Posted on 08/11/2003 8:57:56 AM PDT by fishtank
PDF file.
Kid born with anencephaly (no cerebrum or cerebellum) - human or non-human?
Adult with brain death - human or non human?
So far NO ONE has answered either question (other than me and that other guy), merely wanted to ask their OWN questions......
The NCSE Review of Wells on Haeckel's Embryos.
For any textbook to show Haeckel's drawings themselves as unqualified statements of developmental anatomy or to advocate "recapitulation" in a Haeckelian sense would be inexcusable, but none of the textbooks reviewed by Wells appear to do so. Wells gleefully excoriates Futuyma for using Haeckel's drawings, but apparently in his fit of righteous indignation, he forgot to read the text, in which the drawings are discussed in a historical context -- stating why Haeckel is wrong -- and Futuyma has an entire chapter devoted to development and evolution.I suggest clicking the link on "Figure 10" at the above source. It shows that Wells has gone into a tizzy at any comparative depiction of embryos at all, including photographs, not just redrawings from Haeckel. It's as if he really wishes to suppress the truth about embryos under the guise of eliminating Haeckel's misdrawings.
I believe we've been over this before, but here you are back with the same old crap.
This is easy, but first a clarification. Chimps share 98% of their genome with humans. The actual number of genes are still estimates.
Chimps are very human-like, but they won't vote. However, chimps are not liberals. They don't talk about their feelings. They're very concerned about their freedoms and don't like big government. They're too smart to be liberals.
A problem with this line of (ad homnium) argument is that the peer-review system is a closed system. The only way to become a "peer" is to swear to a particular intellectual orthodoxy and become an advocate for a special set of dogma. If you refuse, you won't be peer-reviewed, and you won't be published, either.
Other than that, your reasoning is stellar.
A problem with this line of (ad homnium) argument is that the peer-review system is a closed system. The only way to become a "peer" is to swear to a particular intellectual orthodoxy and become an advocate for a special set of dogma. If you refuse, you won't be peer-reviewed, and you won't be published, either.
First of all, it appears you do not know what an ad hominem (sp!) argument is.
Second of all, I publish routinely in peer reviewed journals. I've posted some fairly controversial stuff. Nowhere was I asked to swear to any orthodoxy, nor advocate any dogma. I have been asked to provide documentation for my observations, and to consider other alternatives when discussing my data. The authors under discussion did not do the latter.
"Yeah, we're smart....
We got opposible thumbs on our FEET, too!
I guess we've further along the 'toolusing' line than you mere humans."
But they whine like liberals, and since they have neither permanent addresses, nor American citizenship, nor driver's licences, they qualify to vote under Motor Voter.
The only thing it's safe to assume about that work is that somewhere in it are some sort of depictions of embryos. Beyond examining the primary source, there is no telling whether said depictions are Haeckel drawings, later and hopefully more accurate drawings, or even photographs. The history to date clearly says that creationists pay no attention to such details in their haste to tar as many as possible with the "fraud" label.
Think about how baby frogs look like fish, baby insects look like soft-bodied worms, baby horseshoe crabs look like trilobites, baby lampreys look like amphioxus/brachiostoma (primitive cephalochorates), etc. Try a Yahoo on "evolutionary developmental biology."
The controversy is that there's still a lot of evidence for phylogeny in embryology, but there's the club of Haeckel's historical fraud to make it all go away when arguing before the unprepared jurors of society at large and maybe the school boards. Suppressing evidence is the true nature of ID.
Except that it all goes away--POOF!--because Haeckel faked his drawings.
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