T
The_Barbarian
Guest
Barbarian observes:
No need to get angry. You have made repeated errors about what Darwin actually said in The Descent of Man, (you, for example, didn’t realize that he explained that many of the ideas in the book were speculative, to be later determined). Makes it difficult to take your critique seriously.
Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man
Darwin points out:
"Nevertheless the difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind."
Yes, recent studies of neurology and testing of ape cognition have shown this to be true.
Barbarian observes:
That one has a convoluted history. It turns out you’ve copied an allegation about Julian Huxley by creationists. But the funny part is, that is false, too, depending on a rewriting of a statement by Thomas Huxley, which had nothing to do with sexual ethics.
edwardtbabinski.us/julian_huxley_lie.html
Word to the wise: if you copy things from creationists, be sure you check them thoroughly.
So your source is indeed creationst.
No need to get angry. You have made repeated errors about what Darwin actually said in The Descent of Man, (you, for example, didn’t realize that he explained that many of the ideas in the book were speculative, to be later determined). Makes it difficult to take your critique seriously.
Many of the views which have been advanced are highly speculative, and some no doubt will prove erroneous; but I have in every case given the reasons which have led me to one view rather than to another. It seemed worth while to try how far the principle of evolution would throw light on some of the more complex problems in the natural history of man.It is difficult to understand how one can honestly think that the main issues I have presented are considered speculative by Darwin.
Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man
Darwin points out:
"Nevertheless the difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind."
Yes, recent studies of neurology and testing of ape cognition have shown this to be true.
If God chose to do it that way, it offends you, because…?Darwin’s certainty about his conclusion is directly related to the necessary implications of his view that the moral sense of man is a product of evolution, which is my second main issue.
Barbarian observes:
That one has a convoluted history. It turns out you’ve copied an allegation about Julian Huxley by creationists. But the funny part is, that is false, too, depending on a rewriting of a statement by Thomas Huxley, which had nothing to do with sexual ethics.
edwardtbabinski.us/julian_huxley_lie.html
Word to the wise: if you copy things from creationists, be sure you check them thoroughly.
Nope. The story was (as far as I can discover, and I’ve looked a bit) invented by none other than hyperfundamentalist Ken Hovind (currently in prison for among other things, perjury) However, it seems the first time Hovind attributed it to Aldous Huxley, apparently under the impression that he was Thomas Huxley.The only thing that is funny here is that my source for this is not creationist. It is from a non-Darwinian evolutionist, combined with my own reading of Huxley.
So your source is indeed creationst.
You betcha.Oh, the irony of it all!