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75 Theses ~ Science Against Evolution

ChristineM

"Be strong", I whispered to my coffee.
Premium Member
Since Raup is continually being quote mined I will copy a large section of an article that may help :

"From: Evan Yeung

Let me congratulate you on a fantastic website! I have been thoroughly impressed with the articles and information presented here. It's too bad that many of this information seems to be deliberately ignored by many people who post on this feedback board...

I do have a question...

In a number of articles that I've read from pro-creationist or intelligent design theorists, they have quoted David Raup from the Field Museum, who reportedly stated in 1979 that "We now have a quarter of a million fossil species, but the situation hasn't changed much... We have even fewer examples of evolutionary transition than we had in Darwin's time." Did David Raup really say this, or is he being taken out of context like so many other paleontologists when they are quoted by creationists?

Thanx! Evan

bluebar2.gif




Yes, Raup did say this (in "Conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology", Field Museum of Natural History Bulletin Jan. 1979, Vol. 50 No. 1 p. 22-29). Here is the quote in the immediate context (the quoted portions in boldface):

Well, we are now about 120 years after Darwin and the knowledge of the fossil record has been greatly expanded. We now have a quarter of a million fossil species but the situation hasn't changed much. The record of evolution is still surprisingly jerky and, ironically, we have even fewer examples of evolutionary transitions than we had in Darwin's time. By this I mean that some of the classic cases of darwinian change in the fossil record, such as the evolution of the horse in North America, have had to be discarded or modified as a result of more detailed information -- what appeared to be a nice simple progression when relatively few data were available now appear to be much more complex and much less gradualistic. So Darwin's problem has not been alleviated in the last 120 years and we still have a record which does show change but one that can hardly be looked upon as the most reasonable consequence of natural selection. (p. 25, emphasis mine)

Note that while Raup says that some of the examples have been "discarded" he also says that others have only been "modified". For example the classic horse series Raup mentions is one of those that has been modified, but it is far from discarded. Also note that Raup clearly states that the pattern of the fossil record is one of change in living things over geologic time, something that young earth creationists deny.

And yes it has been taken out of context. The paper is about Darwin's mechanism of natural selection and whether this mechanism is reflected in pattern of the fossil record, not whether there is a lack of evidence for common descent. From the beginning of the article:

Part of our conventional wisdom about evolution is that the fossil record of past life is an important cornerstone of evolutionary theory. In some ways, this is true -- but the situation is much more complicated. I will explore here a few of the complex interrelationships between fossils and darwinian theory. . . Darwin's theory of natural selection has always been closely linked to evidence form fossils, and probably most people assume that fossils provide a very important part of the general argument that is made in favor of darwinian interpretations of the history of life. Unfortunately, this is not strictly true. We must distinguish between the fact of evolution -- defined as change in organisms over time -- and the explanation of this change. Darwin's contribution, through his theory of natural selection, was to suggest how the evolutionary change took place. The evidence we find in the geologic record is not nearly as compatible with darwinian natural selection as we would like it to be. (p. 22)
The transitions Raup seems to be talking about, in the quote creationists use, are mostly at the level of species or genera (like between a horse and a zebra or between a fox and a wolf). Not intermediates between higher classifications like between classes, orders, or families (between reptiles and mammals etc.), which are the ones creationists most object to. However it is these "missing" species level transitions that creationists (in ignorance?) often quote paleontologists talking about. This seems to be the case here as well:

There were several problems, but the principle one was that the geologic record did not then and still does not yield a finely graduated chain of slow and progressive evolution. In other words, there are not enough intermediates. There are very few cases where one can find a gradual transition from one species to another. . . (p. 23, emphasis mine)
Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge are favorite targets for this creationist tactic because their hypothesis of punctuated equilibria is intended to explain why, from a biological point of view, we should expect species level transitions to be rare in the fossil record. Thus in their writings they frequently state the problem(s) they are attempting to solve. Creationists quote them stating the problems but not the solutions they propose. This seems to be the nature of the quote they have taken from Raup. The beginning of the very next paragraph after the one they quote tends to confirm this:

Now let me take a step back from the problem and very generally discuss natural selection and what we know about it. I think it is safe to say that we know for sure that natural selection, as a process, does work. There is a mountain of experimental and observational evidence, much of it predating genetics, which shows that natural selection as a biological process works. (p. 25)
He then moves on to the fossil record:

Now with regard to the fossil record, we certainly see change. If any of us were to be put down in the Cretaceous landscape we would immediately recognize the difference. Some of the plants and animals would be familiar but most would have changed and some of the types would be totally different from those living today. . . This record of change pretty clearly demonstrates that evolution has occurred if we define evolution simply as change; but it does not tell us how this change too place, and that is really the question. If we allow that natural selection works, as we almost have to do, the fossil record doesn't tell us whether it was responsible for 90 percent of the change we see or 9 percent, or .9 percent. (p. 26)
He then goes on to discuss natural selection versus other possible explanatory mechanisms and how they might relate to the fossil record. He also discusses the effects of historical contingency as it relates to extinction pointing out that sometimes species may become extinct due more to "bad luck" than bad genes (this by the way is the basis for Raup's 1991 book Extinction - Bad Genes or Bad Luck?). Raup concludes this article stating:

The ideas I have discussed here are rather new and have not been completely tested. No matter how they come out, however, they are having a ventilating effect on thinking in evolution and the conventional dogma is being challenged. If the ideas turn out to be valid, it will mean that Darwin was correct in what he said but that he was explaining only a part of the total evolutionary picture. The part he missed was the simple element of chance! (p. 29)
Not particularly damning. Perhaps the more interesting question is where do creationists get the idea that lists of such (out of context) quotations are a valid form of scientific argument?

For Raup's views on creationist arguments I suggest you look up one or both of the following:

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"Geology and Creationism", Field Museum of Natural History Bulletin Mar. 1983, Vol. 54 No. 3 pp. 16-25)

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"The Geological and Paleontological Arguments of Creationism" in Scientists Confront Creationism (1983), Laurie R. Godfrey (Editor), pp. 147-162"

On a Common Creationist Quotation of Dr. David M. Raup


See also
David Raup - RationalWiki
 

ChristineM

"Be strong", I whispered to my coffee.
Premium Member
Raup: We must distinguish between the fact of evolution -- defined as change in organisms over time -- and the explanation of this change. Darwin's contribution, through his theory of natural selection, was to suggest how the evolutionary change took place. The evidence we find in the geologic record is not nearly as compatible* with darwinian natural selection as we would like it to be"

of course direct quoting of scientists is an 'out of context creationist trick' the words 'superficial' and 'minor' must be added to his own words to give them better context right? ;)



^ as above

Nope they are added because that's how it is

And again it is not the task of evolution to explain the change
 

gnostic

The Lost One
Nothing evolves through Blind Chance - please educate yourself about evolution before making ignorant posts.
Guy is going to ignore your advice to him about “educating yourself” with regarding to evolution...

...and if you are patient and wait a few days, he will make the same claims again, demonstrating he didn’t take your advice to learn evolution, thereby he is doomed to repeat the same error, over and over again.
 
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gnostic

The Lost One
I think it means life from non-life has never been observed.
Sorry, but that’s not entirely correct; every single individual atoms in your body are non-living matters.

If you break down a protein into separate atoms, these individual carbon atoms, oxygen atoms, hydrogen atoms, nitrogen atoms, as single particles, then by themselves, they are non-living matters. How they bonded together iswhat make living matters.

It is only when atoms bonded together in certain numbers of atoms, and in certain arrangement and configuration of atoms (compounds and macromolecules), do you get life from.

Proteins, cells, genes, chromosomes, nucleic acids (eg DNA, RNA), lipids, tissues, blood, etc, are all made from compounds of atoms. Every cells and genes in our bodies, are living matters made out non-living matters.
 
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savagewind

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Sorry, but that’s not entirely correct; every single individual atoms in your body are non-living matters.

If you break down a protein into separate atoms, these individual carbon atoms, oxygen atoms, hydrogen atoms, nitrogen atoms, as single particles, then by themselves, they are non-living matters. How they bonded together iswhat make living matters.

It is only when atoms bonded together in certain numbers of atoms, and in certain arrangement and configuration of atoms (compounds and macromolecules), do you get life from.

Proteins, cells, genes, chromosomes, nucleic acids (eg DNA, RNA), lipids, tissues, blood, etc, are all made from compounds of atoms. Every cells and genes in our bodies, are living matters made out non-living matters.
So, when someone figures out how to put it all together the right way, then life will result.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
So, when someone figures out how to put it all together the right way, then life will result.
Very likely. Why wouldn't it? They have "made life" by copying existing life. Why couldn't it be made from scratch? That is the problem that is being solved by scientists that study abiogenesis.
 

Dan From Smithville

Monsters! Monsters from the id! Forbidden Planet
Staff member
Premium Member
I appreciate all the thoughtful responses, sorry I haven't had time to respond

If merely referencing the title of the paper is an 'out of context quote mine'... again I don't think I'm the one twisting the context here!

If you read the whole paper, the title is clearly not meant to be ironic or a rhetorical device
Titling the paper 'conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology' means he thinks there are conflicts between Darwin and paleontology, I agree, so do many scientists.

Point being: many Darwinists are simply unaware of this conflict- evident here by those convinced, that all these opinions of renowned scientists are some sort of devious misleading 'creationist trick'.

I posted the link to the entire paper earlier, anyone can read for themselves- there is no trick here.

As I said, there is no slam dunk argument either way, it's an extremely interesting and complicated question- life itself- does it get much more interesting? and to me, important to understand.



If we found a clear, smooth, perfectly steady incremental transition over billions of years, from single cell to man, that would have been a great validation of Darwinian predictions

If we found fully formed humans appearing overnight with nothing that could possibly be an ancestor anywhere in the record, that would be a pretty emphatic refutation

We are somewhere in the middle, with lots of uncertainty and margin for error, but as Raup and others point out, the public perception is that the record is far more Darwinian than it actually is:

Raup
'A large number of well-trained scientists outside of evolutionary biology and paleontology have unfortunately gotten the idea that the fossil record is far more Darwinian than it is. This probably comes from the oversimplification inevitable in secondary sources: low-level textbooks semipopular articles, and so on. Also, there is probably some wishful thinking involved. In the years after Darwin, his advocates hoped to find predictable progressions. In general. these have not been found-yet the optimism has died hard and some pure fantasy has crept into textbooks."
When you first brought it up in a response to me or a post I responded to, you didn't reference the paper in a meaningful way. You mentioned the quote-mined premise and the author. No title of the publication, no source, etc. You posted it in a way that was intended to demonstrate that the theory of evolution was flawed and had been shown to have failed. Raup's work doesn't show that at all. This is what is wrong with doing what you have been doing.

Your quote from Raup doesn't refute the theory of evolution. It is about how evolution progresses and his opinion on the evidence we have for evolution and what it says. Nothing about it refutes the theory of evolution. I haven't seen you admit that yet.
 

Guy Threepwood

Mighty Pirate
When you first brought it up in a response to me or a post I responded to, you didn't reference the paper in a meaningful way. You mentioned the quote-mined premise and the author. No title of the publication, no source, etc. You posted it in a way that was intended to demonstrate that the theory of evolution was flawed and had been shown to have failed. Raup's work doesn't show that at all. This is what is wrong with doing what you have been doing.

Your quote from Raup doesn't refute the theory of evolution. It is about how evolution progresses and his opinion on the evidence we have for evolution and what it says. Nothing about it refutes the theory of evolution. I haven't seen you admit that yet.

His position is pretty well known, if I quote Reagan in a political forum, saying "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" I assume it's a bit redundant to provide links to an official transcript..


I posted it in a way to show that there are conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology. period. You can disagree with me, Raup, and many other scientists on this, it's an interesting discussion to have- simply calling each other liars is not.

Your quote from Raup doesn't refute the theory of evolution. It is about how evolution progresses and his opinion on the evidence we have for evolution and what it says. Nothing about it refutes the theory of evolution. I haven't seen you admit that yet.

I've said it many times, maybe not to you, this is not a slam dunk argument against evolution.- it's an unambiguous observation that the record did not live up to Darwinian predictions and hopes. And Darwin himself, by his own standards, may well have been a skeptic today based on this. - he was not afraid to go against the vagaries of academic fashion after all!

It's just one of several lines of evidence that point away from Darwinism, taken all together yes I think there is a very sound argument against it, but we're dealing with an inherently speculative subject
 

Dan From Smithville

Monsters! Monsters from the id! Forbidden Planet
Staff member
Premium Member
His position is pretty well known, if I quote Reagan in a political forum, saying "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" I assume it's a bit redundant to provide links to an official transcript..


I posted it in a way to show that there are conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology. period. You can disagree with me, Raup, and many other scientists on this, it's an interesting discussion to have- simply calling each other liars is not.



I've said it many times, maybe not to you, this is not a slam dunk argument against evolution.- it's an unambiguous observation that the record did not live up to Darwinian predictions and hopes. And Darwin himself, by his own standards, may well have been a skeptic today based on this. - he was not afraid to go against the vagaries of academic fashion after all!

It's just one of several lines of evidence that point away from Darwinism, taken all together yes I think there is a very sound argument against it, but we're dealing with an inherently speculative subject
You're are just rationalizing now. The bottom line is that Raup was not denying evolution or refuting it. If these other lines of evidence are like what we see from Raup, then they aren't against it either. They are just being manipulated by biased people to twist it to a desired outcome.

How can an argument that doesn't refute evolution be included in with alleged lines of evidence against evolution be used as a package against evolution? That doesn't make any sense.
 

Guy Threepwood

Mighty Pirate
You're are just rationalizing now. The bottom line is that Raup was not denying evolution or refuting it.

Defining it as Raup does:'change'- neither am I. He was questioning Darwinism. So am I


If these other lines of evidence are like what we see from Raup, then they aren't against it either. They are just being manipulated by biased people to twist it to a desired outcome.

How can an argument that doesn't refute evolution be included in with alleged lines of evidence against evolution be used as a package against evolution? That doesn't make any sense.

Not sure if I gave you this example

but let's say a famous TV ancient alien theorist, concedes that 'we have even fewer plausible examples of UFO sightings today than we did in the 1950's' (because many have since been debunked.)

The fact that he is ultimately still an adherent to the theory, only serves to underscore how objective the actual observation is. right?

If I quoted a staunch alien skeptic saying the same thing, it could be dismissed as subjective bias.

So as skeptics, we are perfectly correct to quote him, to people who believe we have far more validated UFO sightings. That's doesn't make us dishonest or misleading at all
 
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Dan From Smithville

Monsters! Monsters from the id! Forbidden Planet
Staff member
Premium Member
Defining it as Raup does:'change'- neither am I. He was questioning Darwinism. So am I




Not sure if I gave you this example

but let's say a famous TV ancient alien theorist, concedes that 'we have even fewer plausible examples of UFO sightings today than we did in the 1950's' (because many have since been debunked.)

The fact that he is ultimately still an adherent to the theory, only serves to underscore how objective the actual observation is. right?

If I quoted a staunch alien skeptic saying the same thing, it could be dismissed as subjective bias.

So as skeptics, we are perfectly correct to quote him, to people who believe we have far more validated UFO sightings. That's doesn't make us dishonest or misleading at all
I don't believe you. You aren't questioning the theory of evolution by using Raup, you are implying it is dead. Even if punctuated equilibrium turns out to be the primary mode of evolution, it is still evolution. Something has to drive the geologically rapid change. Some kind of powerful selection. Arguments about punctuated equilibrium are a dead end for creationists. I'm not sure why it persists except for the fact that it is twisted to imply that the theory has been destroyed.

I don't know what you call plausible, but I don't know of any plausible alien sightings nor do I know of any scientific theory for alien visitations. You can quote anyone, but at a minimum you need to provide who, the source and a date. You can't quote out of context and expect to maintain any legitimacy and credibility. In the original post from you, you mentioned, in a round about way, the quote mine from the creationist propaganda sites and attributed it to Raup. I think you attributed it to him. I can't recall. But it was out of context as I have demonstrated. You didn't mention it as an argument about different rates of evolution. What it really is about. You mentioned it as evidence against evolution. You have since tried to fill in the gaps and I appreciate that, but Raup still doesn't refute evolution. His work is a discussion of the details of evolution and supports punctuated equilibrium. Another theory of evolution based on the existing theory of evolution. Not some completely different theory that refutes evolution.
 

Guy Threepwood

Mighty Pirate
I don't believe you. You aren't questioning the theory of evolution by using Raup, you are implying it is dead. Even if punctuated equilibrium turns out to be the primary mode of evolution, it is still evolution. Something has to drive the geologically rapid change. Some kind of powerful selection. Arguments about punctuated equilibrium are a dead end for creationists. I'm not sure why it persists except for the fact that it is twisted to imply that the theory has been destroyed.

I don't know what you call plausible, but I don't know of any plausible alien sightings nor do I know of any scientific theory for alien visitations. You can quote anyone, but at a minimum you need to provide who, the source and a date. You can't quote out of context and expect to maintain any legitimacy and credibility. In the original post from you, you mentioned, in a round about way, the quote mine from the creationist propaganda sites and attributed it to Raup. I think you attributed it to him. I can't recall. But it was out of context as I have demonstrated. You didn't mention it as an argument about different rates of evolution. What it really is about. You mentioned it as evidence against evolution. You have since tried to fill in the gaps and I appreciate that, but Raup still doesn't refute evolution. His work is a discussion of the details of evolution and supports punctuated equilibrium. Another theory of evolution based on the existing theory of evolution. Not some completely different theory that refutes evolution.

The paper I directly quoted was called 'conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology' I wouldn't characterize Raup's work as ' propaganda' He was a very well respected scientist, curator of the Chicago Field museum

I used several quotes from it to highlight several conflicts between.. Darwin and Paleontology

I can't control any other context you are putting this in


From a Victorian starting point in the state of the fossil record, Darwinists predicted that the apparent gaps, jumps, periods of stasis would be smoothed out over time, to show the slow steady incremental changes that Darwin himself saw as crucial to the theory

Skeptics predicted that these characteristics were true reflections of the record, and would only become better establish as the fossil record was expanded.

Remind me which prediction panned out?


Once again this does not entirely destroy Darwinism by itself, though it creates a lot of problems to try to solve. - and if science is to progress we at least have to acknowledge them. There is a pop-science perception Raup references, that Darwinism is somehow very well supported scientifically- rather it is very popular academically,. There some 'pure fiction' in the text books as he puts it, that anyone interested in science should want exposed.
 

ImmortalFlame

Woke gremlin
The paper I directly quoted was called 'conflicts between Darwin and Paleontology' I wouldn't characterize Raup's work as ' propaganda' He was a very well respected scientist, curator of the Chicago Field museum

I used several quotes from it to highlight several conflicts between.. Darwin and Paleontology

I can't control any other context you are putting this in


From a Victorian starting point in the state of the fossil record, Darwinists predicted that the apparent gaps, jumps, periods of stasis would be smoothed out over time, to show the slow steady incremental changes that Darwin himself saw as crucial to the theory

Skeptics predicted that these characteristics were true reflections of the record, and would only become better establish as the fossil record was expanded.

Remind me which prediction panned out?


Once again this does not entirely destroy Darwinism by itself, though it creates a lot of problems to try to solve. - and if science is to progress we at least have to acknowledge them. There is a pop-science perception Raup references, that Darwinism is somehow very well supported scientifically- rather it is very popular academically,. There some 'pure fiction' in the text books as he puts it, that anyone interested in science should want exposed.
Your whole argument falls apart the moment you acknowledge that Darwin/Darwinism =/= the theory of evolution.
 

ImmortalFlame

Woke gremlin
Yep, especially since there's no such thing as "Darwinism". To call evolution as such would be like calling psychology "Freudism" or the theories of relativity "Einsteinism".
Guy Threepwood's eyes would probably explode if he saw an essay questioning Newtonianism.
 

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
Guy Threepwood's eyes would probably explode if he saw an essay questioning Newtonianism.
Thus probably not realizing the Newton's formulas actually didn't work out-- but admittedly got pretty close. He was amazingly brilliant, no doubt.

BTW, the book "E=MC2", even though it's around two decades old, does an excellent job, imo, of covering Newton's theories and contrasting that with Einstein's.
 

Hockeycowboy

Witness for Jehovah
Premium Member
.....how two scientists :

eventually produced two ribozymes that could replicate one another ad infinitum as long as they were supplied with sufficient nucleotides. Not only can these naked RNA molecules reproduce, they can also mutate and evolve

What do you think these scientists represent? A mindless force, or intelligent design?

So what you’ve done here, is to support how a beneficial function, requires an intelligent source as its origin.
 

blü 2

Veteran Member
Premium Member
What do you think these scientists represent? A mindless force, or intelligent design?

So what you’ve done here, is to support how a beneficial function, requires an intelligent source as its origin.
There's no evidence for the creo concept of "Intelligent Design". The only evidence alleged for ID was "irreducible complexity" but as you know, every single purported example was explained in evolutionary terms at the Dover trial (2005) by exaptation. Behe, you'll recall, had said back around 2001 that he needed to amend his hypothesis to take exaptation into account, but he hadn't done it by the time of the Dover trial and he hasn't done it since.

There's no definition of the ID such that if we found a candidate we could tell whether it was the ID or not. That's not a problem because no real candidate has ever been proposed.

So with no irreducible complexity, no intelligent designer in sight, nor even a proposed way of finding one, nor even a statement of what one is, I suggest you don't worry about ID too much. It was and remains nonsense.

Meanwhile science continues to look for a pathway from chemistry to active biochemistry, and the demonstration that RNA can (as you saw on that link) form spontaneously is a big step along that path. Stay tuned.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
What do you think these scientists represent? A mindless force, or intelligent design?

So what you’ve done here, is to support how a beneficial function, requires an intelligent source as its origin.

The fact that an intelligent scientist mixed chemicals and got a reaction doesn't mean that it takes an intelligence for those chemicals to be mixed and react.
 
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