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ibetrippin07
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Also note my friends that these are die hard evolutionists…
Interesting quotes. Here are some from Ernst Mayr (once referred to by Gould as the world’s foremost living evolutionary biologist):Also note my friends that these are die hard evolutionists…
Who are you to say what a person believes?I feel the need to say, evolutionists don’t even believe in their own argument…so why do any evolutionists here do?
“Stunning” lolthe following are some stunning quotes i have decided to dig up as to demoralize the other side
You do know that Goldschimdt has been dead for 50 years don’t you?“Evolution of the animal and plant world is considered by those entitled to judgment to be a fact for which no further proof is needed. But in spite of nearly a century of work and discussion there is still no unanimity in regard to the details of the means of evolution.”
-geneticist Richard Goldschmidt
Yeah?“Today we are less confident and the whole subject is in the most exciting ferment. Evolution is … nagged from within by the troubling complexities of genetic and developmental mechanisms and new questions about the central mystery-specitation itself.”
Keith S. Thomson
Once again, so what?“Indeed, to make the statement even stronger, imperfections are the primary proofs that evolution has occurred, since optimal designs erase all signposts of history.”
Dr. Stephen Jay Gould! chief advocate of punctuated equilibrium!
I don’t know much about the dating of strata… you have to ask one of our resident geologist on this forum“No paleontologist worthy of the name would ever date his fossils by the strata in which they are found … Ever since William Smith at the beginning of the 19th century, fossils have been and still are the best and most accurate method of dating and correlating the rocks in which they occur.” sure with circular reasoning that works
Derek Ager
Maybe… maybe nottwo other quotes supporting this, if you really want them i can type them out too
heres a good one
“The known fossil record fails to document a single example of phyletic evolution accomplishing a major morphological transition”
S.M. Stanley of John Hopkins
That is pretty much what evolution says it happens in isolated populations. Your point?“Evolution happens rapidly in small localized populations, so were not likely to see it in the fossl record.”
S.M. Stanley of John Hopkins.
the fossil record is part of the many evidences for evolutionso wait, the fossil record proves evolution but it occurs in small areas so its not likely to be seen? convenient to date the fossils at random really.
Lyell? A 19th century geologist?Modern geologists say
"Furthermore, much of Lyell’s uniformitarianism, specifically his ideas on identity of ancient and modern causes, gradualism, and constancy of rate, has been explicitly refuted by the definitive modern sources as well as by an overwhelming preponderance of evidence that, as substantive theories, his ideas on these matters were simply wrong.
You mean former astrophysists?'I don’t know how long it is going to be before astronomers generally recognize that the combinatorial arrangement of not even one among the many thousands of biopolymers on which life depends could have been arrived at by natural processes here on the earth. Astronomers will have a little difficulty at understanding this because they will be assured by biologists that it is not so, the biologists having been assured in their turn by others that it is not so. The ‘others’ are a group of persons who believe, quite openly, in mathematical miracles. They advocate the belief that tucked away in nature, outside of normal physics, there is a law which performs miracles (provided the miracles are in the aid of biology). This curious situation sits oddly on a profession that for a long has been dedicated to coming up with logical explanations of biblical miracles…It is quite otherwise, however, with the modern mathematical miracle workers, who are always to be found living in the twilight fringes of thermodynamics."
-Sir Fred Hoyle, one of the worlds top mathematical astrophysicists!
Is that the best you got?More quotes coming! just absorb these!
If we spent all that time reading we would evolve into a huge pair of eyes with a single hand for moving the mouse.stevea << Is that the best you got? ubetrippin all right >>
Good job, Steve. IBe needs to read the previous 4.5 billion posts and threads we’ve had on this topic for many years in here.
Here’s a sample IBe can check out
And don’t forget the "Quote Mine" Project at TalkOrigins.
Phil P
What I said about Mayr was that he was honest enough to point out problems with the theory, not that he didn’t believe the theory. (My quotes were all from What Evolution Is).Another Mayr quote:
“Eventually it was widely appreciated that the occurrence of evolution was supported by such an overwhelming amount of evidence that it could no longer be called a theory. Indeed, since it was as well supported by facts as was heliocentricity, evolution also had to be considered a fact, like heliocentricity…The evidence for evolution is now quite overwhelming. It is presented in great detail by Futuyma (1983, 1998), Ridley (1996), and Strickberger (1996)…” (Mayr, What Evolution Is, page 12-13)
So tell me which “evolutionist” doesn’t agree with evolution?I feel the need to say, evolutionists don’t even believe in their own argument…so why do any evolutionists here do?
Old and edited quote you cut and pasted from some of the less honest creationist sites. You think we haven’t seen this before?the following are some stunning quotes i have decided to dig up as to demoralize the other side
Goldschmidt, as you might know, was on the fringes of biology. But he’s right, about this; while almost all biologists acknowledge the fact of evolution, there is disagreement on some of the details. But a lot less than when he wrote that in the 30s. There has been more discovery in biology since then, than existed before. Eighty-year-old quote-mining. Still looks kinda trollish.“Evolution of the animal and plant world is considered by those entitled to judgment to be a fact for which no further proof is needed. But in spite of nearly a century of work and discussion there is still no unanimity in regard to the details of the means of evolution.”
-geneticist Richard Goldschmidt
Thompson is here speaking of the new science of evolutionary development (evo-devo) and the discovery that evolution is much more interesting and complicated than Darwin imagined. It is, as he says, exciting. From the examination of homobox genes we have opened some difficult questions, and confirmed many theories based on inferences from fossils and anatomy alone. Such stuff is exactly the opposite of “demoralizing;” it is what we do science for.“Today we are less confident and the whole subject is in the most exciting ferment. Evolution is … nagged from within by the troubling complexities of genetic and developmental mechanisms and new questions about the central mystery-specitation itself.”
Keith S. Thomson
Indeed. Gould is pointing out that it is the odd incongruities of organisms (like our backward-arranged retina or our vestigial tails) that provide a look into evolution. If we were perfect in every respect, there wouldn’t be much clue as to how we became as were are.“Indeed, to make the statement even stronger, imperfections are the primary proofs that evolution has occurred, since optimal designs erase all signposts of history.”
Dr. Stephen Jay Gould! chief advocate of punctuated equilibrium!
Yep. The early geologists soon noted that the same fossils always turned up in the same place in the geologic column. Soon, they were able to show that the presence of certain fossils always correlated with certain rocks. At least in England, they did. Many are still useful, and some new ones have been found, although some were later found to have a wider distribution in time than initial evidence indicated. However, the geologists did not use the fossils to work out relative dating of rocks; that was by the law of superposition. Only later, did they realize that the fossils could also be used for that purpose, so no circularity was involved. They were, BTW, creationists. Surprise.No paleontologist worthy of the name would ever date his fossils by the strata in which they are found … Ever since William Smith at the beginning of the 19th century, fossils have been and still are the best and most accurate method of dating and correlating the rocks in which they occur."
Thirty-five years ago, when Stanley was doing his work on phyletic evolution, that might have been true. But with the discovery of the transitionals between hoofed mammals and whales, and between dinosaurs and birds, and between reptiles and mammals, that is no longer the case. Paleontology has progressed a lot in the last half-century.“The known fossil record fails to document a single example of phyletic evolution accomplishing a major morphological transition”
S.M. Stanley of John Hopkins
Actually, Stephen Gould, who first proposed punctuated equilibrium, points out horses, ammonites, and forams as examples of gradual evolution in non-isolated populations. Most speciation seems to be by geographical isolation (we have an event happening right now, as the Alberts and Kaibab squirrels are now either separate species or very nearly so)“Evolution happens rapidly in small localized populations, so were not likely to see it in the fossl record.”
Proof isn’t part of science, but yes, we can show very great but very gradual change in the fossil record. Would you like to see it?so wait, the fossil record proves evolution
Often, but not always. Want to learn about it?but it occurs in small areas so its not likely to be seen?
Modern geologists say:
Fred Hoyle was an astron0mer, and he didn’t know much at all about Gelogy. For example, “uniformitarianism” doesn’t mean “gradualism.” Lyell was quite aware of catastrophic change, and wrote about it. Hoyle was a barber trying to tell mechanics how to rebuild an engine."Furthermore, much of Lyell’s uniformitarianism, specifically his ideas on identity of ancient and modern causes, gradualism, and constancy of rate, has been explicitly refuted by the definitive modern sources as well as by an overwhelming preponderance of evidence that, as substantive theories, his ideas on these matters were simply wrong.
This is about abiogenesis, not evolution. And he’s wrong. For example, we now know that amino acids and peptides form abiotically. And we also know that RNA can self-catalyze. But you can’t blame Hoyle for that; he wrote that about 30 years ago, before we discovered these things. Hoyle, BTW, also wrote that insects are likely smarter than we are.'I don’t know how long it is going to be before astronomers generally recognize that the combinatorial arrangement of not even one among the many thousands of biopolymers on which life depends could have been arrived at by natural processes here on the earth.
Sounds like fun. Got any from this century?More quotes coming! just absorb these!