Posted on 05/02/2003 10:26:29 AM PDT by Remedy
According to Illustra Media, the Public Broadcasting System uploaded the film Unlocking the Mystery of Life to its satellite this past Sunday. For the next three years, it will be available for member stations to download and broadcast. In addition, PBS is offering the film on their Shop PBS website under Science/Biology videos (page 4).
The film, released a little over a year ago, has been called a definitive presentation of the Intelligent Design movement. With interviews and evidences from eight PhD scientists, it presents strictly scientific (not religious) arguments that challenge Darwinian evolution, and show instead that intelligent design is a superior explanation for the complexity of life, particularly of DNA and molecular machines. The film has been well received not only across America but in Russia and other countries. Many public school teachers are using the material in science classrooms without fear of controversies over creationism or religion in the science classroom, because the material is scientific, not religious, in all its arguments and evidences, and presents reputable scientists who are well qualified in their fields: Dean Kenyon, Michael Behe, Jonathan Wells, Steven Meyer, William Dembski, Scott Minnich, Jed Macosko, and Paul Nelson, with a couple of brief appearances by Phillip E. Johnson, the "founder" of the Intelligent Design movement.
Check with your local PBS Station to find out when they plan to air it. If it is not on their schedule, call or write and encourage them to show the film. Why should television partly supported by public tax funds present only a one-sided view on this subject, so foundational to all people believe and think? We applaud PBS's move, but it is only partial penance for the Evolution series and decades of biased reporting on evolution.
This is a wonderful film, beautifully edited and shot on many locations, including the Galápagos Islands, and scored to original music by Mark Lewis. People are not only buying it for themselves, but buying extra copies to show to friends and co-workers. Unlocking the Mystery of Life available here on our Products page in VHS and DVD formats. The film is about an hour long and includes vivid computer graphics of DNA in action. The DVD version includes an extra half-hour of bonus features, including answers to 14 frequently-asked questions about intelligent design, answered by the scientists who appear in the film.
This is a must-see video. Get it, and get it around.
Intelligent Design Gets a Powerful New Media Boost
03/09/2002We highly recommend this film. Copies are just now becoming available for $20. Visit IllustraMedia.com and order it. View it, and pass it around. Share it with your teachers, your co-workers, your church. You will have no embarrassment showing this high-quality, beautiful, amazing film to anyone, even the most ardent evolutionist.
shawne: what evidence do you have to counter?
First of all, when you assert that "no changes are beneficial," you imply the existence of some mechanism to prevent some random change from being beneficial to the organism. Otherwise, why wouldn't a change be lucky once in a blue moon? Similarly, when you assert that "no random changes accumulate," you imply the existence of some mechanism that prevents same, since you have already admitted the occurrence of said random changes. If you can't come up with a plausible and defensible mechanism in each case, I'm not going to give you a free pass just because you'd like to slough the burden of proof on me. You remain tasked with identifying mechanisms and with providing evidence for their existence. Your request for a free pass is denied.
As it happens, however, there is a vast amount of evidence that microevolutionary changes accumulate to macro.
Tempo and Mode of Speciation (A slide show for newbies like yourself)There's plenty more, but try to actually follow the links and read on that for a bit.
29 Evidences for Macroevolution (Good but long overview)
Some links on "Where are the transitionals?"
Assuming, of course, that an ultimate being outside our universe actually created the universe. There is mud outside my window, but as far as I know it only required water and dirt. It may be man made mud or maybe it is just raining, but its existence alone is not proof one way or the other.
I would point out that, knowing so little about how our own universe actually works, we have no basis to assume that something is or isn't possible within our own universe (though this is the strongest claim we CAN make in a Bayesian sense). Or what laws do and don't apply both inside and out. Or whether it was intentionally created or a side-effect of some other activity by an ultimate being. Or whether a ultimate being exists just outside our universe; for all we know the closest thing to an ultimate being lives two universe abstractions up and isn't really even cognizant of our universe underneath the one He is aware of. Basically, all we have is a Star Trek episode with better writing.
You know, it just occurred to me that there's really no evidence of transitional positions for the continents - all we have is extrapolation from their current movements.Intelligent Drift. Very well done! Creationism is never having to connect the dots.
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I like it. I think I'll call my theory "Intelligent Drift", and demand equal time in earth science classrooms around the country.
Because the "inland seashells" are from *multiple different time periods* -- and the times even vary from place to place. If there were a global flood, there would be a large layer of seashells in all places, all in a single strata that measured to the same time period. Furthermore, even single locations will often have a layer of sea shells, with a layer of geologic formation on top of that which can only be formed under *dry* conditions, followed by another layer of sea shells. Kind of hard to explain *that* by invoking a one-time global flood.
To even suggest that their presence is evidence of continental drift is preposterous.
And yet, that's exactly what the enormous amounts of geological evidence indicates, to the exclusion of any "global flood" hypothesis. Deal with it.
Here's what North America, Africa, and Europe looked like 390 million years ago:
(Image courtesy of the excellent Paleomap Project website, which is a good starting point for education about how the Earth has changed over time, and how we know.)
The light blue areas are shallow seas, which as you'll notice cover most of what are today "inland" areas.
Even as recently as 80 million years ago there were extensive "inland seas":
How do we know this is what the Earth was like 390 (or 80) million years ago? From careful reconstruction from literally millions of pieces of data acquired from such independent sources as paleomagnetism, linear magnetic anomalies, paleobiogeography, paleoclimatology, geologic and tectonic history, and the nature of various geologic strata from location to location.
Reconstructions of the configuration of the Earth in the past are based on such research and measurements as:
Barron, E.J., Fawcett, P.J., Pollard, D., and Thompson, S., 1994. Model simulations of Cretaceous climates: the role of geography and carbon dioxide, in J.R.L. Allen, B.J. Hoskins, B.W. Sellwood, R.A. Spicer, and P.J. Valdes (eds), Palaeoclimates and their Modelling: with special reference to the Mesozoic era, Chapman & Hall, London, pp. 99-107.Excuse me if I tend to take their findings as carrying more weight than whatever you, or any other creationist, personally finds "preposterous", especially since you're clearly not familiar with even the most basic forms of the available evidence.Bertrande, G., and Scotese, C.R., 1993. Plate Tectonic Reconstructions of Southeast Asia (0-40 ma). PALEOMAP Project Progress Report 55, pp.
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Dalziel, I.W. D., 1991. Pacific margins of Laurentia and East Antarctica-Australia as a conjugate rift pair: Evidence and implications for an Eocambrian supercontinent, Geology, 19: 598-601.
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Kutzbach, J.E., and Ziegler, A.M., 1994. Simulation of Late Permian climate and biomes with an atmosphere-ocean model: comparisons and observations, in J.R.L. Allen, B.J. Hoskins, B.W. Sellwood, R.A. Spicer, and P.J. Valdes (eds), Palaeoclimates and their Modelling: with special reference to the Mesozoic era, Chapman & Hall, London, pp. 119-132.
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McKerrow, W.S, and Scotese, C.R., 1990. Palaeozoic Biogeography and Paleogeography, Geological Society of London, Memoir 12, 435 pp.
McKerrow, W.S., Scotese, C.R., and Brasier, M.F., 1992. Early Cambrian continental reconstructions, J. Geol. Soc., London, 149: 599-606.
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You can do that here, at the Vertebrate Transitionals FAQ.
Start with "Fishes to first amphibians." Then, if you're in a hurry, you bypass transitions among amphibians and skip ahead to transitions from amphibians to first reptiles. In the same mode, you skip transitions among reptiles, hopping to transition from reptiles to first mammals. Then you go to Condylarths (first hooved mammals), then elephants.
That's all it takes for an outline. If you want more info on any particular species, you slam it into Yahoo or Google.
Again, what is the evidence that anything else is happening?
We both approach the subject from our own world views. Some aspects of our existence are problematic for one world view but not another.
For example, the concept "before time" is used althoug meaningless to the secular materialist, but not to the creationist.
Another example would be the existence of matter, energy and information. Again not a problem to the creationist, but a migraine for the secular materialist.
The problems are due to world view assumptions. Creationists are allowed to "assume" a Creator (even though we have good evidence we will call it an assumption for now). Since we assume a Creator, that Creator is not limited nor can be logically limited by the materialist world view.
This is rather basic and should be relatively simple to comprehend; that the universe was created means de facto that the Creator not only exists outside the universe but before the universe. It also follows that the creation of the universe and its laws must necessarily be a subset of essential existence and its laws.
So the original question, "Who designed the Designer?" makes certain assumptions that are tied to the materialist world view, such as everything is subject to the laws of the universe. That's baggage from your world view, as I said and the question only seems to make sense so long as the invalid assumptions from the baggage are in place.
Also known as the "God of the gaps" philosophy, since it postulates that God may still be lurking somewhere in the areas where there are gaps in our knowledge about the universe.
That reasoning allows an equal probability that I am God, and that I just like to drop in to FR from time to time. However, I can neither confirm nor deny that such an assertion is true at this time.
The Impersonal gives rise to the personal? How do you explain that one?
None whatsoever--your grandfather was either ignorant, or intentionally setting up a strawman to get a desired reaction from you.
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