Here is Koons' self bio..
I obtained an academic scholarship which took me to Michigan State University in East Lansing. At first, I majored in economics, and then in humanities, but eventually, as more and more philosophy courses accumulated on my transcript, I accepted the inevitable and concentrated on philosophy.
My interest in religion and theology continued, and in 1979 I won a Marshall Scholarship which took me to Oxford, where I studied philosophy and theology for two years. While at Oxford, my philosophical interests moved more and more in the direction of logic and formal philosophy.
My combined interests in logic and in philosophical theology led me to do my graduate work in philosophy at UCLA. In 1987, I completed my dissertation on logical paradoxes of truth and rationality. That fall, I came to the University of Texas at Austin as an assistant professor.Note that the common thread in the list that provided? Almost none have any graduate level or even undergraduate degrees in biology. The thing they do seem to have though is an strong interest in religion.
Why aren't any lead scientists for pharmaceutical firms signing on to this list? Why aren't scientists that are actually working with infectious diseases signing on to this list?
This is getting funny. I'm having a belly laugh here.
I give you a link showing 700 scientists, and then I give you another link showing over 50 scientists, and you give me the credentials for only a couple, that you SAY are not worthy, & that's supposed to mean something??
OK, OK. Since I'm so nice, here's 400 more scientists, so you can pick a couple out and tell me something that wrong with them. I'm still laughing over all this.
Ready?
Here goes:
http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/filesDB-download.php?command=download&id=443