01.24.08
Frustrated at Work?
The random ramblings of Micah Cowan. Programmer, musician, typesetting enthusiast, gamer…
It's wrong to judge a book by its cover. It's doubly wrong to judge an author by his jacket photo. If you were to do that with me, you would be forced to assume that I was some sort of rogue Muppet, eremite priest, or Russian dictator.
Patrick Rothfuss, author of Name of the Wind, http://www.patrickrothfuss.com/
Subdued
...for now...
but when I please
I will—with ease—
make my arrival loud and known.
A gentle and low simmer
...to start...
but like the fire I am
I grow quickly to consume
your being entire
your thoughts, to obsess
Screaming, demanding
I force your submission
Unrelenting
Subdue me you must, for I shall not
be ignored
Never ignored
Your utter attention is required
in quenching me
Your strength—the last of it—
will you use to bring me
once again
to calm
Only when you have nearly blacked
will I depart and subside
abated and
once again
subdued.
...for now...
The following is reposted, with permission, from The Barefoot Bum; it makes some good points that I’d have liked to have made here at some time, except that he’s already done an excellent job of it, so why bother? It includes a list of several examples of both items that proponents of Intelligent Design believe that evolutionists believe or teach (but, in fact, don’t), such as radio-carbon dating; and items that they believe are true (but which, in fact, are false), such as the myth that evolution from one species into another hasn’t been observed. These are very widely spread myths in the creationist community, and it’s nice to debunk a few of the most common of them. Most of these items don’t have links or citations; however, you can find a wealth of information about them at TalkOrigins (which has a longer list, and citations to back up its claims). [Update: reworded the above to more accurately represent the list of creationist myths.]
There’s also the pernicious practice of quote mining, taking a statement made by a scientist or philosopher out of context and thus changing its meaning to be critical of evolution. Any time an advocate of evolution seems to say something deeply critical of the endeavor, any reasonable person must be suspicious that something is amiss. Quote mining is lying.
I have better things to do with my time than correct lies about evolution. If you want to lie, do it on your own blog or in a more appropriate venue; I refuse to publish lies.
Here are some specifics:
Evolution is not a scientific theory about the origin of terrestrial life. The origin of terrestrial life is an interesting scientific field in itself (all the more interesting because the evidence is buried under billions of years of history), but it has nothing to do with evolution. Even if the first living thing were intentionally created by a space alien, a deity or the systems administrator of the computer we’re all inhabiting, evolutionary theory would not change at all.
No scientific theory in the field of evolution says that the characteristics of modern organisms arose by chance alone. All evolutionary theories discuss the interplay between chance changes to organisms and natural selection; natural selection is driven by physical law, the opposite of chance.
Yes, there have been instances of scientific fraud as well as honest mistakes. Science is an error-correcting endeavor, precisely because errors do arise. What “error” actually means and how errors are corrected is an interesting topic of philosophical inquiry, but Piltdown Man and Haeckel’s embryology are not by themselves probative of anything… except perhaps in the sense that scientists have actually discovered and corrected such errors.
Scientists have actually observed speciation.
Radiocarbon dating is accurate to only tens of thousands of years. Scientists employ other methods, including other types of radiometric dating, to establish ages on the order of mega- and giga-years. The validity of radiometric dating is established primarily by nuclear physics and quantum mechanics.
Charles Darwin was not baffled by the eye. His “bafflement” in The Origin of Species was a rhetorical device: he goes on to explain how the eye actually did evolve. This assertion is probably the most famous instance of quote mining. Nor did Darwin renounce evolution on his deathbed. This claim is an outright lie.
Regardless, science is not theology, and no scientist is an authority. Nothing in science is believed just because some scientist, however well-respected, has asserted it. Even Newton, Einstein, Darwin and Feynman had to show their work, and the idea stands or falls on its own merits, independent of the reputation of the person. Darwin himself made mistakes, and those mistakes have been discovered and corrected.
The attitude of scientists and scientific philosophy regarding the “supernatural” is not unique to evolution. I’m more than happy to discuss scientific philosophy, methodological and metaphysical naturalism, in as much (or more) detail as you wish, but philosophically, any argument concerning naturalism applies to all science, not just the sciences of biology, archeology, paleontology, genetics, ecology, etc. which adopt an evolutionary paradigm.
In general, I’m going to evaluate any criticism of evolution by first investigating what Talk.Origins has to say about it. I don’t demand that anyone accept Talk.Origins uncritically or at all, but you will save us both a lot of time if you examine their arguments before you comment, and address them within your comment.
And, lastly, the complaint that scientists and advocates of science tend to bury criticism in a flood of information is a non-starter. Rational people settle these sorts of arguments by evaluating the evidence. If there’s a ton of evidence against your position, boo hoo, too bad for you.