Sedaka wrote:
Escuerd wrote:
Kelvin's objection was (at his time) much more reasonable than Hoyle's later on. That is, Kelvin's was (initially at least) a fairly legitimate agreement based on the best known physics of his time, and it wasn't clear that evolution and physics could be reconciled, so he favored the one that he understood the evidence for better. What's problematic is when people cite Kelvin's arguments now as though they still hold water.
Hoyle's was more like an arrogant (albeit brilliant) guy with a pet theory who didn't really seem to get the theory he was criticizing.
people do this all the time when criticizing evolution... they cite theories that have been already rejected or corrected as if they are currently still believed.
Yeah, I've seen that all too often.
Sedaka wrote:
i hardly ever see debate on evolution at the molecular level.... which is pretty much the main thrust of it now. people have heard of dna and maybe that it's in a double helix... but the dynamics of molecules and gene expression and all sorts of abstract things are not really known by the general public.
I've only rarely seen attempts by creationists to account for why we get nested hierarchical degrees of similarity in comparing the sequences of DNA or proteins, or comparing insertion points of transposons, etc., and that these relationships are so consistent. They mostly seem to ignore it. The only two I've seen attempt to address it were two of those that have training as biologists: Michael Denton and Duane Gish. Denton just revealed a fundamental misunderstanding that evolution was linear and not hierarchical, and Gish, well,
Gish seemed to be making things up. Then there's Michael Behe, who has quietly stated that he accepts that this is convincing evidence for common descent (his issue is that he thinks natural selection is insufficient to account for it, but that's another topic for discussion).