Showing posts with label creationism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creationism. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Scientific Hoaxes

Scientific hoaxes happen. Some scientists do indeed fake their discoveries.

A couple examples are given in this report by Discovery. Wherever you have people, you will have dishonesty, from unavoidable bias to outright chicanery.

Nebraska Man



Today, I saw a video discussion between Wendy Wright, a representative of Concerned Women for America, and Richard Dawkins, the famous atheist. In the discussion, Wendy Wright refers to the discovery of a tooth (actually two teeth) said by one scientist to belong to a primitive hominid, named hesperopithecus and known as "Nebraska Man."

The tooth turned out to belong to an extinct pig.

Ms. Wright refers to that discovery as "fraud." She says that science should not "censor out the evidence that goes against evolution."

There's only one problem with the accusation that science or scientists are fraudulent: It was science and scientists that determined that the teeth—two of them—belonged to a species of pig.

Piltdown Man



Unlike Nebrask Man, Piltdown Man was in fact a deliberate hoax. Again, however, it was scientists who believe in evolution, not those who oppose evolution, who exposed the hoax, which was in doubt from the very beginning.

Scientific Hoaxes in General



As I said, anywhere you have humans involved, especially if there are many of them, you will have dishonesty. One horrid Japanese scientist, for example (Shinichi Fujimura) set Japanese paleontology back 20 years by producing numerous artifacts that he planted himself.

I know of not one single case where a scientific hoax, an attempt to foist evolution on the public, has been exposed by those who oppose evolution. Oh, yes, there are invalid accusations made by anti-evolutionists, but not one valid exposed hoax.

Hoaxes are always exposed by legitimate scientists.

An example is archaeapteryx. Anti-evolutionists have taken numerous potshots at this important transitional fossil, but it stands as valid evidence of dinosaur to bird evolution. Recently, scientists moved it one step further from birds and closer to dinosaurs by doing intense analysis of growth patterns in archaeopteryx' bones. Again, though, this was not the revealing of a hoax, but the increase of knowledge through scientific study by scientists who are aware of the incontrovertible evidence for evolution.

Getting Off the Subject: Richard Dawkins



It's good when writing for the web, if you want to be found by search engines, to stay focused on a subject. But I don't want to mention Richard Dawkins in this post as though I agree with him.

I read Richard Dawkins very interesting book, The Blind Watchmaker. It has a terrific description of bat sonar in the first couple chapters.

If you want to be astounded by God's creation, read those chapters written by an atheist.

Dawkins makes a persuasive, powerful argument that bat sonar evolved. I don't care. The description of the incredible complexity and brilliance of bat sonar makes me believe in God all the more. I don't care how he did it. Bat sonar is the work of God.

Later in the book, however, Dawkins reasoning crumbles. He argues that the many strange occurrences that humans, and especially theist humans (believers in God), call miracles are simply coincidences. With 6 billion people on earth—now closer to 7 billion—there are going to be extremely unusual incidents, he says. Those are just chance.

My friends and I like to joke about that. I listened once to a tape by the brother of a friend of mine. This person was—and is—a backslidden believer. He taped himself making music one day, but when he went to play the tape back a horrid voice said his name and then said some things to him.

I listened to that tape. It was chilling.

Just one of those 1 in 6 billion chances, I guess. If a couple billion people tape music onto a cassette, surely at least one of them will get a spine-tingling voice saying their name and giving them a message.

That's a joke. I'm not serious.

There may be 6 billion people on earth, but I don't know them. I've only met a few thousand. But I've heard the tape, and just about every person I've ever met can tell an amazing story like that ... or a few amazing stories. I have plenty, some good and spiritual like answers to prayer, and several that are frightening.

I've been told by atheists—and one supposed believer—that I'm ignoring all the times those things didn't happen.

Um, okay. When I see a clear example of something being moved by meditation and attempted telekinesis, I need to take into account all the other attempted telekinetics? Why?

When I pray for a blind 2-year-old to be healed of an infection in his eyes, and I and the others with me have a powerful spiritual experience during the prayer, and the child is healed though he's had the infection for over a year, do I really need to take into account that there was a prayer study done on a church full of half-hearted Christians putting God to the test against Scriptural mandate?

I don't think so.

Sorry, Richard. I can't buy the "oh, well, it happened because there's 6 billion people on earth" argument.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Ray Comfort and Creationism

For the record, I did not go looking for videos on Ray Comfort or creationism today. I ran across the video that follows because I have Google alerts set for things like "early church fathers" and "council of nicea."

A blog that one of those alerts turned up sent me to this video.

I tell you why that's important down below.

Here's the video:



Ok, here's the point. Do you think that any non-Christian who sees that video will ever listen to Ray Comfort again?

The problem is that I read a quote by Ray Comfort calling scientists liars and saying that liars will go to hell. In the meantime, he and many others who are calling them liars are not doing enough research to find out whether anyone actually is lying.

I understand that anti-evolutionists are just trying to read the Bible the way it is written. They are trying to read Genesis literally, and some believe that if you can't read the creation story in Genesis at face value, then you can't trust anything else in the Bible. So they firmly close their eyes, and they hold to a young earth or they oppose evolution despite all the evidence for it.

I don't even have a problem with that, but I can't do it myself.

What I have a problem with is accusing people of lying who aren't lying!

Christians, Creationism, and False Accusations



In 1994, I saw a TV show where Dr. Robert Gentry accused Donald Johansen of lying about his discover of Lucy, the Australopithecus Afarensis skeleton. A few days later I pointed out to an evolutionist in a CompuServe forum that scientists are deceitful.

What I found out is that Christians like Bob Gentry are deceitful. Donald Johansen didn't tell any lies, and the false accusation against him had been exposed some 15 years later. However, that didn't stop Dr. Gentry and the creation museum he was doing the show for from repeating the false accusation.

I'm sorry, but if you're going to get on TV and accuse someone of lying, you need to do a little research.

Don't you think that a literal reading of the Bible would lead you to do so?

It's one thing to disagree with evolution without researching it. It's quite another to make a liar or a fool of yourself publicly defending your disagreement. It doesn't help the cause of Christ; it harms it.