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Designed to deceive: Creation can't hold up to rigors of science
CONTRA COSTA TIMES ^ | 12 February 2006 | John Glennon

Posted on 02/12/2006 10:32:27 AM PST by PatrickHenry

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To: Petronski
Yes, a fine admission from you. You keep missing the entire target you're trying to hit.

Pathetic try at humor, but as bad as it was, it is still better than your losing argument. The point you missed, is that you substituted "have not" for "did not". The search was officially ended. "Did not" was perfectly valid, yet you did a "Clintonian squirm" and then proceeded to describe my rhetoric that way.

1,221 posted on 02/14/2006 11:39:07 PM PST by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: freedumb2003

Freepmail.


1,222 posted on 02/14/2006 11:39:24 PM PST by Havoc (Evolutionists and Democrats: "We aren't getting our message out" (coincidence?))
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To: freedumb2003

Brave Sir Robin ran away.
Bravely ran away, away!
When danger reared its ugly head,
He bravely turned his tail and fled.
Yes, brave Sir Robin turned about
And gallantly he chickened out.
Bravely taking to his feet
He beat a very brave retreat,
Bravest of the brave, Sir Robin!


1,223 posted on 02/14/2006 11:39:39 PM PST by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: AndrewC
No, quite the contrary. It appears that you are the one who not only missed the point, but answered my question with an anti-Catholic attack, which did NOT answer the question put to you at all. Rather, your response was completely off topic and missed the point by miles.

If one is in conversation or debate with a liar, how is that irrelevant? How, if this is a point of fact, is it an ad hominem?

Clearly, your example is an ad hominem; the part that was an insult and patently untrue.

OTOH, calling someone FRED, is irreleventnt, unless it is to prove that the person is a male, a male named FRED, or something else germane to the topic at hand.

1,224 posted on 02/14/2006 11:40:09 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Californiajones; CarolinaGuitarman; Dimensio; Right Wing Professor
[Californiajones:] Again Darwin's theory INHERENTLY attempts to debunk the Christian God of the Bible as to how life began.

[Ichneumon:] This is a blatant lie.

[Californiajones:] Please. friend, check the dictionary definition of "lie" again before you open the door.

I'm familiar with the meaning of the word. The claim as written is still a blatant lie, whether it's your own or whether you're innocently repeating someone else's.

If you hadn't included the word "attempts", I would have described it merely as wrong, or at least a matter of differing conclusion based perhaps on different initial premises.

But with the inclusion of the word "attempts", it moves it into the realm of a blatant falsehood. Since theories themselves do not "attempt" anything -- they have no intentionality -- the use of the word "attempts" quite clearly tries to impute a motive to the originator or maintainers of the theory, an agenda for which they employ the theory. And this accusation is quite simply false. It's a slanderous falsehood. It is a lie.

And looking at the replies you received, I now note that I am hardly alone in arriving at that conclusion.

Perhaps you were just expressing yourself extraordinarily poorly (and all I can go on is what you actually post), but the statement *as written* is a blatant falsehood, one that the originator either had to know was false (if he had actually looked into the matter), or was putting forth in the knowledge that he had not bothered to verify its truth before presenting it as such.

It is also a common slander from anti-evolutionists, reinforcing the likelihood that it was intended in the way it appears.

Demonstrate the power of the "scientific" process of which you call "Evolution" and then we will all be impressed.

No problem,

here you go.

See also:

The Origins of Order: Self Organization and Selection in Evolution. By Stuart Kauffman, S. A. (1993) Oxford University Press, NY, ISBN: 0195079515.

Compositional genomes: Prebiotic information transfer in mutually catalytic noncovalent assemblies

Eigen M, and Schuster P, The hypercycle. A principle of natural self-organization. Springer-Verlag, isbn 3-540-09293, 1979

The origin of genetic information: viruses as models

Compositional genomes: prebiotic information transfer in mutually catalytic noncovalent assemblies

Stadler PF, Dynamics of autocatalytic reaction networks. IV: Inhomogeneous replicator networks. Biosystems, 26: 1-19, 1991

Lee DH, Severin K, and Ghadri MR. Autocatalytic networks: the transition from molecular self-replication to molecular ecosystems. Curr Opinion Chem Biol, 1, 491-496, 1997

Lee DH, Severin K, Yokobayashi Y, and Ghadiri MR, Emergence of symbiosis in peptide self-replication through a hypercyclic network. Nature, 390: 591-4, 1997

Apolipoprotein AI Mutations and Information

Creationist Claim CB102: Mutations are random noise; they do not add information.

Multiple Duplications of Yeast Hexose Transport Genes in Response to Selection in a Glucose-Limited Environment

Evolution of biological information

Evolution of biological complexity

Evolution and Information: The Nylon Bug

Examples of Beneficial Mutations and Natural Selection

The evolution of trichromatic color vision by opsin gene duplication in New World and Old World primates

Gene duplications in evolution of archaeal family B DNA polymerases

Koch, AL: Evolution of antibiotic resistance gene function. Microbiol Rev 1981, 45:355378.

Selection in the evolution of gene duplications

Velkov, VV: Gene amplification in prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems. Genetika 1982, 18:529543.

Romero, D & Palacios, R: Gene amplification and genomic plasticity in prokaryotes. Annu Rev Genet 1997, 31:91111.

Stark, GR & Wahl, GM: Gene amplification. Annu Rev Biochem 1984, 53:447491.

Reinbothe, S, Ortel, B, & Parthier, B: Overproduction by gene amplification of the multifunctional arom protein confers glyphosate tolerance to a plastid-free mutant of Euglena gracilis. Mol Gen Genet 1993, 239:416424.

Gottesman, MM, Hrycyna, CA, Schoenlein, PV, Germann, UA, & Pastan, I: Genetic analysis of the multidrug transporter. Annu Rev Genet 1995, 29:607649.

Schwab, M: Oncogene amplification in solid tumors. Semin Cancer Biol 1999, 9:319325.

Widholm, JM, Chinnala, AR, Ryu, JH, Song, HS, Eggett, T, & Brotherton, JE: Glyphosate selection of gene amplification in suspension cultures of three plant species. Physiol Plant 2001, 112:540545.

Otto, E, Young, JE, & Maroni, G: Structure and expression of a tandem duplication of the Drosophila metallothionein gene. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1986, 83:60256029.

Maroni, G, Wise, J, Young, JE, & Otto, E: Metallothionein gene duplications and metal tolerance in natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster. Genetics 1987, 117:739744.

Kondratyeva, TF, Muntyan, LN, & Karvaiko, GI: Zinc-resistant and arsenic-resistant strains of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans have increased copy numbers of chromosomal resistance genes. Microbiology 1995, 141:11571162.

Tohoyama, H, Shiraishi, E, Amano, S, Inouhe, M, Joho, M, & Murayama, T: Amplification of a gene for metallothionein by tandem repeat in a strain of cadmium-resistant yeast cells. FEMS Microbiol Lett 1996, 136:269273.

Sonti, RV & Roth, JR: Role of gene duplications in the adaptation of Salmonella typhimurium to growth on limiting carbon sources. Genetics 1989, 123:1928.

Brown, CJ, Todd, KM, & Rosenzweig, RF: Multiple duplications of yeast hexose transport genes in response to selection in a glucose-limited environment. Mol Biol Evol 1998, 15:931942.

Hastings, PJ, Bull, HJ, Klump, JR, & Rosenberg, SM: Adaptive amplification: an inducible chromosomal instability mechanism. Cell 2000, 103:723731.

Tabashnik, BE: Implications of gene amplification for evolution and management of insecticide resistance. J Econ Entomol 1990, 83:11701176.

Lenormand, T, Guillemaud, T, Bourguet, D, & Raymond, M: Appearance and sweep of a gene duplication: adaptive response and potential for new functions in the mosquito Culex pipiens. Evolution 1998, 52:17051712.

Guillemaud, T, Raymond, M, Tsagkarakou, A, Bernard, C, Rochard, P, & Pasteur, N: Quantitative variation and selection of esterase gene amplification in Culex pipiens. Heredity 1999, 83:8799.

Until Evolutionists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Wow, what an enormously vapid and idiotic assertion. Let's try that in other contexts, where it's equally (in)valid, and see how dumb it sounds, shall we?

Until meteorologists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until automotive engineers can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until rocket scientists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until civil engineers can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until radiologists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until agronomists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until endocrinologists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until vulcanologists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Until botanists can create something out of nothing, their "science" means nothing.

Nope, still sounds really stupid, and transparently false.

How about this one: Until Jehovists can create something out of nothing, their "religion" means nothing. After all, it's the *theists* who avow that something *was* created out of nothing, and yet they can't demonstrate that this process ever actually can or even did occur. Science, on the other hand, leaves that as an open question -- makes no conclusions about whether such a process was possible or even necessary. Perhaps there always *was* "something" and never "nothing". Or perhaps "something" is, ultimately, nothingness after all:

"There are something like ten million million million million million million million million million million million million million million (1 with eighty [five] zeroes after it) particles in the region of the universe that we can observe. Where did they all come from? The answer is that, in quantum theory, particles can be created out of energy in the form of particle/antiparticle pairs. But that just raises the question of where the energy came from. The answer is that the total energy of the universe is exactly zero. The matter in the universe is made out of positive energy. However, the matter is all attracting itself by gravity. Two pieces of matter that are close to each other have less energy than the same two pieces a long way apart, because you have to expend energy to separate them against the gravitational force that is pulling them together. Thus, in a sense, the gravitational field has negative energy. In the case of a universe that is approximately uniform in space, one can show that this negative gravitational energy exactly cancels the positive energy represented by the matter. So the total energy of the universe is zero."

-- Steven Hawking, 1988, "1988. A Brief History of Time", p. 129

Regardless where "something" may or may not have come from, evolution still *works* and demonstrably has happened and was involved in, at the very least, a great deal of the diversity of modern life. Similarly, meteorology still works no matter how or where the atmosphere may have originated.

In any case, I *have* made something out of nothing -- I have written many computer programs which in no way existed in any form before I created them from scratch. So perhaps you could lay to rest your goofy "requirement".

But so far, the only human being who demonstrated the power of creation -- i.e. the power over life and death -- was Jesus Christ of Nazareth.

Oh? What's your evidence for this claim? "I have a book that says so and the book says it's accurate on that issue" is circular reasoning. Even by the book's account, you couldn't even demonstrate that he was actually dead and returned from the dead, as opposed to, say, the kind of "presumed dead but later awoke from a comatose state much to everyone's surprise" cases which were actually quite common before the advent of modern medicine and diagnostic tools. For that matter, even today I read about 2-3 similar cases a year, in areas where modern medicine aren't readily available.

And THAT is what this thread is really all about.

For *you* it may be. For *us* it's about trying to get people to stop telling lies about science and the people who practice it or advocate it.

It's the inherent, unspoken argument that stirs people up over Evolution. Sorry.

There are plenty of Christians who have no problem with this alleged "clash" between science and their religion. There's nothing "inherent" in modern biology which fuels such a clash. It's the touchy, defensive beliefs of a *fraction* of all religious people who get their shorts in a knot over scientists daring to (*gasp*) make their findings public and (*horrors*!) teaching science in school.

1,225 posted on 02/14/2006 11:40:14 PM PST by Ichneumon
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To: Right Wing Professor
Can't imagine why you'd be avoiding it.

Maybe he's just a coward.
1,226 posted on 02/14/2006 11:41:40 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: AndrewC
"Did not" was perfectly valid...

"Did not" implies they do not exist. "Have not" is more accurate because it states only that they have not been located.

1,227 posted on 02/14/2006 11:43:11 PM PST by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: AndrewC
So you're saying that it's not relevant to point out that statements made by a person making an argument are demonstratably false? It's not relevant to demonstrate that a person is knowingly speaking falsehoods? The fact that they are knowingly making false claims has no bearing on the validity of the conclusions that they draw from their false claims?
1,228 posted on 02/14/2006 11:44:50 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: Havoc
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...you're really just LOVING all of the attention; aren't you?

The internet can produce all sorts sensory activities. But, since you appear to be completely unaware of the way English writers and speakers us terms such as "the smell of fear", to describe another, who is in a difficult situation, you must, yet again, react with a juvenile stab at calumny.

1,229 posted on 02/14/2006 11:45:26 PM PST by nopardons
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To: nopardons
But, since you appear to be completely unaware of the way English writers and speakers us terms such as "the smell of fear", to describe another, who is in a difficult situation, you must, yet again, react with a juvenile stab at calumny.

Perhaps it's not so much that he's unaware of it but rather that he's decided to redefine it to suit his whims, much like he did with the word "species". He can't stand that "corn" isn't a species, and that there are actually different species within the range of plants called "corn", so he's redefined "species" so that "corn" and all genetic varieties thereof are a single species. That way he can pretend that he's not lying when one species of corn becoming another species of corn isn't really speciation. True, he's insisting idiotically that "species" means something other than what it really means, but many creationists are so delusional that they really don't believe themselves to be lying if they insist enough that their redefinitions of reality are the correct ones and that absolutely everyone else on the planet has it wrong when they disagree (you see this frequently with creationists who insist that evolution addresses the origin of the cosmos, for example)
1,230 posted on 02/14/2006 11:48:47 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: Petronski
It says a lot about you.

No it says everything about you. That was selected only because google had it as the first entry and the example was the only one there. Google "ad hominem" and see for yourself. But you are probably too tied up in searching for some imagined injury to pull you out of the hole you are in. Tough luck.

This is the site google had first.

http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/ad-hominem.html

1,231 posted on 02/14/2006 11:49:29 PM PST by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: Dimensio
True, he's insisting idiotically that "species" means something other than what it really means...

That is deceptive enough to be another lie.

1,232 posted on 02/14/2006 11:50:25 PM PST by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: Dimensio

And maybe he's just smarter than you in knowing what nonsense to avoid in argumentation. Misunderestimated..


1,233 posted on 02/14/2006 11:50:57 PM PST by Havoc (Evolutionists and Democrats: "We aren't getting our message out" (coincidence?))
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To: Petronski
"Did not" implies they do not exist.

You are out of your mind. If I did not find the matching sock to a sock, it does not imply that it does not exist. It only implies that I did not find it.

1,234 posted on 02/14/2006 11:51:28 PM PST by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: nopardons
Your description as your perceptions,

are wrong.

Period.
1,235 posted on 02/14/2006 11:51:29 PM PST by RunningWolf (Vet US Army Air Cav 1975)
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To: AndrewC

Blame Google, but YOU posted it, Google didn't.

There are non-offensive examples, but you posted that one. I do not believe you found that one offensive.


1,236 posted on 02/14/2006 11:51:41 PM PST by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: shuckmaster

What is Dover?

And please again all youse Evos out there, I'm not "lying". But bless you anyway.


1,237 posted on 02/14/2006 11:57:14 PM PST by Californiajones ("The apprehension of beauty is the cure for apathy" - Thomas Aquinas)
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To: RunningWolf
That "are" should be IS and no, I am correct.

PERIOD !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

1,238 posted on 02/14/2006 11:58:17 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Ichneumon
There are plenty of Christians who have no problem with this alleged "clash" between science and their religion. There's nothing "inherent" in modern biology which fuels such a clash. It's the touchy, defensive beliefs of a *fraction* of all religious people who get their shorts in a knot over scientists daring to (*gasp*) make their findings public and (*horrors*!) teaching science in school.

Tell me, if you will, if it's a fraction of all religious people, why is it that the numbers aren't different. I mean, CBS's numbers show only 27% believe in Evolution plus God, while 55% believe in God alone. I mean, if you're going to state that, I'd have to say the burden is on you to show it is so because the numbers say you're mistating the facts.

As for whether there is a problem between religion and evolution. Between Christianity and Evolution there is most certainly a problem. And it's no small problem, which is why the numbers look as they do. People who believe a mix fall into a couple of categories not the least of which is that they don't know why they believe what they believe. Some just don't know their scriptures and some don't know fully what evolution says in light of that. And that is where guys like Kent Hovind and Ken Ham make great strides and why evolutionists have nothing but disdain for both.. likening them to the taliban and such.. *snort*.

1,239 posted on 02/14/2006 11:58:35 PM PST by Havoc (Evolutionists and Democrats: "We aren't getting our message out" (coincidence?))
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To: Ichneumon

Whew.

Well, uh, Lord bless you, too.


1,240 posted on 02/14/2006 11:59:02 PM PST by Californiajones ("The apprehension of beauty is the cure for apathy" - Thomas Aquinas)
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