Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2026 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $16,419
20%  
Woo hoo!! And now only $591 to reach 21%!! Thank you all for your continued support!! God bless.

Keyword: evolution

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Hyped fossil 'link' just a big boner (another disappointing missing link)

    10/23/2009 10:55:52 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 33 replies · 1,048+ views
    New York Post ^ | 10/23/2009 | Malcolm Ritter
    Remember Ida, the fossil discovery announced last May with its own book and TV documentary? A publicity blitz called it "the link" that would reveal the earliest evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans. Experts protested that Ida wasn't even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction. In fact, Ida is as far removed from the monkey-ape-human ancestry as a primate could be, says an expert at Stony Brook University on Long Island. Professor Erik Seiffert and his colleagues compared 360 specific anatomical features of 117 living and extinct primate species to draw up a family...
  • The problem with naturalism, the problem with empiricism

    10/23/2009 8:51:50 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 108 replies · 1,238+ views
    Journal of Creation ^ | Lael Weinberger
    For all of history, the fundamental issue in the creation-evolution conflict has been philosophical presuppositions, not empirical evidence or ‘brute facts’. Creationists have been pointing this out for many years, with varying degrees of effectiveness. To their credit, the modern Intelligent Design movement has recognized this same point, and for almost twenty years now, has explicitly made philosophical argumentation central in the debate over Darwinism. Phillip Johnson played an important role in bringing the philosophy of naturalism out into the open and onto the dissecting table with his best-selling Darwin on Trial, the book usually credited with launching the modern...
  • The Scabbardfish sees blue (is evolution or design the best explanation for this unique adaptation?)

    10/23/2009 8:18:40 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 56 replies · 1,358+ views
    Science Literature ^ | October 23, 2009 | David Tyler, Ph.D.
    Shallow water light ranges from the ultraviolet to red (wavelengths 360 nm - 650 nm). Going deeper, the extremes disappear and the spectrum narrows to a blue (approx 480 nm). Of the fish species whose colour vision has been tested to date, all except one can see in the ultraviolet (UV). The exception is the scabbardfish, which is the subject of a new research paper. The authors find that the fish that are sensitive to UV have a pigment that absorbs UV light, but the scabbardfish lacks this pigment and has, instead, a pigment that is violet-sensitive. The scabbardfish (Lepidopus...
  • Ethiopia 27 million years ago had higher rainfall, warmer soil

    10/22/2009 3:06:22 PM PDT · by decimon · 27 replies · 845+ views
    Southern Methodist University ^ | October 22, 2009 | Unknown
    Thirty million years ago, before Ethiopia's mountainous highlands split and the Great Rift Valley formed, the tropical zone had warmer soil temperatures, higher rainfall and different atmospheric circulation patterns than it does today, according to new research of fossil soils found in the central African nation. Neil J. Tabor, associate professor of Earth Sciences at SMU and an expert in sedimentology and isotope geochemistry, calculated past climate using oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in minerals from fossil soils discovered in the highlands of northwest Ethiopia. The highlands represent the bulk of the mountains on the African continent. Tabor's research supplies a...
  • A Classic Polystrate Fossil (defies evo-assumption that the "present is key to the past")

    10/22/2009 7:38:11 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 120 replies · 2,502+ views
    ACTS&FACTS ^ | October 2009 | John D. Morris, Ph.D.
    Years ago, National Geographic published a remarkable photograph of a polystrate fossil, a fossilized tree that extended stratigraphically upward through several layers of rock in Tennessee. Its roots were in a coal seam, and the overlying deposits included bedded shale and thin carbon-rich layers. An advocate of any form of uniformitarianism would believe that it took many, many years to deposit this sequence of layers (much longer than it takes for a tree to grow and eventually die and decay), yet one vertical fossil extends through them all. This one fossilized tree offered a direct contradiction to the evolutionary mantra...
  • Was our oldest ancestor a proton-powered rock? (Temple of Darwin at it again...LOL!!!)

    10/22/2009 2:44:51 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 81 replies · 2,422+ views
    New Scientist ^ | October 19, 2009 | Nick Lane
    Was our oldest ancestor a proton-powered rock? --snip-- The picture painted by Russell and Martin is striking indeed. The last common ancestor of all life was not a free-living cell at all, but a porous rock riddled with bubbly iron-sulphur membranes that catalysed primordial biochemical reactions...
  • The Human Methylome: What Do These Patterns Mean? (high state of living cell's design "astonishing")

    10/22/2009 10:13:30 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 29 replies · 1,171+ views
    ICR News ^ | October 22, 2009 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    The Human Methylome: What Do These Patterns Mean? by Brian Thomas, M.S.* For decades, researchers have noticed that tiny chemicals called “methyl groups” piggyback on DNA molecules, and that they occur in certain patterns. Intrigued by the meaning and function of methylation patterns, especially as they relate to medicine, a five-year, $ 190-million-dollar research effort funded by the National Institutes of Health began in 2008. In one of its studies, researchers have stumbled upon a new intricacy of cell function.Joseph Ecker of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies led a collaboration to generate the world’s first complete map of human...
  • Spin from the BBC about Darwin (devoted to absolving Darwinism from revolutionary evolutionism)

    10/22/2009 8:31:09 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 448 replies · 6,937+ views
    CMI ^ | October 22, 2009 | Russell Grigg
    The British Broadcasting Corporation in England has deemed it necessary to try and absolve Darwinism from any responsibility for the Holocaust and the many other atrocities committed in the name of evolutionary progress ever since Darwin published his Origin of Species in 1859. To achieve this, BBC2 produced a TV “documentary” entitled Darwin’s Dangerous Idea,[1] written and presented by their journalist and political commentator Andrew Marr. This 3-part series...
  • 'Missing Link' Primate Fossil Debunked

    10/21/2009 9:36:09 PM PDT · by bogusname · 39 replies · 1,762+ views
    Discovery News ^ | Oct. 21, 2009 | Malcolm Ritter
    Remember Ida, the fossil discovery announced last May with its own book and TV documentary? A publicity blitz called it "the link" that would reveal the earliest evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans. Experts protested that Ida wasn't even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction...
  • New Hull Technology a Slick Design Copy

    10/21/2009 9:19:34 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 19 replies · 1,363+ views
    ICR News ^ | October 20, 2009 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    Many species of marine creatures are very well suited to their watery environment, with precisely arranged gas exchange organs, properly angled eyeball parts, and streamlined bodies with appropriate musculature for expert swimming. They also have a continuously sloughing slime layer that lubricates their underwater motion. Rahul Ganguli of Teledyne Scientific in California is experimenting with ways to provide a similar slime for ship hulls to glide through water more efficiently...
  • Beethoven: It All Began With a Thump (LOL!...a monkey thump, that is)

    10/21/2009 6:29:00 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 30 replies · 1,038+ views
    CEH ^ | October 17, 2009
    Oct 17, 2009 — Macaques (small monkeys) shake branches and sometimes thump on logs. Ode to Joy could not be far behind. Maybe concert music began as a threatening display or show of strength (think gorilla chest-beating). This is not a joke (at least, intentionally). Charles Q. Choi wrote for Live Science in all seriousness, “When monkeys drum...
  • DEMAND THE EVIDENCE CONFERENCE, October 23-24, 2009: Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, CA

    10/21/2009 1:09:52 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 55 replies · 1,430+ views
    "The evolutionary lie is so pointedly antithetical to Christian truth that it would seem unthinkable for evangelical Christians to compromise with evolutionary science in any degree. But during the past century and a half of evolutionary propaganda, evolutionists have had remarkable success in getting evangelicals to meet them halfway. Remarkably, many modern evangelicals…have already been convinced that the Genesis account of creation is not a true historical record. Thus they have not only capitulated to evolutionary doctrine at its starting point, but they have also embraced a view that undermines the authority of Scripture at its starting point.” —Dr. John...
  • The Courage to Question—-A Passion for Answers (how committed evo became a biblical creationist)

    10/21/2009 9:34:57 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 9 replies · 784+ views
    What started out as a simple challenge by a college friend, “Bet you can’t prove evolution,” turned into a 30-year journey for Dr. Carl Werner. Like most of the other biology and medical school students, Carl was educated in and committed to an evolutionary belief system. But when his friend challenged those beliefs, his quest for answers began...
  • New Pterosaur Fossil Forces Re-think of Standard Evolution

    10/21/2009 8:28:27 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 43 replies · 1,402+ views
    ICR News ^ | October 21, 2009 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    Charles Darwin admitted that the sudden appearance of fully formed creatures in fossil deposits was one of the biggest problems with his hypothesis that nature generated living creatures through natural selection. His vision of organisms gradually morphing from one kind to another over vast time spans predicted that most fossils should reflect that steady grading from one basic body plan to another. Some scientists believe they have found a creature that bridges one of the many gaps in the fossil record, although it requires a significant reworking of evolutionary theory. The crow-sized pterosaur fossil from China has been named Darwinopterus...
  • Molecular limits to natural variation (creationist: natural selection correct in principle, but...)

    10/20/2009 8:59:42 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 29 replies · 1,228+ views
    Journal of Creation ^ | Alex Williams
    Darwin’s theory that species originate via the natural selection of natural variation is correct in principle but wrong in numerous aspects of application. Speciation is not the result of an unlimited naturalistic process but of an intelligently designed system of built-in variation that is limited in scope to switching ON and OFF permutations and combinations of the built-in components. Kirschner and Gerhart’s facilitated variation theory provides enormous potential for rearrangement of the built-in regulatory components but it cannot switch ON components that do not exist. When applied to the grass family, facilitated variation theory can account for the diversification of...
  • Dragonfly design tips (bioengineers: flight mechanism "analogous to coaxial contra-rotating rotors")

    10/20/2009 9:02:01 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 71 replies · 2,122+ views
    CMI ^ | October 20, 2009 | David Catchpoole, Ph.D.
    Just how can the dragonfly perform its energetically-demanding aerial acrobatics—flying backwards or forwards, fast, slow or hovering—and remain airborne for such extended periods? The answer, in part, is that it...
  • Everything You Know About Natural Selection Is Wrong

    10/20/2009 8:22:18 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 64 replies · 1,877+ views
    CEH ^ | October 16, 2009
    Oct 16, 2009 — It’s called “a fresh theoretical framework” but it undermines the popular conception of natural selection.  It’s called a “dense and deep work on the foundations of evolutionary biology” but it criticizes as simplistic and false the ideas of Richard Dawkins, one of the most outspoken proponents of natural selection as “the greatest show on earth.”  It produces a new scheme for how natural selection works, but raises more questions than it answers.  What is it?  It’s a new book by Harvard philosopher Peter Godfrey-Smith, Darwinian Populations and Natural Selection (Oxford, 2009), reviewed mostly positively by Jay...
  • Science News or Tabloid Journalism?

    10/19/2009 8:43:31 PM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 15 replies · 1,093+ views
    CEH ^ | October 19, 2009
    Oct 19, 2009 — Science news outlets have put out some bizarre headlines recently.  Readers can judge whether they should be blessed with the label “science” or belong instead at supermarket checkouts. Women are evolving fatter:  New Scientist and PhysOrg said that natural selection is making women shorter, plumper and more fertile.  “The take-home message is that humans are currently evolving,” said Stephen Stearns of the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center in Durham, North Carolina.  “Natural selection is still operating.” Killer algae heading north:  Science Daily said that toxic algae was a key player in mass extinctions in the past, and...
  • Dinosaur Soft Tissue Issue Is Here to Stay

    10/19/2009 1:40:13 PM PDT · by lasereye · 56 replies · 2,010+ views
    Institute for Creation Research ^ | Sep 1, 2009 | Brian Thomas
    In recent decades, soft, squishy tissues have been discovered inside fossilized dinosaur bones. They seem so fresh that it appears as though the bodies were buried only a few thousand years ago. Since many think of a fossil as having had the original bone material replaced by minerals, the presence of actual bone--let alone pliable blood vessels, red blood cells, and proteins inside the bone--is quite extraordinary. These finds also present a dilemma. Given the fact that organic materials like blood vessels and blood cells rot, and the rates at which certain proteins decay, how could these soft tissues have...
  • Twiddling the knobs (evolution wrong: biological change more like turning knobs on complex machine)

    10/19/2009 9:39:38 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 36 replies · 1,612+ views
    Creation Magazine ^ | Don Batten, Ph.D.
    Complex machines often have lots of knobs provided for adjustment: think of a jumbo jet, a television set or a DVD player. With a radio set you can twiddle the knobs to tune a different station or increase the volume or adjust the tone. But you can twiddle the controls on your radio as much as you like, it won’t change into a TV set. The natural changes we see in living things are like twiddling the knobs on a complex machine: they can fine-tune the settings, but cannot create something completely new. For example, an enzyme in a bacterium...