Posted on 05/09/2002 3:18:41 PM PDT by laureldrive
UCI's Ayala wins National Medal of Science
Researcher famous for work in genetics, evolutionary biology.
By GARY ROBBINS
The Orange County Register
May 9, 02
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The National Medal of Science the most prestigious award given for lifetime achievement will be bestowed upon a University of California, Irvine, researcher who has done pioneering work in genetics and evolutionary biology, the White House announced today.
Francisco Ayala, 68, is one of 15 scientists and engineers who will receive the medal from President George W. Bush during a ceremony expected to be held in mid-June in Washington, D.C.
Ayala will receive the medal along with such eminent figures as Harold Varmus, the Nobel laureate who formerly headed the National Institutes of Health, and Charles Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, a leader in global warming research.
"Each one of these individuals has helped advance our country's place as a leader in discovery, creativity and technology," President Bush said in a statement. "Their contributions have touched all of our lives and will continue to do so."
Ayala is the second UCI professor to win the National Science Medal. The late Frederick Reines, the "father of neutrino physics", was honored in 1983. A medal also was given to Corona del Mar instrument inventor Arnold O. Beckman in 1989.
Ayala is a former Dominican priest who left the clergy to study evolution and genetics. He achieved fame partly because of his work on the "molecular clock," a field in which scientists can date when some species diverged from a common ancestor. The timing of the clock involves analysis of DNA.
The Spanish-born biologist also is well-known for determining that some organisms have more genetic variation than predicted by sophisticated mathematical models.
Ayala was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1980. A year later, he and famed Harvard scholar Stephen Jay Gould testified for the defense in McLean v. the Arkansas Board of Education, the so-called "balanced-treatment law." A federal judge ruled on behalf of the plaintiff, saying that it was unconstitutional for Arkansas to require teachers to devote equal class time to creationism and evolution.
He joined the UCI faculty in 1987, raising the university's profile in evolutionary science. Fellow biologist Walter Fitch says Ayala's presence was a main reason that he joined the faculty the following year.
More recently, Ayala helped recruit Douglas Wallace, a world-renowned geneticist from Emory University. Irvine recruited Wallace with a $3 million package in February.
Ask a biologist if he can explain the evolution of reciprocal altruism. Can't - it alone debunks the faith of scientists in their evolutionary god.
But they won't ever mention that.
This is the theoretical basis for the molecular clock and according to neo-darwinian theory, it shouldn't exist, as it trivializes the role of natural selection in evolution. What this suggests is that chance plays a greater role in evolution than does natural selection. And, as micro-evolution is essentially a process that only optimizes existing genes according to enviromental or selection pressure, it would follow that macro-evolution would require the production of new genes using random chance acting on randomized DNA.
Bloody hopeless...
I wonder if this will come up at the award ceremony at the White House?
Brian.
If death does no more than provide relief from hearing such superstitious poltroonery, then it is to be welcomed.
I know that you will be viewed as a simpleton for your answer, but it is interesting that your answer, written over 3,000 years ago, is relevant to today's questions. It seems like the other proposals provided so far on this thread don't have a definitive answer as to why the birth canal has continued to be small compared to the baby's head.
Coincidence is God acting anonymously :-)
BTW - The people who would demand earthly perfection before accepting a creation are missing the point that there is a higher goal. If the goal was only to have a physical creation, then of course it would now and always be perfect. If the goal, however, included allowing the creation to suffer, then it needn't be perfect.
The incomplete formation of a baby's skull is a partial solution to the problem - the fontanels allow the infant's skull to compress somewhat as it passes through the birth canal. Those of you who have witnessed a birth will probably have noticed that babies tend to come out pointy-headed in many cases. Another part is the hormone "relaxin", which softens and loosens the (anatomical parts alert - stop reading now) cervix and the vaginal canal, and makes it a bit more flexible and open, along with the pelvis.
Like I said, it's only a partial solution to the problem of squeezing a baby through the birth canal, though - as my wife readily assures me ;)
Because there's another head before the baby's that prefers the canal to be smaller ... ?
Brian.
Nuff said.
The sad thing is what they are doing to their children. The children's warped scientific knowledge will keep them from participating in science after their parents have taken the creation dogma to the grave.
"Children, two plus two is not four because it doesn't say so in the bible. Those mathematicians are wicked!"
Pathetic.
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