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Review of Godless -- (Centers on Evolution)
Powells Review a Day ^ | August 10, 2006 | Jerry Coyne

Posted on 08/17/2006 11:04:51 AM PDT by publius1

Godless: The Church of Liberalism by Ann Coulter Coultergeist A Review by Jerry Coyne

H. L. Mencken once responded to a question asked by many of his readers: "If you find so much that is unworthy of reverence in the United States, then why do you live here?" His answer was, "Why do men go to zoos?" Sadly, Mencken is not here to ogle the newest creature in the American Zoo: the Bleached Flamingo, otherwise known as Ann Coulter. This beast draws crowds by its frequent, raucous calls, eerily resembling a human voice, and its unearthly appearance, scrawny and pallid. (Wikipedia notes that "a white or pale flamingo ... is usually unhealthy or suffering from a lack of food.") The etiolated Coulter issued a piercing squawk this spring with her now-notorious book, Godless: The Church of Liberalism. Its thesis, harebrained even by her standards, is that liberals are an atheistic lot who have devised a substitute religion, replete with the sacraments of abortion, feminism, coddling of criminals, and -- you guessed it -- bestiality. Liberals also have their god, who, like Coulter's, is bearded and imposing. He is none other than Charles Darwin. But the left-wing god is malevolent, for Coulter sees Darwin as the root cause of every ill afflicting our society, not to mention being responsible for the historical atrocities of Hitler and Stalin.

The furor caused by her vicious remarks about the 9/11 widows ("I've never seen people enjoying their husbands' deaths so much.") has distracted people from the main topic of her book: evolutionary biology, or rather the pathetic pseudoscientific arguments of its modern fundamentalist challenger, Intelligent Design (ID). This occupies four of Coulter's eleven chapters. Enamored of ID, and unable to fathom a scientific reason why biologists don't buy it, Coulter suggests that scientists are an evil sub-cabal of atheist liberals, a group so addicted to godlessness that they must hide at all costs the awful "truth" that evolution didn't happen. She accuses evolutionists of brainwashing children with phony fossils and made-up "evidence," turning the kids into "Darwiniacs" stripped of all moral (i.e., biblical) grounding and prone to become beasts and genocidal lunatics. To Coulter, biologists are folks who, when not playing with test tubes or warping children's minds, encourage people to have sex with dogs. (I am not making this up.)

Any sane person who starts reading Godless will soon ask, Does Coulter really believe this stuff? The answer is that it doesn't much matter. What's far more disturbing than Coulter herself (and she's plenty disturbing: On the cover photo she has the scariest eyes since Rasputin) is the fact that Americans are lapping up her latest prose like a pack of starved cats. The buyers cannot be political opponents who just want to enjoy her "humor"; like me, those people wouldn't enrich her by a dime. (I didn't pay for my copy.) Rather, a lot of folks apparently like her ravings -- suggesting that, on some level at least, they must agree with her. And this means that the hundreds of thousands of Americans who put Coulter at the top of the best-seller lists see evolution as a national menace.

Well, that's hardly news. We've known for years that nearly half of all Americans believe in the Genesis account of creation, and only about 10 percent want evolution taught in public schools without mentioning ID or other forms of creationism. But it's worth taking up the cudgels once again, if only to show that, contrary to Coulter's claim, accepting Darwinism is not tantamount to endorsing immorality and genocide.

First, one has to ask whether Coulter (who, by the way, attacks me in her book) really understands the Darwinism she rejects. The answer is a resounding No. According to the book's acknowledgments, Coulter was tutored in the "complex ideas" of evolution by David Berlinski, a science writer; Michael Behe, a third-rate biologist at Lehigh University (whose own department's website disowns his bizarre ideas); and William Dembski, a fairly bright theologian who went off the intellectual rails and now peddles creationism at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. These are the "giants" of the ID movement, which shows how retarded it really is. Learning biology from this lot is like learning elocution from George W. Bush.

As expected with such tutors, the Darwinism decried by Coulter is the usual distorted cardboard cut-out. All she does is parrot the ID line: There are no transitional fossils; natural selection can't create true novelty; some features of organisms could not have evolved and therefore must have been designed by an unspecified supernatural agent. And her "research" method consists of using quotes taken out of context, scouring biased secondary sources, and distorting what appears in the scientific literature. Judging by the shoddy documentation of the evolution section, I'm not convinced that the rest of the book isn't based on equally shoddy research. At any rate, I won't belabor the case that Coulter makes for ID, as I've already shown in TNR that her arguments are completely bogus.

What is especially striking is Coulter's failure to tell us what she really believes about how the earth's species got here. It's clear that she thinks God had a direct hand in it, but beyond that we remain unenlightened. IDers believe in limited amounts of evolution. Does Coulter think that mammals evolved from reptiles? If not, what are those curious mammal-like reptiles that appear exactly at the right time in the fossil record? Did humans evolve from ape-like primates, or did the Designer conjure us into existence all at once? How did all those annoying fossils get there, in remarkable evolutionary order?

And, when faced with the real evidence that shows how strongly evolution trumps ID, she clams up completely. What about the massive fossil evidence for human evolution -- what exactly were those creatures 2 million years ago that had human-like skeletons but ape-like brains? Did a race of Limbaughs walk the earth? And why did God -- sorry, the Intelligent Designer -- give whales a vestigial pelvis, and the flightless kiwi bird tiny, nonfunctional wings? Why do we carry around in our DNA useless genes that are functional in similar species? Did the Designer decide to make the world look as though life had evolved? What a joker! And the Designer doesn't seem all that intelligent, either. He must have been asleep at the wheel when he designed our appendix, back, and prostate gland.

There are none so blind as those who will not see, and Coulter knows that myopia about evolution is a lucrative game. After all, she is a millionaire, reveling in her status as a celebrity and stalked by ignorazzis. I have never seen anyone enjoy her own inanity so much.

But after ranting for nearly a hundred pages about evolution, Coulter finally gives away the game on page 277: "God exists whether or not archaeopteryx ever evolved into something better. If evolution is true, then God created evolution." Gee. Evolution might be true after all! But she's just spent a hundred pages telling us it isn't! What gives? As Tennessee Williams's Big Daddy said, there's a powerful and obnoxious odor of mendacity in this room.

What's annoying about Coulter (note: there's more than one thing!) is that she insistently demands evidence for evolution (none of which she'll ever accept), but requires not a shred of evidence for her "alternative hypothesis." She repeatedly assures us that God exists (not just any God -- the Christian God), that there is only one God (she's no Hindu, folks), that we are made in the image of said God, that the Christian Bible, like Antonin Scalia's Constitution, "is not a 'living' document" (that is, not susceptible to changing interpretation; so does she think that Genesis is literally true?), and that God just might have used evolution as part of His plan. What makes her so sure about all this? And how does she know that the Supreme Being, even if It exists, goes by the name of Yahweh, rather than Allah, Wotan, Zeus, or Mabel? If Coulter just knows these things by faith alone, she should say so, and then tell us why she's so sure that what Parsees or Zunis just know is wrong. I, for one, am not prepared to believe that Ann Coulter is made in God's image without seeing some proof.

Moreover, if evolution is wrong, why is it the central paradigm of biology? According to Coulter, it's all a big con game. In smoky back rooms at annual meetings, evolutionists plot ways to jam Darwin down America's throat, knowing that even though it is scientifically incorrect, Darwinism (Coulter says) "lets them off the hook morally. Do whatever you feel like doing -- screw your secretary, kill Grandma, abort your defective child -- Darwin says it will benefit humanity!"

Unfortunately for Coulter (but fortunately for humanity), science doesn't work this way. Scientists gain fame and high reputation not for propping up their personal prejudices, but for finding out facts about nature. And if evolution really were wrong, the renegade scientist who disproved it -- and showed that generations of his predecessors were misled -- would reach the top of the scientific ladder in one leap, gaining fame and riches. All it would take to trash Darwinism is a simple demonstration that humans and dinosaurs lived at the same time, or that our closest genetic relative is the rabbit. There is no cabal, no back-room conspiracy. Instead, the empirical evidence for evolution just keeps piling up, year after year.

As for biologists' supposed agenda of godlessness -- how ridiculous! Yes, a lot of scientists are atheists, but most have better things to do than deliberately destroy people's faith. This goes doubly for the many scientists -- roughly a third of them -- who are religious. After all, one of the most vocal (and effective) opponents of ID is Ken Miller of Brown University, a devout Catholic.

The real reason Coulter goes after evolution is not because it's wrong, but because she doesn't like it -- it doesn't accord with how she thinks the world should be. That's because she feels, along with many Americans, that "Darwin's theory overturned every aspect of Biblical morality." What's so sad -- not so much for Coulter as for Americans as a whole -- is that this idea is simply wrong. Darwinism, after all, is just a body of thought about the origin and change of biological diversity, not a handbook of ethics. (I just consulted my copy of The Origin of Species, and I swear that there's nothing in there about abortion or eugenics, much less about shtupping one's secretary.)

If Coulter were right, evolutionists would be the most beastly people on earth, not to be trusted in the vicinity of a goat. But I've been around biologists all of my adult life, and I can tell you that they're a lot more civil than, say, Coulter. It's a simple fact that you don't need the Bible -- or even religion -- to be moral. Buddhists, Hindus, and Jews, who don't follow the New Testament, usually behave responsibly despite this problem; and atheists and agnostics derive morality from non-biblical philosophy. In fact, one of the most ethical people I know is Coulter's version of the Antichrist: the atheistic biologist Richard Dawkins (more about that below). Dawkins would never say -- as Coulter does -- that Cindy Sheehan doesn't look good in shorts, that Al Franken resembles a monkey, or that 9/11 widows enjoyed the deaths of their husbands. Isn't there something in the Bible about doing unto others?

The mistake of equating Darwinism with a code of behavior leads Coulter into her most idiotic accusation: that the Holocaust and numberless murders of Stalin can be laid at Darwin's door. "From Marx to Hitler, the men responsible for the greatest mass murders of the twentieth century were avid Darwinists." Anyone who is religious should be very careful about saying something like this, because, throughout history, more killings have been done in the name of religion than of anything else. What's going on in the Middle East, and what happened in Serbia and Northern Ireland? What was the Inquisition about, and the Crusades, and the slaughter following the partition of India? Religion, of course -- or rather, religiously inspired killing. (Come to think of it, the reason Hitler singled out the Jews is that Christians regarded them for centuries as the killers of Christ. And I don't remember any mention of Darwinism in the Moscow Doctors' Trial.) If Darwin is guilty of genocide, then so are God, Jesus, Brahma, Martin Luther, and countless popes.

As Coulter well knows, the misuse of an idea for evil purposes does not mean that idea is wrong. In fact, she accuses liberals of making this very error: She attacks them for worrying that the message of racial inequality conveyed by the book The Bell Curve could promote genocide: "Only liberals could interpret a statement that people have varying IQs as a call to start killing people." Back at you, Ann: Only conservatives could interpret a statement that species evolved as a call to start killing people.

Coulter clearly knows better. I conclude that the trash-talking blonde bit is just a shtick (admittedly, a clever one) calculated to make her rich and famous. (Look at her website, where she whines regularly that she is not getting enough notice.) Her hyper-conservativism seems no more grounded than her faith. She has claimed that the Bible is her favorite book, she is rumored to go to church, and on the cover of Godless you see a cross dangling tantalizingly in her décolletage. But could anybody who absorbed the Sermon on the Mount write, as she does of Richard Dawkins, "I defy any of my coreligionists to tell me they do not laugh at the idea of Dawkins burning in hell"? Well, I wouldn't want Coulter to roast (there's not much meat there anyway), but I wish she'd shut up and learn something about evolution. Her case for ID involves the same stupid arguments that fundamentalists have made for a hundred years. They're about as convincing as the blonde hair that gets her so much attention. By their roots shall ye know them.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; anothercrevothread; bookreview; coulter; crevolist; enoughalready; genesis1; irreligiousleft; jerklist; pavlovian; thewordistruth
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To: js1138
But, of course, the parts of a flagellum are independently useful, and a path can be found in which all steps are useful.

Really? Since the entire flagella is composed of parts which are necessary to its function, how then is each part independently useful? What are they useful for?
461 posted on 08/22/2006 7:05:37 PM PDT by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: tortoise
But... my point is that there was only one path chosen. As such the evolution of each useable sub part (or function, if you will) is an order of magnitude greater than the one it is a part of, since it is necessary for both to exist in order for both to to work.

Now, I'm not much up on probability theory, but I believe that what I'm indicating is that for a given, known and provable path (of which we have many examples), the odds are overwhelmingly against random chance. One of the problems inherent in assuming (practically) infinite paths is that they are not testable. Also, from a practical aspect, each useable function has an extremely limited set of paths.

Part of the problem of assuming a huge amount of available paths for a given function is that the function has, arguably, only followed one of the paths. Therefore, assuming the possibility of multiple paths for a given function which has only one is a little strange.

When using theoretical probabilities, perhaps it would be better to assume theoretical functions. When talking of actual parts, the odds are anything but theoretical
462 posted on 08/22/2006 7:34:10 PM PDT by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: freedumb2003
There is no peer reviewed "attacks" on cook books, readers digest articles, b.c. comic strips, Star Trek novels or lots of other things. Peer reviewed science journals are reserved for science. Peer reviewed critiques are also reserved for science.

Nice try, but what do cook books, readers digest articles, b.c. comic strips, Star Trek novels have to do with the collection of, and analyis of, high retentions of nuclear-decay-generated helium in microscopic zircons (ZrSiO4 crystals)? Did you even read the research paper?

ICR is not a scientific organization. At best, it is a political organization.

It is genetic fallacy to reject the validity of scientific data based on the political or religious views of the source. If you can produce some contrary bore hole data, let's see it. Until then comparison of the research to a comic strip is empty bluster.

Cordially,

463 posted on 08/23/2006 7:56:22 AM PDT by Diamond
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To: Stultis
lead you to believe that the charge (which, btw, wasn't that the data was fabricated)...

Wasn't that the data was fabricated?

To: Diamond; freedumb2003
You're misrepresenting the talkorigins write-up. The data in this case were fabricated to match the prediction.

A better example would have been a cosmological one. The Bible documents a creation event that is now accepted in the "big bang" theory. The previous steady-state theory is now discredited and no longer studied.

313 posted on 08/18/2006 2:23:00 PM CDT by <1/1,000,000th%

Cordially,

464 posted on 08/23/2006 8:07:19 AM PDT by Diamond
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To: Diamond
Nice try, but what do cook books, readers digest articles, b.c. comic strips, Star Trek novels have to do with the collection of, and analyis of, high retentions of nuclear-decay-generated helium in microscopic zircons (ZrSiO4 crystals)? Did you even read the research paper?

Because if it is not published in a recognized scientific journal and peer-reviewed then it is just meaningless words -- like Asimov's famous "thiotimoline" article -- and is thus classified with the other works I listed.

It is genetic fallacy to reject the validity of scientific data based on the political or religious views of the source. If you can produce some contrary bore hole data, let's see it. Until then comparison of the research to a comic strip is empty bluster.

What in the heck is a "genetic fallacy?" Again, I don't need to provide an argument against something that doesn't exist in the science milleu.

465 posted on 08/23/2006 8:22:15 AM PDT by freedumb2003 (I LIKE you! When I am Ruler of Earth, yours will be a quick and painless death)
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch

http://www.talkdesign.org/faqs/flagellum.html


466 posted on 08/23/2006 10:21:38 AM PDT by js1138 (Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch
...but I believe that what I'm indicating is that for a given, known and provable path (of which we have many examples), the odds are overwhelmingly against random chance.

That is true of any path, before it happens. One cannot predict the weather, nor could anyone a century ago, have predicted the events leading up to your birth and upbringing.

It's rather foolish, however, to calculate the odds against a complex phenomenon after it has happened.

The basic error in using probability against evolution is assuming that certain things have to happen a certain way, or that complex structures are specified in advance.

If evolution calculated structures and traits in advance of need, species would never go extinct.

467 posted on 08/23/2006 10:28:48 AM PDT by js1138 (Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
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To: freedumb2003
Because if it is not published in a recognized scientific journal and peer-reviewed then it is just meaningless words --

Well I guess The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life is meaningless words, then. Better chalk up Heisenberg and his Uncertainty Principle and the Friedmann and his cosmological model as meaningless words, because neither paper was published in a peer reviewed journal either.

Cordially,

468 posted on 08/23/2006 11:27:32 AM PDT by Diamond
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To: js1138
Thanks for the article link. Just like to point out a few things:

Much of the author's posits are speculatory at best (and he is careful to note this). I note that he remarks that Ton B and Tol A share sequence similarities to Mot AB homologs. Therefore, he implies that the Mot AB homologs are just a mutant variation of Ton B and Tol A. While that could be, it is a bit speculative on his part to say this. However, he notes that the functions between these different proteins is similar, if not exactly the same.

As an aside I will admit, now that I've thought it over, that many parts have multiple functions (such as the human mouth used for both eating and talking). As an explanation, when I was talking of one part/one function, I was thinking in terms of parts which could not produce a function without each other (such as the heart and lungs - to use a crude example).

The author also talks of random mutations to achieve the flagellum without noting the enormous difficulties attached to this approach. His arguments could just as easily lead to the conclusion that the flagellum is grown on purpose by bacteria to escape population pressures. The assumption is also made that bacteria containing the new feature would retain it when it reproduces. If the flagellum is created by secretion (as emphasized by the author), the necessary changes to DNA to make the new structure heritable by succeeding generations would not necessarily be done.

But to get back to the original argument, the author provides a very nicely reasoned supposition that the motors in the flagellum already exist in another form in the bacteria. This may very well be true, but it still is supposition and needs to be confirmed. It doesn't explain at all how Tan A & Tan L become Mot A and Mot B. Also, the author's premise is that this is an evolutionary tactic. This could be so, but considering that the author implies that the proto flagellum could be created by a bacteria deliberately using secretions to do so, it highly likely that this is a random chance event.

I would have to say that a self-directed mutation (if mutation it is) may or may not be evolutionary in tone (it may just be a different breed of the same animal), but it is definately not Darwinistic is approach.
469 posted on 08/23/2006 11:52:18 AM PDT by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch

I see no evidence that evolution is ever deliberate. It may appear to be if you assume that things are what they are because of planning, but if evolution could plan, species would not go extinct.


470 posted on 08/23/2006 11:56:25 AM PDT by js1138 (Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
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To: js1138
It's foolish to base predictions on what is already known? Every climatologist that I know will run last year's known weather through their climate-predicting models.

It's called baselining.

Things may not have to happen in a certain way, but given that they did and that we know what the complex structures already are, we can baseline the results. The problem with not doing so, is that your data becomes devoid of the real world real quickly.

Assuming a large number of viable paths gives just as much weight to a theoretical path as it does to a known one. How do you know all paths are equal? The type of probability modelling you are talking of is at least as difficult to do as climate modelling - and just as accurate.
471 posted on 08/23/2006 12:01:26 PM PDT by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: js1138
Well now, that is interesting. Whenever I talk to a geneticist on this subject, I ask "is evolution random?" Invariably, and without hesitation, they give me a resounding "no." If evolution is following a set of orderly rules (as I've been told time and again), why and where did those rules come from? The logical implications alone are staggering.

This also goes against Darwinists who insist on random mutation, when there is no such animal.

Why mathematically, true randomness escapes us and if mathematicians cannot achieve randomness, then what hope have evolutionists of doing so? Although, to be fair, John Dean seems to be a fairly random number.
472 posted on 08/23/2006 12:13:15 PM PDT by Frumious Bandersnatch
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch
Well now, that is interesting. Whenever I talk to a geneticist on this subject, I ask "is evolution random?" Invariably, and without hesitation, they give me a resounding "no."

Variation does not anticipate need. In that sense it is random.

Selection is complex and uncomputable, but not random.

Together, evolution is deterministic but not predictable. Living things do not aspire to evolve features like flagella. They do not strive to evolve in a certain direction. Mutation and genetic variation is stochastic.

473 posted on 08/23/2006 12:50:45 PM PDT by js1138 (Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch
Well now, that is interesting. Whenever I talk to a geneticist on this subject, I ask "is evolution random?" Invariably, and without hesitation, they give me a resounding "no."

Randomness in evolution as creationists understand it, was invented by creationists. Biologists understand randomness in evolution to mean, randomness in the characteristics of a population.

At the genetic level, the usual rules of chemistry apply, even if they have to be determined by trial and error.

Just out of curiousity, where do you have access to all of the geneticists you ask this?

474 posted on 08/23/2006 1:04:31 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Diamond
Better chalk up Heisenberg and his Uncertainty Principle and the Friedmann and his cosmological model as meaningless words, because neither paper was published in a peer reviewed journal either.

Generally I would agree with you. Even though I think a good idea should be pursued in peer reviewed journals, even if it isn't accepted at first.

However, you are incorrect about Heisenberg. With his student and assistant, Hans Euler, he published his "Über den anschaulichen Inhalt der quantentheoretischen Kinematik und Mechanik", in the journal, ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PHYSIK 43: 172-198 in 1927.

475 posted on 08/23/2006 1:30:22 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Stultis

I didn't notice I was quoted in post 464.

I wonder if I can start writing creationist books for the big money now.


476 posted on 08/23/2006 1:48:25 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Diamond; freedumb2003
Because if it is not published in a recognized scientific journal and peer-reviewed then it is just meaningless words --

Well I guess The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life is meaningless words, then.

Your supposition that Darwin's theory wasn't published, prior to his book, in the journal or proceedings of a learned society is inaccurate.

Joint papers (from Darwin and evolution-via-natural-selection independent co-discoverer Alfred Russell Wallace) were read before The Linnean Society of London in 1858, and published in their proceedings (Vol 3 1858. pp 45-62.).

You can read these papers on at least two websites (the second belonging to the Linnean itself):

http://www.life.umd.edu/emeritus/Reveal/PBIO/darwin/darwindex.html

http://www.linnean.org/index.php?id=53

477 posted on 08/23/2006 1:55:54 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: <1/1,000,000th%; Diamond
I didn't notice I was quoted in post 464.

Diamond shoulda pung ya.

I stand corrected attributing "fabricated" to his reading of the Humphreys article. However Humphreys' attempt to respond to his critic, Henke, remains laughably inadequate, and laced with dishonesty. Of course this puts it fully on par for a creationist "contribution".

478 posted on 08/23/2006 2:09:58 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: Diamond
Well I guess The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (etc. etc. etc.)...

The review process wasn't then what it is today. What happend back then is irrelevant. Today science needs to be peer reviewed and published in scientific journals, not political blogs.

479 posted on 08/23/2006 2:22:44 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (I LIKE you! When I am Ruler of Earth, yours will be a quick and painless death)
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To: Diamond

Oh and I see your (now shown to be false) assertion about what wasn't peer reviewed (I never said I was a scientific historian) has been pretty well crushed.

You should have quit while you were ahead.

Hmmm, I guess I shouldn't say that since you have not been ahead in this discussion yet. I apologize.


480 posted on 08/23/2006 2:25:11 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (I LIKE you! When I am Ruler of Earth, yours will be a quick and painless death)
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