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Ancient LIVING shark born in 1500s is world's OLDEST vertebrate and could be 512 years old
Daily Star ^ | 12th December 2017 | Anthony Blair

Posted on 12/13/2017 10:56:09 AM PST by nickcarraway

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To: Fiji Hill

Wonder is sh, the shark, knew them well?


41 posted on 12/13/2017 6:14:24 PM PST by Sequoyah101 (It feels like we have exchanged our dreams for survival. We just have a few days that don't suck.)
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To: gaijin

He looks adorable, like you would want him for your friend. I doubt that you would, though.


42 posted on 12/13/2017 6:52:32 PM PST by Bellflower (Who dares believe Jesus?)
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To: stockpirate

“Animal’s can’t change their code by thinking..”

I did not say they “change their code” (DNA) but they very apparently can learn and can change their behavior. And what studies have shown is that under very long term changes in behavior what CAN change is, from what DNA there is in the nucleus, some genes will obtain more active expression while other genes will get triggered less. Same DNA.

Scientist have begun to learn that not all the DNA in every species (including humans) they see as “not active”, is or was or will be perpetually inactive. Conditions can and do cause the need for genes that are there to be expressed less, or more. We see this in humans in natal development where the mothers hormones, and their different levels her body happens to be expressing at the time, has some influence on gene expression (set to be active, or set dormant but present).

Changing behavior causes or retreats the levels of biological chemistry needed, including the substances that we call hormones (and others). Some have powerful effects on triggering or not triggering the DNA that is present. This happens in very simple terms with body chemistry all the time. Same DNA but over long stretches of time demonstrating variations in which genes that are present are working or dormant.

Our DNA has not changed, but while the social sexual aspects of sexual maturity (when people start reproducing) has been increasing in age, our physical sexual maturity (pubic hair, first menses, first ejaculation) has been declining in age. Same DNA, different behavior and in humans a strangely different physical time-clock moving in the opposite direction to our social time clock. And that is just in a short span of time.


43 posted on 12/14/2017 6:16:02 AM PST by Wuli
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To: nickcarraway

This shark was the oldest living animal and then the Danes killed it.


44 posted on 12/14/2017 6:35:45 AM PST by jpsb (Never believe anything in politics until it has been officially denied. Otto von Bismark)
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To: SunkenCiv

“It was this assertion which most angered the Church leaders of the time.”

When brain-dead leftards at Stanford issue a moronic pronouncement on, say, Obamacare, people here react with the appropriate level of scorn.

Why are their pronouncements on ecclesial matters regarded as credible?


45 posted on 12/14/2017 7:35:07 AM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: dsc
There's a lot of regurgitated apologia for what happened with Galileo, but the only thing that kept him from being tortured by the Inquistion was his age. Copernican heliocentrism was heretical, so he had to denounce it. He got off light, Bruno was burned at the stake in part for embracing heliocentrism.

46 posted on 12/14/2017 11:29:39 AM PST by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: SunkenCiv

I copied this to disk when it was new. I wanted to link to it, but searches of FR came up dry.

Debunking the Galileo Myth

Many people have uncritically accepted the idea that there is a longstanding war between science and religion.
We find this war advertised in many of the leading atheist tracts such as those by Richard Dawkins, Victor Stenger, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens. Every few months one of the leading newsweeklies does a story on this subject. Little do the peddlers of this paradigm realize that they are victims of nineteenth-century atheist propaganda.

About a hundred years ago, two anti-religious bigots named John William Draper and Andrew Dickson White wrote books promoting the idea of an irreconcilable conflict between science and God. The books were full of facts that have now been totally discredited by scholars. But the myths produced by Draper and Dickson continue to be recycled. They are believed by many who consider themselves educated, and they even find their way into the textbooks. In this article I expose several of these myths, focusing especially on the Galileo case, since Galileo is routinely portrayed as a victim of religious persecution and a martyr to the cause of science.

The Flat Earth Fallacy: According to the atheist narrative, the medieval Christians all believed that the earth was flat until the brilliant scientists showed up in the modern era to prove that it was round. In reality, educated people in the Middle Ages knew that the earth was round. In fact, the ancient Greeks in the fifth century B.C. knew the earth was a globe. They didn’t need modern science to point out the obvious. They could see that when a ship went over the horizon, the hull and the mast disappear at different times. Even more telling, during an eclipse they could see the earth’s shadow on the moon. Look fellas, it’s round!

Huxley’s Mythical Put-Down: We read in various books about the great debate between Darwin’s defender Thomas Henry Huxley and poor Bishop Wilberforce. As the story goes, Wilberforce inquired of Huxley whether he was descended from an ape on his father or mother’s side, and Huxley winningly responded that he would rather be descended from an ape than from an ignorant bishop who was misled about the findings of science. A dramatic denouement, to be sure, but the only problem is that it never happened. There is no record of it in the proceedings of the society that held the debate, and Darwin’s friend Joseph Hooker who informed him about the debate said that Huxley made no rejoinder to Wilberforce’s arguments.

Darwin Against the Christians: As myth would have it, when Darwin’s published his Origin of Species, the scientists lined up on one side and the Christians lined up on the other side. In reality, there were good scientific arguments made both in favor of Darwin and against him. The British naturalist Richard Owen, the Harvard zoologist Louis Agassiz, and the renowned physicist Lord Kelvin all had serious reservations about Darwin’s theory. Historian Gertrude Himmelfarb points out that while some Christians found evolution inconsistent with the Bible, many Christians rallied to Darwin’s side. Typical was the influential Catholic journal Dublin Review which extravagantly praised Darwin’s book while registering only minor objections.

The Experiment Galileo Didn’t Do: We read in textbooks about how Galileo went to the Tower of Pisa and dropped light and heavy bodies to the ground. He discovered that they hit the ground at the same time, thus refuting centuries of idle medieval theorizing. Actually Galileo didn’t do any such experiments; one of his students did. The student discovered what we all can discover by doing similar experiments ourselves: the heavy bodies hit the ground first! As historian of science Thomas Kuhn points out, it is only in the absence of air resistance that all bodies hit the ground at the same time.

Galileo Was the First to Prove Heliocentrism: Actually, Copernicus advanced the heliocentric theory that the sun, not the earth, is at the center, and that the earth goes around the sun. He did this more than half a century before Galileo. But Copernicus had no direct evidence, and he admitted that there were serious obstacles from experience that told against his theory. For instance, if the earth is moving rapidly, why don’t objects thrown up into the air land a considerable distance away from their starting point? Galileo defended heliocentrism, but one of his most prominent arguments was wrong. Galileo argued that the earth’s regular motion sloshes around the water in the oceans and explains the tides. In reality, tides have more to do with the moon’s gravitational force acting upon the earth.

________________________________________
In reality, the Church was the leading sponsor of the new science and Galileo himself was funded by the church. The leading astronomers of the time were Jesuit priests.
________________________________________
The Church Dogmatically Opposed the New Science: In reality, the Church was the leading sponsor of the new science and Galileo himself was funded by the church. The leading astronomers of the time were Jesuit priests. They were open to Galileo’s theory but told him the evidence for it was inconclusive. This was the view of the greatest astronomer of the age, Tyco Brahe. The Church’s view of heliocentrism was hardly a dogmatic one. When Cardinal Bellarmine met with Galileo he said, “While experience tells us plainly that the earth is standing still, if there were a real proof that the sun is in the center of the universe…and that the sun goes not go round the earth but the earth round the sun, then we should have to proceed with great circumspection in explaining passages of scripture which appear to teach the contrary, and rather admit that we did not understand them than declare an opinion to be false which is proved to be true. But this is not a thing to be done in haste, and as for myself, I shall not believe that there are such proofs until they are shown to me.” Galileo had no such proofs.

Galileo Was A Victim of Torture and Abuse: This is perhaps the most recurring motif, and yet it is entirely untrue. Galileo was treated by the church as a celebrity. When summoned by the Inquisition, he was housed in the grand Medici Villa in Rome. He attended receptions with the Pope and leading cardinals. Even after he was found guilty, he was first housed in a magnificent Episcopal palace and then placed under “house arrest” although he was permitted to visit his daughters in a nearby convent and to continue publishing scientific papers.

The Church Was Wrong To Convict Galileo of Heresy: But Galileo was neither charged nor convicted of heresy. He was charged with teaching heliocentrism in specific contravention of his own pledge not to do so. This is a charge on which Galileo was guilty. He had assured Cardinal Bellarmine that given the sensitivity of the issue, he would not publicly promote heliocentrism. Yet when a new pope was named, Galileo decided on his own to go back on his word. Asked about this in court, he said his Dialogue on the Two World Systems did not advocate heliocentrism. This is a flat-out untruth as anyone who reads Galileo’s book can plainly see. Even Galileo’s supporters, and there were many, found it difficult to defend him at this point.

What can we conclude from all this? Galileo was right about heliocentrism, but we know that only in retrospect because of evidence that emerged after Galileo’s death. The Church should not have tried him at all, although Galileo’s reckless conduct contributed to his fate. Even so, his fate was not so terrible. Historian Gary Ferngren concludes that “the traditional picture of Galileo as a martyr to intellectual freedom and as a victim of the church’s opposition to science has been demonstrated to be little more than a caricature.” Remember this the next time you hear some half-educated atheist rambling on about “the war between religion and science.”


47 posted on 12/14/2017 11:31:41 PM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: Wuli

“I did not say they “change their code” (DNA) but they very apparently can learn and can change their behavior. And what studies have shown is that under very long term changes in behavior what CAN change is, from what DNA there is in the nucleus, some genes will obtain more active “

NO THEY CAN’T


48 posted on 12/15/2017 4:59:49 AM PST by stockpirate (REPRESSION BREEDS VIOLENCE)
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To: stockpirate

Yes they can.


49 posted on 12/15/2017 6:05:42 AM PST by Wuli
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To: dsc

Thanks for a great post!

I’ll save it for future reference.


50 posted on 12/15/2017 7:46:31 AM PST by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective...)
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To: nickcarraway; newgeezer

Creation is amazing!


51 posted on 12/15/2017 7:50:14 AM PST by DungeonMaster (Goblins, Orcs and the Undead: Metaphors for the godless left.)
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To: BroJoeK

I wasn’t the first to post it here, but I didn’t find it when I searched.


52 posted on 12/15/2017 8:18:18 AM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: sageburn

I think food like that is the gastronomical equivalent of Jackson Pollock art. A few “classy” folks want to pull one over on society, so they convince people that something obviously offensive, worthless or stupid is “cool”, and you’re not with the hip crowd if you don’t try or appreciate it. Anyone that does so subsequently doesn’t want to look like a dumbass for falling for it, so they keep the ruse running and we end up with canned stuff that smells like dead bodies and people paying millions for splatter on a canvas that you’d time-out your 3 year old for doing on his bedroom walls...


53 posted on 03/10/2020 6:49:15 PM PDT by Axenolith (WWG1WGA!)
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To: nickcarraway
After 67 years as a UPI White House correspondent and then columnist, Helen Thomas at last wore out her welcome.

She raised it as a pup.

54 posted on 03/10/2020 7:02:36 PM PDT by BulletBobCo
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