HeavyDluxe, on Jan 26 2009, 03:08 PM, said:
At the risk of getting LOLed at, these discussions irk me.
Evolution and Creationism are both *philosophical* positions. Neither can be proven nor disproven through scientific inquiry. While one may have, in ppl's opinion, the bulk of the evidence in its favor that only makes it a hypothetical until more data is gathered.
These discussion would be helped greatly if people would focus on true science, rather that swedging psuedo-scientific and religious dogma into the conversation.
Why not present the the issue as follows: "We have a fossil record, it would seem to indicate X. However, there is a decided lack of evidence for the incremental, transitional species we would expect to see if X were true. What do you make of that? What are possible explanations for the things we observe? Are there things that can be studied to rule out possible explanations?"
In that case, we'd actually be teaching science (and the scientific method) rather than ideology wrapped in lab coats or pulpit robes.
LOL
Only someone with little knowledge of the evidence in support of evolution, or a wilfull refusal to accept the implications of such evidence, would argue that Evolution and Creationism are 'philosophies' that are both unproven or unprovable.
Certainly, creationism by definition is unprovable.. which is why it is absurd to teach it as or as supplemental to science.
But evolutionary theory has been studied and explored for 150 years... including, critically, several decades of genetic study.
The argument that the fossil record is incomplete is no longer, if it ever were, a valid response to evolutionary ideas. The fossil record, by its nature, will always be incomplete. Many forms of life do not fossilize well... any with no bony or hard parts will tend not to fossilize other than in extraordinary circumstances.. extraordinary in comparison to the already rare scenarios in which the more common fossils form. And, even for those that fossilize, the strata of rock in which the fossils have formed has to become accessible to human discovery.
Consider that, for large animals commonly found as fossils, the average 'life' of a species is on the order of a million years, and that the transitionary period may be hundreds or thousands of years, and we see that we would expect the vast majority of fossils to be from the period of relative stability rather than transition.
But, of course, the real answer is that current understanding of evolutionary theory has gone far beyond recourse to fossils.. only an intellectual fossil would think otherwise
Evolutionary theory now depends far more upon genetics and math than upon stumbling across a dinosaur fossil in the badlands.
In short... evolutionary theory is a real scientific theory.. unlike belief in creationism or its stalking horse, ID.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari