H
hecd2
Guest
Just so. Note that this qualifier has been on my website (where I do quite a bit of my spouting) since it was launched in 2003:You’re not a molecular biologist and therefore by your own standard, you’re “not qualified to judge”. Additionally, you lack competence in this field. You’ve published no peer reviewed papers on molecular biology either. You’re not a “competent authority” and your opinions can be regarded for what they are – spoutings of an unqualified observer.
“I am a trained scientist, but obviously not trained or working in every scientific discipline. There is very little on this website which rests on my own authority. However, where I make claims or statements, they are backed up by references to the primary literature. Most creationist arguments can be refuted by any trained scientist who is prepared to undertake some literature research.”.
And that is also the case for what I write about science subjects on this forum.
However, I note that you still haven’t been able to produce, from the tens of thousands of working scientists, a single molecular biologist, comparative anatomist, physical anthropologist, palaeontologist or developmental biologist who concludes that humans and chimps do not share common descent. The scientific debate that you claim exists, is merely your delusion.
Again, we can notice the qualifer and manipulation of the point, just as you did with my statement that there are some scientists who disagree with the idea of common descent.
That is so because we are talking about the way institutional science works today. What is relevant is the likelihood that someone regarded as a crank is ultimately vindicated in the context of the way science works now. Of course there are one or two examples from the whole of the last hundred years, but that is a tiny number given the vast number of kooks and crazy types who self-publish on the internet about ways in which the entire scientific community is wrong and they are right. Is it possible - yes, we have seen some examples - I volunteered two and someone else has given one (I notice that you haven’t given any). Is it likely - no, it is unlikely and rare. It’s just not the way science generally worksHere, you’ve narrowed the scope to “recent examples”.
Kooks and fruicakes, and those who support them, argue that there is a rich history of people like them being vindicated, and if we look at the facts, it’s just not so. It’s a rare exception.
Alec
evolutionpages.com