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Why Keith Blanchard really doesn’t understand evolution

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A few days ago, The Week published a pro-evolution article with the paradoxical title, “Why you should stop believing in evolution” by Keith Blanchard, a former editor-in-chief of Maxim magazine who is now the chief digital officer of the World Science Festival. Evolution, argued Blanchard, isn’t something we believe in, but something we simply grasp: “You either understand it or you don’t.” Blanchard then proceeded to demonstrate that he doesn’t understand the very theory he advocates: his article is riddled with scientific errors and non sequiturs.

I’m not the first person to criticize Blanchard’s article on scientific grounds. That honor belongs to Glenn Branch, Deputy Director of the National Center for Science Education, whose article, Five Quibbles for Blanchard was published on the NCSE Website on August 7, and re-posted on the Richard Dawkins Foundation Website on the same day. But only one of the errors identified by Branch could properly be described as a scientific error; the rest are either philosophical, historical or related to Blanchard’s background beliefs: curiously for an evolutionist, he appears to retain a vestige of belief in the Great Chain of Being, as evidenced by his strange assertion that humans are becoming “less bestial” over time, coupled with his frank acknowledgement that he would rather not be related to monkeys – a startling remark for a Darwinist to make, and one that Branch indignantly declared “could almost make me go ape!”

The scientific error identified by Glenn Branch related to Keith Blanchard’s limited understanding of the mechanisms of evolution:

Blanchard seems to equate evolution, in the sense of universal common ancestry — “Go back far enough, and you’ll find an ancestor common to you and to every creature on Earth” — with natural selection. Or, what’s about as problematic, he seems to identify natural selection as the one and only mechanism of evolution... Granted, for the purposes of Blanchard’s piece, there was no particular reason to invoke any of the other primary mechanisms of evolution (genetic drift, gene flow, mutation). But since his concern was primarily with universal common ancestry, it wouldn’t have been particularly difficult for him to write in such a way as to avoid reinforcing these misconceptions.

Blanchard’s “selectionist” model of evolution

Personally, I think Branch is being too charitable to Blanchard here. Blanchard’s understanding of evolution is undeniably selectionist, as evidenced by the following passage in his article:

When … new traits are advantageous (longer legs in gazelles), organisms survive and replicate at a higher rate than average, and when disadvantageous (brittle skulls in woodpeckers), they survive and replicate at a lower rate.

That’s a little oversimplified, but the general idea. As advantageous traits become the norm within a population and disadvantageous traits are weeded out, each type of creature gradually morphs to better fit its environment.

Branch might be interested to know that evolutionary biologist P.Z. Myers recently criticized South Carolina’s state science standards for inaccurately asserting that “[b]iological evolution occurs primarily when natural selection acts on the genetic variation in a population and changes the distribution of traits in that population over multiple generations.” In a follow-up post, Myers went on to explain that this statement reflects an out-dated selectionist model of evolution, in which all mutations are regarded as either advantageous or deleterious. The modern view of evolution, explained Myers, is strikingly different from that of Darwin:

First thing you have to know: the revolution is over. Neutral and nearly neutral theory won. The neutral theory states that most of the variation found in evolutionary lineages is a product of random genetic drift. Nearly neutral theory is an expansion of that idea that basically says that even slightly advantageous or deleterious mutations will escape selection — they’ll be overwhelmed by effects dependent on population size. This does not in any way imply that selection is unimportant, but only that most molecular differences will not be a product of adaptive, selective changes.

In other words, most mutations have no effect on fitness. And mutations that have only a slight positive or negative effect on fitness are invisible to natural selection. Blanchard’s model of evolution is over forty years out-of-date.

Blanchard’s faulty understanding of genes

But this error pales into insignificance, when compared to Blanchard’s bald (and inaccurate) assertion about the role of genes:

Genes, stored in every cell, are the body’s blueprints; they code for traits like eye color, disease susceptibility, and a bazillion other things that make you you.

This crude understanding of genes was roundly debunked in a recent article in the Huffington Post by Professor Agustin Fuentes, titled, DNA Is Not a Blueprint: How Genes Really Work (June 8, 2012):

Genes play an important role in our development and functioning, not as directors but as parts of a complex system. “Blueprints” is a poor way to describe genes. It is misleading to talk about genes as doing things by themselves. There are very few instances of direct gene-to-trait scenarios, even in well known “genetic” disorders. Traits emerge from the interactions of genes and a range of developmental and environmental influences, and similar DNA sequences often produce slightly different outcomes. Our DNA influences who we are, but not in a linear or easily described manner. (See here for more.)…

Genes contain information, but the actual relationship between genes and our bodies and behavior is complicated…

There is little evidence to support any one-to-one relationship between genes and behavior.

Blanchard’s gradualism

There’s more. Blanchard asserts that new species are the result of an accumulation of gradual changes over the course of time:

The very notion of “species” is even a little misleading — a discrete-sounding artifice created for the convenience of people who live about a hundred years. If you had eyes to see the big picture, and could watch life change on a geologic time frame, you’d see constant gradual change, as generations adapt to circumstance…

Pile on enough eons, and tiny pidgin (sic) horses gradually become rideable by gradually less hairy apes.

Blanchard should know that this gradualistic view of evolution has been publicly rejected by leading biologists, including evolutionary biologist Eugene Koonin, who states in his best-selling work, The Logic of Chance: The Nature and Origin of Biological Evolution (FT Press, Upper Saddle River, NJ: 2011):

Gradualism is not the principal regime of evolution. (p. 398)

Evolutionary biologist P. Z. Myers concurs with this view: he cited this very quote from Koonin’s book in a recent post. In a 2007 review of the late Stephen Jay Gould’s posthumously published magnum opus, Punctuated Equilibrium, Myers wrote:

Gould and Eldredge proposed punctuated equilibrium as a paleontologist’s view of the history of life: they were describing the paleontological data available at the time pointing out that there was no geological evidence to support Charles Darwin’s belief that species evolved gradually. Time has shown them to be correct, and their observations are now accepted by most biologists as a accurate account of evolutionary history.

Artificial selection as evidence for macroevolution

Blanchard compounds his errors by arguing that artificial selection proves that macroevolution (evolution at or beyond the species level) can occur: although evolution normally proceeds at a glacial pace, humans can speed it up artificially, leading to “evolution turbocharged by human intervention” which effectively creates new species. The implication is clear: if human breeding over a relatively short scale of several thousands of years can accomplish all this, how much more so can natural selection, operating over the course of millions of years?

We invented the dog, starting with wolves and quickening the natural but poky process of evolution by specifically selecting breeding pairs with desirable traits, gradually accentuating particular traits in successive populations. Poodles, Rottweilers, Great Danes, Hollywood red-carpet purse dogs — all this fabulous kinetic art was created, and continues to be created, by humans manually hijacking the mechanism of evolution.

There’s a saying that a picture is worth a thousand words. Here’s a photo of the skeleton of a Great Dane, next to a Chihuahua:

Apart from size, there’s not much of a difference in the skeletons, is there?

Or as geneticist Jeff Tomkins (who is now a creationist) trenchantly puts it in an online article titled, Artificial Selection and Dog Breeding is Not Evolution (April 25, 2013):

You can push dog genetic variability in whatever direction you want, and you will only get dogs. It’s not a situation where small changes are adding up over long periods of time to vertically transform and produce something completely different than a dog. Rather, dog breeding (artificial selection) is a matter of exploiting and manipulating inherent variability within the dog gene pool, called horizontal genetic variation. Dog breeding doesn’t vindicate evolution on a grand scale or provide proof for natural selection.

“What about human beings and great apes such as the chimpanzee and gorilla?” you might ask. Here’s another picture, showing a human skeleton and a gorilla skeleton. Not so similar, are they?

Chimpanzees and gorillas are agreed by scientists to be man’s closest living relatives. The anatomical differences between humans and chimpanzees, which are quite extensive, are conveniently summarized in a handout prepared by Anthropology Professor Claud A. Ramblett the University of Texas, entitled, Primate Anatomy. Anyone who thinks that a series of random stepwise mutations, culled by the non-random but unguided process of natural selection, can account for the anatomical differences between humans and chimpanzees, should read this article very carefully. What it reveals is that an entire ensuite of changes, relating to the skull, teeth, vertebrae, thorax, shoulder, arms, hands, pelvis, legs and feet, not to mention the rate of skeletal maturation and method of locomotion, would have been required, in order to transform the common ancestor of humans and chimps into creatures like ourselves. Given the sheer diversity of changes that would have been required, it is surely reasonable to ask whether an unguided process, such as Darwinian macroevolution, could have accomplished this feat over a period of a few million years.

Blanchard’s bungled examples of human vestigial traits

Blanchard concludes his argument with an appeal to human vestigial traits as evidence for evolution:

Why do you have sharp canine teeth? An appendix? Hair under your arms? If your body was designed for its current usage, there’s a lot of inefficiency there. If it seems, rather, to be in the process of becoming less … bestial, well, that’s because it is.

Blanchard’s artless statement that humans are becoming less bestial over time has been critiqued on scientific grounds by Glenn Branch, a vocal defender of human evolution, who comments:

Humans are still beasts … and no amount of evolution is going to change that.

If one accepts Branch’s naturalistic assumptions, then his logic is impeccable.

But the alleged vestiges cited by Blanchard do not pass muster. To begin with, the function of canine teeth, according to leading dentists, is “holding, grasping, and tearing food.” Because canine teeth are especially durable, they are referred to by dentists as “the cornerstone of the mouth.” What’s more, the shape and size of canine teeth have changed little since the time of Australopithecus africanus, three million years ago, as these images show. (It is true that Neanderthal man had larger canines than modern man, but his incisors were larger as well, and the large size is apparently due to the very heavy wear on teeth in prehistoric times.)

The human appendix was shown several years ago to play a vital function in the human body. Loren G. Martin, professor of physiology at Oklahoma State University, has listed various likely functions for the appendix on Scientific American‘s website (October 21, 1999), including:

  • being “involved primarily in immune functions”;
  • “function[ing] as a lymphoid organ, assisting with the maturation of B lymphocytes (one variety of white blood cell) and in the production of the class of antibodies known as immunoglobulin A (IgA) antibodies”;
  • helping with “the production of molecules that help to direct the movement of lymphocytes to various other locations in the body”;
  • “suppress[ing] potentially destructive humoral (blood- and lymph-borne) antibody responses while promoting local immunity”;
  • and finally, it is “an important ‘back-up’ that can be used in a variety of reconstructive surgical techniques.”

The idea that the appendix functions as a storehouse for beneficial microbes that help fight off infections in the gut is becoming more widely accepted, even among evolutionary biologists, as science reporter Susan Perry acknowledges in an article for MinnPost titled, The appendix has a healthful purpose, evolutionary evidence suggests (February 18, 2013). She points out that according to a recent study, people without an appendix were four times more likely to experience a recurrence of an infection caused by the bacterium C. difficile than people who still had their appendix. C. difficile kills an estimated 14,000 Americans each year. In her article, Perry explains how the myth that the appendix had no function came to be accepted in the first place, thanks largely to the speculations of Charles Darwin:

Charles Darwin helped popularize the idea that the appendix was a vestigial structure. During his lifetime, only humans and other great apes were known to have an appendix. This led Darwin to hypothesize that the appendix was an evolutionary artifact — a remnant of the days when our ancient ancestors needed a larger cecum (the pouch-like beginning of the large intestine) to store bacteria to break down plant tissues. Darwin believed that when those ancestors switched to a more easily digestible fruit-based diet, the cecum shrank — and the appendix became unnecessary.

Perry goes on to cite a recent article by Colin Barras in Science Now (February 12, 2013), which states that no less than 50 species of mammals are now considered by scientists to have an appendix, and that for most of these species, there was no sign of a dietary shift triggering the evolution of the appendix. Nevertheless, Barras maintained that since the ape appendix appeared at around the time when our ancestors switched diets, it “may have” originally evolved for that reason. In logic, this kind of reasoning is known as post hoc, ergo propter hoc (“after this, therefore because of this”). And even if the origin of the ape appendix could be linked to dietary changes, the fact that it continues to play a vital role in the human body means that its value as a piece of evidence for human evolution is vastly diminished.

The last item cited as evidence for human evolution by Blanchard is “hair under your arms.” Reading about this one made me smile: even the zealously pro-evolution Wikipedia admits: “The evolutionary significance of human underarm hair is still debated.” There are at least three hypotheses which attempt to account for why we have hair under our armpits: it may (i) aid the wicking of sweat away from the skin, (ii) reduce friction between the thorax and upper arm, or (iii) facilitate the release of sex pheromones. A recent article by Cristen Conger on HowStuffWorks explains underarm hair in terms of sexual selection: “The hair in those areas traps and amplifies those odors, like loudspeakers that amplify your body’s chemical siren song of attraction.” Well, maybe – but what does that prove about our ancestry? The simplistic notion, popularized by Blanchard, that underarm hair is a relic of our simian past has not the slightest evidence to support it.

Conclusion

I could go on, but I’d like to conclude this article with a final observation: Keith Blanchard doesn’t have a science degree. His LinkedIn profile lists him as having a two year tech degree in Electronic Technology, which he obtained in 1975. Let us freely grant that the man’s skill set looks quite impressive. Nevertheless, the fact remains that a man without a science degree has no place writing an article on evolution in a popular online magazine like The Week. It’s simply presumptuous.

For the record, I happen to believe in the common descent of humans and apes, based in large part on the fact that the gaps in the hominin fossil record have been shrinking steadily over the last few decades – including the gap that was alleged to exist between Australopithecus and Homo ergaster/erectus. But after having read assiduously about human evolution for more than 40 years, I can categorically state that anyone who thinks we’ve got it all sewn up is just nuts. We know very little of the genetic changes that triggered the explosive growth and structural reorganization of the human brain over the past few million years, and we are in no position at the present time to estimate the statistical likelihood of these changes. (Remember: we’re talking about the most complicated machine in the universe, folks. Computers don’t hold a candle to it, and the brains of other animals appear to be qualitatively different in terms of their mental capacities.) Consequently, we have no right to assume that the evolution of the human brain and body, if it occurred, was an unguided process, as modern-day evolutionary biologists overwhelmingly do, or that it occurred without the need for any special intervention, as Blanchard appears to believe. (The only possible role he allows for God at the end of his article is setting “the rules of evolution.”)

It is a great pity that Keith Blanchard believes that macroevolution is as obvious as “gravity, or the roundness of Earth.” As readers of this blog will be aware, one of the world’s top chemists, Professor James Tour, thinks there’s no scientist alive today who understands macroevolution. Perhaps Blanchard, in his arrogance, thinks that Professor Tour is also guilty of covering his eyes and ears, like everyone who questions macroevolution. What I would suggest that Blanchard do instead is try to find out why intelligent people come to doubt evolution.

Comments
I don't understand God. I really don't. At best I can hope to emulate what I have heard about God. So I should stop believing in God? Why?Mung
August 9, 2014
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I thought that it was a well known fact that no one understands evolution. So how can we fault Keith Blanchard?Mung
August 9, 2014
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Moreover, there is credible reason to doubt the gradual appearance of humans:
"A number of hominid crania are known from sites in eastern and southern Africa in the 400- to 200-thousand-year range, but none of them looks like a close antecedent of the anatomically distinctive Homo sapiens…Even allowing for the poor record we have of our close extinct kin, Homo sapiens appears as distinctive and unprecedented…there is certainly no evidence to support the notion that we gradually became who we inherently are over an extended period, in either the physical or the intellectual sense." Dr. Ian Tattersall: - paleoanthropologist - emeritus curator of the American Museum of Natural History - (Masters of the Planet, 2012) Skull "Rewrites" Story of Human Evolution -- Again - Casey Luskin - October 22, 2013 Excerpt: "There is a big gap in the fossil record," Zollikofer told NBC News. "I would put a question mark there. Of course it would be nice to say this was the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and us, but we simply don't know." - http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/10/skull_rewrites_078221.html No Known Hominin Is Common Ancestor of Neanderthals and Modern Humans, Study Suggests - Oct. 21, 2013 Excerpt: The article, "No known hominin species matches the expected dental morphology of the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and modern humans," relies on fossils of approximately 1,200 molars and premolars from 13 species or types of hominins -- humans and human relatives and ancestors. Fossils from the well-known Atapuerca sites have a crucial role in this research, accounting for more than 15 percent of the complete studied fossil collection.,,, They conclude with high statistical confidence that none of the hominins usually proposed as a common ancestor, such as Homo heidelbergensis, H. erectus and H. antecessor, is a satisfactory match. "None of the species that have been previously suggested as the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and modern humans has a dental morphology that is fully compatible with the expected morphology of this ancestor," Gómez-Robles said. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/10/131021153202.htm
And I certainly don't think the gap has been shrinking, as you hold Dr. Torley. In fact, it has recently been growing larger:
Skull of Homo erectus throws story of human evolution into disarray - OCT. 17, 2013 Excerpt: Over decades excavating sites in Africa, researchers have named half a dozen different species of early human ancestor, but most, if not all, are now on shaky ground.,,, If the scientists are right, it would trim the base of the human evolutionary tree and spell the end for names such as H rudolfensis, H gautengensis, H ergaster and possibly H habilis. http://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/oct/17/skull-homo-erectus-human-evolution
Moreover, Darwinists themselves are in complete disarray as to which 'family tree' we should accept:
The Truth About Human Origins: Excerpt: "It is practically impossible to determine which "family tree" (for human evolution) one should accept. Richard Leakey (of the famed fossil hunting family from Africa) has proposed one. His late mother, Mary Leakey, proposed another. Donald Johanson, former president of the Institute of Human Origins in Berkeley, California, has proposed yet another. And as late as 2001, Meave Leakey (Richard's wife) has proposed still another.,," http://books.google.com/books?id=J9pON9yB8HkC&pg=PT28&lpg=PT28 What Can We Responsibly Believe About Human Evolution? - Denyse O'Leary - August 4, 2014 Excerpt: A 2012 article in Scientific American acknowledged,,, "The origin of our genus, Homo, is one of the biggest mysteries facing scholars of human evolution." Intriguing finds lead to a barrage of conflicting narratives, partial and uncertain, much like ancient mythologies.,,, Basic outlines of our origins are admitted to be uncertain and conflicting: In PNAS, paleobiologist Bernard Wood puts it like this: "The origin of our own genus remains frustratingly unclear. Although many of my colleagues are agreed regarding the "what" with respect to Homo, there is no consensus as to the "how" and "when" questions.",,, http://www.evolutionnews.org/2014/08/what_can_we_res088531.html
But perhaps the strongest reason why I don't trust Darwinists, in regards to how they handle any purported evidence for human evolution, is the blatant misrepresentation, i.e. artistic license, that Darwinists shamelessly employ to mislead people with their inaccurate ape to man drawings
“We have all seen the canonical parade of apes, each one becoming more human. We know that, as a depiction of evolution, this line-up is tosh (i.e. nonsense). Yet we cling to it. Ideas of what human evolution ought to have been like still colour our debates.” Henry Gee, editor of Nature (478, 6 October 2011, page 34, doi:10.1038/478034a), "National Geographic magazine commissioned four artists to reconstruct a female figure from casts of seven fossil bones thought to be from the same species as skull 1470. One artist drew a creature whose forehead is missing and whose jaws look vaguely like those of a beaked dinosaur. Another artist drew a rather good-looking modern African-American woman with unusually long arms. A third drew a somewhat scrawny female with arms like a gorilla and a face like a Hollywood werewolf. And a fourth drew a figure covered with body hair and climbing a tree, with beady eyes that glare out from under a heavy, gorilla-like brow." “Behind the Scenes,” National Geographic 197 (March, 2000): 140 picture - these artists "independently" produced the 4 very "different" ancestors you see here http://www.omniology.com/JackalopianArtists.html https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/human-evolution-skull-1470-it-turns-out-has-a-multiple-personality-disorder/ "alleged restoration of ancient types of man have very little, if any, scientific value and are likely only to mislead the public" Earnest A. Hooton - physical anthropologist - Harvard University
One can see that 'artistic license' for human evolution being played out on the following site.
10 Transitional Ancestors of Human Evolution by Tyler G., March 18, 2013 http://listverse.com/2013/03/18/10-transitional-ancestors-of-human-evolution/
Please note, on the preceding site, how the sclera (white of the eye), a uniquely human characteristic, was brought in very early on, in the artists' reconstructions, to make the fossils appear much more human than they actually were, even though the artists making the reconstructions have no clue whatsoever as to what the colors of the eyes, of these supposed transitional fossils, actually were.
Evolution of human eye as a device for communication - Hiromi Kobayashi - Kyoto University, Japan Excerpt: The uniqueness of human eye morphology among primates illustrates the remarkable difference between human and other primates in the ability to communicate using gaze signals. http://www.saga-jp.org/coe_abst/kobayashi.htm
bornagain77
August 9, 2014
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Dr. Torley, enjoyed your article, well written and researched as usual, but, of course, I still disagree with you on this:
For the record, I happen to believe in the common descent of humans and apes, based in large part on the fact that the gaps in the hominin fossil record have been shrinking steadily over the last few decades –
,,,,This is, mainly, because of the great fanfare with which supposed new human ancestor fossil findings are released, (and the back page fine print retractions once the fossils are exposed as not ancestral to humans), I simply don't trust Darwinists with this area of evidence. They simply have ruined any credibility they had with me in this area. A few notes to that effect:
Hominid Hype and the Election Cycle - Casey Luskin - September 2011 Excerpt: Ignoring fraudulent fossils like Piltdown man, the last 50 years have seen a slew of so-called human ancestors which initially produced hype, and were later disproven. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/09/hominid_hype_and_the_election_050801.html Ardi: The Human Ancestor Who Wasn't? - May 2010 Excerpt: "[White] showed no evidence that Ardi is on the human lineage," Sarmiento says. "Those characters that he posited as relating exclusively to humans also exist in apes and ape fossils that we consider not to be in the human lineage." http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1992115,00.html Icon Of Evolution - Ape To Man - The Ultimate Deception - Jonathan Wells - video http://vimeo.com/19080087 Missing link fossil a “hotchpotch,” “may never have existed” - April 2014 Excerpt: The fossils of Australopithecus sediba, which promised to rewrite the story of human evolution, may actually be the remains of two species jumbled together. (Piltdown anyone?) https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/missing-link-fossil-a-hotchpotch-may-never-have-existed/ Flores bones show features of Down syndrome, not a new 'hobbit' human - Aug 04, 2014 Excerpt: In October 2004, excavation of fragmentary skeletal remains from the island of Flores in Indonesia yielded what was called "the most important find in human evolution for 100 years." Its discoverers dubbed the find Homo floresiensis, a name suggesting a previously unknown species of human. Now detailed reanalysis by an international team of researchers including Robert B. Eckhardt, professor of developmental genetics and evolution at Penn State, Maciej Henneberg, professor of anatomy and pathology at the University of Adelaide, and Kenneth Hsü, a Chinese geologist and paleoclimatologist, suggests that the single specimen on which the new designation depends, known as LB1, does not represent a new species. Instead, it is the skeleton of a developmentally abnormal human and, according to the researchers, contains important features most consistent with a diagnosis of Down syndrome. http://phys.org/news/2014-08-flores-bones-features-syndrome-hobbit.html
The Hobbit 'hoax' is very similar in nature to the many other infamous hoaxes for human evolution that Darwinists have perpetuated for years in the past:
EVOLUTION FORGERIES (For Human Evolution) - excerpts - Piltdown Man: An Orang-utan Jaw and a Human Skull! Nebraska Man: A Single Pig Tooth! Ota Benga: The African Native Put Into a Cage! http://www.evolutiondeceit.com/chapter9.php etc... etc.. etc..
Certainly not a track record to inspire confidence is it? Phillip Johnson gives the reason why, (human nature), Darwinists continually push fraudulent fossils:
“What I saw about the fossil record again,, was that Gould and Eldridge were experts in the area where the animal fossil record is most complete. That is marine invertebrates.,, And the reason for this is that when,, a bird, or a human, or an ape, or a wolf, or whatever, dies,, normally it does not get fossilized. It decays in the open, or is eaten by scavengers. Things get fossilized when they get covered over quickly with sediments so that they are protected from this natural destructive process. So if you want to be a fossil, the way to go about it is to live in the shallow seas, where you get covered over by sediments when you die,,. Most of the animal fossils are of that kind and it is in that area where the fossil record is most complete. That there is a consistent pattern.,, I mean there is evolution in the sense of variation, just like the peppered moth example. Things do vary, but they vary within the type. The new types appear suddenly, fully formed, without an evolutionary history and then they stay fundamentally stable with (cyclical) variation after their sudden appearance, and stasis (according) to the empirical observations made by Gould and Eldridge. Well now you see, I was aware of a number of examples of where evolutionary intermediates were cited. This was brought up as soon as people began to make the connection and question the (Darwinian) profession about their theory in light of the controversy. But the examples of claimed evolutionary transitionals, oddly enough, come from the area of the fossil record where fossilization is rarest. Where it is least likely to happen.,,, One of things that amused me is that there are so many fossil candidates for human ancestorship, and so very few fossils that are candidates for the great apes.,, There should be just as many. But why not? Any economist can give you the answer to that. Human ancestors have a great American value and so they are produced at a much greater rate.,, These also were grounds to be suspicious of what was going on,,, ,,,if the problem is the greatest where the fossil record is most complete and if the confirming examples are found where fossils are rarest, that doesn’t sound like it could be the explanation." - Phillip Johnson - April 2012 - audio/video 15:05 minute mark to 19:15 minute mark http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJDlBvbPSMA&feature=player_detailpage#t=903s
Of related note, Bill Nye was busted using a fraudulent slide in his debate with Ken Ham
Contemplating Bill Nye’s 51 skulls slide - February 10, 2014 - with video Excerpt: David A. DeWitt, Biology & Chemistry chair at Liberty, knows a thing or two about skulls, and writes to say, "This afternoon and evening I tracked down 46 of the 51 skulls that were on the slide Nye showed in the Ken Ham debate (at about 1:05 on the Youtube video). This was a challenge because some of them are not very well analyzed, partial skulls, etc. While some of them are well known, others are rarely discussed. I believe only a well-trained anthropologist would have been able to address that slide in the very brief time that it was visible. It was especially confusing because the skulls are in different orientations (including one that is viewed from the bottom and one that is just a jaw). They were not shown with the same scale so the relative sizes are wrong, and they are not grouped or lined up in any clear order. They are mixed up by type of skull and by date, and the only label is the name of the individual skull. I suspect that this was deliberate.,,," "I can only conclude that the sole purpose of showing such a slide was to confuse and obfuscate, not educate.” https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/from-david-dewitt-at-liberty-u-contemplating-bill-nyes-51-skulls-slide/
bornagain77
August 9, 2014
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