I would certainly amend my statement to "almost always for religious reasons", if anyone could come up with even one exception.
But I don't think that's going to happen.
religious reasons?
Discussion in 'Creation vs. Evolution' started by Helen, Jun 3, 2003.
Page 2 of 3
-
-
Helen, my name is matthew, new on the baptist board.
Question- May I ask where you are getting you Info on evolution?
Matthew -
HI Matthew and welcome to Baptist Board. I am 55 years old, and grew up learning evolution, believing it, and later teaching it. I still subscribe to Nature, National Geographic, New Scientist, Discovery, and Science News. So I get it from primary sources as well as popular media.
My husband is a physics research scientist who also started off believing evolution was true. For both of us, the evidence changed us apart from our faith (and we were not married at the time, nor did we know each other). The folks taunting on this thread know my story very well, and know that there are people who are anti-evolution apart from any religious reasons at all, and a number of practicing scientists, such as my husband, are in that category. But no matter what I say, they will continue taunting, so I figured this thread wasn't worth the time. -
Neal -
This thread commenced with Helen's demand for a REFERENCE supporting Galatian's contention that no scientist rejects evolution for other than religious reasons. It is an inappropriate request for a reference.
References are useful for documentation. Had Galatian said "Smith says that no scientist accepts young-earth creationism for other than religious reasons", then it would be appropriate to ask him for a reference indicating that Smith actually said that. That would be asking for a reference to data.
But what is actually being claimed here is not directly a piece of data, but the conclusion of an argument. I, at least, in my previous post to this thread, have summarized an argument suggesting (at least) that there can be few or no scientists rejecting evolution for scientific reasons. (I explicitly noted that the proposition I defended was weaker than that which Helen asked Galatian to defend.) In response one might take issue with any of my arguments, but it's silly to continue to insist on a reference. I've made my argument right here! The reference to my argument is a pointer to this forum! Had I said here that 3% of scientists were young-earth creationists and a third of those (1% of all scientists) reject evolution for non-religious reasons, then it would have been appropriate for Helen to have asked for a reference to the survey or study I relied upon for those results. Here, however, we do not rely upon survey or study to conclude that no scientist rejects evolution for non-religious (or, if one prefers, scientific) reasons. We argue that the contrary position is absurd. You might think we argue mistakenly and you might reply to our arguments; butit makes no sense to demand a reference where we've argued this somewhere else! -
Helen argues that both she and her husband are examples of people rejecting evolution for scientific reasons. Hers is an argument rebutting our claim that no scientist rejects evolution based upon scientific arguments. (I'm not going to stand o ceremony and dispute whether either of the Setterfields is really a scientist.) If what Helen claims is factually correct, then she has raised a forceful counter-argument.
There are two problems with Helen's claim. Firstly I think one should discount personal claims of motivation. It is obvious that when one goes through a "conversion experience", or a major "paradigm shift", if you prefer that term, that during the shift one's thinking is often confused and it is impossible to accurately recollect it later. Of course one can discount Steve Austin's claim that he became a YEC because of the scientific evidence when we learn that he had been earlier publishing creationist material under a pseudonym. I don't think that makes him a liar. It's just that he can't consistently reconstruct his mental processes of going forom evolution to creation. I wouldn't expect him to do much better recounting a conversion in the reverse direction. People have these conversions and supply the reasons later. That is not to say that the supplied reasons cannot be valid reasons, but only that they are not likely to have been the actual reasons.
The second problem with a conversion to young-earth creationism based upon scientific evidence is that there just isn't any such evidence. I don't mean that a person couldn't in good faith THINK that he or she believes in young-earth creationism because of some scientific reason. I have little doubt that such reasons are simply misunderstandings.
In the cases of the Setterfields this is well-illustrated. Helen claims evolution to be scientifically impossible based upon patently misunderstood themes from thermodynamicsx, information theory, genetics, and possibly other branches of science. While it may be true, for example, that Helen rejects evolution because she honestly thinks it is forbidden by some generalized entropy principle, the fact is that there is no such generalized entropy principle. I have no problem conceding that if there were such a genralized entropy principle forbidding evolution, then Helen would be rejecting evolution for scientific reason, and she would serve as counterexample to Galatian's and my claims. The trouble is that her factual claim is just wrong and she can find no argument to back it up, nor any reference save vague allusion from a popular book.
When we say that no one accepts creationism based upon scientific reason, perhaps we should have qualified this as "sound or plausible scientific reason" meaning some reason accepted or regarded plausible by a significant portion of the scientific community even if Helen were the first to connect that reason with the impossible of evolution.
There is such sound or plausible reason in Helen's writings here or on any other forum. -
I did not believe in evolution before I was a Christian because there was too much indication of "design" in the world around me.
Helen knows that I did believe in an old earth theory, but that was the ONLY part that changed based on Biblical reference.
I could see the design while watching my pet ducks fly across the yard, realizing that there was no possible way for a complex flying machine like a duck to develop by evolutionary techniques.
Of course, I am just a lowly design engineer and not a scientist with a PHD and my only graduate degree is in business not science, so I guess I don't count.
(I would say that I must have done a pretty good job on some of the black boxes in the Tomahawk and Air-Launched Cruise Missiles that were just recently used. Funny, they didn't come about by evolution either.) So, I do seem to have a knack at recognizing "design" when I see it and evolutionary scientists must be either blind in that particular area or maybe the Bible stands true when it says that the truth will be hidden from them. -
Phillip wrote:
Consider naturalistic processes and God's design in another context. I assume that you believe that God is your creator and has some special interest in you. (I would agree with you!) Yet the process of your fertilization using the particular sperm that provided half of your genetic material is the result of many chance events. Your parents had to have intercourse the night and possibly the time that they chose. Of all of the sperm ejaculated, the particular one that did, containing the half of your father's genetic material that makes up half of you had to be the one to fertilize the egg. That depended upon very complicated fluid flow. A single chance movement of one of your parents would have meant that that particular sperm wouldn't have been the lucky one!
Despite your fertilization being largely a product of chance you don't for a moment regard yourself as any less special. So even if evolution were a largely chance process (it is not) there is no reason why you should think God uninvolved in it. If God wants something done it'll get done!
You see design in nature? Fine. Perfectly compatible with evolution. -
And, unless he has been through a paradigm shift, he is simply not in a position to know what is going on mentally or what one remembers. My memory of that time and a lot of what was involved is quite clear -- often my kids have to remind me of things I or they did in earlier years, but no one has to remind me of what happened during the five years of reading which were required for me to finally admit to the truth of not only creation but a young creation. What Kluge is missing is that I fought that change right up until the end.
It is fine to discount me as a scientist. I have never claimed to be one, but only a teacher, although science has been a major focus of my interest for about 30 years now...but who's counting? However since it is the main line of work of Barry's, and since his research is original, and since he is privately funded in regards to this research (by a number of individuals, not a grant), I think I am safe in assuming that it is just a matter of him not fitting Kluge's definition of a scientist rather than Barry not being one in reality.
In addition, I presume you have forgotten that I deliberately separated this concept of the universal trend toward entropy from thermodynamics, where the law requires a closed system. General entropy does not have that requirement and, in fact, the input of energy in any form generally speeds up the slide towards disorganization -- again unless the energy is regulated and the receiver designed to receive it and actually do something with it. Think of a plant or a solar cell...
I also looked up an email I got last year and include the relevant part here:
> Included below are the names & credentials of legitimate
>scientists whose expertise is in physics, chemistry, or biology to whom
>I believe would concur that evolution & thermodynamics are
>incompatible:
>
>Aardsma, Gerald (Ph.D in Nuclear Physics from the University of Guelph)
>Akridge, Russel G. (Ph.D. in Physics from the Georgia Institute of
>Techonology)
>Andrei, Gabriela (M.S. in Physics)
>Andrews, Edgar H. (Ph.D. in Polymer Physics)
>Armstrong, Harold L. (Ph.D. in Physics) -deceased
>Barnes, Thomas G. (Ph.D. in Physics from Hardin-Simmons University)
>Bass, Robert W. (Ph.D. in Physics) Bates, Gary (B.S. in Physics from
>the University of California, Davis) Baumgardner, John R. (Ph.D. in
>Space Physics from the University of California, Los Angeles)
>Bielecki, Joseph W. (M.S. from Wayne State University)
>Brauer, Oscar L. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Braun, Wernher von (Ph.D. in Physics from the University of
>Berlin) -deceased
>Brown, Robert H. (Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Washington,
>Seattle)
>Bube, Richard H. (Ph.D. in Physics from Princeton University)
>Burkhalter, John Evans (Ph.D. in Atmospheric Physics from the University of
>Texas, Austin)
>Chaffin, Eugene F. (Ph.D. in Theoretical Nuclear Physics from Oklahoma
>State
>University)
>Compton, Arthur (Ph.D. in Physics from Princeton University) - deceased
>Conners, Samuel R. (Ph.D. in Physics from Massachusetts Institute of
>Technology)
>Daly, Reginald M. (M.S. in Physics)
>DeYoung, Donald (Ph.D. in Physics from Iowa State University)
>Dilling, Richard (M.S. in Physics from Purdue University)
>Dobberpuhl, Delmar (M.S. in Physics from the University of Missouri)
>Dolphin, Lambert T. (A.B. in Physics from San Diego State University)
>Dotsenko, Boris P. (Ph.D. in Physics from Moscow State University)
>Dusenbury, Bernard D., Jr. (B.S. in Physics from North Carolina State
>University)
>Eimers, Leroy (Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from Syracuse University)
>Fisk, Randall J. (Ph.D. in High Energy Physics from State Univ. of (SUNY)
>New York)
>Gentry, David W. (B.S. in Physics)
>Gentry, Robert V. (M.S. in Physics from the University of Florida)
>Giles, Frederick H. (Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Illinois)
>Godlove, Terry F. (Ph.D. in Physics from Yale University)
>Harris, David M. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Hartzler, H. Harold (Ph.D. in Physics from Rutgers University)
>Hawke, George S. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Hefferlin, Ray (Ph.D. in Physics from the California Institute of
>Technology)
>Hinderliter, Hilton F. (Ph.D. in Physics from Penn State)
>Hogan, Tom (M.S. in Physics)
>Holt, Roy D. (M.S. in Physics from the University of Missouri, Kansas City)
>Hubert, Jerzy Z. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Humphries, D. Russell (Ph.D. in Physics from Louisiana State University)
>Ivenov, Andrey A. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Jackson, Stephen (B.S. in Physics)
>Jubalar, Ramona (M.A. in Physics)
>Kaita, Robert (Ph.D. in Physics from Rutgers University)
>Karlow, Edwin A. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Kulakov, Yuri (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Lamb, David P. (B.S. in Physics)
>Lenner, Gerald E. (Ph.D. in Nuclear Physics)
>Lucas, Charles W. (Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics from the College of William
>& Mary)
>Mulfinger, George L. (M.S. in Physics from Syracuse University) - deceased
>McGinley, Fergus (B.S. in Physics)
>McMahon, Michael D. (B.S. in Physics)
>Nelles, Maurice (Ph.D. in Engineering Physics from Harvard)
>Newquist, David L. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Osborn, John C. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Pemper, Richard R. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Pollard, William G. (Ph.D. in Physics from the Rice Institute)
>Rankin, John (Ph.D. in Mathematical Physics from the University of
>Adelaide)
>Ramirez, Francisco (M.S. in Physics from the University of Texas, El Paso)
>Richards, Jon M. (M.S. in Health Physics)
>Rush, David E. (M.S. in Physics)
>Rybka, Theodore W. (Ph.D. in Solid-State Physics from the University of
>Oklahoma)
>Schaefer, Henry F., III (Ph.D. in Chemical Physics from Stanford)
>Schoepflin, Gary L. (M.S. in Physics)
>Schroeder, Gerald L. (Ph.D. in Physics from Massachusetts Institute of
>Technology)
>Seegert, Jay A. (B.S. in Physics)
>Shin, Dong-ha (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Smith, Ronald E. (B.S. in Physics from Grace College, Winoma Lake, Indiana)
>Smith, Stan G. (M..S. in Physics)
>Spencer, Wayne R. (M.S. in Physics from Whichita State University, Kansas)
>Spetner, Lee (Ph.D. in Physics from Massachusetts Insititute of Techonlogy)
>Stanulonis, Stanley F. (M.S. in Physics from the University of Texas, El
>Paso)
>Steiner, Duane A. (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Stoner, Don (B.S. in Physics)
>Stout, Tim (B.S. in Physics from U.C.L.A.)
>Van Till, Howard J. (Ph.D. in Physics from Michigan State University)
>Vardiman, Larry (Ph.D. in Physics from Colorado State University)
>Voss, Henry D. (Ph.D. in Space Physics from the University of Illinois)
>Wagner, Curt (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Wanser, Keith H. (Ph.D. in Physics from the University of California,
>Irvins)
>Watts, William D. (M.S. in Physics)
>Whitelaw, Robert L. (M.S. in Engineering Physics from the University of
>Toronto)
>Windale, Arthur (Ph.D. in Physics)
>Woetzel, David P. (B.S. in Physics)
>Yang, Seoung-Hoon (Ph.D. from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science &
>Technology)
>Anstine, Tim (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the University of Nevada)
>Arndt, Alexander (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Arndts, Russell T. (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Louisiana State University)
>Back, Edwin (B.S. in Chemistry from California Polytechnic University)
>Baurin, Thomas S. (B.A. in Chemistry from Lawrence College)
>Beckman, William A. (Ph.D. in Chemisty from Western Reserve University)
>Bloom, John A. (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Cornell University)
>Boudreaux, Edward A. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from Tulane University,
>New
>Orleans)
>Brauer, Oscar L. (Ph.D. in Chemstry)
>Buehler, John A. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the University of
>Indiana)
>Burkart, Leonard F. (Ph.D. in Wood Chemistry from the University of
>Minnesota)
>Chai, Myoung-Joon (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Seoul National University)
>Chittick, Donald E. (Ph.D. in Physical Chemstry from Oregon State
>University)
>Choi, Young-Sang (Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Miami)
>Clark, Robert E. D. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>Cook, Melvin Alonzo (Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Yale University)
>Dahmer, Lionel (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>Derosa, Thomas (M.Ed. in Chemistry)
>Eklund, Sven E. (B.S. in Analytical Chemistry)
>Entz, Wil H. (B.S. in Chemistry)
>Farmer, Kevin D. (M.S. in Chemistry)
>Flentge, Dennis (Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Texas A & M University)
>Goette, Robert L. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>Grebe, John J. (D.Sc. in Physical Chemistry from Case Institute of
>Technology)
>Grocott, Stephen (Ph.D. in Organometallic Chemistry from the University of
>Western Australia)
>Gustafson, Carl (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Hallonquist, Earl (Ph.D. in Industrial & Cellular Chemistry from McGill
>University)
>Helmick, Larry (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from Ohio University)
>Higley, L. Allen (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Holmes, Ivan G. (Ph.D. in Analytical & Nuclear Chemistry from Oregon State
>University)
>Kennard, Gregory J. (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Kent, Lee Gregory (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Kersey, W. H. (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Kim, Jung-Han (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the University of Houston)
>Kim, Kyoung-rae (Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from the University of
>Houston)
>Kinnaird, Mike (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>Kofahl, Robert E. (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Langer, Daniel A. (B.S. in Chemistry)
>Lumley, James A. (B.S. in Chemistry)
>Marcus, John P. (Ph.D. in Biological Chemistry from the University of
>Michigan, Ann Arbor)
>Matthews, Ralph (Ph.D. in Radiation Chemistry)
>Matzko, George T. (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>McCombs, Charles A. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry from the Univ. of
>California, Los Angeles)
>Patterson, Fred D. (M.S. in Chemistry)
>Patterson, Gary D. (Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Stanford University)
>Pendleton, John (B.S. in Chemistry)
>Phillips, Preson P., Jr. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>Reynolds, Dan (Ph.D. in Physical/Organic Chemistry from the University of
>Texas, Austin)
>Ritter, Mark (M.S. in Chemistry from Cal Poly Pomona)
>Robinett, L. David (M.S. in Organic Chemistry)
>Rosevear, David (Ph.D. in Organo-Metallic Chemistry from the University of
>Bristol)
>Sarfati, Jonathan D. (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Victoria University,
>Wellington, New Zealand)
>Shim, Young-Gi (Ph.D. in Chemistry)
>Shin, Hyun-Kil (Ph.D. in Food Chemistry)
>Shulgin, Mikhail (Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from the Moscow Institute of
>Steel & Alloys)
>Stine, Charles M. A. (Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from John Hopkins
>University) - deceased
>Stroud, William (M.S. in Physical Chemistry)
>Thaxton, Charles B. (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Iowa State University)
>Truman, Royal J. (Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry)
>White, A. J. "Monty" (Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Wales)
>Whitney, Dudley Joseph (B.S. in Agricultural Chemistry from the Univ. of
>California, Berkeley)
>Wilder-Smith, Arthur Ernest (Dr.esSc. in Chemistry from Reading Univ.,
>England) - deceased
>Wile, Jay L. (Ph.D. in Nuclear Chemistry from the University of Rochester,
>New York)
>Woodland, Dorothy (Ph.D. in Chemistry from Ohio State University)
>Young, Patrick H. (Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from Ohio University)
>Zimmerman, Paul A. (Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Illinois)
>Altland, William (M.S. in Biology)
>Carlos A. Alvarez (Ph.D. in Molecular Biology)
>Arment, Chad (B.S. in Biology from Wright State University)
>Armitage, Mark (M.S. in Biology from Azusa Pacific University)
>Artist, Russell C. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Minnesota)
>Barnhart, Walter R. (M.S. in Biology)
>Baumann, Donald (Ph.D. in Biology from Iowa State University)
>Bergman, Jerry (Ph.D. in Human & Molecular Biology)
>Bitter, Victor G. (M.S. in Biology)
>Blake, Donald F. (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Bleecker, Allan (Ph.D. in Aquatic Biology)
>Bohlin, Raymond G. (Ph.D. in Molecular & Cell Biology from the University
>of
>Texas)
>Booth, Ernest S. (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Bosanquet, Andrew (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Brand, Leonard R. (Ph.D. in Biology from Cornell University)
>Brazo, Mark W. (M.S. in Biology)
>Brown, Terry (B.A. in Biology from the University of California, San Diego)
>Buren, Suzanne (M.S. in Biology)
>Carlson, Johanna (M.S. in Biology)
>Carroll, Paige (M.S. in Biology)
>Chadwick, Arthur (Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from the University of Miami)
>Clemons, Michael K. (B.S. in Biology)
>Cruz, Georgina E. (B.S. in Biology)
>Cumming, Kenneth B. (Ph.D. in Biology from Harvard University)
>Cuozzo, John W. (M.S. in Oral Biology from Loyola University of Chicago)
>Curtis, Thomas C. (B.S. in Biology from the University of Queensland,
>Brisbane)
>Dean, Douglas H. (Ph.D. in Biology)
>De Wit, Jacobus Johannes Duyvene (Ph.D. in Biology) - deceased
>DeWitt, David A. (Ph.D. in Biology from Case Western Reserve University)
>Dunlap, Dwight P. (B.S. in Biology)
>Eaking, David A. (M.S. in Biology from the University of Louisville)
>Elmore, Austin D. (M.A.T. in Biology from Indiana University)
>Francis, Joseph (Ph.D. in Cell Biology from Wayne State University)
>Furman, Dana (M.S. in Biology)
>Haines, Timothy L. (A.A.S. in Biology)
>Henning, Willard L. (Ph.D. in Biology from Ohio State University)
>Howard, Warren R. (A.B. in Biology)
>Jerlstrom, Pierre G. (Ph.D. in Molecular Biology)
>Jones, Arthur J. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Birmingham,
>United
>Kingdom)
>Kenyon, Dean H. (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Kim, Kyoung-Tai (M.S. in Biology)
>Knaub, Clete W. (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation Research)
>Kolosov, Natasha (M.S. in Molecular Biology from Novosibirsk State
>University)
>Kouznetsov, Dmitri A. (D.Sc. in Biology from the USSR Academy of Medical
>Sciences Institute)
>Lawson, Lazella M. (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation
>Research)
>Lee, Eun-Ho (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Lee, Woong-sang (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Levake, Rod (M.S. in Biology)
>Lumsden, Richard D. (Ph.D. in Biology from Rice University) - deceased
>Manning, Art (M.S. in Biology)
>Mennega, Aaldert (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Menton, David N. (Ph.D. in Biology from Brown University, Providence, Rhode
>Island)
>Meyer, John R. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Iowa)
>More, Ewan Robert James (B.S. in Biology from Paisley University)
>McCall, Pamela (B.A. in Human Biology from Stanford University)
>McMurray, Nigel (B.S. in Biology)
>Nutting, Mary Jo (M.S. in Biology from the Institute of Creation Research)
>Orchard, Mary (B.S. in Biology)
>Osborne, Chris D. (Ph.D. in Biology from Loma Linda University, Loma Linda,
>California)
>Perry, Casey (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation Research)
>Porcella Russell (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Tennessee)
>Rajca, John (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation Research)
>Reid, Rod (M.S. in Biology)
>Rhome, Laura Michelle (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation
>Research)
>Richards, Roger A., Jr. (B.S. in Biology)
>Roth, Ariel A. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Michigan)
>Sanders, Matthew Henderson (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation
>Research)
>Scherer, Siegfried (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Konstanz)
>Schloss, Jeffrey P. (Ph.D. in Evolutionary Biology from the University of
>Washington)
>Schuler, Rachel (M.S. in Biology from the Insititute for Creation Research)
>Sermonti, Giuseppe (Ph.D. in Biology)
>Silvius, John (Ph.D. in Biology from West Virginia University)
>Smith, E. Norbert (Ph.D. in Biology from Texas Tech)
>Standish, Timothy G. (Ph.D. in Biology from George Mason University)
>Stuart, Mary Ann (B.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation Research)
>Sur, Byoung-Sun (M.S. in Biology)
>Swanson, Lindy (M.S. in Biology from the Institute for Creation Research)
>Telfair, Raymond C., II (M.A. in Biology from North Texas State University)
>Tinkle, William John (Ph.D. in Biology from Ohio State) - deceased
>Titrud, Jane M. (B.A. in Biology from the University of Minnesota)
>Tkrachuck, Richard D. (Ph.D. in Biology from UCLA)
>Verderame, John (B.S. in Biology)
>Wells, Jonathan (Ph.D. in Developmental Biology from the University of
>California, Berkeley)
>Wilder, William Douglas (B.S. in Biology)
>Wills, Irwin A. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Iowa)
>Winchester, Albert M. (Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Texas)
>Wright, Richard T. (Ph.D. in Biology from Harvard University)
>Zuill, Henry (Ph.D. in Biology from Loma Linda University)
>
>There are many other scientists in related fields such as Biochemistry,
>Biomechanics, Biophysics, Astrogeophysics, Astrophysics, Genetics,
>Geochemistry, Geophysics, Microbiology, Neuro-biology,
>Physico-chemistry, Medicine, Zoology which I didn't include. I am sure
>the above have many divergent views regarding this subject matter, but
>nevertheless believe that they would concur that evolution and
>thermodynamics are incompatible. If not, then I stand corrected.
As far as information theory goes, the evolutionist defense hinges entirely upon the rejection of the concept of meaningful information as being different from stochastic information. I have defended that before and refer to, among other references, Werner Gitt's excellent book concerning this: In the Beginning was Information.
As far as genetics goes, there is no known way for a cell to make a de novo protein. Period. And that is required for evolution from a unicellular organism to a mammal to take place. Even if making that protein were possible, which it gives no evidence of being, the cell wouldn't know what to do with it, but would dismantle it as anomalous and useless and use the amino acids in the construction of something -- a protein -- which it could use. This is simply the fact of the matter, not a matter of interpretation at all! Evolution requires not only the making of brand new kinds of proteins once, but over and over again in a variety of cells through time. It requires that the cells know what to do with these proteins as well, and that these proteins be able to integrate into a system in such a way that no other life-threatening disturbances are produced.
Kluge is welcome to add to the above the fact that natural selection as a driver of evolution is a farce. First, natural selection deletes by virtue of death, thus depriving any given population of some portion of its genetic variability potential. Second, it is impossible to select for more than (what appears to be) a maximum of three traits at a time without wiping out the population via natural selection. Evolutionists have to imagine their way around all of this -- despite the fact that 'all of this' is a matter of data and not imagination.
There are many more scientific evidences regarding the impossibility of evolution, but I just took Kluge's three that he mentioned as being connected with my thought processes (which he is taking at least seriously enough to mention) and adding one more.
Because the reasons are both logically sound and scientific. They don't even have to be 'plausible,' because they are data, and data just sits there, whether or not one considers it plausible.
(I am now laughing because I am quite sure someone is going to take a phrase in the above totally out of context and quote me as saying "they don't have to be plausible" without the rest of the sentence. Oh well....)
Now, to give what I promised to give at the end of this post. Last Wednesday night Barry and I, on a short personal vacation, were privileged to be able to meet with the Catherine who posts here, her husband, and Dean and Tricia Kenyon for a lovely dinner and evening's discussion.
After which I can state without qualification that Dr. Kenyon switched from evolution to creation on the basis of scientific evidence only. He did, after all, write a book promoting evolution. That book was then refuted by Dr. Wilder-Smith. Dr. Kenyon stated to us that he spent an entire summer seeking to undo Wilder-Smith's arguments and could not do it.
He changed points of view on the basis of scientific evidence and only scientific evidence.
However, if a person's own story from his or her own lips and mind is not reliable, then, of course, this can be discounted. I think it is fairly evident, however, that I disagree strongly with Kluge's estimation of what a man remembers about the significant moments in his life.
[ June 22, 2003, 12:10 PM: Message edited by: Helen ] -
Not long ago, the National Center for Science Education began Project Steve. The idea was to compare creationist lists of scientists who reject evolution, with those who accept it.
In order to qualify, you had to have a doctorate in science or a closely allied field (such as philosophy of science) and you had to have a name derived from "Stephen", such as Steve, Stephany, etc.
There are currently 379 Steves who have doctorates and accept evolution in the count.
In Helen's list, we see about 142 doctorates, and one Steve.
Which is about right; in the US, "Steve" related names are about 1% of the total population, and somewhat less in the rest of the world. There doesn't seem to be a bias toward science among Steves. This indicates that creationists among those with doctorates in science are somewhat less common than the 2% often suggested by creationists.
Of course, all creationists say that they were converted by the evidence. But those who didn't also convert to a YE religious doctrine at the same time are still not evident. -
Helen
Do you think Atkins, if asked, would also support your claim that "general entropy" does not allow for evolution? If yes, have you actually asked him and if so is there anything you can tell us? If not, do you think you could be using what he said in a matter not intended as Mark explained so well recently? -
Galatian, you have used your 'majority makes the truth' argument ad nauseum. That seems to be what you believe, so that's that.
I've never held that the majority determines the truth. I prefer strange things like data, God's Word, logic -- weird stuff like that.
UTEOTW, I have read the book. Short of typing out full chapters here to show you I am not taking things out of context, I don't know what I can do else. Atkins does in his book what Gee does in "In Search of Deep Time". Both men spend the first half of their respective books being exceptionally honest about the data itself and the second half trying to get around it so that evolution will still work, at least philosophically. Yes, I quoted only from the first half of Atkins' book, but I did quote accurately.
That aside, however, call it anything you like, but things rust, wear out, run down, fall apart -- this is the natural tendency we spend our entire lives fighting in terms of our own bodies, our homes, our cars, our other possessions, etc. So you are welcome to call it what you will. It's the way things go. -
But you probably should be asking yourself why people who know more about thermodynamics than the average person are so much more likely to see no conflict between it and evolution.
Particularly when we can find no case where a "conversion" on the 2nd law isn't accompanied by a conversion to a literalist religion. -
Barry grinned and answered, "Nothing."
But you probably should be asking yourself why people who know more about thermodynamics than the average person are so much more likely to see no conflict between it and evolution.
Particularly when we can find no case where a "conversion" on the 2nd law isn't accompanied by a conversion to a literalist religion. </font>[/QUOTE]Well, sir, I have talked to scientists. They are not saying what you would like to claim they are saying. So while you are speaking from imagination, I'm afraid I am speaking from experience and conversations actually held. -
Helen:
Um, no, I didn't say that. I merely pointed out that a tiny minority of people with doctorates in science think that thermodynamics is a problem for evolution. If you want to draw a conclusion, you're on your own. I didn't make one.
(Helen says she got her hubby to agree with her)
Um, impressive. But as noted above, I didn't say anything about majority making truth. I merely cited the facts. You're resposible for any conclusions.
If you ask a scientist why he doesn't think the 2nd Law is a problem for evolution, he'll start talking about evidence. God hasn't commented to us on the 2nd Law. And logic has to match the evidence.
But you probably should be asking yourself why people who know more about thermodynamics than the average person are so much more likely to see no conflict between it and evolution.
Particularly when we can find no case where a "conversion" on the 2nd law isn't accompanied by a conversion to a literalist religion.
Tell us about it.
-
n writes:
Of course there is a sense in which I could not know what was going in the mind of someone undergoing a paradigm shift without having undergone a paradigm shift myself. I could not know the emotional turmoil, the deep sense of angst, the lonliness, the blackness, the confusion, of the experience.
None of which is relevant here. What is relevant is not whether I know of the emotional turmoil, the deep sense of angst, the lonliness, the blackness, but rather that I know OF those things in people undergoing paradigm shifts and that I understand how those things, individually and together, tend to make it difficult, if not impossible, for the one experiencing them to make sense of his oor her individual experience.
Obviously you fail on account of (2). Obviously you were confused during the transition. Obviously your mind, as any human mind would, tried to create a consistent reality for you every step of your transition. Obviously what you remember so clearly is the self-consistent stories your mind told you during your trauma.
This is no disrespect towards you or your mind. Our memories are always created within us by our trying to create a self-consistent story. Did I see that cup of coffee on the edge of my desk when I looked in its direction just before it fell to the floor? I must have, so my memory of that glance at my desk contains an image of that coffee cup. The pencils, paper clips, books and papers beside that coffee cup are a bit fuzzy, and I don't know if I remember them, but the coffee cup memory is plain even though it is no more prominent than those other items, and only beca e significant after the event of my glance.
What I am describing is commonplace. Even the most banal memories are largely retrospective. One cannot imagine that you accurately remember how you changed paradigms any more than it is reasonable to imagine St. Paul remembering the details of his blinding flash of light on the road to Damascus. . Unlike you, St. Paul was wise enough not to pretend to analyze what had hit him. He didn't know. Neither do you, nor can you or couold you.
Indeed, from my own quite ordinary experience with other humans and their memories I don't find your claim that you fought the change until the very end at all implausible or particularly doubtful. In fact I'll go out on a limb and believe that it's probably true.
Unfortunately it tells me very little of your experience. You say you resisted the change till the end Duh! Your cessation of resistance (or its diminution to insignificance) defines the end of your paradigm shift experience. Of course you resisted to the very end! That's what happens in a paradigm shift. Your memory of this means absolutely nothing!
I have argued that his alleged conversion to YECism based upon scientific arguments is implausible, but have not argued in this thread that he is not a scientist.
I do not intend here to argue that he is not a scientist. I do, however, as an aside, want ot make it clear that Helen's reasons for affirmatively regarding Setterfield to be a scientist are without value. A person's status as a scientist is not determined by his own (or his spouse's) self-description as a scientist or by claims that it has been his main line of work for 30 years. Nor is it at all relevant that some people have paid for his work.
To be a scientist is to be a member of a profession, and to do the things that members of that profession, as members of that profession do. What are those things that scientists do? I do not thik we can give an exhaustive list, and no one does all of the things on a list that I would give. Nevertheless we may say that all scientists conduct research, understood by peers to be sc ientific research, and communicate the same to their peers through publication channels recognized by those peers.
Now Setterfield has indeed conducted research of a sort. Is any of it regarded as up to scientific standards by his scientific peers? (as a group--undoubtedly he can find someone in the world who will find it up to standard.) As it happens the research he has done would, if he were a scientist, make him and me scientific peers! And I am quite competent to judge what he has written. I find it not up to standard. I've given some of the reasons here on this forum (not this thread!). I note that the one time he tried to publish a paper in the usual channels of scientific communi cation it war rejected on its merrits. Rightly or wrongly Setterfield's peers do not regard his work as up to standard. You might not like that assessment, or disagree with it, but it is an objective assessment. Anyone examining scientists' replies to Setterfield, or even looking at his publication statistics, could see that he is not regarded as a scientist by peers, nor has he published in the ordinary literature by means of which scientists communicate with their peers.
Astoundingly, virtually all of the remarks substantively criticizing Setterfield's work have regarded it as not even wrong.
(Even Alan Montgomery, in his condemnation of Aardasma's review of Setterfield's use of statistics damns Setterfield with his faint praise. Note that in rejecting Aardasma's use of weighted least squares fitting of c time-series databecause Aardasma's treatment fulfils only two of the three criteria proposed by Montgomery, Montgomery implicitly condemns even more strongly Setterfield's unweighted least squares fitting which fulfils only one of Montgomery's criteria.)
-
Helen wrote:
I also looked up an email I got last year and include the relevant part here:
> Included below are the names & credentials of legitimate
>scientists whose expertise is in physics, chemistry, or biology to whom
>I believe would concur that evolution & thermodynamics are
>incompatible:
[lengthy list deleted]Click to expand...
As far as information theory goes, the evolutionist defense hinges entirely upon the rejection of the concept of meaningful information as being different from stochastic information.Click to expand...
As far as genetics goes, there is no known way for a cell to make a de novo protein. Period. And that is required for evolution...Click to expand...
Kluge is welcome to add to the above the fact that natural selection as a driver of evolution is a farce.Click to expand...
First, natural selection deletes by virtue of death, thus depriving any given population of some portion of its genetic variability potential.Click to expand...
There are many more scientific evidences regarding the impossibility of evolution...Click to expand...
..
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />When we say that no one accepts creationism based upon scientific reason, perhaps we should have qualified this as "sound or plausible scientific reason" meaning some reason accepted or regarded plausible by a significant portion of the scientific community even if Helen were the first to connect that reason with the impossible of evolution.Click to expand...
Because the reasons are both logically sound and scientific. They don't even have to be 'plausible,' because they are data, and data just sits there, whether or not one considers it plausible.Click to expand...
No, you have never here discussed “data” telling us that evolution is impossible. Such data could conceivably exist: Dog fossils in the Cambrian, etc. But you seldom if ever discuss any data that refute evolution. You rely upon reasons of the other type, of deductive reasons. It’s OK to do so, but you should not confuse them with data.
For example, Barry Setterfield claims that the data of speed of light measurements over time indicate that light speed has changed. He also thinks that astronomical data indicate that red shifts are quantized. These are interpretations following from data. (It is not my purpose here to discuss whether he is correct or not.) He can say that the data are the reasons for his conclusion.
Barry Setterfield has also created a rather elaborate theoretical framework to explain those data. Why do we observe a decreasing speed of light? The data don’t tell us, but Setterfield supposes that the vacuum energy density is increasing with time and argues that this would result in decreases of observed speed of light. Note that increasing vacuum energy density is not data. We never observed it. It’s perfectly OK for him to use non-data reasons, but you should never be confused into thinking that his theory or his model follows from the data. That would be an extreme Baconian position rejected by virtually all scientists, and also, based upon his own work, by Barry Setterfield.
(I am now laughing because I am quite sure someone is going to take a phrase in the above totally out of context and quote me as saying "they don't have to be plausible" without the rest of the sentence. Oh well....)Click to expand...
We are not like the creationists quoting Colin Patterson in a way suggesting that he questioned the use of evolution. Apparently he really did ask his audience, expecting no positive response, whether any of them could find any case in which evolution had been useful.
Of course the context concerned organization of once living things into clades, which can be done with and without taking into account evolutionary relationships. The results turn out pretty much the same either way, hence the question about the use of evolution. Patterson was saying that one could infer the same hierarchical relationships between living things obtained by consideration of evolutionary relationships by other means! (That is, one could categorize once living things in the same way as would be done based upon their evolutionary relationships by other means. The only known way to understand those relationships is within evolution, but Patterson was talking about categorization, ) Creationists have regularly and mendaciously used the Patterson quote sans context to suggest a wider meaning.
Now, to give what I promised to give at the end of this post. Last Wednesday night Barry and I, on a short personal vacation, were privileged to be able to meet with the Catherine who posts here, her husband, and Dean and Tricia Kenyon for a lovely dinner and evening's discussion.
After which I can state without qualification that Dr. Kenyon switched from evolution to creation on the basis of scientific evidence only. He did, after all, write a book promoting evolution. That book was then refuted by Dr. Wilder-Smith. Dr. Kenyon stated to us that he spent an entire summer seeking to undo Wilder-Smith's arguments and could not do it.
He changed points of view on the basis of scientific evidence and only scientific evidence.Click to expand...
I know that you think that creation/evolution is an exclusive or situation where exactly one must be true. You’re wrong (God could have created a world that evolved, for example, so both could in principle be true), but let’s accept Helen’s dualism for the sake of argument. Nevertheless, whatever Wilder-Smith wrote to convince Kenyon of the problems of evolution was just that. Kenyon might have come out of his reading thinking that he wasn’t as certain that evolution had occurred as before, or that he now thought he understood less about evolution than he had thought he understood before. But what we are talking about is valid scientific reasons for accepting creationism. What you have described is, at most, a case of an individual coming to doubt evolution based upon scientific reasons. -
Galatian, Mark -- I quote authoritative sources and your responses are either that I am misquoting or that I do not understand the material.
I give personal experiences and I am told that is not acceptable.
I relate the experience of others which I have heard first-hand in personal conversations with them and am told anecdotes are not acceptable.
In essence, I am being called a liar, ignorant, and perhaps stupid, too. Why on earth would you want to have a discussion with someone that dispicable?
Nothing is acceptable to you folks except what you already agree with. Have a good evening. -
Galatian, Mark -- I quote authoritative sources and your responses are either that I am misquoting or that I do not understand the material.Click to expand...
I give personal experiences and I am told that is not acceptable.Click to expand...
I relate the experience of others which I have heard first-hand in personal conversations with them and am told anecdotes are not acceptable.Click to expand...
In essence, I am being called a liar,Click to expand...
ignorant, and perhaps stupid, too.Click to expand...
Why on earth would you want to have a discussion with someone that dispicable?Click to expand...
Nothing is acceptable to you folks except what you already agree with.Click to expand...
Have a good evening.Click to expand... -
Helen wrote:
Galatian, Mark -- I quote authoritative sources and your responses are either that I am misquoting or that I do not understand the material.Click to expand...
But if you are referring to Atkins, then the work you cite can in no way be considered authoritative material. You quoted a popular book written for people like yourself who cannot or will not learn thermodynamics rigorously and in all of its glory. It's a POPULARIZATION, perhaps a good popularization, but a popularization nevertheless. Your knowledge of thermodynamics, based as it is on Atkins', and perhaps others' popularizations, is but a popular understanding. It is therefore incomplete and you should expect it to be somewhat inaccurate and ought to be willing to accept correction from those who know the subject better than you.
ersonal experiences and I am told that is not acceptable.Click to expand...
I relate the experience o0 others which I have heard first-hand in personal conversations with them and am told anecdotes are not acceptable.Click to expand...
In essence, I am being called a liar, ignorant, and perhaps stupid, too.Click to expand...
The problem is that your memories, like my memories and everyone else's memories, are unreliable, especially when we remember a crisis. Haven't you read anything about the psychology of memory? Memories are mostly made up. We remember bits and pieces and try to construct a coherent story with them. It's like reconstructing a dream. Most of the time our reconstructed memories work just fine. Perhaps you remember stopping for a pedestrian at a local intersection last time you returned from shoppiong. You remember that the light was green in your direction, but you don't really remember that because you weren't looking at trhe light because you saw that pedestrian and had to worry about hitting the breaks to avoid hitting hij. But you remember the light being green because you're a good driver and it makes no sense that that pedestrian would have been there with you so close moving if the light was red against you. YUou're a good driver so you remember driving well, and you fill in whatever background memories are necessary for yourmemory to be consistent with your being a good driver.
The pedestrian, on the other hand, remembers a green light in his favor. But he too didn't really see that green light. He remembers it being green because he's a careful fellow and would never dash out into traffic without the light. He remembers a green light just as you slammed on your breaks to avoid hitting him and he accelerated to avoid the same. But he wasn't really looking at the light, and his memory of the green light in his direction is as worthless as your memory of the green light in yours.
Which one of you is right? I don't know. I do know, however, that neither of your memories is likely to be reliable. You were both in crisis where something in your surroundings didn't make sense. Your brain created a sensible memory for you.
It is like that for most, if not all of us in crisis. Something does not make sense. Our minds create memories that make sense, perhaps making us look more heroic. It's nothing to be ashamed of. It is human nature. God gave us minds that can cope with crisis in part by creating sensible (to the one in crisis) memories. They get us through the day. But that doesn't mean that they are reliable or that they should be believed by anyone else.
I am surprised that you are ignorant about this aspect of human menory, though it is evident that you are ignorant of it. Stupid? Probably not. Maybe. Who cares?
Why on earth would you want to have a discussion with someone that dispicable?Click to expand...
Page 2 of 3