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Keyword: evolution

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  • Phillip Johnson's "Darwin on Trial" now a free ebook

    03/22/2011 5:38:52 AM PDT · by wendy1946 · 12 replies · 1+ views
    Phillip Johnson's major work seems to have been made available to the public as a free ebook in html format. My advice would be to save a copy in case anybody changes their mind... Johnson was a law professor at Cal Berkeley who got involved in the evolution debate and investigated the question of how close evolutionists could come to meeting the normal standards of evidence in an American courtroom. "Darwin on Trial" is his most major work.
  • Texas Bill Would Protect College Professors Who Question Evolution

    03/20/2011 5:26:33 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 20 replies
    Christian Post ^ | 03/19/2011 | Katherin T. Phan
    A new Texas bill would make it illegal for colleges to fire or refuse jobs to professors based on their research on intelligent design or other theories on the origin of life that question evolution. The measure from Republican state Rep. Bill Zedler would prohibit public institutions of higher education from discriminating against or penalizing faculty members or students, in regard to employment or academic support, based on their "conduct of research relating to the theory of intelligent design or other alternate theories of the origination and development of organisms." The bill, HB 2454, was received by the Higher Education...
  • The Unfit and Inferior

    03/20/2011 1:50:37 AM PDT · by Ethan Clive Osgoode · 12 replies
    Internet Archive ^ | 1932 | Leonard Darwin
    Exerpts from What is Eugenics, chapter 14, 1932 3rd ed.Leonard DarwinALL of us are being greatly damaged by the presence of the unfit and the inferior in the ranks of the nation. If those included in these classes have large families, this injury to our country will be slowly increased as the generations succeed each other. And in all probability, from this cause, racial deterioration is now actually taking place very slowly but very steadily. All this we have seen, and the question is, What can be done to safe-guard the nation against this treacherous disease? In the first place,...
  • Evolutionist Warns: Natural Selection Will Destroy Us

    03/08/2011 10:13:26 AM PST · by topcat54 · 22 replies · 1+ views
    American Vision ^ | March 8, 2011 | Gary DeMar
    Nobel Prize winning Biochemist Christian de Duve, a professor emeritus at New York City’s Rockefeller University and 1974 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, warns that “natural selection has resulted in traits such as group selfishness being coded in our genes. These were useful to our ancestors under the conditions in which they lived, but have become noxious to us today.” Rape and killing the weak were also useful, and with no God, perfectly “moral.” ... It’s humorous to watch atheists try to build a case for a moral universe without God. The latest popular attempt is...
  • Out of (southern) Africa: Modern man 'evolved from desert bushmen'

    03/08/2011 4:50:30 AM PST · by Pharmboy · 37 replies
    Daily Mail (UK) ^ | March 8, 2011 | DAVID DERBYSHIRE
    The first modern people evolved in southern Africa more than 60,000 years ago - and not in the east of the continent as most scientists believe, a study concludes. After analysing DNA samples from 27 populations in modern-day Africa, researchers say the most likely location for the 'cradle of humanity' is the Kalahari desert region of South Africa, Namibia and Botswana. The modern-day click-speaking bushman from the desert show the greatest genetic diversity of any Africans - suggesting that their home was the birthplace of the first true Homo sapiens. Originators: The home of the modern day click-speaking bushman in...
  • Skin color: Handy tool for teaching evolution

    02/28/2011 12:05:32 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 182 replies
    PhysOrg ^ | 02/28/2011
    Variations in skin color provide one of the best examples of evolution by natural selection acting on the human body and should be used to teach evolution in schools, according to a Penn State anthropologist. "There is an inherent level of interest in skin color and for teachers, that is a great bonus -- kids want to know," said Nina Jablonski, professor and head, Department of Anthropology, Penn State. "The mechanism of evolution can be completely understood from skin color." Scientists have understood for years that evolutionary selection of skin pigmentation was caused by the sun. As human ancestors gradually...
  • How evolutionary theory's other discoverer could heal the Darwin divide

    02/24/2011 9:00:59 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 15 replies
    Washington Post ^ | 02/24/2011 | David Klinghoffer
    The seemingly ineradicable opinion divide on evolution calls to mind Mark Twain's quip that everyone talks about the weather, mostly to complain, but nobody does anything about it. Pro-Darwinian educators were frustrated this week to find that most public high school biology instructors in their teaching do not wholeheartedly endorse evolution. The teachers reflect a stubborn division across American culture. For the past three decades, Americans have been locked into a basically unchanging split of views on the subject, with only about 16 percent believing in Darwin's theory of unguided evolution. Charles Darwin would have turned 200 in 2009. Will...
  • Plankton key to origin of Earth's first breathable atmosphere

    02/21/2011 12:44:34 PM PST · by decimon · 18 replies
    Ohio State University ^ | February 21, 2011 | Unknown
    COLUMBUS, Ohio – Researchers studying the origin of Earth's first breathable atmosphere have zeroed in on the major role played by some very unassuming creatures: plankton. In a paper to appear in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Ohio State University researcher Matthew Saltzman and his colleagues show how plankton provided a critical link between the atmosphere and chemical isotopes stored in rocks 500 million years ago. This work builds on the team's earlier discovery that upheavals in the earth's crust initiated a kind of reverse-greenhouse effect 500 million years ago that...
  • Subtle Shifts, Not Major Sweeps, Drove Human Evolution

    02/21/2011 2:29:58 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 6 replies
    Science News ^ | February 17, 2011 | U of Chicago Medical Center, via EurekAlert
    The most popular model used by geneticists for the last 35 years to detect the footprints of human evolution may overlook more common subtle changes, a new international study finds. Classic selective sweeps, when a beneficial genetic mutation quickly spreads through the human population, are thought to have been the primary driver of human evolution. But a new computational analysis, published in the February 18, 2011 issue of Science, reveals that such events may have been rare, with little influence on the history of our species. By examining the sequences of nearly 200 human genomes, research led by Ryan Hernandez,...
  • Stone Age Fertility Ritual Object Found [...may have been used to promote fertility]

    02/21/2011 9:52:20 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 39 replies
    Discovery News ^ | February 4, 2011 | Jennifer Viegas
    THE GIST A Paleolithic elk antler, carved with zigzag lines and a human figure, has been unearthed in Poland. Analysis of the figure indicates an image on it depicts a woman with spread legs. Carved zigzags on the object may symbolize water and life.
  • Experts set to study state of footprints at Laetoli riverbed

    02/21/2011 11:21:23 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 5 replies
    The Citizen (Tanzania) ^ | Tuesday, February 8, 2011 | Zephania Ubwani
    Scientific experts from across the world are converging at a remote site near the Ngorongoro crater to witness the event amid controversy on how the 3.6 million-year old footprints should be best preserved. Mr Donatus Kamamba, the director of Antiquities in the ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism told The Citizen on the phone yesterday that the exercise would last for seven days. He said archaeological experts from within and outside the country would oversee the digging of the ash bed with the footprints to get a clue of its state. "After that the experts may decide on the best...
  • Biological anthropologists question claims for human ancestry

    02/18/2011 12:46:53 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 37 replies
    PhysOrg ^ | 02/17/2011
    "Too simple" and "not so fast" suggest biological anthropologists from the George Washington University and New York University about the origins of human ancestry. In the upcoming issue of the journal Nature, the anthropologists question the claims that several prominent fossil discoveries made in the last decade are our human ancestors. Instead, the authors offer a more nuanced explanation of the fossils' place in the Tree of Life. They conclude that instead of being our ancestors the fossils more likely belong to extinct distant cousins. "Don't get me wrong, these are all important finds," said co-author Bernard Wood, University Professor...
  • When is it acceptable to discriminate against evolution sceptics?

    02/18/2011 8:40:28 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 30 replies
    The Guardian ^ | 02/16/2011 | James Hannam
    Dr Martin Gaskell is a respected expert on supermassive black holes and a long-serving research fellow at the University of Texas. In 2007, Dr Martin Gaskell applied for the position of director at the new MacAdam student observatory at the University of Kentucky. He stood "breathtakingly above the other applicants in background and experience" according to the chairman of the selection panel, but he did not get the job. Unsurprisingly, he sued. It is not controversial to state that English-born Gaskell is a devout Christian. He has also said that he is sceptical about certain aspects of evolutionary theory and...
  • Backwards America (We're so STOOPID, unlike Cody and Barry!)

    02/17/2011 1:12:35 AM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 12 replies
    The Cornell Daily Sun ^ | February 17, 2011 | Cody Gault
    America needs a Plan B, in case God flakes. President Barack Obama agrees, stressing science’s pivotal role in securing America’s future, and so do the courts, which consistently find the teaching of Creationism in public schools unconstitutional. But a recent poll found that only 28 percent of public school biology teachers present the theory of evolution as scientific fact — the rest endorse Genesis or teach it alongside other “theories that frankly don’t hold up,” as the President once put it. If Obama cannot prevent Evangelicals and abetting Republican leaders like Mike Huckabee and Sarah Palin from tunneling under the...
  • A Nationwide Day for Honoring Charles Darwin, but Handled With Caution

    02/16/2011 10:13:39 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 11 replies
    New York Times ^ | 02/16/2011 | Amy Harmon
    There was trepidation on both sides when a squadron of biologists set out to celebrate Darwin Day in rural America during the weekend. The National Evolutionary Synthesis Center in Durham, N.C., which instigated the road trip in the name of scientific outreach, first held a workshop where seven of its Ph.D.’s staged role-playing games and practiced debunking misconceptions about evolution without sounding confrontational. The group’s small-town hosts took their own precautions. A high school principal in Ringgold, Va., sent out permission slips so parents could opt out of sending their children to the event (two did). A museum vice president...
  • Earliest humans not so different from us, research suggests

    02/14/2011 2:33:19 PM PST · by decimon · 26 replies
    University of Chicago Press Journals ^ | February 14, 2011 | Unknown
    That human evolution follows a progressive trajectory is one of the most deeply-entrenched assumptions about our species. This assumption is often expressed in popular media by showing cavemen speaking in grunts and monosyllables (the GEICO Cavemen being a notable exception). But is this assumption correct? Were the earliest humans significantly different from us? In a paper published in the latest issue of Current Anthropology, archaeologist John Shea (Stony Brook University) shows they were not. The problem, Shea argues, is that archaeologists have been focusing on the wrong measurement of early human behavior. Archaeologists have been searching for evidence of "behavioral...
  • New African Wolf Discovered

    02/14/2011 7:25:16 AM PST · by Immerito · 19 replies
    ScienceDaily ^ | January 31, 2011 | Unknown
    ScienceDaily (Jan. 31, 2011) — Scientists studying genetic evidence have discovered a new species of wolf living in Africa. The researchers have proved that the mysterious animal, known as the 'Egyptian jackal' and often confused with the golden jackal, is not a sub-species of jackal but a grey wolf. The discovery, by a team from Oxford University's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), the University of Oslo, and Addis Ababa University, shows that grey wolves reached Africa around 3 million years ago before spreading throughout the northern hemisphere. The new wolf is a relative of the Holarctic grey wolf, the Indian...
  • Reducing Crime To Genes

    02/13/2011 2:03:08 PM PST · by SeanG200 · 4 replies
    Religio-Political Talk (RPT) ^ | 2-13-2011 | Papa Giorgio
    There are multiple links in my one post, so if you wish to go directly to them here they are: ----http://www.bioedge.org/index.php/bioethics/bioethics_article/9384/ ----http://www.scribd.com/doc/39228567/Determinism-and-Morals ----http://www.philosophy.ucsb.edu/faculty/anderson/lewisanti.html ----http://www.scribd.com/doc/48738624/Reduction-ism ----http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6fdZqzD2Qk ----http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXaQsybMIQQ ----http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaqmGGOZbeY I piece together these recent and past videos and stories (one is an article from National Review from 2008 scanned in -- not in the links above) that deal with evolutionary psychology and genes being the source of (fallaciously of course) all human behavior. In other words, no choice of free will. I will add an excerpt below. Enjoy the massive amounts of info!!
  • Third of Russians think sun spins round Earth?

    02/11/2011 8:43:16 PM PST · by george76 · 80 replies · 1+ views
    Reuters ^ | Feb 11, 2011 | Alissa de Carbonnel
    Does the sun revolve around the Earth? One in every three Russians thinks so, a spokeswoman for state pollster VsTIOM said on Friday. In a survey released this week, 32 percent of Russians believed the Earth was the center of the Solar system; 55 percent that all radioactivity is man-made; and 29 percent that the first humans lived when dinosaurs still roamed the Earth.
  • Fossil find puts 'Lucy' story on firm footing

    02/11/2011 1:44:54 AM PST · by Natufian · 45 replies
    BBC ^ | 10 February 2011 | Jonathan Amos
    New fossil evidence seems to confirm that a key ancestor of ours could walk upright consistently - one of the major advances in human evolution. The evidence comes in the form of a 3.2 million-year-old bone that was found at Hadar, Ethiopia. Its shape indicates the diminutive, human-like species Australopithecus afarensis had arches in its feet. Arched feet, the discovery team tells the journal Science, are critical for walking the way modern humans do.