02/2003 10:26:29 AM PDT by Remedy
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To: Remedy
Terrific...But even when the theory of "natural selection" is finally and thoroughly discredited, there will still be the "selective demise" theory, aka Darwin Awards. Let the evolutionists cling to that small comfort.
2 posted on 05/02/2003 10:30:45 AM PDT by lsee
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To: Remedy
I recently saw the video, it was very good. Not for kids, because it is too technical. Evolutionists argue that amino acids randomly combined to form proteins and then cells. As I understand it from the film, cells require the information provided by DNA to convert amino acids into proteins. Thus the information HAD to exist first, which makes the evolutionary theory impossible.
3 posted on 05/02/2003 10:40:17 AM PDT by Galatians513
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To: PatrickHenry
Idiots on parade. Again. And again. And Again.
4 posted on 05/02/2003 10:40:36 AM PDT by balrog666 (When in doubt, tell the truth. - Mark Twain)
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To: VadeRetro; jennyp; Junior; longshadow; *crevo_list; RadioAstronomer; Scully; Piltdown_Woman; ...
Your tax dollars at work. First, socialism; now, ID. Ping.

[This ping list is for the evolution -- not creationism -- side of evolution threads, and sometimes for other science topics. To be added (or dropped), let me know via freepmail.]

5 posted on 05/02/2003 10:43:34 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.)
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To: Galatians513
"Evolutionists argue that amino acids randomly combined to form proteins and then cells. "

No they don't...the first replicating forms were probably RNA based, and did not have proteins. RNA has self-catalyzing properties and many RNA structures (e.g. ribosomes) are truly ancient.

6 posted on 05/02/2003 10:49:09 AM PDT by Axolotl
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To: Remedy
The earth is flat, the sun goes around it and Darwin was wrong...a triple crown for ignorance...
7 posted on 05/02/2003 10:49:42 AM PDT by Axolotl
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To: PatrickHenry
Supernaturalists are funny, except when they're spending our money to promote their sillyness.
8 posted on 05/02/2003 10:55:10 AM PDT by ASA Vet ("Those who know, don't talk. Those who talk, don't know." (I'm in the 2nd group.))
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To: ASA Vet
Now we can call PBS the "Creationist Network."
9 posted on 05/02/2003 10:57:09 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Axolotl; gore3000
g3 ...

evolution, as I have said many times is ANTI-SCIENCE.

The central point of science is the discovery of causes and effects and materialist evolution denies it. It proposes random events as the engine of the transformation of species.

This is totally unscientific, it is an attack on science which in order to expand human knowledge and human health and living standards needs to find the causes and effects of how our Universe functions.

Randomness answers nothing and leads to no discoveries.

In fact it opposes scientific inquiry and is a philosophical know-nothingism.

That is why evolution has been popular with the masses and virtually ignored by scientists.

It is ... pseudo-science --- for morons.

With a few words such as 'survival of the fittest' and 'natural selection' it seeks to make idiots think they are knowledgeable.

We see the idiocy of evolution and evolutionists daily on these threads. That is why they all repeat the same stock phrases, throw a few links (because they cannot even understand the concepts being discussed), but never give any facts showing their theory to be what they claim it is - the center of science. If it was, they should have no problem doing so. It is not, that's why they cannot.

sop ...

The theory of evolution is just that - a theory.

g3 ...

It may be a theory, but it is not a scientifically supported theory which is what evolutionists claim it to be. Anybody can have a theory about anything. It is whether a theory is valid that is the point. So you have not given any evidence for your side. All you have done is indulge in rhetoric, but you have not shown that evolution is science or have in any way refuted my statement that evolution cannot in fact be science because of its central proposition that 'evolution just happens'. Such is not science.

539 posted on 03/13/2003 8:59 PM PST by gore3000

10 posted on 05/02/2003 11:00:53 AM PDT by f.Christian (( With Rights ... comes Responsibilities --- irresponsibility --- whacks // criminals - psychos ! ))
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To: All
very few links from the famous "list-o-links" (so the creationists don't get to start each new thread from ground zero).

15 Answers to Creationist Nonsense. From Scientific American
Arguments we think creationists should NOT use from Answers in Genesis.
300 Creationist Lies.
Site that debunks virtually all of creationism's fallacies. Excellent resource.
Creation "Science" Debunked.

The foregoing is just a tiny sample. So that everyone will have access to the accumulated Creationism vs. Evolution threads which have previously appeared on FreeRepublic, plus links to hundreds of sites with a vast amount of information on this topic, here's Junior's massive work, available for all to review:
The Ultimate Creation vs. Evolution Resource [ver 21].

11 posted on 05/02/2003 11:08:58 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.)
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To: Galatians513
Evolutionists argue that amino acids randomly combined to form proteins and then cells.

I'm not a biologist, but I don't believe that evolution has anything to do with how cells are formed. It's more about how cells (or multicellular organisims) reproduce (specifically that they reproduce imperfectly). I believe that you are confusing evolution with abiogenesis, but evolution does not depend upon abiogenesis. Evolution only deals with existing life forms, it has no application when life is not present, so the formation of the first life forms from "non-life" is not a part of evolution.

Then there's the confusion between DNA and RNA, but someone else addressed that.
12 posted on 05/02/2003 11:09:41 AM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: f.Christian
nice rant...

Evolution is a science, and I am a scientist who studies it.

Many of the masses pick up on it, like they picked up on gravity, because it is undeniably true. There is as much evidence for evolution having occurred as there is that the earth goes around the sun.

You only brought up one substantive point...about randomness. Mutation may be random, but evolution is not. Many sciences deal with events that are influenced by random events (e.g. statistics and probability, quantum mechanics). Does the fact that mutations are random also make genetics a pseudo-science? Who's the moron here?

14 posted on 05/02/2003 11:12:32 AM PDT by Axolotl
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To: shawne
My grandfather's words: "Hmmm, I am hungry, I think I will grow a mouth. Hmmm, I need someplace to store the food, I will grow a stomach. Gotta get rid of the excess food, let's grow an a$$. Now how xcess food, let's grow an a$$. Now how much sense does that make boy?"

Well, if evolution were anything like the strawman that you presented then you might have thorougly ridiculed it. Since evolution doesn't work that way, however, your comments are meaningless.

The funny thing about this...ID does not reference God, Jehovah, Jesus, or anything of the sort. It simply uses science to show that their had to be some sort of, well, intelligent design to everything. But this absolutely infuriates evolutionists! I love it.


Actually, it does not infuriate me. I'm bothered by the lack of real scientific method applied in "ID theory" and the question-begging that it presents. However, it has been shown in may instances that proponents of ID theory, such as those pushing to have it taught in some public schools, are actually trying to dress up Biblical creationism (this coming from their own statements where they betray their true intentions).

If you have a repeatable, testable and observable method to demonstrate that life is the result of intelligent intervention, then I'd like to see it. Present it for peer review, win a Nobel Prize.
15 posted on 05/02/2003 11:14:09 AM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: shawne
The funny thing about this...ID does not reference God, Jehovah, Jesus, or anything of the sort. It simply uses science to show that their had to be some sort of, well, intelligent design to everything.

Check out the history of these ID guys, they are all creationists that think they have found a useful wedge.

16 posted on 05/02/2003 11:15:10 AM PDT by Axolotl
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To: Axolotl
No they don't...the first replicating forms were probably RNA based, and did not have proteins.

No, they were not probably just possibly.

Still, doubts remained because scientists had never been able to find a ribozyme that could synthesize the nucleotide building blocks from simpler precursors. Although scientists could propose ways by which the four RNA bases (adenine, cytosine, guanine and uracil) and the ribose-phosphate sugars could have arisen spontaneously on the early Earth, these prebiotic reactions do not seem to be sufficient for linking the base to the sugar phosphate--the critical step to making nucleotides.

In this study, Whitehead scientists took the approach of making 1,000 trillion random RNA molecules go through test-tube evolution to find those that could catalyze nucleotide formation. They found three different families of ribozymes that synthesize a nucleotide by linking the base to a sugar phosphate--a reaction similar to those used by proteins in contemporary metabolism.

"These ribozymes make only one nucleotide, and that is not enough. But the fact that they can do this is encouraging, and we plan to try further evolution to see if we can make them better and more efficient," Professor Bartel said.

17 posted on 05/02/2003 11:16:07 AM PDT by AndrewC
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To: Axolotl
You apparently have had little exposure to f.Christian. No one here has really figured out f.Christian except that it's quite clear that he (or she) is very, very mad. The only 'coherent' statements that you will ever see in postings from f.Christian will be from him (or her) quoting from another (usually another FReeper, but sometimes from another website). Otherwise f.Christian's posts consist of nothing but hard to decipher babble where he (or she) apparently equivocates evolution, atheism, paganism and satanism (and possibly several other subjects). Rational discussion is a foreign concept to this individual. Nothing that you say can persuade f.Christian to understand your viewpoint, because f.Christian seems incapable of really understanding anything other than 'evolution evil, creationism good'. Best to point out the obvious holes in the arguments people who manage to post correctly structured sentences, because at least they don't have the excuse of being completely insane.
18 posted on 05/02/2003 11:17:34 AM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Now we can call PBS the "Creationist Network."

Haven't they always been liberals trying to paint the missing-chromosone crowd as Joe (GOP) Six-Pack?

19 posted on 05/02/2003 11:17:43 AM PDT by balrog666 (When in doubt, tell the truth. - Mark Twain)
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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