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Making Monkeys Out of Evolutionists
Salt Lake City Tribune ^ | August 28, 2002 | Cal Thomas

Posted on 08/28/2002 9:36:04 AM PDT by gdani

Making Monkeys Out of Evolutionists
Wednesday, August 28, 2002

By Cal Thomas
Tribune Media Services

It's back-to-school time. That means school supplies, clothes, packing lunches and the annual battle over what can be taught.

The Cobb County, Ga., School Board voted unanimously Aug. 22 to consider a pluralistic approach to the origin of the human race, rather than the mandated theory of evolution. The board will review a proposal which says the district "believes that discussion of disputed views of academic subjects is a necessary element of providing a balanced education, including the study of the origin of the species."

Immediately, pro-evolution forces jumped from their trees and started behaving as if someone had stolen their bananas. Apparently, academic freedom is for other subjects. Godzilla forbid! (This is the closest one may get to mentioning "God" in such a discussion, lest the ACLU intervene, which it has threatened to do in Cobb County, should the school board commit academic freedom. God may be mentioned if His Name modifies "damn." The First Amendment's free speech clause protects such an utterance, we are told by the ACLU. The same First Amendment, according to their twisted logic, allegedly prohibits speaking well of God.)

What do evolutionists fear? If scientific evidence for creation is academically unsound and outrageously untrue, why not present the evidence and allow students to decide which view makes more sense? At the very least, presenting both sides would allow them to better understand the two views. Pro-evolution forces say (and they are saying it again in Cobb County) that no "reputable scientist" believes in the creation model. That is demonstrably untrue. No less a pro-evolution source than Science Digest noted in 1979 that, "scientists who utterly reject Evolution may be one of our fastest-growing controversial minorities . . . Many of the scientists supporting this position hold impressive credentials in science." (Larry Hatfield, "Educators Against Darwin.")

In the last 30 years, there's been a wave of books by scientists who do not hold to a Christian-apologetic view on the origins of humanity but who have examined the underpinnings of evolutionary theory and found them to be increasingly suspect. Those who claim no "reputable scientist" holds to a creation model of the universe must want to strip credentials from such giants as Johann Kepler (1571-1630), the founder of physical astronomy. Kepler wrote, "Since we astronomers are priests of the highest God in regard to the book of nature, it befits us to be thoughtful, not of the glory of our minds, but rather, above all else, of the glory of God."

Werner Von Braun (1912-1977), the father of space science, wrote: " . . . the vast mysteries of the universe should only confirm our belief in the certainty of its Creator. I find it as difficult to understand a scientist who does not acknowledge the presence of a superior rationality behind the existence of the universe as it is to comprehend a theologian who would deny the advances of science."

Who would argue that these and many other scientists were ignorant about science because they believed in God? Contemporary evolutionists who do so are practicing intellectual slander. Anything involving God, or His works, they believe, is to be censored because humankind must only study ideas it comes up with apart from any other influence. Such thinking led to the Holocaust, communism and a host of other evils conjured up by the deceitful and wicked mind of uncontrolled Man.

There are only two models for the origin of humans: evolution and creation. If creation occurred, it did so just once and there will be no "second acts." If evolution occurs, it does so too slowly to be observed. Both theories are accepted on faith by those who believe in them. Neither theory can be tested scientifically because neither model can be observed or repeated.

Why are believers in one model -- evolution -- seeking to impose their faith on those who hold that there is scientific evidence which supports the other model? It's because they fear they will lose their influence and academic power base after a free and open debate. They are like political dictators who oppose democracy, fearing it will rob them of power.

The parallel views should be taught in Cobb County, Ga., and everywhere else, and let the most persuasive evidence win.


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To: Buck Turgidson
Do you understand the scientific method? The fossil record and geology can be used to confirm evolution.

Yes but apparently you don't:

I. The scientific method has four steps

  1. Observation and description of a phenomenon or group of phenomena.
  2. Formulation of an hypothesis to explain the phenomena. In physics, the hypothesis often takes the form of a causal mechanism or a mathematical relation.
  3. Use of the hypothesis to predict the existence of other phenomena, or to predict quantitatively the results of new observations.
  4. Performance of experimental tests of the predictions by several independent experimenters and properly performed experiments.

If the experiments bear out the hypothesis it may come to be regarded as a theory or law of nature (more on the concepts of hypothesis, model, theory and law below). If the experiments do not bear out the hypothesis, it must be rejected or modified. What is key in the description of the scientific method just given is the predictive power (the ability to get more out of the theory than you put in; see Barrow, 1991) of the hypothesis or theory, as tested by experiment. It is often said in science that theories can never be proved, only disproved. There is always the possibility that a new observation or a new experiment will conflict with a long-standing theory.

http://teacher.nsrl.rochester.edu/phy_labs/AppendixE/AppendixE.html

So you see, the heart of the scientific method is experimentation with measurable and repeatable results. Observing fossils is not an experiment and making an interpretation that A evolved into B is not an experiment. Evolution theory has steps 1 and 2 only. It doesn't have 3 or 4.

Furthermore, the fossil record is at the heart of the anti-evolution argument anyway. But that's another issue. The bottom line is, Maxwell's electromagnetic equations are not a theory in remotely the same way as evolution. Every piece of electro-magnetic equipment in the world runs on Maxwell's equations.

421 posted on 08/28/2002 8:19:38 PM PDT by lasereye
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To: dubyagee
That everything shows evidence of having gradually aged? Butcouldn't it have been created that way? According to the Bible, Adam was a man, not a baby, at creation.

Last Thursdayism makes similar claims. Couldn't everything have been created last Thursday? There is no explanatory power in such theories.

422 posted on 08/28/2002 8:23:10 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Heartlander
Thanks for the charts, Heartlander. Imagine finding THAT in your kids bio-text!! Not a chance. Strictly Verboten. Only ask NICE questions (i.e., ones that make THEM look SCHMMART!!)
423 posted on 08/28/2002 8:25:05 PM PDT by cookcounty
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To: moneyrunner
But one thing I have learned is that the person on the other end of the e-mail connection presenting himself as God’s Gift to Women (or young, slinky and voluptuous) had better present some bonda fides … or source his references.

Have you tried clicking on my screen name?

Which makes the ultra-fierce support of evolution a puzzling phenomenon, unless the reasons are more emotional than intellectual.

The real issue, when it comes to defending evolution, is not that the creationists object to the theory, but that they ignore the evidence. You would see exactly the same reaction by scientists if a significant number of Americans believed that the Earth was flat.

The creation model in Genesis is not testable since it is not reproducible without the cooperation of the Creator.

Of course it's testable. The Genesis account says that the universe and the Earth are a few thousand years old; several independent methods date them as being of order 15 billion years old and 4.5 billion years old, respectively. The Genesis account says that the Earth was covered by a flood a few thousand years ago. This would have led to gross geological effects that have been shown not to exist. The Genesis account says that trees and grasses existed prior to the sun; the fossil record reveals a long history of life on Earth before the existence of grasses and trees, which could not have occurred without the sun.

Right. See you in roughly several million years?

What of it? The universe is the way it is, and not how we would wish it to be. It will take billions of years to confirm our prediction that the sun will become a red giant; does that mean the standard solar model is not science? Scientific theories are required to be falsifiable, not necessarily conveniently falsifiable.

As a matter of curiosity, what does the evolution of man theorize we will be in another million years?

Different, or more likely, extinct.

We can't predict what the weather will be for more than a few days. Does that mean that we have no scientific understanding of our atmosphere?

424 posted on 08/28/2002 8:25:50 PM PDT by Physicist
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To: Physicist
As a matter of curiosity, what does the evolution of man theorize we will be in another million years?
:Different, or more likely, extinct.

Bingo. I'll tell you what we will be in a few hundred years... Dumber.
425 posted on 08/28/2002 8:31:06 PM PDT by Poser
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Last Thursdayism makes similar claims. Couldn't everything have been created last Thursday? There is no explanatory power in such theories.

You point me to a 'last thursday sect' and you're pointing at a group of irrational people. Sorry, but it sounds like something scientists made up to attempt to make ID look bad. There is no logic behind it whatsoever. And anyone who claims there is no logic behind creation is irrational. Maybe it can't be proved but it can't be disproved either. No matter how convinced one is that there is no God, there will always remain the chance that they're wrong.

426 posted on 08/28/2002 8:33:18 PM PDT by dubyagee
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To: balrog666
Isn't the Blind Idiot God Azathoth superior to Cthulhu? Not to mention Yog-Sothoth or ^H^H^H^H^H^H (whom I won't actually mention.)
427 posted on 08/28/2002 8:33:54 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: gore3000
Very cute, but of course evading the point completely. The question you need to answer is how can an atheist believe there is no God if God created life and all the species on earth. Evolution is totally necessary for atheism and that is why it was an atheist, Darwin, that made it up.

If God created life and all the species on earth, then either He left tracks or He didn't. He didn't.

And of course, Darwin was no atheist, although he moved closer to atheism as he got older. But first & foremost, Darwin was a scientist.

Did you know I became an atheist at age 13, not because of anything whatever to do with evolution? It just struck me that it's, ummm, intellectually indefensible to believe in a supernatural person who nobody sees and who is only able to communicate with those people who already fervently believe in him - and then only telepathically, so that there never is any intersubjectively verifiable evidence that he was really there. If I did believe in God, I'd still believe in evolution because I'm not going to disbelieve my lyin' eyes.

428 posted on 08/28/2002 8:39:55 PM PDT by jennyp
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To: dubyagee
Then why have one set of virial DNA incorporated into the non-coding DNA of gorillas, chimps, and humans and another set of viral DNA incorporated into the non-coding DNA of chimps and humans, each in the same place in the genome? Also why have exactly the same mutation incorporated into the part of the genome of chimps and humans that destroys the ability to make vitamin C? (Other animals that cannot make vitamin C have the mutation in another place.)

The non coding regions (or Kilroy region as I would like to have named them) tell much.
429 posted on 08/28/2002 8:40:29 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: jennyp
Did you know I became an atheist at age 13, not because of anything whatever to do with evolution? It just struck me that it's, ummm, intellectually indefensible to believe in a supernatural person who nobody sees and who is only able to communicate with those people who already fervently believe in him - and then only telepathically, so that there never is any intersubjectively verifiable evidence that he was really there.

Antique religious practices amounted to attempts to communicate directly with the spirit world using oracles, prophecy, idols and idolatry, divination, electrical gadgetry such as the ark of the covenant, etc.

Given the manner in which the words "prophet" and "prophecy" permiate every other book of the Old Testament, it is astonishing that the word "prophet" occurs only once in Genesis, i.e. the vague reference to Abraham as "God's prophet", after the flood. One possible interpretation of this is that, prior to the flood, communication with the spirit world was direct and natural, and did not require anything resembling oracles or prophecy.

There is reason to believe that the human mind and brain were originally hardwired for a form of communication as far above anything we now have as anything we now have is above smoke signals. How anything like that could evolve, of course, is just another problem for evolutionists.

Julian Jaynes "Origin of Consciousness" describes the manner in which such capabilities were ground out of the human race by a process of attrition as they became progressively more disfunctional and as the practice of idolatry turned the world into an insane assylum for hundreds of years after the flood.

Nonetheless, vestiges of a few such capabilities remain. A google search on the two terms 'military' and 'remote viewing' turns up over 6000 hits, and I assume this means that the U.S. military does not have the luxury of ignoring scientific developments because they are politically incorrect or because they break paradigms. One such article which might serve as a starting point:

RVIS Remote Viewing Site

Likewise the king of France in the 1400s did not have such a luxury. The Catholic church, apparently making up in thoroughness for anything they might lack in celibacy, took several hundred years to analyze the case of Joan of Arc, and ultimately determined that at least some of her activities required information that she had no way of having other than for paranormal means; they cannonized Joan in the 20'th century.

Rupert Sheldrake is a former director of studies in cellular biology at Cambridge University. His studies with dogs who appear to know when their owners are coming home are seen on cable channel programs. The most fabulous case of remnant telepathic capabilities in animals is that of Nkisi, an African grey parrot involved in animal communication studies in New York. Sheldrake's "Seven Experiments Which Could Change the World" is nearly a must read along these lines.

Religious practices and social organization based upon such phenomena broke down before the time of Christ and were in disrepute by Roman times. Christianity amounts to a new kind of religion, in which it is acknowledged that we know the spirit world through faith, and not via direct contact.

There actually are a handful of neo catastrophists who believe in evolution; I am not one of them.

The most major arguments against evolution are:


430 posted on 08/28/2002 8:46:46 PM PDT by medved
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To: Poser
"Over a few hundred years we have dogs as different as a mastiff and a chihuahua, caused by man. Over millions of years, mutations did a lot more than we could in a few hundred years...."

Let me say again, I don't think you're understanding what evolution is. Mastiffs and chihuahuas are bred by selectively BREEDING OUT unwanted characteristics. BREEDING OUT, that is, REDUCING a gene pool, will not get you from bacteria to baboons, or from worms to woodpeckers. You can only do this by selecting and applying NEW information.

Most non evolutionists (including most creationists) ACCEPT the idea of "change over time," (how else could you have the divergence of the human race(s)?), but they DON'T accept addition of complexity over time. Seen through this matrix, the great majority of "examples of evolution" break down (ie, eohippus-->horse: the sequence of toes 5-4-3 and down to 1 toe is a reduction, a degradation) though it may be advantageous to a horse, it is NOT a more complex form.

431 posted on 08/28/2002 8:47:03 PM PDT by cookcounty
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To: Dynamo
Actually, as He wrote in His book, oh numb one. Get a grip.

Ahem, "oh numb one???" Oh well.

432 posted on 08/28/2002 8:48:06 PM PDT by jennyp
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Also why have exactly the same mutation incorporated into the part of the genome of chimps and humans that destroys the ability to make vitamin C? (Other animals that cannot make vitamin C have the mutation in another place.)

You're over my head, and all I can give you is an answer you won't like, 'to everything there is a purpose.'

What is evolution's reasoning behind this? I mean, we need vitamin C. Why would the ability be destroyed? Serious question, I'm curious.

433 posted on 08/28/2002 8:49:09 PM PDT by dubyagee
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To: Heartlander
Contrary to both Darwinian gradualism and punctuated equilibria theory, the vast majority of phyla appear abruptly with low species diversity. The disparity of the higher taxa precedes the diversity of the lower taxa.

Huh??? That's not even wrong, it's nonsensical. Maybe you want to rephrase the paragraph?

434 posted on 08/28/2002 8:51:52 PM PDT by jennyp
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To: dubyagee
You point me to a 'last thursday sect' and you're pointing at a group of irrational people

How is Last Thursdayism any more irrational than any other Young Earth sect? Several independent dating mechanisms show the Earth to be around 4,5000,000,000 years old. Assuming 4 days or 4000 years still miss the mark by some orders of magnitude.

435 posted on 08/28/2002 8:58:15 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: dubyagee
Accidents happen (even in this best of all possible worlds). In this case the exact mutation occurs in chimps and humans and in no other species. Other DNA markers are shared by gorillas, chimps, and humans. The entire science of cladistics (has a journal called "Cladistics" too) is the study of such tree-structures.

436 posted on 08/28/2002 9:02:28 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Physicist
The Genesis account says that the universe and the Earth are a few thousand years old;

It says no such thing.

437 posted on 08/28/2002 9:02:42 PM PDT by AndrewC
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To: gdani
Why are believers in one model -- evolution -- seeking to impose their faith on those who hold that there is scientific evidence which supports the other model? It's because they fear they will lose their influence and academic power base after a free and open debate. They are like political dictators who oppose democracy, fearing it will rob them of power

Cal's right on the money. Pro-Darwinist bigotry is no different than any other kind of bigotry. Only its proponents are an order of magnitude more zealous than a Holy Land crusader.

438 posted on 08/28/2002 9:02:54 PM PDT by Kevin Curry
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Several independent dating mechanisms show the Earth to be around 4,5000,000,000 years old.

Call me irrational if you will, but I have a whole lot harder time believing the earth's been around that long than I do believing the earth is young.

439 posted on 08/28/2002 9:10:04 PM PDT by dubyagee
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To: f.Christian
Winding in and winding out
Leaves a lot of serious doubt
If the lout who built this route
Was going to hell or coming out

--Author Unknown
440 posted on 08/28/2002 9:21:29 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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