Posted on 10/06/2002 8:16:21 AM PDT by hispanarepublicana
Professor rigid on evolution </MCC HEAD>
By SEBASTIAN KITCHEN </MCC BYLINE1>
AVALANCHE-JOURNAL </MCC BYLINE2>
Criteria for letters of recommendation: http://www2.tltc.ttu.edu/dini/Personal/ letters.htm
Michael Dini's Web page:
http://www2.tltc.ttu. edu/dini/
On the Net
Micah Spradling was OK with learning about evolution in college, but his family drew the line when his belief in the theory became a prerequisite for continuing his education.
Tim Spradling said his son left Texas Tech this semester and enrolled in Lubbock Christian University after en countering the policy of one associate professor in biological sciences.
Professor Michael Dini's Web site states that a student must "truthfully and forthrightly" believe in human evolution to receive a letter of recommendation from him.
"How can someone who does not accept the most important theory in biology expect to properly practice in a field that is so heavily based on biology?" Dini's site reads.
Dini says on the site that it is easy to imagine how physicians who ignore or neglect the "evolutionary origin of humans can make bad clinical decisions."
He declined to speak with The Avalanche-Journal. His response to an e-mail from The A-J said: "This semester, I have 500 students to contend with, and my schedule in no way permits me to participate in such a debate."
A Tech spokeswoman said Chancellor David Smith and other Tech officials also did not want to comment on the story.
At least two Lubbock doctors and a medical ethicist said they have a problem with the criterion, and the ethicist said Dini "could be a real ingrate."
Tim Spradling, who owns The Brace Place, said his son wanted to follow in his footsteps and needed a letter from a biology professor to apply for a program at Southwestern University's medical school.
Spradling is not the only medical professional in Lub bock shocked by Dini's policy. Doctors Patrick Edwards and Gaylon Seay said they learned evolution in college but were never forced to believe it.
"I learned what they taught," Edwards said. "I had to. I wanted to make good grades, but it didn't change my basic beliefs."
Seay said his primary problem is Dini "trying to force someone to pledge allegiance to his way of thinking."
Seay, a Tech graduate who has practiced medicine since 1977, said a large amount of literature exists against the theory.
"He is asking people to compromise their religious be liefs," Seay said. "It is a shame for a professor to use that as a criteria."
Dini's site also states: "So much physical evidence supports" evolution that it can be referred to as fact even if all the details are not known.
"One can deny this evidence only at the risk of calling into question one's understanding of science and of the method of science," Dini states on the Web site.
Edwards said Dini admits in the statement that the details are not all known.
Dini is in a position of authority and "can injure someone's career," and the criteria is the "most prejudice thing I have ever read," Seay said.
"It is appalling," he said.
Both doctors said their beliefs in creationism have never negatively affected their practices, and Seay said he is a more compassionate doctor because of his beliefs.
"I do not believe evolution has anything to do with the ability to make clinical decisions pro or con," Seay said.
Academic freedom should be extended to students, Edwards said.
"A student may learn about a subject, but that does not mean that everything must be accepted as fact, just because the professor or an incomplete body of evidence says so," Edwards said.
"Skepticism is also a very basic part of scientific study," he said.
The letter of recommendation should not be contingent on Dini's beliefs, Edwards said.
"That would be like Texas Tech telling him he had to be a Christian to teach biology," Edwards said.
Harold Vanderpool, professor in history and philosophy of medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, said he has a problem with Dini's policy.
"I think this professor could be a real ingrate," Vanderpool said. "I have a problem with a colleague who has enjoyed all the academic freedoms we have, which are extensive, and yet denies that to our students."
Vanderpool, who has served on, advised or chaired committees for the National Institute of Health, the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services, said the situation would be like a government professor requiring a student to be "sufficiently patriotic" to receive a letter.
"It seems to me that this professor is walking a pretty thin line between the protection of his right to do what he wants to do, his own academic freedom, and a level of discrimination toward a student," he said.
"It is reaching into an area of discrimination. That could be a legal problem. If not, it is a moral problem," Vanderpool said.
Instead of a recommendation resting on character and academic performance, "you've got this ideological litmus test you are using," he said. "To me, that is problematic, if not outright wrong."
William F. May, a medical ethicist who was appointed to President Bush's Council on Bioethics, said he cannot remember establishing a criterion on the question of belief with a student on exams or with letters of recommendation.
"I taught at five institutions and have always felt you should grade papers and offer judgments on the quality of arguments rather than a position on which they arrived."
Professors "enjoy the protection of academic freedom" and Dini "seems to be profoundly ungrateful" for the freedom, Vanderpool said.
He said a teacher cannot be forced to write a letter of recommendation for a student, which he believes is good because the letters are personal and have "to do with the professor's assessment of students' work habits, character, grades, persistence and so on."
A policy such as Dini's needs to be in the written materials and should be stated in front of the class so the student is not surprised by the policy and can drop the class, Vanderpool said.
Dini's site states that an individual who denies the evidence commits malpractice in the method of science because "good scientists would never throw out data that do not conform to their expectations or beliefs."
People throw out information be cause "it seems to contradict his/her cherished beliefs," Dini's site reads. A physician who ignores data cannot remain a physician for long, it states.
Dini's site lists him as an exceptional faculty member at Texas Tech in 1995 and says he was named "Teacher of the Year" in 1998-99 by the Honors College at Texas Tech.
Edwards said he does not see any evidence on Dini's vita that he attended medical school or treated patients.
"Dr. Dini is a nonmedical person trying to impose his ideas on medicine," Edwards said. "There is little in common between teaching biology classes and treating sick people. ... How dare someone who has never treated a sick person purport to impose his feelings about evolution on someone who aspires to treat such people?"
On his Web site, Dini questions how someone who does not believe in the theory of evolution can ask to be recommended into a scientific profession by a professional scientist.
May, who taught at multiple prestigious universities, including Yale, during his 50 years in academia, said he did not want to judge Dini and qualified his statements because he did not know all of the specifics.
He said the doctors may be viewing Dini's policy as a roadblock, but the professor may be warning them in advance of his policy so students are not dismayed later.
"I have never seen it done and am surprised to hear it, but he may find creationist aggressive in the class and does not want to have to cope with that," May said. "He is at least giving people the courtesy of warning them in advance."
The policy seems unusual, May said, but Dini should not be "gang-tackled and punished for his policy."
The criterion may have been viewed as a roadblock for Micah Spradling at Tech, but it opened a door for him at LCU.
Classes at LCU were full, Tim Spradling said, but school officials made room for his son after he showed them Dini's policy.
skitchen@lubbockonline.com 766-8753
Then there is this from your NCSE link.
Although Patterson considers the general theory of evolution ("evolution has occurred") to be a historical theory and hence "by some definitions" not a part of science because it deals with unrepeatable events, he acknowledges that it does have rules, does make general predictions, and is open to disproof. Furthermore, evolution has survived a series of severe tests unimaginable to Darwin - including its consistency with genetics, the universality of DNA, and "the evidence from DNA sequences of innumerable 'vestigial organs' at the molecular level" (p 117).
Patterson concludes, "[i]n terms of mechanism ... the neutral theory of molecular evolution is a scientific theory; it can be put into law-like form: changes in DNA that are less likely to be subject to natural selection occur more rapidly.[emphasis mine] This law is tested every time homologous DNA sequences are compared. ... But neutral theory assumes (or includes) [the] truth of the general theory - common ancestry or Darwin's 'descent with modification' - and 'misprints' shared between species, like the pseudogenes or reversed Alu sequences, are (to me) incontrovertible evidence of common descent" (p 119).
Certainly, Patterson's quoted words are not a hearty endorsement of Darwinian evolution, especially the italicized words. And common descent seems to be a feature of all theories of evolution(silly to have to mention that)
I find this statement quite interesting:
So, if I'm reading this right, there can be 64 (4x4x4) possible codons?
You got it!
Or to put it another way, people are frequently not-Muslim, not-Buddist etc. but rarely does it satisfy them to be not-Christian. Many actually become anti-Christ.
So in their own malignity they confirm the Word and our Christian faith. It is altogether an amazing thing to observe!
Don't overlook the obvious. No one is posting quotes from the Koran or the Teachings of Buddha here. If they did, I have no doubt that they would receive the same treatment and for the same reasons (hint: it's not "hate").
I am curious about your handle. The term balrog I recognize from the Lord of the Rings - but why the 666?
I understand that if you lived in a Muslim nation and attempted to direct criticism to their faith, you would not last very long.
Keep religion in places of worship. Is that so difficult?
If you have followed my posts on these threads, you would realize that I believe that no ideology should be taught K-12 in public schools. I extend that to include both multiple universes from multiple quantum fluctuations and punctuated equilibrium.
IMHO, much of the rancor between evolution and creation could be avoided by removing the randomness terminology from K-12 and replacing it with discussions of environmental niches and the ilk. That would leave all forms of ideology off the plate K-12, public funding.
Thanks for your letter of 5th March, and your kind words about the Museum and my book. I held off answering you for a couple of weeks, in case the artwork you mention in your letter should turn up, but it hasn't.I fully agree with your comments on the lack of direct illustration of evolutionary transitions in my book. If I knew of any, fossil or living, I would certainly have included them. You suggest that an artist should be asked to visualize such transformations, but where would he get the information from? I could not, honestly, provide it, and if I were to leave it to artistic licence, would that not mislead the reader?
I wrote the text of my book four years ago. If I were to write it now, I think the book would be rather different. Gradualism is a concept I believe in, not just because of Darwin's authority, but because my understanding of genetics seems to demand it. Yet Gould and the American Museum people are hard to contradict when they say that there are no transitional fossils. As a palaeontologist myself, I am much occupied with the philosophical problems of identifying ancestral forms in the fossil record. You say that I should at least "show a photo of the fossil from which each type organism was derived." I will lay it on the line - there is not one such fossil for which one could make a watertight argument. The reason is that statements about ancestry and descent are not applicable in the fossil record. Is Archaeopteryx the ancestor of all birds? Perhaps yes, perhaps not: there is no way of answering the question. It is easy enough to make up stories of how one form gave rise to another, and to find reasons why the stages should be favoured by natural selection. But such stories are not part of science, for there is no way of putting them to the test.
So, much as I should like to oblige you by jumping to the defence of gradualism, and fleshing out the transitions between the major types of animals and plants, I find myself a bit short of the intellectual justification necessary for the job.
Thanks again for writing.
Yours sincerely,
Colin Patterson
If Patterson didn't really mean what seems obvious do me, why would Philip Kitcher state the following in a television debate on March 3, 1984:
Dr. Patterson, when he wrote that letter in 1979, he wrote that letter in complete ignorance of the political situation in the USA. He thought that he was writing a letter to a fellow professional scientist.
Try to imagine that we're arguing geology here. I point out to you that there are things that a single flood, however massive, won't do and that the earth is chock-full of exactly such features. You do not directly address but go into a long song-and-dance, stopping only to joust at strawmen. Anyone reading the post to which your long screed purports to reply will see the evasions.
your "refutation" was true, then there would never be heavy sediments over light sediments. But there are. What part of reality do you not get here?
My point, not yours. One big flood won't put a heavy layer over a light one.
But there are layers there. What caused them, brain farts? Do you know of anything else that causes earth layering in nature besides, uh water deposits?
Yes. Do you? (Hint: look up "loess deposits.")
In the section containing the above quote, you spin out of control into furniture chewing. I'm not sure what you're trying to say, really, but it ain't pretty.
You also mixed rock types with sedimentary layers. Are you telling me that limestone and granite are sedimentary rocks?
Yes and no.
Why would dead animals have different rules than dead rocks? Just like in a stream bed you see sorting by mass/cross sectional area vs flow rate in floodwaters you see in fossils sorting by mass/cross sectional area vs flow rate. That is why you see debris sorted on the beach the same way.
The fossil record is not sorted by any size or mass rules. There are no rabbits in the Precambrian. There are no Dimetrodons in the Pleistocene. Most trilobites were the size of a modern pill bug. Why are all their fossils in sediments older than the dinosaurs?
Seriously, if what this statement said is true, there would be no such thing as lava formations of any sort than land or water. Did you catch the concept that lava happens before, during and after the flood? This again is an attempt to make the whole world fit in a single test tube. Very shortsighted.
You can't have it both ways. If most/all of the world's geologic column is supposed to be from the Great Flood, there shouldn't be dry-land volcanic sediments (not underwater-extruded pillow lava) here and there between "flood" layers. But in fact there are always active volcanoes somewhere or other in the world. We have a geologic column that reflects that. Pick a time from the present to the Archaean and you can find evidence of dry-land volcanism somewhere. What you can't find is evidence of one flood all over the world.
As for radiometric dating, it is based on the concept that decay rates are a constant barring of course external influences. I suspect that a world wide flood is a bit of an influence.
You have a scoop. Your Nobel in Physics awaits you. Current thinking is that nothing in any flood, no matter how big, has anything to do with radioactive decay rates.
Because delicate fossils exist a single event that happened at one time in history did not?
Delicate dry-land fossils, up and down the geologic column. At no time was the world all underwater. (OK, there may have been a period about 700 million years ago when quite a lot of it was under ice, but that's not a big part of the geologic column and it wouldn't have looked like a great flood.)
Next time you get road kill in front of your house, go drag it onto your lawn, put up safety barriers around it with big signs saying DO NOT DISTURB, FOSSILATION EXPERIMENT IN PROGRESS around it and report back to me when you get a dog fossil complete with hair in place. Of course you will have to keep flies and other dogs away. But then, if they are smart enough to design the next generation of dogs that fly, surely they can read your signs...
See, you're ignoring efforts I've made to educate you already. Had you paid more attention, you'd know to take that road-kill dog and throw it in a nice swamp or small lake. The bottom of same is probably full of anoxic water because of all the decaying plant matter. Fish won't go after the dog because they don't swim where the water has no oxygen. None of the usual animal scavenger culprits can live in that stuff. So the dog has a chance at least to get buried in silt before the swamp gets drained or the lake water layers "turn over" after the some cold night in the fall. (Drop off the dog in late spring for the maximum burial time.)
I got a suggestion, get a girl-friend and go to a movie. Watch a sunset, swim at the beach. Do something silly for once and enjoy life. You only got one, and playing with fossils all day make Jack a dull boy. La Chiem. (To LIFE!)
If we're exchanging suggestions, I'll say that you should stop kidding yourself and others that you're interested in science. Just relax and go to church. Don't torture yourself with the wicked ways of this world.
Frances Hitching was not an archaeologist or any other kind of scientist. Woodmorappe is a renowed quote-twister with several web pages dedicated to debunking him.
Read and weep for yourself. Creationist "quote science" is lying propaganda.
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