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Look at complete lack of intermediate links in the fossil record (there are no convincing ones), the Cambrian explosion (representatives from every major animal phylum suddenly appear in Cambrian rock)
I'm sorry, but I used this one back when I didn't know better. It simply is not true. To say anything to the contrary is the same as sticking your fingers in your ears and yelling "Lalala, I'm not listening." Here's some fine humanoid fossils we've collected over the years:
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the Cambrian explosion (representatives from every major animal phylum suddenly appear in Cambrian rock)
The term "explosion" is a bit of a misnomer. 30 million years isn't exactly a short span of time.
I find it interesting that you say they aren't looking at this fact. That's the same claim
Rev. Jonathan Wells made in his book "Ten Questions to Ask your Biology Teacher About Evolution," and once again while in a debate with
Ken Miller. Which is hilarious, because Ken Miller actually wrote a textbook including the subject. One of largest misconceptions is that people believe every type of animal appeared in the Cambrian explosion. This is just ignorance of scientific jargon. As you stated, every
phylum appeared. Mammals, reptiles, birds? No. Insects? Nope. Not even something that resembles a modern fish. None of them appeared in the Cambrian explosion. Those subsets are much lower on the list, which I'll link here for your convenience.
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structural homology (similar structures, such as the makeup of front limbs of many creatures, are defined by different areas of the genetic code across species, indicating they are not related, and yet the same structures are there)
I'm sorry, but being a former Creation advocate I happen to know this is a bad argument and any semblance of support for it died long ago. But here, you can read up on
hox genes if you want. It's really cool how similar they are throughout the animal kingdom, and how we've made correlations between changes in the hox gene and major anatomical changes. So many fun correlations between them and evolutionary events!
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You could also look into cytochrome-c. (a protein shared by many organisms that reflects the underlying DNA, which if macro-evolution was true would be most similar between closely related organisms: In 99% of the data this is not the case)
Here is a wonderful topic from a website called "Evolution fairy tale." In the topic, the administrator/owner of the forums tries to make a case against evolution using cytochrome c. He offers a challenge for evolutionists to prove him wrong. Along the course of the thread, someone constructs a tree out of his data that does, indeed prove him wrong. After tons of backpedaling and smokescreens, he eventually throws out the argument for cytochrome-c, because it no longer supports his argument. That being said, it still supported evolutionary claims, but he was willing to ignore that for the sake of his pride.
After realizing what a failure following the cytochrome-c argument was, I'm surprised they didn't delete the thread. I'm also surprised you didn't bring up cytochrome-c pumps. If you don't mind me asking, what type of Creationism do you align with? IDT? YEC? Something else?
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Part of what makes us sensitive about it is that the media, education etc portray macro-evolution as near fact, and often insult and disregard people who believe otherwise. After all, higher education especially is supposed to be a melting pot of different ideas and thought. Why then is macro-evolution allowed no competition?
For the longest time evolution wasn't taught, and Creationisms reigned supreme with no contender. But then we realized science is more important in the classroom than religion, and that religion shouldn't be tangled up in government.
But evolution still doesn't go "unopposed." Every once in a while, a new movement crops up - Creationism, Creation Science, IDT, critical analysis of evolution... These have all been slipped into public schools at some point, and then thrown out because they had
no scientific backing.Look at
Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District. They had it easy. All they had to do was prove that IDT had a shred of scientific possibility to one of the most conservative, Christian judges in the area, and they failed it. They even admitted in interviews afterwards that their case should have been much easier. The judge got pretty pissed, because of the sad display IDT made in the courtroom:
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After a searching review of the record and applicable caselaw, we find that while ID arguments may be true, a proposition on which the Court takes no position, ID is not science. We find that ID fails on three different levels, any one of which is sufficient to preclude a determination that ID is science. They are: (1) ID violates the centuries-old ground rules of science by invoking and permitting supernatural causation; (2) the argument of irreducible complexity, central to ID, employs the same flawed and illogical contrived dualism that doomed creation science in the 1980s; and (3) ID's negative attacks on evolution have been refuted by the scientific community. …It is additionally important to note that ID has failed to gain acceptance in the scientific community, it has not generated peer-reviewed publications, nor has it been the subject of testing and research. Expert testimony reveals that since the scientific revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries, science has been limited to the search for natural causes to explain natural phenomena."
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ID's backers have sought to avoid the scientific scrutiny which we have now determined that it cannot withstand by advocating that the controversy, but not ID itself, should be taught in science class. This tactic is at best disingenuous, and at worst a canard. The goal of the IDM is not to encourage critical thought, but to foment a revolution which would supplant evolutionary theory with ID." ~Judge John E. Jones III
These are found on
page 64 and
page 89 respectively of his
139 page ruling on the matter, which I have made available for you in full in the links above.
So yeah. It goes "opposed." Until we find evidence that the opposition is wrong. And then, being logical, reasonable people, we decide not to teach our children false concepts.
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I do wonder, if the theory is so good, than why launch legal battles to prevent alternatives from being considered. After all, even without believing in God, couldn't there be another possible solution? Maybe we've missed some obvious facts that would lead us to a better theory just because of the obsession with protecting current beliefs.
Let's step into the history of legal cases on Creationism. We have the 1925 Scopes Trial, where beforehand it was illegal to teach evolution in many public schools. Many schools taught Creationism in biology class. In
State of Tennessee v. Scopes, we have a biology teacher being accused of violating the
Butler Act. At the end of the trial, Scopes was found guilty, and had to pay a fine. But the case had a much broader significance than that - it struck a blow to fundamentalist thought, and showed the lack of scientific evidence in Creationism.
So, why did this legal battle exist? To "stamp out the competition?" Yes, exactly! You are completely right on that part! Creationism wanted to silence alternate beliefs.
Then we had the 1968 case of
Epperson v. Arkansas, where they fought against a 1920's law preventing the teaching of evolution. The Supreme Court invalidated the Arkansas statute. Once again, evolution isn't trying to force others out, it's trying to just get in.
In fact, Creationism wasn't even excluded from public schools by evolution! It was actually in
Abbington Township School District v. Schempp, where a law mandated children to read from the Bible in public schools. This was taken to the Supreme Court, and religion was banished from public schools - Creation with it. That's why Creation had a resurgence as "Creation Science." Later, after that was being shown as too religious, it came back as "Intelligent Design Theory." Later, after that was shown as having no scientific backing, it started coming back as "objection to evolution." Which is where we are today.
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This reminds me of how Galen's medical teachings were used for over 1000 years even after much evidence contradicted it
It also reminds me of how people think the Bible tells them homosexuality is wrong, abortion is wrong, and Hell exists. Even evidence contradicts it!
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Disagreeing with a single theory (which by the way come and go
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Also, even Stephen Hawking acknowledges that science is not final. Scientists do the best they can, but they are in the end occasionally (and perhaps often wrong). Stephen Hawking says in "The Universe in a Nutshell" that either the Theory of General Relativity, or the Quantum Mechanical Theory is incorrect, they contradict one another: both seem to have more evidence than evolution.
Someday we'll get rid of that darn theory of gravity...
Oh wait. Einstein beat us to it.
Yes, theories come, and sometimes they can go. But I think you have the common misconception of what a theory means vs. what a
theory in science means. Let's bust out some science philosophy! (note: I'm pretty bad at philosophy, so this will be basic)
Theory - Abstract statement that offers causal explanations for the things we experience.
According to
David Hume, confidence in past experience is based on repeated exposure to the event, rather than logical reasoning. Which pretty much means there's no logical justification for a theory. For example, the force that creates gravity is never observed.
Karl Popper took his work a step further and told us science cannot prove anything, and that all scientific theories are trapped in a world of abstractions. Since we cannot prove anything, what makes something a theory? The ability to be disproven. It is not a scientific theory unless it has the capacity to be disproven. In fact, all scientific theory is built upon scientists trying to disprove something until they are unable to. That's what makes something a theory. The point is, science cannot prove anything.
Science cannot ever be final. But the sheer volume of evidence for evolution is fascinating. Not to mention, the theory has gone over several revisions since its conceptions; no one would literally believe evolution as it was a century ago. But when Einstein "disproved" the theory of gravity, the world as we know it didn't turn topsy-turvey. Gravity still works, and we didn't all go floating into space. We just understood gravity a little better.
By the way, being philosophically unable to be disproven is one of the many reasons why Creation cannot, and never will be, a science. Unless it has the capacity to be disproven, it cannot be tested. If its not tested, it's just a bunch of people conjecturing about what they think. And don't give me any talk about whether or not there's real scientific evidence - just a few years ago the best minds in IDT came together for a court case and couldn't pull an ounce of convincing evidence out of their bag of tricks. It's all smoke and mirrors. And now we have legal ruling that it's all smoke and mirrors too.
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1. Why do rabbits have white tails? Shouldn't that have evolved away? After all if one rabbit had a brown tail, it would be less likely to be seen by predators, and more likely to pass on it's genes.
They're pack animals that are most active in twilight/dawn. They keep it hidden on their underside except when fleeing, and this helps alert other rabbits that there is danger. Think of whitetail deer. It's also interesting to note that all their natural predators are color blind, and it could be used as a diversion tactic.
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2. Sight and hearing: How the heck did that happen? "About 200 million years ago a small amphibian developed warts on it's head. Two of them. Over times nerves in the warts started sending information about surrounding light to the brain..." Whatever... What about hearing? Did you know that your brain actually adjusts perceived sound levels? 11 decibels is 10 times louder than 10 decibels, yet it wouldn't sound like it. If someone can explain how ears formed I'd be amazed.
Ears are actually really interesting, and they started as jawbones.
Here is some reading on the subject, which I found fascinating despite my limited knowledge of biology.
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3. Oriental Sweetlips: It would have had to evolved teeth, the instinct to swim to a reaf and open it's mouth, without eating the Blue Streaked Wrasse and then at the same time the Wrasse would have to develop the instinct to swim in 'sweeties' mouth and eat the plaque of it's teach. Symbiotic mutualism is bad for macro-evolution indeed.
Here is an article on the evolution of mutualisms from the
National Academy of Sciences. I can't really speak about that specific instance because I don't know much about them, but this pretty much covers all mutualisms.
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That's a very broad and inaccurate statement, science doesn't have "proof" for macro-evolution.
This reminds me of the Dover, when
Michael Behe claimed that the blood clot cascade had irreducible complexity. The lawyers then stacked a pile of books in front of him and asked him if he had read a number of peer reviewed journals and publications that give reasonable proof otherwise. He claimed that he did not read all of it, but implied that it was all inadequate. The judge gave an interesting reply to this:
“In fact, on cross-examination, Professor Behe was questioned concerning his 1996 claim that science would never find an evolutionary explanation for the immune system. He was presented with fifty-eight peer-reviewed publications, nine books, and several immunology textbook chapters about the evolution of the immune system; however, he simply insisted that this was still not sufficient evidence of evolution, and that it was not good enough.
(Picture of the books and papers stacked in front of Behe during the case
We find that such evidence demonstrates that the ID argument is dependent upon setting a scientifically unreasonable burden of proof on the theory of evolution.” So, to tie things together, I'd first like to apologize in advance for the personal attack, but:
I find your view of evolution to be completely unreasonable, and your argument to be equally unreasonable. I see no proof for anything you've said, but instead I have cited numerous sources that claim otherwise. I'm sorry but the utter amount of pure conjecture and baseless words in your posts do not promote valuable discourse. If you want to make some claims and back them up, that's fine; but please try to refrain from further dragging the topic off course if you can't at least add some substance to all of this.
I urge you, if you wish to have any fulfilling discussion in this topic, to please read
this page. There are many claims you are making that simply cannot be backed up, and that page can help us sort through what's worth discussing.
And now, getting back on topic, I'd really like to know: Why do you find evolution so threatening?
Also, back on the topic of why it's so threatening to Christianity specifically: Why aren't we seeing other religions or even atheists bringing up all these claims that there are "problems in evolution?" In fact, only 0.167% of all U.S. scientists will say there are flaws in the theory of evolution, and they all have Christian backgrounds. Why are there a staggeringly low level of Hindus, Muslims, and atheists opposing evolution if what you said about there being "tons of problems" with it is true?
You know, I spent a couple hours writing this, but in retrospect it was a good use of time. It helped me review for my final next week in my class on the history of legal battles between Creation and evolution.