googlef87758e9b6df9bec.html A Sure Word: 2019

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Answering TalkOrigins “Frequently asked but never answered questions”: Part 2


I'm writing a series responding to an article from TalkOrigins.org titled, FABNAQ (Frequently Asked But Never Answered Questions). I'm hoping to answer 2-3 questions with each post but the first 2 questions had multiple sub-questions so I answered only question #1 in my first post and now I'm answering only question #2 in my second. And even though I'm only answering a single question, this is a longer post than usual. Thanks in advance for your patience. Let's get on to the next question:

2. Is there any observation which supports any feature of your theory? (An adequate answer to this question will not be something which is a problem for evolution, but is rather evidence for your theory. Remember that it is logically possible for both evolution and your theory to be false. Something which appears to support Lamarkian evolution rather than Darwinian, or punctuated equilibrium rather than gradualism is not enough. Also, the observation must be something which can be checked by an independent observer.)

I've talked many times before about the nature of theories and evidence. In short, theories are our attempts to explain the evidence. A fossil, for example, doesn't tell us how it came to be. Instead, we use our theories to explain how the fossil came to be. I believe most fossils were created suddenly in the Flood described in Genesis. Someone else may believe the fossil formed in a local event (like a flooded stream), which buried the creature. Both theories could explain how the fossil formed yet the fossil doesn't tell us which is true. The fossil is simply data and isn't really for either theory.

This idea that evidence is for any theory seems rather circular to me. If I invent a theory to explain some thing, how could I then say the thing is evidence for my theory? If I found a black rock with purple stripes painted on it, I could theorize that aliens painted the stripes on the rock. What evidence do I have for this theory, you might ask? Well, there's the rock and there are the stripes so that proves it! You can see how that doesn't work.

The question should be, which theory better explains the evidence? It seems obvious that the better theory is the one that best explains the evidence. And if that is true, then problems for evolution do tend to be evidence for creation. I wrote a series a couple of years ago, where I suggested 10 observations that were better explained by creation than evolution/naturalism. I'll link to the series below but here are a few points from that series:

  • Secular origin stories claim matter/energy just poofed into existence. They believe there must have been a natural cause for nature but that's like saying nature created nature. It's absurd. It's far more reasonable to believe that something outside of nature caused nature – something “super”-natural.
  • Secular scientists still cling to a type of spontaneous generation which they now call “abiogenesis.” It's similar to the long discarded belief that maggots would spring out of rotting meat. Every example of spontaneous generation that was once believed to have occurred has been debunked through experimentation and observation (AKA, “science”). Now, evolutionists similarly believe the first life-form sprang out of a fortunate arrangement of amino acids. They haven't seen it happen. They can't make it happen. They just blindly believe it did happen. It's far more reasonable to believe God created life.
  • Mimicry is an observed phenomenon where one creature looks and/or behaves like another creature. A fly might look like a bee; a lizard might look like a leaf; a moth might look like an owl. There is an obvious survival advantage to this – prey can more easily hide from predators or maybe it appears too dangerous to approach. But how did such remarkable similarities evolve? Evolutionists have their stories: each generation of fly was tested by natural selection, and the fly most similar to the bee survived until, over time, the fly looked a lot like the bee. The problem with this story is that evolution is not supposed to be a directed process. Natural selection didn't know the fly should look more like a bee. Furthermore, the bee is also supposed to be evolving so it wouldn't matter if the fly looked like the bee if the bee was going to look like something else in a million years. To believe such a remarkable similarity could evolve naturally is improbable. To believe it has happened thousands of times is laughable. It is far more reasonable to believe the similarities are the product of design.

As I've said, evolutionists have their own explanations for these things. The question is, which is the better explanation. In many cases, creation is the better theory to explain what we observe.

Related articles:


2a. Is there any observation which was predicted by your theory?

If two theories predict the same thing, then that thing really wouldn't be evidence for either theory. For example, because the Bible says there was a flood that covered even the tallest mountains, I could predict we might find fossils of aquatic animals on the top of even the tallest mountains. Sure enough, we do find shells on the top of the Himalayas. Now, people who believe in evolution have their own theories on why there are fossils on the tops of mountains. It's as I've already said, both theories have to explain the evidence. However, in this case, the Bible was indisputably written before anyone Mt Everest so finding evidence the tops of mountains were once underwater was predicted before the evidence was found.

I can already see the evolutionists rolling their eyes as they read this. I would consider this a very successful prediction – made millennia before being confirmed – but I doubt critics will see it the same way. In spite of what you've always heard, many skeptics don't go wherever the evidence leads them. Instead, they only see what they want to see and they refuse to see this as a successful prediction. Oh well.

What we need are predictions that are based on creationist assumptions and are not the same as predictions made by secular theories. Here's one for you to consider:

In 1984, PhD scientist, Dr. Russell Humphreys, published his predictions of the strengths of the magnetic fields of both Uranus and Neptune. His prediction was specifically borne out of his belief in creation. In his own words (source):

I made the predictions on the basis of my hypotheses that (A) the raw material of creation was water (based on II Peter 3:5, "the earth was formed out of water and by water"), and (B) at the instant God created the water molecules, the spins of the hydrogen nuclei were all pointing in a particular direction. The tiny magnetic fields of so many nuclei would all add up to a large magnetic field. By the ordinary laws of physics, the spins of the nuclei would lose their alignment within seconds, but the large magnetic field would preserve itself by causing an electric current to circulate in the interior of each planet. By the same laws, the currents and fields would preserve themselves with only minor losses, as God rapidly transformed the water into other materials. After that, the currents and fields would decay due to electrical resistance over thousands of years. Not all creationists agree with my hypothesis that the original material was water, but all agree that once a magnetic field existed, it would decay over time.

What's more, his predictions were very different than the secular, dynamo theory predictions. Not just a little different but different on an order of magnitude.

In 1986, when Voyager II passed Uranus, we learned that Humphreys' prediction was correct and the dynamo theory prediction was wrong. In 1989, Voyager II passed Neptune and, again, Humphreys was proven right and all other predictions were wrong.

Humphreys made his predictions in 1984. They were verified in 1986 & 1989. TalkOrigins wrote their article asking for successful predictions in 1992. They either had not heard of these successful predictions, heard of them and didn't consider them to be successful predictions, or heard of them and ignored them hoping that no one else ever hears about them. I'll let my readers decide which is most likely the case.

Related articles:

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Answering TalkOrigins “Frequently asked but never answered questions”: Part 1



TalkOrigins (TO) is an online resource whose subtitle describes itself as “exploring the creation/evolution controversy.” That may sound neutral to a casual clicker but the site is squarely pro-evolution. It's a sort of apologetics site for evolutionists.

Anyway, in their archive is an article titled, FABNAQ (Frequently Asked But Never Answered Questions). I've said before how titles like this annoy me. It's not quite as bad as saying, “Questions no creationist can answer,” but it's certainly disingenuous because I guarantee you there are at least a dozen rebuttals to this very article posted elsewhere online. Many of these questions were asked an answered hundreds of times even before TO wrote its article. In other words, all of these questions have been asked and answered so there's nothing sensational about them. Headlines like this are a cheap gimmick used to make the article seem to have more weight than it truly does. Now, even though these questions have been answered over and over, they are still being asked. And since I need something to blog about, I thought I'd write a series giving my own responses.

Before getting into the list, let me preface my response with a few points. Truth is not affected by my understanding of it. If something is true, then it's true whether or not I believe it. It's true whether or not I understand it. And my ability or inability to answer a question on a subject has no bearing on whether or not the subject is true. Some subjects are complicated and no one is an expert in everything so if an unbeliever asks a believer a question he can't answer, it's not necessarily evidence of anything.

Having said that, I wonder what is the point of TO asking these questions? They don't really say. I guess they intend them to have a “gotcha” effect on creationists but, as I've said, we shouldn't feel defeated if we can't answer every one of them. However, what happens if I do answer them? I mean, I intend to answer all of them in my series and, if I do, does it mean creation is true? Will the people at TO become creationists? Obviously, that wouldn't be the case. TO isn't sincerely looking for answers to these questions. Rather, they're trying to embarrass creationists. They want us to be uncomfortable and perhaps begin to doubt some of the things we believe. Like I said, it's a gimmick.

There are 12 questions in the article. Further, several of the questions have sub-questions. It's kind of odd because, in some cases, the sub-questions seem unrelated to the main question; why didn't they just make those a separate question? Regardless, I'd like to cover 2-3 questions per post so as to not make this too long of a series. The first question has five sub-questions, making six questions in all. Considering I've already devoted a few paragraphs to my opening remarks, I'll only Question #1 and its sub-questions in this post. It's still going to be a bit long so I apologize in advance.

Without further ado, let's get started.

1. Is there any reason to believe in your theory rather than some other version of creationism?
As I read this question, I took special note that TO is asking why one version of creationism (presumably, young earth creationism) should be believed over any other version. Since we're only comparing versions of creationism, I understand that to mean why should a Christian believe my interpretation over some other interpretation (like the Gap theory or Day Age theory).
Biblically speaking, I believe the young-earth position is the most obvious meaning of the text. The “days” consisting of “evening and morning” in Genesis 1, the “six days” of creation mentioned in Exodus 20:11, the numerous and detailed genealogies throughout the Old and New Testaments, all attest to a sudden, recent creation. II Peter 1:20 says, Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.” In other words, there is no “hidden meaning” to the Bible. The plain meaning is usually the intended meaning. So when Exodus says, “in six days the LORD created the heavens and the earth,” there should be no twisting of the words to explain why “six days” really means “billions of years.”
Further reading:
Does “And God Said” Mean God Didn't Do?
How Long Were the Days in Genesis?
Five Reasons Why I Reject Theistic Evolution: Part 1
1a. If you believe that some animals -- for example, dinosaurs -- were not saved on the Ark, explain why you believe the Bible is incorrect.
This is an example of what I was saying – some of the sub-questions seem unrelated to the main question. //RKBentley scratches his head// I personally don't believe there were any terrestrial kinds omitted from representation on the Ark so maybe I don't have to answer this question. But how boring would that be?

I've read second hand quotes of Christians supposedly saying that dinosaurs are extinct because they were too big to fit on the Ark. However, it's only from critics that I hear quotes like these. I can't find any sources of creationists making such a claim. Maybe some exist (it's a big world wide web and I haven't gotten to it all yet) but they must be such a tiny minority that I would call them, “fringe.” I suspect, instead, that this is a straw man – fictitious comments invented by skeptics and attributed to creationists in order to make them sound foolish.

There were dinosaur kinds on the Ark. Full stop.

Related articles:
Were there Fish on the Ark?
Could All of the Animals Fit on the Ark?
Koalas on the Ark

1b. Why are many Christians evolutionists?
This is such an irrelevant question that I wonder why it would be included in a list of frequently asked questions. I could ask why some people believe in a flat earth but what would it prove? It's as I've already said: if something is true, it's true regardless of whoever believes it. Suggesting that evolution might be true because some Christians believe it has about the same merit of me suggesting creation is true because Newton believed it.

Yet even so, I'll tell you why there are many Christians who are evolutionists: They've been told over and over again that “evolution is a fact.” They've been told lies like, “every field of science supports evolution” or “nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution.” We have an entire generation of people taught in public schools where evolution is presented as the only, scientific model and teachers are prohibited by court decision from even telling kids to be open minded about it. Creationists are mocked and ridiculed by academia, the scientific community, celebrities, and the media. We are called, “science deniers,” “flat-earthers,” “scientifically illiterate,” and many other names too impolite to print here.

So, yes, some people have been shamed or indoctrinated into believing evolution. It doesn't mean anything.

Related articles:
Evolution and Christianity make strange bedfellows
Do the Heavens Declare His Glory?
Why I Say Evolution is Not Compatible with the Bible

1c. If you are a young-earth creationist: Why are many creationists old-earth creationists?
1d. If you are a young-life creationist: Why are many creationists old-life creationists?
My answers to both of these points are essentially the same so I'll answer them both at once. The questions are completely irrelevant to the debate. Again, I could ask, “If you believe the earth is a globe, why do other people believe the earth is flat?” Does it prove anything? Is it evidence of either theory?
The reasons some Christians believe in an old earth/life are the same reasons some Christians believe in evolution. They've been told the “science is settled.” They've been convinced that the things they were told in school must be true so they ignore the plain meaning of the Bible and twist the words to make them mean something completely different.
Well meaning Christians invent fanciful interpretations of Scripture in an attempt to make the Bible seem compatible with “science.” It's bad hermeneutics being used to agree with a bad theory.
Related articles:
Augustine was a Young-Earth Creationist!
Is God a Deceiver?
1e. Some people say that scientific creationism does a disservice to Christianity by holding Christianity up to ridicule. How would you answer that charge?

I've been told this personally, many times. I'm not sure what answer the critics are expecting. If creation is true, then what else am I to do? I will speak the truth and bear the ridicule, taking comfort in the knowledge that the same One who spoke the universe into existence has also promised me an eternal reward if I am persecuted for His sake (Matthew 5:11-12)

John 6:60,66-68 says, Many therefore of his disciples, when they had heard this, said, This is an hard saying; who can hear it?... From that time many of his disciples went back, and walked no more with him. Then said Jesus unto the twelve, Will ye also go away? Then Simon Peter answered him, Lord, to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life.

The truth is the truth and sometimes people don't want to hear it. Jesus spoke the truth and some people stopped following Him because of it. What is the solution? Do I tell a lie so that my message sounds more appealing? Do I replace the God of the Bible with a moron of a god who is indistinguishable from dumb luck? Should the gospel be that you don't have to believe the Bible – just believe in Jesus? No thank you. No thank you. And again, no thank you.

Related articles:


Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Jesus wasn't plan B


Genesis 2:15-17, “And the Lord God took the man, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it. And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.”

This passage has been a puzzle to many Christians and the subject of much criticism from unbelievers. The question often asked is why would an all-knowing God put the Tree in the Garden if He knew Adam would disobey and bring the Curse on all of creation? If there were no tree, Adam could not have eaten of it so would not have sinned by disobeying God. No tree means no Fall, no Curse, and no history of death in the world. In other words, if God knows everything, why didn't He just not put the tree in the garden and spare the world generations of misery?

Critics sometimes exaggerate the dilemma, hoping to raise doubt on the omniscience of God or the plausibility of the Bible. Such criticism could have a chilling effect on the gospel. It tries to make it look like God made a mistake and then had to come up with the cross as a way to fix it. Jesus was a sort of “plan B.”

There are a few bad assumptions behind this criticism. First, it's completely non sequitur as an argument for atheism. I'm not sure exactly how it follows that, because people die, there can be no God. You could try to make a case that He's not a loving God or that He's not the God of the Bible but there's no reason we must necessarily conclude that death means there's no God. It goes back to a point I made a few months back: people have a false idea of how God should act and, when they can't find a god that acts they way, they conclude there must be no god at all.

The other flaw in this criticism is the assumption that eating from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was the only sin Adam could have committed. Removing the tree does not necessarily mean Adam could no longer sin. Adam still had free will and so could have disobeyed God in other ways. For example, God also commanded Adam and Eve to multiply; Adam could have refused. We have to ask if it is even possible for God to create a creature with free will but not the ability to choose to disobey Him? It's sort of like asking if God could create a square circle.

I certainly can't claim to completely understand God. Indeed, if a finite, simple man like me could completely understand Him, He wouldn't be a very big God. But after having thought about this and looking into His word, I think I have an inkling of why things are they way they are.

We like to say that God can do anything. Of course, there are things even God can't do. God cannot lie, for example. He cannot even be wrong. And here is another very important thing – God cannot stop being God. He will always be the Infinite One, the Eternal One, the Perfect One. Logically speaking, it can be no other way.

Isaiah 46:9-11 says, Remember the former things of old: for I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none like me, Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure: Calling a ravenous bird from the east, the man that executes my counsel from a far country: yea, I have spoken it, I will also bring it to pass; I have purposed it, I will also do it.

Like this passages says, there cannot be anyone like God. In logic, there is an interesting paradox called the Irresistible Force Paradox. Essentially it says that irresistible force and an immovable object cannot exist simultaneously. One must yield to the other. The same is true for God. Not only must there be only one supreme power, He must also have supreme authority. You cannot have 2 beings with free will unless the will of one them yields to the other. Think about it – what would happen if one god says, “this will be blue” and the other says, “no, this will not be blue”? One of them must yield to the other.

When God made man, He could have made us like robots who only can do what He programmed us to do. That isn't what God wanted. He wanted someone with whom He could have fellowship - someone who would have emotions and reason similar to His. So, He created in His image. Yet, even though we are like God, we cannot be just like God. God wanted us to have fellowship with Him. He created us with free will and the ability to genuinely love Him. But by giving us free will, it was inevitable that we would disobey him. If we have free will, there will come a point that what a man wants will conflict with what God wants. Obviously, God would have known all this.

God is love (1 John 4:7-8). Because of His perfect love, He desired an object to love. However, His perfect justice would not allow Him to suffer the disobedience of His creation. So when He purposed to create us, He simultaneously would have had a plan to reconcile us to Himself again, once we disobeyed Him. His plan was the cross!

Revelation 13:8 refers to Jesus as, “The Lamb, slain from the foundation of the world.” In dutiful obedience to the Father, Jesus created the entire universe and shaped man with His own hands, knowing that the cost would be His own blood. It's overwhelming to think about it. It reminds me of a moving passage from that famous hymn:

And when I think of God, His Son not sparing
Sent Him to die, I scarce can take it in
That on the Cross, my burden gladly bearing
He bled and died to take away my sin

God didn't make a mistake. He didn't create us without realizing the cost. Jesus wasn't plan B. He was always the plan!

Friday, April 19, 2019

So tell me again how evolution could be falsified? Conclusion


In order to bolster the claim that evolution is a valid scientific theory, Rational Wiki (RW) posted an article suggesting several ways evolution might be falsified. In a series of posts, I've already dealt with the first 6 items on their lists and saw they were rather ridiculous sounding. They were only slightly more substantive than saying, “Evolution would be disproved if it could be shown that animals don't reproduce.” The last two items, however, are serious tests of the theory. Perhaps it's not a coincidence that these were made by someone other than RW. This last post in this series will deal with both of them but it's going to be a longer post than usual. Let's get right to it:

Charles Darwin made the case a little differently when he said, "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. But I can find out no such case."

Evolution is sometimes described as “descent with modification.” A wing is a modified leg – leg is a modified fin – and so on and so on backward. Darwin understood that if some structure were ever discovered that could not have possibly been formed by this series of successive modifications, it would utterly disprove his theory. I agree. Keep in mind, this isn't my test. It isn't RW's test. It isn't any creationist's test. This is Darwin's test. So if we ever found such a structure, Darwin himself believed it would “absolutely break down” his theory.

Michael Behe is a biochemist who invented the term, “irreducible complexity.” In his own words it means, a single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning.” To illustrate this, he used the example of a mousetrap. A mousetrap has very few working parts. However, if any part is missing, the entire trap becomes useless. Since all of the parts have to be present before a mousetrap has any function, Behe believed the mousetrap was a good analogy of the type of structure Darwin meant.


In his research as a biochemist, Behe has examined the flagellum, a whip-like structure which single-celled creatures use to move themselves around. The flagellum is very complex and has several working parts. Behe claims that the flagellum is irreducibly complex. Since no single part of the flagellum would have any function at all, Behe claims it could not have evolved in gradual steps, since it would have no function until all of the parts were together. Behe claims it qualifies as the type of structure Darwin said would disprove his theory.

Proponents of evolution have attacked Behe's arguments from a variety of angles. From NewScientist, we read the following:

The best studied flagellum, of the E. coli bacterium, contains around 40 different kinds of proteins. Only 23 of these proteins, however, are common to all the other bacterial flagella studied so far. Either a “designer” created thousands of variants on the flagellum or, contrary to creationist claims, it is possible to make considerable changes to the machinery without mucking it up. What’s more, of these 23 proteins, it turns out that just two are unique to flagella. The others all closely resemble proteins that carry out other functions in the cell. This means that the vast majority of the components needed to make a flagellum might already have been present in bacteria before this structure appeared.

Now, this may be a fair criticism of Behe's claims. People on both sides of the debate could argue their points – which is how science is supposed to work. However, in their zeal to protect their theory, NewScientist overplays its hand and reveals the true attitude of the folks on their side. They will never accept that any structure is irreducibly complex. I direct your attention to the last few paragraphs of the article (bold added):

[T]he fact that today’s biologists cannot provide a definitive account of how every single structure or organism evolved proves nothing about design versus evolution. Biology is still in its infancy, and even when our understanding of life and its history is far more complete, our ability to reconstruct what happened billions of years ago will still be limited. Think of a stone archway: hundreds of years after the event, how do you prove how it was built? It might not be possible to prove that the builders used wooden scaffolding to support the arch when it was built, but this does not mean they levitated the stone blocks into place. In such cases Orgel’s Second Rule should be kept in mind: “Evolution is cleverer than you are.”

In other words, no structure, no matter how complex, no matter how many parts have to be present before the structure works, and no matter that none of the parts could serve in any other function that we can determine, will ever serve to satisfy this test of the theory. Even if we cannot imagine how some structure evolved, it has no bearing on whether it evolved because “evolution” found a way we can't think of. So, while Darwin and I think this would be a way to potentially falsify his theory, it's more of an exercise in futility because evolutionists can resort to “we just don't know how it happened.” They always have; they always will.

J.B.S. Haldane famously stated that "fossil rabbits in the Precambrian" would disprove evolution - and this has been a talking point in philosophy of science for some time.

The Cambrian Period is a geological era believed by scientists to have occurred around 540 million years ago. Cambrian strata is remarkable for its abundance of diverse fossils whereas, strata below the Cambrian - aka “Precambrian” - are largely empty of fossils. The sudden appearance of fossils representing so many diverse animal phyla is so startling, many people have used the term “Cambrian explosion” to describe it.

According to evolutionary theory, life began as “simple,” single-celled creatures which gradually became more complex over millions of years. Rock layers are also laid down gradually, over millions of years, and so the fossils found in each rock layer create a sort of snap shot of life on earth at the time the layer was laid down. The earliest and “simplest” life forms should be lower down in the geological column. The more recent and more evolved life formed should be higher up. Precambrian rocks, therefore, should only have fossils of the earliest and simplest creatures.

When asked what might falsify evolution, a British-Indian scientist, named J.B.S. Haldane, famously quipped, “rabbits in the Precambrian.” His point was that, since rabbits are believed to have evolved relatively recently, finding rabbit fossils with the earliest life forms would be problematic for the theory. Richard Dawkins echoed a similar sentiment when he said, “Evolution could so easily be disproved if just a single fossil turned up in the wrong date order” (lie #1 from my list of lies evolutionists tell).

I agree that such a discovery would be extremely damaging to the theory of evolution. However, it's somewhat unlikely that such a discovery will be made. I believe the sequence of fossils better indicates where a creature lived/died rather than when. Think about it. If a deluge of water and mud suddenly buried everything, here's what I think we'd find: bottom dwelling marine animals would be buried first, then swimming animals, then amphibious animals, then reptiles and birds and mammals at the top. Well, that is sort of what we find. I say “sort of” because even terrestrial fossils are always found in layers with marine animals. I would not expect to find rabbits being buried with creatures at the bottom of the ocean.

Even though it's not probable that the Flood would bury rabbits with trilobites, it's not entirely impossible and so, once again, I think this is a fair test of the theory. Of course, it doesn't just apply to rabbits; any, grossly “out of order” fossils should be evidence against evolution. Dawkins said even “a single fossil” could disprove the theory if it “turned up in the wrong date order.” Unfortunately, he doesn't mean it. We routinely find fossils in places we didn't think they'd be. Just do a google search on the term, “fossil rethink evolution” and you'll find plenty of examples. So even though there have been thousands of out-of-order fossils found over the past few decades, I haven't seen any headline that say any one of them have disproved evolution.

Saying out of order fossils would disprove evolution, when so many have already been found, shows this isn't a serious test but it mere posturing. Even RW, in the same paragraph, hedges its bet just in case something like a Precambrian rabbit is every found. From the article we read this:

The simple truth is that a single strange fossil would probably not make much difference. In practice, the evidence in the fossil record which supports evolution is so overwhelming that a single fossil would be regarded as curious certainly, but compared to the mountain of evidence in favor of evolution it would probably be regarded as an anomaly while more data was awaited... However, the existence of entire groups of anomalous fossils would be a different thing — Haldane did say rabbits after all. Again, in practice an effort would initially be made to fit the new data into the existing framework — this is not cheating but simply the way science works. But still, in principle some quite major revisions to the theory may be needed to explain them. Such a situation would not immediately and conclusively prove a special creation over a naturalistic evolution.

So... what are you saying, RW? That not even rabbits in the Precambrian would conclusive disprove evolution? Yeah, that's what I thought you were saying.

If you googled the phrase, “new discovery rewrites evolution,” you would find a mile long list of articles describing times researchers have found some new thing that causes them to completely change how they understood some part of evolution. Yet even though they were shown to be so wrong about something they thought they knew about evolution, no discovery causes mainstream science to ever question the theory itself. It's always more like, “We didn't understand how this thing evolved,” rather than “Now we're not sure if evolution happened at all.”

Since failed predictions are usually considered evidence against a theory, frustrated creationists have asked what type of discovery it would take to falsify evolution. Any scientific theory should be predictive and falsifiable but the theory of evolution seems unaffected by any amount of contrary evidence.

There you have it, folks. RW's entire list of possible ways evolution might be falsified is nothing more than smoke and mirrors. There is nothing predictive or falsifiable about evolution. It is a worthless theory and not relevant to any other field of science. It is propped up only by psuedo-science and the willingness of sinful, rebellious people to believe a lie. I know that no amount of evidence will persuade them. At the very least, I hope the realization that what they believe is nothing more than a blind faith might soften their stubbornness.

Read the entire series:

Friday, March 29, 2019

So tell me again how evolution could be falsified? Part 3

For any scientific theory to be valid, it must make predictions and be falsifiable. This isn't my rule, it belongs to the scientific community at large and the theory of evolution should be no exception to this rule. It's been my experience, though, that no discovery, no matter how contrary it is our understanding of evolution, seems to be enough to make evolutionists question the theory itself. I read articles with headlines like: “New discovery rewrites the history of human evolution.” Yet I suspect I'll never see an article titled something like, “New discovery casts doubt on the theory of evolution.” They have to admit to being wrong about where, when, and how things evolved but nothing – NOTHING – will ever make some people doubt that things are still evolved. It's very curious.

Out of frustration, creationists have often asked, “If evolution is a valid, scientific theory, what is a way it might be falsified?” Usually, we don't receive an answer beyond bluff and bluster, but they can't duck the question forever. Rational Wiki (RW) has an article titled, Falsifiability of evolution, where they list several ways the theory could be falsified. I examined the first three from their list in my last post and showed how they really weren't serious tests of the theory. I was going to address the next few items from list in this post but [SPOILER ALERT] it's more of the same. I even thought about abandoning this series because, after pointing out the weaknesses in the first 3 items on the list, the similar weaknesses in the other items become rather glaring. I'll touch on the items later but I thought it might be a good idea to back up a minute and address the premise RW used when making these “predictions.”

From the RW article, we read, “[I]t is best to be clear what evolution is. It is based on three main principles: variation, heritability and selection. Given these three principles, evolution must occur, and many features of evolution appear given only these three guiding principles. If any of these were shown to be flawed then the theory would be untenable. [italics in original]

I think it's admirable of RW to want to be “clear” about what evolution is because there seems to be a lot of equivocation over the word. The theory of evolution includes the common descent of all biodiversity from a single ancestor. Evolution also includes fish becoming frogs, dinosaurs becoming birds, and ape becoming men. “Evolution” includes a lot of things that are in contention but RW claims it wants to be “clear.” //RKBentley rolls his eyes//

Let's take those three principles and apply them to a hypothetical population of black and gray mice. In one particular environment, gray might be a better camouflage than black so predators will tend to eat the black mice more often than the gray. The gray mice, then, will tend to live longer and have more offspring and the black mice will leave less offspring. Over time, the entire population of mice will become mostly gray or totally gray. We can see all three of RW's principles in action. Are you with me so far?

What has happened to the mice fits the technical definition of evolution. It is a change in the frequency of the gray allele in the population. There is no debate over this type of change and if people want to call it “evolution” then you could call me an evolutionist. But how does this type of change show that all life has descended from a common ancestor? How can this type of change add feathers to a dinosaur? It doesn't!

What RW has done is described natural selection and called it evolution. They are taking something we do observe (natural selection) and using it as evidence for something we don't observe (evolution). Therefore, the first six items they present are actually things that might potentially falsify natural selection – not evolution. The problem with this, though, is that natural selection is an observed phenomenon. We watch it happen all the time. You can imagine how difficult it would be to look at something, then try to prove the thing you're looking at doesn't exist. You really can't and that's the challenge RW faces in disproving natural selection. As I said in my last post, RW has resorted to taking things that are already known to occur and saying, “If this didn't occur, evolution wouldn't be possible.” That's sort of like saying, “If a bowling ball weren't round, it wouldn't roll.”

So, having said all that, let's look at 2 of the next 3 items from RW's list:

[A]ny of the following would destroy the theory [of evolution]...

If it could be shown that selection or environmental pressures do not favor the reproductive success of better adapted individuals.

If it could be shown that even though selection or environmental pressures favor the reproductive success of better adapted individuals, "better adapted individuals" (at any one time) are not shown to change into other species.

Notice how they even use the word, “selection” in their tests? So if “natural selection” didn't favor the better adapted, evolution wouldn't be possible. If rearrangements of already existing traits didn't produce new species, evolution wouldn't be possible. Since they're conflating natural selection with evolution, RW is essentially saying, “If evolution didn't happen, it wouldn't happen.” And if a bowling ball weren't round, it wouldn't be a ball.

Darwin saw the similarities between different species of finches and realized little changes in the environment would favor certain traits. Over time, the more favored traits would become the most common traits in the population and a species would be better adapted to its environment. Over a really long time, the accumulation of small changes could become big changes – like a leg becoming a wing. That's the theory of evolution. Darwin used the little changes he observed to invent his theory. Now, RW is claiming that these observed, little changes are “predictions” of the theory. It's all incredibly circular.

Having said all that, RW did make one claim that is interesting. They said, [It would destroy evolution...]

If it could be shown that although mutations are passed down, no mutation could produce the sort of phenotypic changes that drive natural selection.

We've already discussed how mutations are already known to occur in the DNA of any organism. Also, we already know mutations are inherited by its offspring so neither of these could really be said could potentially falsify evolution. However, RW is saying mutations must produce the kinds of changes that drive evolution. Actually, they said, drive natural selection but I've already discussed how they conflate the terms.

Mutations are sometimes “expressed” - that is, they have some, physical affect on the host organism. A beetle might be born without wings; a fish might be born without eyes; an elephant might be born without tusks; etc. We sometimes call these types of expressed mutations, “birth defects.”

In some environments, these types of birth defects may give an organism an advantage. On a windy island, for example, flying beetles have a chance of being blown out to sea so a beetle born without wings may have a better chance of surviving. Natural Selection is the blind judge that determines if a birth defect conveys any advantage and if wingless beetles replace all the flying beetles on the island, some people will say that species has “evolved.”

The problem with this scenario is that beetles being born without wings doesn't explain how wings on beetles evolved in the first place. I've said before that you can't make a molehill into a mountain by removing dirt so beetles loosing their wings doesn't make a very good case for evolution. For evolution to be possible, populations must acquire novel traits. To turn a reptile into a mammal, for example, you would have to add hair. The alleged first living organism didn't have hair – nor scales nor skin nor bones nor blood. To turn a microbe into a man, it would require a billion successive generations of organisms acquiring traits they've never had before.

It's not enough to observe beneficial mutations and call it evolution. If the theory of common descent were true, trait-adding mutations would have to happen fairly regularly. We should have plenty of examples. So where are they? I ask in earnest because, in all the years I've been asking evolutionists, I only ever hear the same 3 or 4 questionable examples. Why? It's because trait-adding mutations are astonishingly scare or non-existent.

The glaring lack of examples of trait-adding mutations, which are virtually demanded by the theory, is strong evidence against the theory. It's a nice try of RW to claim natural selection acting on mutations is evidence for the theory but, on this point, I'm going to have to give evolution a big fail.

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Wednesday, March 13, 2019

So tell me again how evolution could be falsified? Part 2


In my last post, I talked about two traits that are critical to any scientific theory: it must be predictive and falsifiable. Evolution has often been criticized as a scientific theory on the grounds that it isn't falsifiable. No discovery, no matter how contrary it is to our current understanding of evolution, would ever make mainstream scientists question the theory. I'm not exaggerating. It's such a problem that frustrated creationists will simply ask, “what is something that, if found, would falsify evolution?”

Rational Wiki (RW), has an article they titled, “Falsifiability of evolution.” In their own words, they say, [A]ny of the following would destroy the entire theory [of evolution]. Now that's fairly committal of them. Thank you. However, as I look over the list, I can hardly believe they're sincere. You'll see what I mean by this in a minute. In this post, we're going to look at three points to see how well they actually test the theory.

[The theory of evolution would be destroyed] If it could be shown that organisms with identical DNA have different genetic traits.

It's hard to imagine a scenario where two, sexual creatures would have identical DNA. The first thing that comes to my mind is identical twins. This occurs when a single, fertilized egg splits and each half develops into an embryo. So RW is saying if identical twins weren't identical, evolution would be disproved. They can't be serious. //RKBentley shakes his head// You can see what I meant when I said these hardly seem like sincere tests of the theory. But, OK – let's go with this for a moment.

 Photo by Unsplash

If you know any identical twins, you've probably noticed they usually don't really look identical. They look similar, of course, but each is distinct enough that they can be told apart. Part of this is because of environmental factors – one twin might have a different diet and so will weigh more, the other might play sports and be more muscular, et cetera. It used to be that the differences between identical twins were always attributed to environmental factors but further studies in genetics has suggested this isn't always the case. One Scientific American headline reads, “Identical Twins' Genes Are Not Identical. Twins may appear to be cut from the same cloth but their genes reveal a different pattern.” Hmm. That's interesting. From the article we read this: Geneticist Carl Bruder of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and his colleagues closely compared the genomes of 19 sets of adult identical twins. In some cases, one twin's DNA differed from the other's at various points on their genomes. At these sites of genetic divergence, one bore a different number of copies of the same gene, a genetic state called copy number variants.

Well there you have it folks! The differences observed in identical twins aren't necessarily due to environmental factors; sometimes they're genetic differences! Put a fork in it, the theory of evolution is done! But we all know it isn't. This highlights the frustration creationists face. I doubt RW will write a rebuttal to this point but, if they did, they would certainly be walking back how my example really doesn't address what they were looking for and maybe this isn't even a good test of the theory anyway.

The tests of the theory suggested by evolutionists are usually extremely vague and seldom sincere.

If it could be shown that mutations do not occur.

Another ridiculous suggestion. We already know that mutations occur in the DNA so how could we show they don't occur? Consider this analogy: suppose I have $20,000 in my bank account. I accidentally leave my bank statement open on my desk and my supervisor sees my balance. Not believing I could have legitimately saved that much money, he accuses me of embezzlement. I protest and tell him I've been saving that money for years. He refuses to believe me. Frustrated, I ask him what it would take to convince him I'm innocent? He answers, “Easy, just show me that you don't have $20,000 in the bank!” Do you see the parallel there? We already know that do mutations occur, so to say evolution would be falsified if they didn't occur is disingenuous.

I've seen many so called “tests” of this sort. One person actually told me evolution could be falsified if it could be shown that animals don't reproduce. //RKBentley, still shaking his head//

I believe what these people are trying to say is that evolution wouldn't be possible if mutations do not occur. We'll actually talk about that in a second, but such a point is ridiculously obvious. It's like saying evolution could not have happened if animals didn't reproduce. We don't need evolutionists to point to something that already happens and say, “Evolution couldn't be true if that thing didn't happen.” What we want is someone to say, “If we ever found thing-x, it would prove evolution didn't happen.” Do you have anything like that?

If it could be shown that when mutations do occur, they are not passed down through the generations.

This suffers from the same flaw as the previous suggestion because we already know mutations can be inherited. However, this brings up another problem with the theory – namely, that evolution is poorly defined. Let me explain.

In biological terms, the most preferred definition of evolution is usually something like this: A change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations, often resulting in the development of new species. In other words, if 50% of a group of mice are gray in one generation, then 55% are gray in the next generation, the population has “evolved” by definition. However, this type of “evolution” doesn't even require there to be any mutations. So if evolution can occur without mutations, then whether or not mutations occur or are inherited is irrelevant to the theory! How, then, can they be used to test the theory?!

If these three items are meant to be serious tests of the theory of evolution, then the theory doesn't have much concern about being disproved any time soon. Perhaps that's why the the people at RW chose them.

Stay tuned for more of the same in my next post!

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Friday, March 8, 2019

So tell me again how evolution could be falsified? Introduction

From RationalWiki (RW), we read the following:

The falsifiability of evolution is an important part of establishing evolution as a scientific theory on the principles of falsifiability.... A central characteristic of science is that it must be falsifiable; this feature of a theory is attributed to Karl Popper, who mentioned it in a criticism of Darwinism. Scientific theories cannot be proven outright – they can only fail to be disproven, and this means pointing out what evidence could disprove the theory. If a theory cannot be disproven, such as with Russell's Teapot, it makes no difference whether it is true either way.

Wow, there's some bad grammar going on there. “Science” is the methodology we use to study something. Surely they don't mean “science” must be falsifiable. What they should say is that “scientific theories” must be falsifiable. Yikes. Anyway, in their own words, a good theory must be falsifiable. Am I misrepresenting anything? Isn't that what they're saying? OK, then on to my next point.

In addition to falsifiability, another characteristic of a good theory is that it must be predictive. A prediction is basically to say that, if a theory is true, then we might expect a certain other thing to be true. I might say, for example, that hair is unique to mammals. If my theory is true, then I could predict that, if there is hair on any creature we ever discover, it will be a mammal. Predictions go hand in hand with falsifiability. If we ever discovered a cold-blooded, egg-laying, gill-breathing creature with hair, my theory would be proven false.

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Let me give you an analogy that might demonstrate how important these two things are to a scientific theory. Suppose I wanted to mix paint to make new colors. I would need to know which colors to mix to make the color I want. If there were a “color theory” that predicted yellow and blue together make green, then that's useful information if I wanted to make green paint. If I mix yellow and blue paint and actually get green paint, then I might use that theory to help me with other color combinations. However, if the “color theory” said yellow and blue could make green, red, or any other color, then the theory isn't predictive and isn't useful to me at all.

Now suppose the theory predicted yellow and blue would only make green, but when I mixed yellow and blue, I got red. In that case, I would know the theory doesn't make successful predictions. You could say it has been falsified. The inventor of the “color theory” might try to say that yellow and blue should make green but he can “explain” why it made red. OK, but the next time I mix them, I get brown. He then “explains” why I got brown. If he has an explanation every time I don't get blue, then there's really no way to falsify the theory. We're back to the problem that the theory isn't predictive but neither is it falsifiable. It's a useless theory.

That the theory of evolution is neither predictive nor falsifiable is a complaint often leveled against evolutionists. Creationists have often asked for concrete examples ways to test the theory. What are some specific, useful predictions that it makes and what are some things that, if we found them, would falsify the theory? I've asked this many times of many people and I usually get one of three responses:
  • A flat dismissal of my question, sometimes accompanied with elephant hurling – something like, “Evolution is the most tested theory in science and is supported by mountains of evidence!”
  • A turn of the tables in an effort to put the creationist on the defense – that is, “Oh yeah, well how would you falsify creation?”
  • On very rare occasions, someone will suggest something that they claim – if found – would disprove evolution.
It's that last response that I'm most interested in yet it's the one that I almost never hear. For whatever reason, evolutionists are reluctant to enumerate concrete examples. I suspect it's because they fear that if they commit to some hypothetical example, maybe someday such a thing might someday be found.

The RW article I linked above actually discusses a few examples of things they claim could falsify evolution. I started writing a short response to each point RW raised but my post started to get way too long. Instead, I'm going to make a series. Check back soon for my first response to the first two points.


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