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The Talk.Origins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy

Feedback for July 2005

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Response: John Barrow's work is cited as part of creationist claim CE410: Physical constants are only assumed constant. Barrow is a counter example to this claim, considering possibilities of small variations in the fine structure constant a bit over 6 billion years ago. This was good science, but it did not pan out, being falsified by further work. The search for variations in fundamental constants continues; but this is not going to have effect on the age of the Earth, since the Earth is only about 4.55 billion years old. Effects on the age of the universe are possible, but not in any way that will give any comfort to creationists.

John Barrow's work was also cited in feedback for March 2000; this also explains some legitimate work on the varying speed of light, and the references also consider possible impacts on cosmology.

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Response: We cannot publish feedback that cuts and pastes entire articles from other sources; it is a serious breach of copyright. Also, this feedback page is really for feedback on our articles; not for feedback on articles at CARM. But no matter. We often seem to be running a question and answer service here; and many folks find it useful and interesting. So I've gone back to have another look.

In May you requested comment on The problem of genetic improbability by Ashby Camp, and How did the human brain evolve? by Helen Fryman; both articles at Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry. In brief, the first is nonsense, and the second is mostly quite sensible. In more detail....

1. The problem of genetic improbability.

The article by Ashby Camp is arrant nonsense from start to finish. The difficulty is that almost every sentence introduces a new error or misconception, and a detailed response would be much longer than the original article.

Archive files that are relevant include:

In Camp's article itself:

  • It opens with a poorly cited reference to a Professor Ambrose for 5 being the minimum number of mutations necessary to produce the simplest new structure. Camp is probably referring to Professor Edmund J Ambrose, author of The Nature and Origin of the Biological World (John Wiley & Sons, 1982), but his only references are to secondary sources.

    It's unclear what this even means. Evolution invariably modifies existing structures and puts them to new purposes; it does not just introduce new structures with a few mutations. But the serious error is that Camp's "analysis" merely assumes all the mutations for new structures must occur in a single generation, and it fails to consider that many different changes are possible other than the ones which actually end up becoming fixed in a population. He's making the usual error of shooting the arrow and then drawing a target around where it lands.

  • The next paragraph cites some statistics: 1 mutation every 100,000 gene replications; 10,000 genes for the first single celled organism, based on E. coli, and 1 in 1000 mutations being non-harmful. It does not really matter what numbers Camp invokes, since the analysis is so fundamentally wrong, but for what it is worth, his numbers are wrong as well.

    The cited mutation rate is high, but roughly in the ball park. The number of genes for the simplest organism is merely silly. Why pick on E. coli? Mycoplasma genitalium has only 470 genes, and experiments have shown that they continue to survive with less than 300 of those. But neither of these is a credible model for the first cells, which probably did not use DNA at all; but may have used RNA or something else entirely. Camp's proportion of deleterious mutations is also out of touch with reality. Many mutations are "silent"; they make no change at all to gene expression. Of those that result in amino acid variations, estimates of the proportion that are deleterious range from around 38% to 85%; nowhere near Camp's 99.9%.

  • The errors above pale into insignificance beside the ludicrous calculations that follow, in which Camp simply multiplies a lot of big numbers together. This "analysis" completely ignores all evolutionary processes such as accumulation of change over many generations and the effects of selection. It also takes no account of the mindbogglingly enormous number of other changes that might occur instead. Calculating probabilities after fact for what happened to occur is foolishness.

It's a low grade snow job.

2. How the human brain evolve?

The article by Helen Fryman is almost entirely correct, and I commend it as interesting and thoughtful. It is given as a question and answer, and the original question incorporates a popular misconception, that we use only a fraction of our brain's capacity.

Ms Fryman focuses primarily on correcting that mistake. She also gives a link for more information. It was a dead link when you quoted it; I have let CARM know the correct link, and they have updated it.

The only point with which I disagree is the final line, and this is the only portion that directly addresses the question of the title. It reads as follows: "One last note -- how did the brain evolve? It didn't. It was created."

Ms Fryman offers no actual argument to refute, so I am content to disagree on this one point while being in enthusiastic agreement with the rest. Though I am not a Christian myself, do note that the range of Christian perspectives on the theology of creation includes the view that the entire natural world is God's creation, and that God is creator of every flower that grows, every cloud that rains, and every species or organ that evolves.

Cheers -- Chris Ho-Stuart

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Response: This is addressed indirectly in creationist claim CC361.

The most important point to grasp is that it is irrelevant. Fossils are not dated by how long they take to form, any more than you estimate the age of a book by how long it took to write.

Yes, some kinds of fossils can form in a few millennia, or less. After all, a fossil is by definition any trace left in the geological record by living creatures, and they can take many forms. Some fossils form very quickly indeed; others take much longer. None of them are dated by considering how long they take to form.

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Response: The main problem here is, as you point out, with the rate assumptions. Your approximation will be pretty good going back several hundred million years, but it implies a rate of energy loss that diverges to infinity at about 5.75 billion years. Rotation slow down does not proceed according to that formula.

Another back of the envelope method is to assume that the number of days in a year is decreasing at a constant rate. The 0.0015 seconds per day per century means that each century a day becomes about 1.5 milliseconds longer, which works out to having about 6.3×10-8 more days in each successive year. Go back 4.5 billion years, and you have about 285 more days in the year, and the day is about 13.5 hours long.

The formulae for these two approximations are as follows: Let R be the slowdown rate in seconds per day per century. Let N be a number of years in the past. The two approximations for the number of hours in a day are as follows:

  • If hours per day increases at a fixed rate: use 24*(1 - R*N/100/86400)
  • If days per year decreases at a fixed rate: use 24/(1 + R*N/100/86400)
For R at 0.0015 sec/day/century, the relative error between these approximations is small as long as N is significantly less than 5.75 billion years.

Neither of these methods is a good way to extrapolate back over several billion years; but the second method is a bit more reasonable.

The energy lost by slowing rotation is made up by the gradual recession of the Moon, and the major mechanism by which this energy transfer is achieved is by tides. The files in the archive which are most relevant to this topic are:

A consequence of the Earth's slowing rotation is that we need to resynchronize our clocks from time to time. The average length of the day was around 86400 seconds in 1820. Now it is more like 86400.002 seconds. You have given us a very timely feedback question, because it has just been announced by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS) that there is to be a leap second added to clocks at the end of this year. The final minute of 2005 (UTC) will be 61 seconds long.

When you are counting in the next New Year, please start your countdown at 11 rather than at 10, or you'll be kissing your main squeeze too soon. Thank you.

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Response: On whether the entire premise of evolution rests upon the ability or lack thereof, to transfer genes: obviously not true. Gene transfer is an important process which is part of how evolution occurs. It is probably a very minor contribution to evolution in large multi-celled organisms; but may be quite important at microbial levels. This is currently an active research question.

But more importantly, there is no reason at all to think gene transfer has the slightest connection at all with homosexuality.

See creationist claim CB403 for more detail on the relationship of homosexuality and evolution. In brief:

  • The major causes of homosexuality appear not to be genetic. At most, genes might make a difference in propensities.
  • It does not go against any homosexual premise to have and raise a child. It is rather about the kinds of relationships to which you are inclined; and believe it or not, there are all kinds of circumstances in which homosexuals may opt to procreate while still having their major loving and/or erotic relationships within their own geneder.
  • In some environments, there can be selective advantages for a proportion your relatives to have a propensity to homosexuality, or for other characteristics linked to homosexuality. If there is a genetic contribution, the effects of selection can be more complex than you may think.
A little more detail, and references, are available at the link.
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Response: We don't know the initial conditions of the earth in fine detail, and we don't know the conditions that would bring about a living cell.

Even if we did, it does not follow that we could reproduce those conditions. For example, one of the conditions might be "bake gently for one million years". But at present, we just don't know.

We do not have a good up to date FAQ on notions relating to the origin of life. It is a fast moving field, and one with many more questions than answers. For an excellent historical background, check out Spontaneous Generation and the Origin of Life by our resident philosopher; and the associated Modern Origin of Life references bibliography.

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Response: We have a whole heap of stuff on creationism. Your real concern is that it is all highly critical.

We are not a debate site (you can find a debate forum at the talk.origins Usenet group), but an information source, with definite answers to the questions that arise. We provide a comprehensive exploration of the creationism and evolution debate from the perspective of mainstream science. In our view, this is the perspective that makes sense of the issues, whereas the creationist view is incorrect and gets nearly everything wrong. Whatever your own view, however, you are very welcome to come at anytime. There may even be resources you could find useful, like our enormous list of links to creationist sources.

Far from shoving off, what we'd really like is for you to sit down and read the whole site through carefully from start to finish. ☺

But I guess that would be asking a bit much. I've not even done that myself. So I invite you to stay, and read even if you disagree. But in any case, thanks for visiting, and please feel free to return at any time.

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Response: Darwin's Origin makes no reference to so-called human races. The word "races" in the subtitle refers to varieties within other species; a standard usage of the day. It contains a lot about races of pigeons, and nothing on "human races". This criticism of the subtitle of Origin is vacuous muck racking, used by people who do not even look at what they criticize, or else are dishonest in how they represent it.

Evolutionary biology provides a powerful demonstration of the deep equivalence of so-called human races, and the triviality of racist distinctions made long before evolution came along. Africa turns out to be the cradle of all humanity, and many Africans take pride in this. We are all the children dark skinned Africans; showing plainly our common heritage, however much it may be denied by those who don't understand evolution and who fixate on trivial variation in color that can be found within the human species.

There is a growing number of fine evolutionary scientists in Africa. A recent article on this trend can be found in "Africans Begin to Make Their Mark in Human-Origins Research", Science, Vol 301, No 5637, pp 1178-1179, 29 Aug 2003.

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Response: Present indications are that tree shrews (Scandentia) would be the closest cousins to primates; followed by bats (Chiroptera) and Colugos (Dermoptera). Note that tree shrews are not shrews. See the Tree of Life page on Eutheria, or placental mammals, which has more good links for these groups.

These are not ancestors, but cousins. The species that were common ancestors of primates and bats, or primates and dogs, are no longer around as identifiable species.

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Response: It may be that your friend has confused a recent (2002) claim that humans and dogs have coevolved. That is, humans evolved at the same time as domesticating, or being domesticated by, dogs.

Here is a good summary, and here is another.

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Response: If God made the world, then God made the evolutionary process, yes. All evolutionary theists would entirely agree with you.
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Response: Several points.
  • Although intelligent design is not founded on strict biblical literalism, it is still driven by religious presumptions; and the notion that God works by intervention, in constrast with natural processes. There is no good empirical basis for denying the capacity of the natural world to give rise to complexity. In my opinion, the proper refutation of intelligent design is theological; with recognition that God is creator of the entire natural world, and that He is just as involved in what is simple and well understood as what is subtle and obscure.
  • The brain develops over several years as an organism grows naturally from a single celled egg. How counter intuitive is that? Furthermore, there is a natural variety in the all aspects of our individual physical forms. Some people have a natural propensity for abstraction; others for memory; others for imagination and empathy; and many other diverse capacities. Is this variety by design, or is it random? Does someone design the capacities your new born child shall develop? Christians typically acknowledge God as their individual creator; but they sell this short by comparing it to the human phenomenon of design. God is supposed to be the entity who ordained the very laws of nature to which mere designers must conform.
  • You say that "Practically all instances of mutations are detrimental." That is false. In fact, the vast majority of mutations have no effect on the final form of an organism. They occur in parts of the genome that are not expressed in the organism; or they switch codons without actually changing the sequence of an expressed protein; or they switch amino acids that don't actually make much difference to the function of an expressed protein.

    Of the small number of mutations that actually alter protein sequences, estimates of the detrimental proportion range from 38% to 85% or so; definitely not "practically all". This is to be expected. The occasional beneficial or adaptive mutations tend to become fixed by selection, resulting in better adapted organisms with correspondingly more scope for adaptation to be disrupted. See feedback above on the alleged problem of genetic improbability.

  • You speak of extra, out of place limbs. That is not usually a result of mutation at all, but of problems that can arise during development even with a perfectly normal genome. Still, your underlying point is solid; mutations can sometimes have dramatic effects, and large effects in one generation are invariably detrimental. But smaller effects are common, and they accumulate to have large effects over many generations. Viability is maintained by selection.

    Bear in mind that the brain is nothing like a computer. Our computers are brittle devices, subject to catastrophic failure with the smallest change. A brain, by contrast, is startlingly robust; and has a natural capacity to grow. It accumulates neurons as a child grows, which integrate seamlessly into a working whole. This capacity for growth also gives a capacity to evolve, as small changes in the genome can be expressed as more neurons, or fewer neurons, or changes in their interconnections, or any number of other varieties. It is a mistake to think bigger brains is always better. The circumstance of environment may drive this in either direction, and selection will always tend to drive a population to a local fitness peak.

  • The vestigial pelvis and leg bones in whales show plainly their evolutionary antecedents as limbs. It is normal for evolution to adapt such vestiges to new purposes; but their form retains obvious associations to prior forms; rather than being new bones designed for a new purpose. The forelimbs of whales are their flippers.

Invoke a designer if you like; but before you presume that evolution is in conflict with this notion, consider whether you might not be denying the very capacity ordained by God for development of life. Nothing in your feedback presents the slightest difficulty for evolutionary biology.

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Response: Nice point well stated. Thanks.
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Author of: Dino Blood Redux
Response: Your overall point is well taken. Details regarding a homicide investigation that could help your presentation include that investigators are responsible for evidence that can be used to convict as well as demonstrate the innocence of any individual. Further, in the absence of evidence from a medical examination, the presumption is always that there has been a crime committed. This way, all evidence is collected in a manner that will allow this evidence to be used in court. This is not to say that screw-ups don't occur, they clearly still do.

Additionally, "macroevolution" has been observed as described in "29+ Evidences for Macroevolution: The Scientific Case for Common Descent", and "Observed Instances of Speciation".

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Response: Darwin does mention Haeckel in The Origin of Species, but not the 1st edition (1859), which is the version found in the Archive. To find mention of Haeckel you’ll have to look in the 6th edition (1872), in chapter 14 at the end of the section titled “On the nature of the Affinities Connecting Organic Beings” (the 6th edition is easily found at other sites on the web):

Professor Haeckel in his Generelle Morphologie and in other works, has recently brought his great knowledge and abilities to bear on what he calls phylogeny, or the lines of descent of all organic beings. In drawing up the several series he trusts chiefly to embryological characters, but receives aid from homologous and rudimentary organs, as well as from the successive periods at which the various forms of life are believed to have first appeared in our geological formations. He has thus boldly made a great beginning, and shows us how classification will in the future be treated.

Later in the same chapter (and elsewhere in the book) Darwin discusses embryos at some length but does not mention Haeckel at all in that context. There is only one illustration in the OoS and it is of an idealized phylogenetic tree, not embryos. The point being, your suspicion that Darwin did not rely on Haeckel with regards to evidence from comparative embryology in the OoS is correct.

Darwin did mention Haeckel numerous times in his book The Descent of Man (1871), and does mention in a caption to some illustrations of embryos that Haeckel has similar drawings of embryos in his book Natürliche Schopfungsgeschichte (“The History of Creation”, 1868):

The human embryo (see upper fig.) is from Ecker, Icones Phys., 1851-1859, tab. xxx., fig. 2. The drawing of this embryo is much magnified. The embryo of the dog is from Bischoff, Entwicklungsgeschichte des Hunde-Eies, 1845, tab. xi., fig. 42 B. This drawing is magnified, the embryo being twenty-five days old. The internal viscera have been omitted, and the uterine appendages in both drawings removed. I was directed to these figures by Prof. Huxley, from whose work, Man's Place in Nature, the idea of giving them was taken. Haeckel has also given analogous drawings in his Schopfungsgeschichte.

While the drawings by Haeckel that Darwin refers to here have been criticized by antievolutionists (unfairly in my opinion) they are not the famous illustrations that Jonathan Wells and others have more recently been attacking (those are from the 3rd edition of Haeckel’s book “The Evolution of Man”, 1874). And in any case as Darwin makes clear in the above caption he did not rely on Haeckel as a source for the drawings in The Descent of Man.

Again, you are correct in thinking that with regards to comparative embryology Darwin did not rely on Haeckel’s embryo illustrations in making his case for descent with modification, this is something manufactured in the minds of antievolutionists.

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Response: No. It would be futile and pointless. See also Kent Hovind's $250,000 Offer.
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Response: Many teachers are intimidated into not teaching evolution. I don't know just how big the problem is, but it is substantial. I recommend anyone in public school learn how to learn outside of class (which is an essential skill in any case). Teachers who are feeling intimidated may want to contact the National Center for Science Education.

Olivia Judson's Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to All Creation is way cool.

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Author of: Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths
Response: A few reasons come to mind; First, Mr. Hovind presents so many falsehoods as facts that it requires considerable effort just to keep up with them. Second, it takes more work to debunk a lie than it takes to tell it. Finally, Mr. Hovind is quite popular and someone that damaging deserves greater attention.
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Response: See at the bottom of the technical FAQs? Those things are called "references". They are listed so that you, or anyone else, can go check them out and see for yourself what the facts are.

As to the meaning of life - it's your life. What would you like it to mean?

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Response: This is no problem at all for evolution; not the slightest. There are many species with a capacity for communication, tool use, and problem solving in varying degrees; and no reason whatsoever for thinking that this capacity must be limited to our nearest relatives, or even for thinking that humans must be the most intelligent species.

I suspect humans are the species with the most developed capacity for thought at the present time; but there is nothing in evolutionary theory that implies this must be the case. Ten million years from now, the descendents of dolphins might be the smartest species around.

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From: John Wilkins
Response: One wonders if the mutants that will arise from X-Men will be ordinary humans...
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Response: For some useful benefits from evolution, see the response to Evolution is a useless theory.

Teaching "Intelligent Design" would not merely compromise science. It would also compromise engineering, since the design of ID has no resemblance to the design used by competent designers. Real design involves experimentation, testing, selection, recombination, and, in a word, evolution. Not exactly the same as biological evolution, but a lot closer than creationists would like to think. Teaching ID would also compromise theology, because it teaches that the designers are incompetent and are directly responsible for evils such as diseases.

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Author of: Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths
Response: You win.

The stupid notion that "fitness" is the same as "living a long while" or "dying in a macho, or approved common way" is pervasive and wrong. You will find several TalkOrigins papers on the notion of 'fitness' starting with, "The Evolution of Improved Fitness : By Random Mutation Plus Selection"

PS: Too few people know what a 'nit' is, and the opportunity to highlight the word took over.

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Response: After the amount of time that I have spent studying various creationist works, I feel that I have earned one.
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Author of: Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths
Response: I dun'no Mike, I think there is material here for a Piled Higher and Deeper.
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Response: Check out our FAQ The Recession of the Moon for more information on tidal forces. It is by Tim Thompson, a talkorigins contributor of many years standing and a physicist working at NASA JPL.

You are mixing up your creationist confusions here. The magnitude of gravitational forces from the moon is easily calculated, and they account for tides just fine. The rate of recession actually depends on tidal friction, which is much harder to calculate, but the details are covered in the FAQ. So the answer to your question is: of course not. Tidal effects are not negligible, and they can be calculated, though the models are complicated. The current rate of recession is actually about 3.82±0.07 cm/year, which is unusually high. The FAQ explains the factors that bear upon the recession rate; it is not uniformitarian except in the trivial sense of using the same laws of physics.

The figure you give corresponds to recession about 650 million years ago. That kind of recession rate suggests that the Moon has receded roughly 20,000 km over those 650 million years. The Moon is currently about 400,000 km away, and our current leading model for formation of the moon is the mother of all catastrophes about 4.5 billion years ago.

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Response: Wow. I'm impressed. I'm pretty sure that when I read Marco Polo's travels there was no mention of dinosaurs. A page number and edition would be really useful...

[So many errors, so little interest.]

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Response: I didn't see the ICR item before writting "Dino Blood Redux", but the T.O. article should fit your needs.
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Author of: Dino Blood and the Young Earth
Response: I ask why you would have bothered to respond? You must have even less to do than you think that I do.

I of course disagree that the effort to correct the errors and out-right lies promoted by creationists about science is wasted. We face many critical issues regarding the preservation of genetic diversity, medical practice, and global energy use which must be decided by a well informed population if we are to avoid disaster.

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Response: It isn't. Any good evolutionary biology text will talk also about drift, canalisation, phylogenetic constraints, and so on. And in the original text that set off the Modern Synthesis, The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection by R. A. Fisher, the very first sentence is

Evolution is not Natural Selection.

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