We only have a month or two left. I have been reminded of a prediction made in the July/August 2004 issue of Touchstone magazine. Brace yourselves.
Where is the ID movement going in the next ten years? What new issues will it be exploring, and what new challenges will it be offering Darwinism?
Dembski: In the next five years, molecular Darwinism—the idea that Darwinian processes can produce complex molecular structures at the subcellular level—will be dead. When that happens, evolutionary biology will experience a crisis of confidence because evolutionary biology hinges on the evolution of the right molecules. I therefore foresee a Taliban-style collapse of Darwinism in the next ten years. Intelligent design will of course profit greatly from this. For ID to win the day, however, will require talented new researchers able to move this research program forward, showing how intelligent design provides better insights into biological systems than the dying Darwinian paradigm.
Man, I'm glad I'll be on sabbatical. It'll give me a year to patch up the radical changes I'll have to make in all of my courses after the ID revolution comes. The rest of you are going to be coming back to rubble in September.
Although, I should also mention that the very next paragraph in that article is the one credible paragraph Paul Nelson ever wrote.
Nelson: Easily the biggest challenge facing the ID community is to develop a full-fledged theory of biological design. We don't have such a theory right now, and that's a real problem. Without a theory, it's very hard to know where to direct your research focus. Right now, we've got a bag of powerful intuitions, and a handful of notions such as "irreducible complexity" and "specified complexity"--but, as yet, no general theory of biological design.
Almost five years on, still no theory.










Comments
Posted by: Ichthyic | June 22, 2009 4:22 PM
Almost five years on, still no theory.
several thousand years on, still no god.
gotta get around to finding the designer first, before one can even consider forming a theory about what the designer has designed.
religion:
beyond epic fail.
Posted by: Glen Davidson | June 22, 2009 4:23 PM
Ha ha, Waterloo to you, godless scientists.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/6mb592
Posted by: Doc Bill | June 22, 2009 4:25 PM
Five years on and they're still left holding the bag.
Let's see what's in the bag.
Notions. Check.
Intuitions. Check.
Kitzmiller. Check.
Posted by: Darren Garrison | June 22, 2009 4:27 PM
"Almost five years on, still no theory."
The problem is, their theory is irreducibly complex. So it can't be typed in a character at a time-- it can only be produced all at once by a single strike to the keyboard.
Posted by: Kobra | June 22, 2009 4:28 PM
If they don't have a theory, and they know they don't have a theory, why the hell are they-- y'know what? It's not worth it. I'm walking away now before this gives me an aneurysm.
Posted by: rob | June 22, 2009 4:28 PM
bummer about biologists having to rewrite all those books and resubmit years and years of papers. i am glad i am a physicist and only have to worry about the 50/50 chance of the LHC destroying the world.
Posted by: Chayanov | June 22, 2009 4:29 PM
Poor Dembski. He didn't realize just how irrelevant he was going to be in five years.
Posted by: Bill Dauphin, OM | June 22, 2009 4:29 PM
Interesting choice of metaphor: Last I heard, the Taliban were stubbornly refusing to go along with their so-called collapse. If "Darwinism" turns out to be as hard to vanquish as the Taliban so far have, Dembski's got a long row to hoe ahead of him.
Posted by: Bjørn Østman | June 22, 2009 4:30 PM
That's it. I'm definitely submitting my evolution paper this week. If I wait any longer, the collapse of Darwinism is going to make my paper worthless. Right?
Posted by: Kobra | June 22, 2009 4:30 PM
@4: Hahaha.
@6: 50/50? Are you sure it's not like 50/(10^50)?
Posted by: tsg | June 22, 2009 4:30 PM
Preferably with the forehead.
Posted by: Glen Davidson
|
June 22, 2009 4:34 PM
Better get your ID grant proposals out there, PZ.
You mean, uh, like where the Taliban is still fighting? Good call, Dembski. If by any chance ID doesn't win the day in a month or two, you can work for the State Department, predicting how fundamentalist Muslims will succeed around the world.
Yeah, pretty fucking difficult to come up with any reason to suppose you're right, when you haven't a clue about causes, or effects, except, you know, it's so very beyond the imaginations of dimwits, so god musta done it for sure.
Good luck on focusing your mind, Paul. It seems unlikely after decades lacking any focus, unless god could be called your focus--more like your label for non-focus.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/6mb592
Posted by: Lurky | June 22, 2009 4:36 PM
#4 and #11
1: aioöwhfaöoi
2. wauiguif
3. ioajiow
4. ioawoijw
.
.
.
558. aölög52
I don't think they can do it in 5 years.
Posted by: James F | June 22, 2009 4:36 PM
But but but! They have a new
peer-reviewedpublication!Posted by: James F | June 22, 2009 4:36 PM
But but but! They have a new
peer-reviewedpublication!Posted by: Timothy | June 22, 2009 4:36 PM
So you're finally going to write that book, PZ? Are we going to get a t-shirt or a PZ action figure when we pre-order it?
Posted by: James F | June 22, 2009 4:38 PM
Dammit!
Posted by: Eddie Janssen | June 22, 2009 4:39 PM
Von Däniken wrote his books to pay off a tax debt. He must have realised immediately after the financial succes of "Were the Gods Cosmonauts?" (is that the English title of his first book?) what a wonderfull moneymaker gullibility is. Add religious fear and you are a millionair overnight.
Charlatannery is easy (more or less), science is difficult.
Posted by: Kilre | June 22, 2009 4:39 PM
#4:The problem is, their theory is irreducibly complex. So it can't be typed in a character at a time-- it can only be produced all at once by a single strike to the keyboard.
Most brilliant thing I've read this month.
Posted by: noodles | June 22, 2009 4:40 PM
Kinda off-topic but too dumb to pass up. A journalist at the Daily Mail confuses weight for size (i.e., revision in estimated mass of some dinosaurs):
Tiny-rannosaurus Rex: Why dinosaurs may not have been as big as Hollywood films suggest
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1194519/Tiny-rannosaurus-Rex-dinosaurs-big-Hollywood-films-suggest.html
Dinosaurs may not have been as monstrously big as scientists and Hollywood film directors would have us believe. Scientists believe the original method used to calculate dinosaur mass was flawed. As a result of the mistake, some dinosaurs may have been oversized... Instead of weighing 38 tonnes, Apatosaurus may have tipped the scales at a relatively puny 18 tonnes... Other dinosaurs were also brought down to size by the new calculations.
P.S. Also, proof the UK has its own share of "I ain't no monkey!" in the comments section.
Posted by: blf | June 22, 2009 4:44 PM
I suspect the thousand monkeys with typewriters will write Hamlet before ID coughs up a first draft of a theory. And should the IDiots actually cough up a theory, it will read like it was written by a thousand monkeys.
Posted by: 'Tis Himself
|
June 22, 2009 4:45 PM
Wouldn't that be a squid action figure?
Posted by: marcus
|
June 22, 2009 4:47 PM
So in a month or so there will be great bonfires as "On the Origin of Species" is torched in the thousands by disaffected biologists. Kewl! I'll bring the marshmallows and the wieners. Gosh, the IDiots sure have a lot work to do in the next weeks considering they haven't been able to put together a rational argument against Darwin (Grace be upon his name)in the last 150 years. Don't quit your day job yet PZ.
Posted by: uppity cracka | June 22, 2009 4:48 PM
@4:
BWAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAAAHAA!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Emily | June 22, 2009 4:49 PM
Without a theory, it's very hard to know where to direct your research focus.
Comedy GOLD.
He meant it to be funny right?
Posted by: Pikemann Urge | June 22, 2009 4:50 PM
Eddie Janssen #18, well put. You know I took him pretty seriously when I was a kid!
So has the "just a theory" excuse run its course yet?
Posted by: umkomasia | June 22, 2009 4:50 PM
Glad I got tenure before my department joins the ID revolution.
Posted by: woozy | June 22, 2009 4:51 PM
Easily the biggest challenge facing the ID community is to develop a full-fledged theory of biological design. We don't have such a theory right now, and that's a real problem.
I actually laughed out loud when I read this. "Well, easily the biggest challenge to our drive cross-country is we have to a aquire a vehicle with a working engine. We don't have such a vehicle right now, and that's a real problem."
Okay, actually the biggest challenge facing the ID community *ten years ago* was that the didn't have a theory then. The biggest problem facing them *today* is that they've proven themselves to be a bunch of creationist idealogues and no matter what they do next (even if it's to come up with a theory that turns out to be true and would revolutionize biology) will never be taken seriously.
Posted by: Raging Bee | June 22, 2009 4:54 PM
Good call, Dembski. If by any chance ID doesn't win the day in a month or two, you can work for the State Department, predicting how fundamentalist Muslims will succeed around the world.
Or, better yet, Dembski can just go work for the fundamentalist Muslims directly. I'm sure Harun Yahya, for one, would welcome his ASSistance -- especially if he brought his former blog-muttawa DaveScot with him.
Posted by: lose_the_woo
|
June 22, 2009 5:01 PM
Man. These people are just really stupid. And when I say stupid, I mean the most stupid kind of stupid. The kind of stupid that makes bone-headed ignorance look like brilliance. The kind of stupid that makes my bedroom slippers look like Story Musgrave. Dembski, you are a complete moron. You should really refrain from attempting to think. You really are not good at it.
Posted by: Rick R | June 22, 2009 5:02 PM
*I wish I knew how to do comic sans*
"For ID to win the day, however, will require talented new researchers able to move this research program forward, showing how intelligent design provides better insights into biological systems than the dying Darwinian paradigm."
I don't know why, but whenever an IDiot says something like "research program", it always makes me laugh.
Their dishonesty is so blatant, they must not see it themselves. "For ID to win the day". It's a foregone conclusion that ID *must* win, even before anybody has even defined what it is.
Pretty much the exact opposite of science.
Nelson's quote sounds nearly identical to this quote by Philip Johnson-
"I also don’t think that there is really a theory of intelligent design at the present time to propose as a comparable alternative to the Darwinian theory, which is, whatever errors it might contain, a fully worked out scheme. There is no intelligent design theory that’s comparable. Working out a positive theory is the job of the scientific people that we have affiliated with the movement. Some of them are quite convinced that it’s doable, but that’s for them to prove…No product is ready for competition in the educational world."
Johnson's tone here seems almost disappointed. He seems to realize that the failures of the ID movement rests with themselves. Do I detect a bit of angry disappointment with his movement's "experts"? That's honest, at least.
I almost......*almost*.....feel a twinge of sympathy for him.
Then I remember all the damage the ID movement has caused in terms of money and time wasted in battling this crap, and I revert to wanting to back over him with my car.
Posted by: CSBSH | June 22, 2009 5:06 PM
Wow, those were some extremely fucking inaccurate predictions.
Posted by: Skemono | June 22, 2009 5:15 PM
Not according to Walter Wagner.
Posted by: Rick R | June 22, 2009 5:15 PM
Johnson: "No product is ready for competition in the educational world."
It makes you wonder, do these bozos really think the purpose and objective of scientific theories is to teach them to children? Really?
I wonder what Johnson thinks of Dembski's "farting" video?
Posted by: Joe Bleau | June 22, 2009 5:17 PM
So, yeah, the Taliban metaphor is mind-numbingly stupid. But it's also telling. Seriously - the Taliban?
Sounds like blatant projection and/or a sly attempt to push the "Darwinism as religion" meme.
Posted by: Blue Girl | June 22, 2009 5:21 PM
Sunuvabitch! I knew there was something I forgot to do the last five years! I forgot to get a damned English degree so I would have something to fall back on when my field imploded and my masters degree became worthless!
Posted by: Bostonian | June 22, 2009 5:23 PM
The admission that they have no theory is a great nugget in that quote, but I'm more amazed by the reference to their research. What research? I've done more research in putting together this comment than they've done to advance our understanding of biology.
Posted by: SciencePundit
|
June 22, 2009 5:25 PM
Uh-oh. Kristine is going to have to add a new counter to her sidebar. ;-)
Posted by: Screechy Monkey | June 22, 2009 5:30 PM
Oh, I'm sure the IDiots are planning to bypass the "theory" phase and go directly to a scientific "law."
What? It doesn't work that way? Damn. That'll teach me not to get my information from Answers in Genesis.
Posted by: Eamon Knight | June 22, 2009 5:34 PM
Eddie @#18: Von Däniken wrote his books to pay off a tax debt. He must have realised immediately after the financial succes of "Were the Gods Cosmonauts?" (is that the English title of his first book?)
In English it was Chariots of the Gods?. But translating it as "Von Daniken's bullshit", is plenty close enough, in any language.
Posted by: lose_the_woo
|
June 22, 2009 5:38 PM
Source.
Just like they do in debates, they just move the goal posts. That's the only way they can participate in the discussion. They want to include the untestable as part of scientific rigor. They don't even see the contradiction.
Posted by: Dutchdoc
|
June 22, 2009 5:41 PM
What ELSE in biology is a lie then?
That whole 'sex' thing probably gotta go too, right?
That's too bad, I liked that part.
Posted by: Stanton
|
June 22, 2009 5:45 PM
Dembski thinks that the soon to be disenfranchised "Darwinists" (sic) are going to flee into the hinterlands of Pakistan and send suicide bombers to terrorize the Pakistani people into hating the legitimate government?Having to plagiarize Adnan Oktar is a cardinal sign of both abject, despairing desperation, and irredeemable stupidity. And these two qualities are, sadly, found in plague-like abundance in the Intelligent Design movement.
Posted by: Blue Girl | June 22, 2009 5:45 PM
We know they aren't very smart, because seconds after they opted to rename "creationism" "ID" we all added "iots" to it. Maybe a behaviorist studying those mental aberrations can build a thesis on that.
Posted by: Richie P | June 22, 2009 5:48 PM
But why would anybody expect them to have a theory anyway. The whole idea rests on the supposition of there being a designer, and so surely the designer himself/herself is the "theory". Unless of course the IDers have got a "theory" about where this mysterious sky-daddy came from.
Posted by: amphiox | June 22, 2009 5:49 PM
ID theory producing protocol:
1. Bang head into keyboard.
2. Repeat as necessary.
3. Sample output:
jcaonfp afwu wpo fa raewoiu fdkj apv fdsa poiur ji
4. Invent new language that makes phrase in 3 intelligible.
Posted by: NewEnglandBob
|
June 22, 2009 5:50 PM
I have a great idea!
Let the Templeton Foundation fund Dembski's research.
What do you say? Even the Templetoonians have no confidence in D
uembski?Posted by: lose_the_woo
|
June 22, 2009 5:54 PM
I heard somewhere that they have internal discussions about moving away from the ID moniker for that very reason. I also heard they are proposing to name the mechanism that describes their predictions: Divine Untestable Majesteria - or DUM for short.
Posted by: Scott Hanley | June 22, 2009 5:58 PM
Have they produced any new researchers in the last 5 years, talented or otherwise?
Posted by: Scott Hanley | June 22, 2009 6:04 PM
Which would immediately become the Divine Untestable Majesteria Belief.
Posted by: lose_the_woo
|
June 22, 2009 6:14 PM
Actually, it's much worse than that. They've gone the other way. Not doing research is one thing, but coming up with arguments like:
- crocoducks
- flagella
- bananas
- evolutionary gravity
- blood clotting
They've got a lot of ground to cover just to catch up to square 1!
Posted by: R Hampton | June 22, 2009 6:16 PM
In searching for latest articles by Paul A. Nelson I found this list hosted by the Discovery Institute.
Interestingly, all of Nelson's Explore Evolution blog entries from 2009 are hidden behind a server (www2.exploreevolution.com) that requires a username and password. And over at www.exploreevolution.com, the last blog entry is from November 2008. Some of the new entries have titles very similar to those that appeared months earlier at Evolution News & Views, but at least one doesn't. That's a shame because it has a very interesting title: The creationism gambit (March 2, 2009)
Posted by: Sili
|
June 22, 2009 6:28 PM
Waaaaaaaaaaaaaterlooooooooooooooo!!
Happy Monkey!
Posted by: Brownian, OM
|
June 22, 2009 6:31 PM
Dutchdoc wrote:
It was always too theoretical for my tastes.
Posted by: Heraclides | June 22, 2009 6:43 PM
I see the Dembski already "knows" the results of his "research" before it's done. Hmm, yes...
And that's assuming his "research" even exists.
Posted by: Marcus Ranum | June 22, 2009 6:44 PM
amphiox writes:
ID theory producing protocol:
1. Bang head into keyboard.
2. Repeat as necessary.
3. Sample output:
jcaonfp afwu wpo fa raewoiu fdkj apv fdsa poiur ji
4. Invent new language that makes phrase in 3 intelligible.
Hey! Y'know, if - at stage 4 - you submitted it to a refereed journal, and threw away the "theories" that got most rudely rejected, then used the offspring from the theories that got less rudely rejected you might eventually evolve an ID theory!! OMG! It might take millions of years but peer-reviewed/selection MIGHT JUST WORK!
Posted by: Heraclides | June 22, 2009 6:50 PM
Whoops - the 'the' in my comment (#55) was accidental. Seriously, it's an error. (Freudian slip, perhaps?)
Posted by: MadScientist | June 22, 2009 7:02 PM
I'm still waiting for the IDiots to provide all that "undisputable evidence" which they keep claiming they have. Well, for now I'll have to settle for laughing my ass off when their doomsday for biologists comes and goes. Why not have an organized countdown across several blogs and a post-apocalyptic party?
Posted by: hje | June 22, 2009 7:42 PM
Then again, there's the infamous prediction by Phil Johnson: "“I believe that at some time well before 2059, the bicentennial year of Darwin’s ‘Origin of Species,’ perhaps as early as 2009 or 2019, there will be another celebration that will mark the demise of the Darwinist ideology that was so triumphant in 1959.’” Phillip Johnson, “How to Sink a Battleship,’ in Mere Creation, ed. By William A. Dembski, (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1998), p. 446-453, p. 448
Phil Johnson (as a Futurama-esque head in a jar): "Did I say 2059? I meant 2950! Or perhaps as early as 2900 or 2910, there will be another celebration that will mark the demise of the Darwinist ideology that was so triumphant in 2059."
Posted by: Drazzel | June 22, 2009 7:50 PM
I clicked on the link and began trying to read that article. But it was just too much bullshit. My brain began to hurt.
Posted by: Drazzel | June 22, 2009 7:53 PM
I clicked on the link and began trying to read that article. But it was just too much bullshit. My brain began to hurt.
Posted by: Les Lane | June 22, 2009 8:52 PM
I've followed the Dembski prediction with evidence from the scientific literature. Results here
Posted by: Dahan | June 22, 2009 8:55 PM
Paul Erdos, the incredibly eccentric math genius supposedly, upon hearing that one of his students had quit to become an artist said something to the effect "Good, he didn't have enough creativity to be a mathematician anyways."
No idea if it's true, but you have to love the sentiment. These IDiots just don't have the creativity necessary to be biologists or scientists of any sort
BTW, I'm not trashing artists. I am one.
Posted by: Aaron | June 22, 2009 9:43 PM
In the next five years, molecular Darwinism ... will be dead.
I have a feeling this quote will be filed away into the same drawer as "No one will ever need more than 640k of memory!"
Posted by: Strider | June 22, 2009 10:06 PM
What's wrong with a hypothesis, boy? Hmm? Why not start off with a nice hypothesis? You don't have to go leaping straight for the theory like a bull at a gate. Give us an hypothesis, boy.
Posted by: DLC | June 22, 2009 10:23 PM
Evolutionary biology has met it's match!
Aaron @64: "I have a feeling this quote will be filed away into the same drawer as "No one will ever need more than 640k of memory!" : You don't need more that 640k of memory.
you don't need a 100MB hard drive either.
and it was in PC Magazine:"the 1900 baud modem is the last one you'll ever need to buy."
and: "if God had meant man to fly he would have given him wings"
The dustbin of failed pronouncements is getting full, we should empty it sometime.
Posted by: Defaithed | June 22, 2009 10:27 PM
Hey PZ! Good to see you got a reminder of this looming deadline for you biologists. I wrote a post about it a few days ago
http://www.defaithed.com/blog/2009/06/death-of-molecular-darwinism-imminent
and am greatly looking forward to watching the death of "molecular Darwinism". Got the popcorn ready and everything.
Your remaining five years for the "Taliban-style collapse of Darwinism" may seem plenty of time, but don't slack off! Little prognostications grow up so fast...
I'm enjoying tracking these "science and atheists are DOOOOMED!" predictions. Anybody know of more??
Posted by: Drew | June 22, 2009 10:46 PM
Here are a few people who disagree with you pompous punks.
A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM
“We are skeptical of claims for the ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of life. Careful examination of the evidence for Darwinian theory should be encouraged.”
This was last publicly updated August 2008. Scientists listed by doctoral degree or current position.
Philip Skell Emeritus, Evan Pugh Prof. of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University Member of the National Academy of Sciences
Lyle H. Jensen Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Biological Structure & Dept. of Biochemistry University of Washington, Fellow AAAS
Maciej Giertych Full Professor, Institute of Dendrology Polish Academy of Sciences
Lev Beloussov Prof. of Embryology, Honorary Prof., Moscow State University Member, Russian Academy of Natural Sciences
Eugene Buff Ph.D. Genetics Institute of Developmental Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences
Emil Palecek Prof. of Molecular Biology, Masaryk University; Leading Scientist Inst. of Biophysics, Academy of Sci., Czech Republic
K. Mosto Onuoha Shell Professor of Geology & Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Univ. of Nigeria Fellow, Nigerian Academy of Science
Ferenc Jeszenszky Former Head of the Center of Research Groups Hungarian Academy of Sciences
M.M. Ninan Former President Hindustan Academy of Science, Bangalore University (India)
Denis Fesenko Junior Research Fellow, Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology Russian Academy of Sciences (Russia)
Sergey I. Vdovenko Senior Research Assistant, Department of Fine Organic Synthesis Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry and Petrochemistry
Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences (Ukraine)
Henry Schaefer Director, Center for Computational Quantum Chemistry University of Georgia
Paul Ashby Ph.D. Chemistry Harvard University
Israel Hanukoglu Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Chairman The College of Judea and Samaria (Israel)
Alan Linton Emeritus Professor of Bacteriology University of Bristol (UK)
Dean Kenyon Emeritus Professor of Biology San Francisco State University
David W. Forslund Ph.D. Astrophysics, Princeton University Fellow of American Physical Society
Robert W. Bass Ph.D. Mathematics (also: Rhodes Scholar; Post-Doc at Princeton) Johns Hopkins University
John Hey Associate Clinical Prof. (also: Fellow, American Geriatrics Society) Dept. of Family Medicine, Univ. of Mississippi
Daniel W. Heinze Ph.D. Geophysics (also: Post-Doc Fellow, Carnegie Inst. of Washington) Texas A&M University
Richard Anderson Assistant Professor of Environmental Science and Policy Duke University
David Chapman* Senior Scientist Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Giuseppe Sermonti Professor of Genetics, Ret. (Editor, Rivista di Biologia/Biology Forum) University of Perugia (Italy)
Stanley Salthe Emeritus Professor Biological Sciences Brooklyn College of the City University of New York
Marcos N. Eberlin Professor, The State University of Campinas (Brazil) Member, Brazilian Academy of Science A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—1
WWW.DISCOVERY.ORG
Bernard d'Abrera Visiting Scholar, Department of Entomology British Museum (Natural History)
Mae-Wan Ho Ph.D. Biochemistry The University of Hong Kong
Donald Ewert Ph.D. Microbiology University of Georgia
Russell Carlson Professor of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology University of Georgia
Scott Minnich Professor, Dept of Microbiology, Molecular Biology & Biochemistry University of Idaho
Jeffrey Schwartz Assoc. Res. Psychiatrist, Dept. of Psychiatry & Biobehavioral Sciences University of California, Los Angeles
Alexander F. Pugach Ph.D. Astrophysics Ukrainian Academy of Sciences (Ukraine)
Ralph Seelke Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology University of Wisconsin, Superior
Annika Parantainen Ph.D. Biology University of Turku (Finland)
Fred Schroeder Ph.D. Marine Geology Columbia University
David Snoke Associate Professor of Physics & Astronomy University of Pittsburgh
Frank Tipler Prof. of Mathematical Physics Tulane University
John A. Davison Emeritus Associate Professor of Biology University of Vermont
James Tour Chao Professor of Chemistry Rice University
Pablo Yepes Research Associate Professor of Physics & Astronomy Rice University
David Bolender Assoc. Prof., Dept. of Cell Biology, Neurobiology & Anatomy Medical College of Wisconsin
Leo Zacharski Professor of Medicine Dartmouth Medical School
Michael Behe Professor of Biological Science Lehigh University
Michael Atchison Professor of Biochemistry University of Pennsylvania, Vet School
Thomas G. Guilliams Ph.D. Molecular Biology The Medical College of Wisconsin
Arthur B. Robinson Professor of Chemistry Oregon Institute of Science & Medicine
Joel Adams Professor of Computer Science Calvin College
Abraham S. Feigenbaum Ph.D. Nutritional Biochemistry Rutgers University
Kevin Farmer Adjunct Assistant Professor (Ph.D. Scientific Methodology) University of Oklahoma
Neal Adrian Ph.D. Microbiology University of Oklahoma
Ge Wang Professor of Radiology & Biomedical Engineering University of Iowa
Moorad Alexanian Professor of Physics University of North Carolina, Wilmington
Richard Spencer Professor (Ph.D. Stanford) University of California, Davis, Solid-State Circuits Research Laboratory
Braxton Alfred Emeritus Professor, Anthropology University of British Columbia (Canada)
R. Craig Henderson Associate Professor, Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering Tennessee Tech University
Wesley Allen Professor of Computational Quantum Chemistry University of Georgia
James Pierre Hauck Professor of Physics & Astronomy University of San Diego
Mark Apkarian Ph.D. Exercise Physiology University of New Mexico
Eshan Dias Ph.D. Chemical Engineering King’s College, Cambridge University (UK)
Joseph Atkinson Ph.D. Organic Chemistry MIT
Dennis Dean Rathman Staff Scientist MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Richard Austin Assoc. Prof. & Chair, Biology & Natural Sciences Piedmont College
Raymond C. Mjolsness Ph.D. Physics Princeton University
John Baumgardner Ph.D. Geophysics & Space Physics University of California, Los Angeles
Glenn R. Johnson Adjunct Professor of Medicine University of North Dakota School of Medicine
George Bennett Associate Professor of Chemistry Millikin University
Robert L. Waters Lecturer, College of Computing Georgia Institute of Technology
David Berlinski Ph.D. Philosophy Princeton University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—2
WWW.DISCOVERY.ORG
James Robert Dickens Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering Texas A&M University
Phillip Bishop Professor of Kinesiology University of Alabama
Jeffrey M. Jones Professor Emeritus in Medicine (Ph.D. Microbiology and M.D.) University of Wisconsin-Madison
Donald R. Mull Ph.D. Physiology University of Pittsburgh
John Bloom Ph.D. Physics Cornell University
William Dembski Ph.D. Mathematics University of Chicago
Ben J. Stuart Ph.D. Chemical & Biochemical Engineering Rutgers University
Raymond Bohlin Ph.D. Molecular & Cell Biology University of Texas, Dallas
Christa R. Koval Ph.D. Chemistry University of Colorado at Boulder
John Bordelon Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
David Richard Carta Ph.D. Bio-Engineering University of California, San Diego
Lydia G. Thebeau Ph.D. Cell & Molecular Biology Saint Louis University
David Bossard Ph. D. Mathematics Dartmouth College
Robert W. Kelley Ph.D. Entomology Clemson University
David Bourell Professor Mechanical Engineering University of Texas, Austin
Carlos M. Murillo Professor of Medicine (Neurosurgery) Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Walter Bradley Distinguished Professor of Engineering Baylor University
Sami Palonen Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry University of Helsinki (Finland)
John Brejda Ph.D. Agronomy University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Bradley R. Johnson Ph.D. Materials Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Rudolf Brits Ph.D. Nuclear Chemistry University of Stellenbosch (South Africa)
Gary Kastello Ph.D. Biology University of Wisonsin-Milwaukee
Frederick Brooks Kenan Professor of Computer Science University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Omer Faruk Noyan Assistant Professor (Ph.D. Paleontology) Celal Bayar University (Turkey)
Neil Broom Associate Professor, Chemical & Materials Engineering University of Auckland (New Zealand)
Malcolm D. Chisholm Ph.D. Insect Ecology (M.A. Zoology, Oxford University) University of Bristol (UK)
John Brown Research Meteorologist National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Joseph A. Kunicki Associate Professor of Mathematics The University of Findlay
John Brumbaugh Emeritus Professor of Biological Sciences University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Thomas M. Stackhouse Ph.D. Biochemistry University of California, Davis
Nancy Bryson Associate Professor of Chemistry Mississippi University for Women
Walter L. Starkey Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering The Ohio State University
Donald Calbreath Professor, Department of Chemistry Whitworth College
Pingnan Shi Ph.D. Electrical Engineering (Artificial Neural Networks) University of British Columbia (Canada)
John B. Cannon Ph.D. Organic Chemistry Princeton University
John L. Burba Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Baylor University
Stephen J. Cheesman Ph.D. Geophysics University of Toronto
Mike Forward Ph.D. Applied Mathematics (Chaos Theory) Imperial College, University of London (UK)
Lowell D. White Industrial Hygiene Specialist (Ph.D. Epidemiology) University of New Mexico
Brian Landrum Associate Professor of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering University of Alabama, Huntsville
David Chambers Physicist Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Michael T. Goodrich Professor of Computer Science University of California, Irvine
T. Timothy Chen Ph.D. Statistics University of Chicago
Sarah M. Williams Ph.D. Environmental Engineering (emphasis in microbiology) Stanford University
Donald Clark Ph.D. Physical Biochemistry Louisiana State University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—3
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John Frederick Zino Ph.D. Nuclear Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Shing-Yan Chiu Professor of Physiology University of Wisconsin, Madison
Todd A. Anderson Ph.D. Computer Science University of Kentucky
John Cimbala Professor of Mechanical Engineering Pennsylvania State University
Chris Swanson Tutor (Ph.D. Physics, University of Oregon) Gutenberg College
Kieran Clements Assistant Professor, Natural Sciences Toccoa Falls College
Jan Chatham Ph.D. Neurophysiology University of North Texas
George A. Gates Emeritus Emeritus Professor of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery University of Washington
John Cogdell Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering University of Texas, Austin
David R. Beaucage Ph.D. Mathematics State University of New York at Stony Brook
Leon Combs Professor & Chair, Chemistry & Biochemistry Kennesaw State University
Laraba P. Kendig Ph.D. Materials Science & Engineering University of Michigan
Nicholas Comninellis Associate Professor of Community and Family Medicine University of Missouri-Kansas City
Stephen Crouse Professor of Kinesiology Texas A&M University
Cham Dallas Professor, Pharmaceutics & Biomedical Science University of Georgia
Charles N. Verheyden Professor of Surgery Texas A&M College of Medicine
Melody Davis Ph.D. Chemistry Princeton University
Thomas Deahl Ph.D. Radiation Biology The University of Iowa
Robert DeHaan Ph.D. Human Development University of Chicago
Gage Blackstone Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Texas A&M University
Harold Delaney Professor of Psychology University of New Mexico
Jonathan C. Boomgaarden Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering University of Wisconsin
William Bordeaux Chair, Department of Natural & Mathematical Science Huntington College
Michael Delp Professor of Physiology Texas A&M University
Keith F. Conner Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Clemson University
David DeWitt Associate Professor of Biology Liberty University
Aaron J. Miller Ph.D. Physics Stanford University
Gary Dilts Ph.D. Mathematical Physics University of Colorado
Gerald Chubb Associate Professor of Aviation Ohio State University
Robert DiSilvestro Ph.D. Biochemistry Texas A & M University
Daniel Dix Associate Professor of Mathematics University of South Carolina
Allison Dobson Assistant Professor, Chemistry Georgia Southern University
David Prentice Professor, Department of Life Sciences Indiana State University
Kenneth Dormer Ph.D. Biology & Physiology University of California, Los Angeles
Ernest Prabhakar Ph.D. Experimental Particle Physics California Institute of Technology
John Doughty Ph.D. Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering University of Arizona
Jeanne Drisko Clinical Assistant Professor of Alternative Medicine University of Kansas, School of Medicine
Robert Eckel Professor of Medicine, Physiology & Biophysics University of Colorado Health Sciences Center
Seth Edwards Associate Professor of Geology University of Texas, El Paso
Eduard F. Schmitter Ph.D. Astronomy University of Wisconsin
Lee Eimers Professor of Physics & Mathematics Cedarville University
William J. Hedden Ph.D. Geology Missouri University of Science & Technology
Daniel Ely Professor, Biology University of Akron
Pattle Pun Professor of Biology Wheaton College
Thomas English Adjunct Professor of Physics & Engineering Palomar College A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—4
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Rosalind Picard Sc.D. Electrical Engineering & Computer Science MIT
Danielle Dalafave Associate Professor of Physics The College of New Jersey
Richard Erdlac Ph.D. Structural Geology University of Texas (Austin)
Michael C. Reynolds Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering University of Arkansas-Fort Smith
Bruce Evans Ph.D. Neurobiology Emory University
Gary Achtemeier Ph.D. Meteorology Florida State University
William Everson Ph.D. Human Physiology Penn State College of Medicine
Susan L.M. Huck Ph.D. Geology/Geography Clark University
James Florence Associate Professor, Department of Public Health East Tennessee State University
Douglas R. Buck Ph.D. Nutrition and Food Sciences Utah State University Fellow, American College of Nutrition
Margaret Flowers Professor of Biology Wells College
Étienne Windisch Ph.D. Engineering McGill University (Canada)
Mark Foster Ph.D. Chemical Engineering University of Minnesota
Suzanne Sawyer Vincent Ph.D. Physiology & Biophysics University of Washington
Clarence Fouche Professor of Biology Virginia Intermont College
Robert Blomgren Ph.D. Mathematics University of Minnesota
Kenneth French Chairman, Division of Natural Science Blinn College
Richard N. Taylor Professor of Information & Computer Science University of California, Irvine
Stephen C. Knowles Ph.D. Marine Science University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Marvin Fritzler Professor of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology University of Calgary Medical School (Canada)
Mark L. Psiaki Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (Ph.D., Princeton) Cornell University
Walter E. Lillo Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Purdue University
Mark Fuller Ph.D. Microbiology University of California, Davis
Daniel Galassini Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Kansas State University
Stanley E. Zager Professor Emeritus, Chemical Engineering Youngstown State University
Andrew Fong Ph.D. Chemistry Indiana University
John Garth Ph.D. Physics University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana
John K. G. Kramer Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Human Biology & Nutrition Sciences University of Guelph (Canada)
Glen O. Brindley Professor of Surgery, Director of Ophthalmology Scott & White Clinic, Texas A&M University H.S.C.
Ann Gauger Ph.D. Zoology University of Washington
Pamela Faith Fahey Ph.D. Physiology & Biophysics University of Illinois
Paul Brown Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Trinity Western University (Canada)
Mark Geil Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering Ohio State University
Ibrahim Barsoum Ph.D. Microbiology The George Washington University
Jim Gibson Ph.D. Biology Loma Linda University
John W. Balliet Ph.D. Molecular & Cellular Biology University of Pennsylvania,
Post-doctoral Fellowship, Harvard Medical School
William Gilbert Emeritus Professor of Biology Simpson College
Joe R. Eagleman Professor Emeritus, Department of Physics & Astronomy University of Kansas
Dexter F. Speck Associate Professor of Physiology University of Kentucky Medical Center
Warren Gilson Associate Professor, Dairy Science University of Georgia
Raul Leguizamon Professor of Medicine (Pathology) Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Steven Gollmer Ph.D. Atmospheric Science Purdue University
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Gene B. Chase Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science (Ph.D. Cornell) Messiah College
Chris Grace Associate Professor of Psychology Biola University
James A. Ellard, Sr. Ph.D. Chemistry University of Kentucky
Richard Gunasekera Ph.D. Biochemical Genetics Baylor University
Jennifer M. Cohen Ph.D. Mathematical Physics New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
Russel Peak Senior Researcher, Engineering Information Systems Georgia Institute of Technology
Graham Gutsche Emeritus Professor of Physics U.S. Naval Academy
Olivia A. Henderson Ph.D. Pharmaceutics University of Missouri, Kansas City
Dan Hale Professor of Animal Science Texas A&M University
Robert L. Jones Associate Professor, Department of Ophthalmology University of California, Irvine
James Harbrecht Clinical Associate Professor, Division of Cardiology University of Kansas Medical Center
George W. Benthien Ph.D. Mathematics Carnegie Mellon University
James Harman Associate Chair, Dept. of Chemistry & Biochemistry Texas Tech University
Frederick T. Zugibe Emeritus Adjunct Associate Professor of Pathology Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
William Harris Ph.D. Nutritional Biochemistry University of Minnesota
Thomas H. Johnson Ph.D. Mathematics University of Maryland
Paul Hausgen Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Gregory A. Snyder Ph.D. Geochemistry Colorado School of Mines
Walter Hearn Ph.D. Biochemistry University of Illinois
Howard Martin Whitcraft Ph.D. Mathematics University of St. Louis
Nolan Hertel Professor, Nuclear & Radiological Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Joseph Francis Associate Professor of Biology Cedarville University
Roland Hirsch Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry University of Michigan
Todd Peterson Ph.D. Plant Physiology University of Rhode Island
Charles Edward Norman Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Carleton University (Canada)
Dewey Hodges Professor, Aerospace Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
James P. Russum Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Marko Horb Ph.D. Cell & Developmental Biology State University of New York
Joe Watkins Military Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering United States Military Academy
Barton Houseman Emeritus Professor of Chemistry Goucher College
Mark Pritt Ph.D. Mathematics Yale University
Edward Peltzer Ph.D. Oceanography University of California, San Diego (Scripps Institute)
Cornelius Hunter Ph.D. Biophysics University of Illinois
Rodney Ice Principle Research Scientist, Nuclear & Radiological Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Malcolm W. MacArthur Ph.D. Molecular Biophysics University of London (UK)
Rafe Payne Ph.D. Biology University of Nebraska
Muzaffar Iqbal Ph.D. Chemistry University of Saskatchewan (Canada)
Mark P. Bowman Ph.D. Organic Chemistry Pennsylvania State University
David L. Elliott Chair, Division of Natural Sciences/Mathematics Louisiana College
David Ives Emeritus Professor of Biochemistry Ohio State University
Amiel Jarstfer Associate Professor of Biology LeTourneau University
Stephan J. G. Gift Professor of Electrical Engineering The University of the West Indies
Tony Jelsma Ph.D. Biochemistry McMaster University (Canada)
Fred Johnson Ph.D. Pathology Vanderbilt University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—6
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Raleigh R. White, IV Professor of Surgery Texas A&M University, College of Medicine
Jerry Johnson Ph.D. Pharmacology & Toxicology Purdue University
Harold D. Cole Professor of Physiology Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Yongsoon Park Ph.D. Nutritional Biochemistry Washington State University
Richard Johnson Professor of Chemistry LeTourneau University
David Hagen Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering University of Minnesota
David Johnson Associate Professor of Pharmacology & Toxicology Duquesne University
Jay Hollman Assistant Clinical Professor of Cardiology Louisiana State University Health Science Center
Lawrence Johnston Emeritus Professor of Physics University of Idaho
Albert J. Starshak Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Illinois Institute of Technology
Robert Jones Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering University of Texas-Pan America
Scott T. Dreher Ph.D. Geology (Royal Society USA Research Fellow) University of Alaska, Fairbanks
David Jones Professor of Biochemistry & Chair of Chemistry Grove City College
Robert Kaita Ph.D. Nuclear Physics Rutgers University
Kenneth Demarest Professor of Electrical Engineering University of Kansas
Edwin Karlow Chair, Department of Physics LaSierra University
Francis M. Donahue Professor Emeritus, Chemical Engineering The University of Michigan
James Keener Professor of Mathematics & Adjunct of Bioengineering University of Utah
Shawn Wright Ph.D. Crop Science North Carolina State University
Douglas Keil Ph.D. Plasma Physics University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dave Finnegan Staff Member (Ph.D. Chemistry, University of Maryland) Los Alamos National Laboratory
Micheal Kelleher Ph.D. Biophysical Chemistry University of Ibadan (Nigeria)
Christine B. Beaucage Ph.D. Mathematics State University of New York at Stony Brook
Rebecca Keller Research Professor, Department of Chemistry University of New Mexico
Gerald E. Hoyer Retired Forrest Scientist (Ph.D. Silviculture, University of Washington) Washington State Department of Natural Resources
Michael Kent Ph.D. Materials Science University of Minnesota
William A. Eckert, III Ph.D. Cell & Molecular Physiology University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Richard Kinch Ph.D. Computer Science Cornell University
Irfan Yilmaz Professor of Biology (Ph.D. Systematic Zoology) Dokuz Eylul University (Turkey)
Bretta King Assistant Professor of Chemistry Spelman College
Mauricio Alcocer Director of Graduate Studies (Ph.D. Plant Science, University of Idaho) Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
R. Barry King Prof. of Environmental Safety & Health Albuquerque Technical Vocational Institute
Hiroshi Ishii M.D., Ph.D. Behavioral Neurology Tohoku University (Japan)
Michael Kinnaird Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Lasse Uotila M.D., Ph.D. Medicinal Biochemistry University of Helsinki (Finland)
Donald Kobe Professor of Physics University of North Texas, Denton
Martin Emery Ph.D. Chemistry University of Southampton (UK)
Charles Koons Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of Minnesota
Miguel A. Rodriguez Undergraduate Lab. Coordinator for Biochemistry University of Ottawa (Canada)
Carl Koval Full Professor, Chemistry & Biochemistry University of Colorado, Boulder
Magda Narciso Leite Professor, College of Pharmacy & Biochemistry Universidade Federal de Juiz de For a (Brazil)
Bruce Krogh Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering Carnegie Mellon University
Tetsuichi Takagi Senior Research Scientist Geological Survey of Japan
Daniel Kuebler Ph.D. Molecular & Cellular Biology University of California, Berkeley
William Notz Professor of Statistics Ohio State University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—7
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Wesley Nyborg Emeritus Professor of Physics University of Vermont
Peter William Holyland Ph.D. Geology University of Queensland (Australia)
Paul Kuld Associate Professor of Biological Science Biola University
Douglas B. Matthews Associate Professor of Neuroscience Baylor University
Heather Kuruvilla Ph.D. Biological Sciences State University of New York, Buffalo
Nancy L. Swanson Ph.D. Physics Florida State University
Martin LaBar Ph. D. Genetics & Zoology University of Wisconsin, Madison
William B. Hart Assistant Professor of Mathematics University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Teresa Larranaga Ph.D. Pharmacology University of New Mexico
Yuri Zharikov Post-Doctoral Research Fellow (Ph.D. Zoology) Simon Fraser University (Canada)
Ronald Larson Professor and Chair of Chemical Engineering University of Michigan
Wolfgang Hutter Ph.D. Chemistry University of Ulm (Germany)
Robert Lattimer Ph.D. Chemistry University of Kansas, Lawrence
Robert J. Graham Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Iowa State University
M. Harold Laughlin Professor & Chair, Department of Biomedical Sciences University of Missouri
Samuel C. Winchester Klopman Distinguished Professor Emeritus (Ph.D. Princeton) North Carolina State University
George Lebo Associate Professor of Astronomy University of Florida
Kurt J. Henle Professor Emeritus (Ph.D. Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania) University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
J.B. Lee Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering University of Texas, Dallas
James O. Dritt Ph.D. Civil Engineering & Environmental Science University of Oklahoma
Matti Leisola Professor, Laboratory of Bioprocess Engineering Helsinki University of Technology
Manuel Garcia Ulloa Gomez Director of Marine Sciences Laboratory Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
E. Lennard Sc. D. Surgical Infections & Immunology University of Cincinnati
Glen E. Deal Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Florida Institute of Technology
Lane Lester Ph.D. Genetics Purdue University
Paul Whitehead Ph.D. Chemical Thermodynamics University of Natal (South Africa)
Catherine Lewis Ph.D. Geophysics Colorado School of Mines
John R. Goltz Ph.D. Electrical Engineering University of Arizona
Peter Line Ph.D. Neuroscience Swinburne University of Technology (Australia)
Gerald P. Bodey Emeritus Professor of Medicine, Former Chairman Department of Medical Specialties,
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Garrick Little Ph.D. Organic Chemistry Texas A & M University
John Nichols Ph.D. Mathematics University of Tennessee
Mark Bearden Ph.D. Electrical & Computer Engineering Carnegie Mellon University
Harry Lubansky Ph.D. Biological Chemistry University of Illinois, Chicago
Daniel L. Moran Ph.D. Molecular & Cellular Biology Ohio University
Fulbright Scholar
Ken Ludema Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering University of Michigan
Jed Macosko Ph.D. Chemistry University of California, Berkeley
Nigel Surridge Ph.D. Electrochemistry & Photochemistry University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Christopher Macosko Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Princeton University
David Keller Associate Professor of Chemistry University of New Mexico
Allen Magnuson Ph. D. Theoretical & Applied Mechanics University of New Hampshire
Amy Ward Ph.D. Mathematics Clemson University
Donald Mahan Professor of Animal Nutrition Ohio State University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—8
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Shane A. Kasten Post-Doctoral Fellow (Ph.D. Biochemistry, Kansas State University) Virginia Commonwealth University
Robert Marks Professor, Signal & Image Processing University of Washington
Jesus Ambriz Professor of Medicine Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Julie Marshall Ph.D. Chemistry Texas Tech University
Jay L. Wile Ph.D. Nuclear Chemistry University of Rochester
David McClellan Assistant Professor of Family & Community Medicine Texas A&M University College of Medicine
Evgeny Shirokov Faculty Lecturer (Nuclear and Particle Physics) Moscow State University (Russia)
Andy McIntosh Full Professor of Thermodynamics and Combustion Theory University of Leeds (UK)
Mark A. Robinson Ph.D. Environmental Science Lacrosse University
Tom McMullen Ph.D. History & Philosophy of Science Indiana University
Martin Poenie Associate Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology University of Texas, Austin
Haim Shore Professor of Quality and Reliability Engineering (Ph.D. Statistics) Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (Israel)
Tony Mega Ph.D. Biochemistry Purdue University
Carl Poppe Ph.D. Physics University of Wisconsin
James Menart Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering Wright State University
Theodor Liss Ph.D. Chemistry MIT
James Keesling Professor of Mathematics University of Florida
Brian Miller Ph.D. Physics Duke University
Christopher D. Beling Associate Professor of Physics The University of Hong Kong (China)
Art Nitz Ph.D. Anatomy & Neurobiology University of Kentucky
Thomas Milner Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering University of Texas, Austin
David Ness Ph.D. Anthropology Temple University
Forrest Mims Atmospheric Researcher Geronimo Creek Observatory
S. W. Pelletier* Emeritus Distinguished Professor of Chemistry University of Georgia, Athens
Paul Missel Ph.D. Physics MIT
Dónal O'Mathúna Ph.D. Pharmacognosy Ohio State University
Lennart Möller Professor, Center for Nutrition & Toxicology Karolinska Institute
Victoriano Saenz Professor of Medicine Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
David Monson Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry Indiana University
Hugh Nutley* Professor Emeritus of Physics & Engineering Seattle Pacific University
Terry Morrison Ph.D. Chemistry Syracuse University
Bijan Nemati Ph.D. High Energy Physics University of Washington
William Russell Belding Ph.D. Mathematics University of Notre Dame
Bridget Ingham Ph.D. Physics Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand)
Paul Nesselroade Associate Professor of Experimental Psychology Asbury College
Kevin L. Kendig Ph.D. Materials Science & Engineering University of Michigan
Robert Newman Ph.D. Astrophysics Cornell University
Angus Menuge Ph.D. Philosophy of Psychology University of Wisconsin-Madison
Khawar Sohail Siddiqui Senior Research Associate (Protein Chemistry) University of New South Wales (Australia)
Janet Parker Professor of Medical Physiology Texas A&M University, Health Science Center
Scott Northrup Chair and Professor of Chemistry Tennessee Tech University
John Omdahl* Professor of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology University of New Mexico
Fazale Rana Ph.D. Chemistry Ohio University
Rebecca Orr Ph.D. Cell Biology University of Texas, Southwestern
Cevat Babuna Professor Emeritus of Gynecology (Post-doc, University of Chicago) Istanbul University (Turkey) A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—9
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Lawrence Overzet Professor of Engineering & Computer Science University of Texas, Dallas
J. Meredith Assistant Professor, Chemical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Siddarth Pandey Assistant Professor of Chemistry New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
Gordon Mills Emeritus Professor of Biochemistry University of Texas, Medical Branch
A. Clyde Hill Ph.D. Soil Chemistry Rutgers University
Stephen Meyer Ph.D. Philosophy of Science Cambridge University
William Purcell Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Princeton University
Paul Randolph Ph.D. Mathematical Statistics University of Minnesota
Christopher Morbey Astronomer (Ret.) Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, National Research Council of Canada
David Reed Ph.D Entomology University of California, Riverside
Charles D. Johnson Ph.D. Chemistry University of Minnesota
J. Ishizaki Associate Professor of Neuropsychology (M.D., Ph.D. Medicine) Kobe Gakuin University (Japan)
David Rogstad Ph.D. Physics California Institute of Technology
Mark Shlapobersky Ph.D. Virology Bar-Ilan University (Israel)
Arthur John Jones Ph.D. Zoology & Comparative Physiology Birmingham University (UK)
Patricia Reiff Director, Rice Space Institute Rice University
Oleh Havrysh Senior Research Assistant, Protein & Peptide Structure & Function Dept. Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry & Petrochemistry
Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences (Ukraine)
W. Christopher Schroeder Associate Professor of Mathematics Morehead State University
Gail H. Allwine Professor of Electrical Engineering (retired) Gonzaga University
Dan Reynolds Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of Texas, Austin
Andrew Steckley Ph.D. Civil Engineering University of Western Ontario (Canada)
Terry Rickard Ph.D. Engineering Physics University of California, San Diego
Arlen W. Siert Ph.D. Environmental Health Colorado State University
Mubashir Hanif Ph.D. Plant Biology University of Helsinki (Finland)
Eliot Roberts Ph.D. Soil Chemistry Rutgers University
Mario Beauregard Associate Researcher, Department of Psychology (Ph.D. Neuroscience) University of Montreal (Canada)
Quinton Rogers Prof. of Physiological Chemistry, Dept. of Molecular Biosciences Univ. of California, Davis, School of Vet. Medicine
Liang Hong Associate Professor, Dept. of Dental Public Health & Behavioral Science University of Missouri—Kansas City
Daniel Romo Professor of Chemistry Texas A&M University
David Sabatini Professor Civil Engineering & Environmental Science University of Oklahoma
Richard Buggs DPhil Plant Ecology & Evolution Oxford University (UK)
Theodore Saito Ph.D. Physics Pennsylvania State University
Kay Roscoe Ph.D. High Energy Particle Physics University of Manchester (UK)
Thomas Saleska Professor of Biology Concordia University
James F. Drake Ph.D. Atmospheric Science University of California, Los Angeles
Fernando Saravi Professor, Department of Morphology and Physiology Med. Sciences School, Univ. Nacional de Cuyo (Argentina)
Harold Toups Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Louisiana State University
Phillip Savage Professor of Chemical Engineering University of Michigan
Seyyed Imran Husnain Ph.D. Bacterial Genetics University of Sheffield (UK)
Dale Schaefer Professor, Materials Science & Engineering University of Cincinnati
Russell C. Healey Ph.D. Electrical Engineering University of Cambridge (UK)
Siegfried Scherer Professor of Microbial Ecology Technische Universität München A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—10
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Stuart C. Burgess Professor of Design & Nature, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering Bristol University (UK)
Norman Schmidt Professor of Chemistry Georgia Southern University
Steve Maxwell Associate Professor of Molecular and Cellular Medicine Texas A&M University, H.S.C.
Rowan Seymour Ph.D. Computer Science Queen’s University, Belfast (Northern Ireland)
Andrew Schmitz Ph.D. Inorganic Chemistry University of Iowa
Anne E. Vravick Ph.D. Environmental Toxicology University of Wisconsin, Madison
Granville Sewell Professor of Mathematics University of Texas, El Paso
Richard A. Strong Ph.D. Chemistry Northeastern University
Marshall Adams Ph.D. Marine Sciences University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Stephen Sewell Assistant Professor of Family Medicine Texas A&M University
Mark C. Biedebach Professor Emeritus of Physiology California State University, Long Beach
Gregory Shearer Ph.D. Physiology University of California, Davis
Douglas Nelson Rose Research Physicist United States Army
David Shormann Ph.D. Limnology Texas A&M University
Paul Lorenzini Ph.D. Nuclear Engineering Oregon State University
Dale Spence Emeritus Professor of Kinesiology Rice University
David W. Dykstra Ph.D. Computer Science University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Arnold Sikkema Associate Professor of Physics Dordt College
Larry S. Helmick Senior Professor of Chemistry Cedarville University
Georgia Purdom Ph.D. Molecular Genetics Ohio State University
John Silvius Ph.D. Plant Physiology West Virginia University
Philip S. Taylor Research Fellow, Computer Science Queen’s University Belfast (UK)
Fred Skiff Professor of Physics University of Iowa
Giulio D. Guerra First Researcher of the Italian National Research Council (Chemistry) Istituto Materiali Compositi e Biomedici, CNR (Italy)
Ken Smith Professor of Mathematics Central Michigan University
Audris Zidermanis Ph.D. Nutrition & Molecular Biology Texas Woman’s University
Jacquelyn W. McClelland Professor (Ph.D. Nutritional Biochemistry) North Carolina State University, NCCE
Robert Smith Professor of Chemistry University of Nebraska, Omaha
Fred Van Dyke Professor of Biology and Chair of the Biology Department Wheaton College (Illinois)
Ian C. Fuller Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography Massey University (New Zealand)
Wolfgang Smith Emeritus Professor of Mathematics Oregon State University
Wayne L. Cook Ph.D. Inorganic Chemistry University of Kentucky
John Stamper Research Physicist Naval Research Laboratory
Alfred Tang Visiting Scholar (Ph.D. Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison) The Chinese University of Hong Kong (China)
Jeffrey L. Vaughn Ph.D. Engineering University of California, Irvine
Timothy Standish Ph.D. Environmental Biology George Mason University
Robert W. Kopitzke Professor of Chemistry Winona State University
William Hankley Professor of Computer Science Kansas State University
Walt Stangl Associate Professor of Mathematics Biola University
John C. Walton Professor of Reactive Chemistry (Ph.D. & D.Sc.) University of St. Andrews (UK)
Fellow Royal Society of Chemistry
Fellow Royal Society of Edinburgh
Karl Stephan Associate Professor, Dept. of Technology Texas State University, San Marcos
Cahit Babuna Ph.D. Radiology Istanbul University (Turkey)
Richard Sternberg Ph.D. Biology (Molecular Evolution) Florida International University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—11
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Also: Ph.D. Systems Science (Theoretical Biology) Binghamton University
Reid W. Castrodale P.E., Ph.D. Structural Engineering University of Texas, Austin
Michael Strauss Associate Professor of Physics University of Oklahoma
Jason David Ward Ph.D. Molecular Biology and Biochemistry Glasgow University (UK)
Scott A. Renner Ph.D. Computer Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
John Studenroth Ph.D. Plant Pathology Cornell University
Peter M. Rowell D.Phil. Physics University of Oxford (UK)
Mark Swanson Ph.D. Biochemistry University of Illinois
João Jorge Ribeiro Soares Gonçalves de Araújo, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics Open University (Portugal)
Rafi Ahmed Ph.D. Computer Science University of Florida
James Swanson Professor of Biological Sciences Old Dominion University
Wade Warren C.J. Cavanaugh Chair in Biology Louisiana College
Justin Holl Ph.D. Animal Science University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Bela Szilagyi Ph.D. Physics University of Pittsburgh
Richard Mann Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Princeton University
Daniel Tedder Associate Professor, Chemical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Derek Linkens Senior Research Fellow and Emeritus Professor (Biomedical Eng.) University of Sheffield (UK)
Charles Thaxton Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Iowa State University
Lee M. Spetner Ph.D. Physics MIT
Christopher L. Thomas Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry University of South Carolina
Douglas C. Youvan Former Associate Professor of Chemistry (Ph.D., U.C., Berkeley) MIT
Sture Blomberg Associate Professor of Anesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine The Sahlgren University Hospital (Sweden)
Pavithran Thomas Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering Ohio State University
Leonard Loose Ph.D. Botany University of Leeds (UK)
Richard Thompson Ph.D. Computer Science University of Connecticut
D. Albrey Arrington Ph.D. Wildlife & Fisheries Sciences Texas A&M University
Stephen Lloyd Ph.D. Materials Science University of Cambridge (UK)
James R. Thompson Noah Harding Professor of Statistics Rice University
Denis M. Boyle Ph.D. Medical Biochemistry University of Witwatersrand (South Africa)
Ide Trotter Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Princeton University
Kevin E. Spaulding Ph.D. Optical Engineering University of Rochester
Royal Truman Ph.D. Organic Chemistry Michigan State University
Robert VanderVennen Ph.D. Physical Chemistry Michigan State University
Tibor Tóth Professor of Product Information Engineering (D.Sc. Hungarian Academy) University of Miskolc (Hungary)
Nigel E. Robinson Ph.D. Molecular Biology University of Nottingham (UK)
Vincente Villa Emeritus Professor of Biology Southwestern University
Margil Wadley Ph.D. Inorganic Chemistry Purdue University
Clifton L. Kehr Ph.D. Chemistry University of Delaware
Carston Wagner Associate Professor of Medicinal Chemistry University of Minnesota
Karl Heinz Kienitz Professor, Department of Systems & Control Instituto Technologico de Aeronautica (Brazil)
Linda Walkup Ph.D. Molecular Genetics University of New Mexico Medical School
James Tumlin Associate Professor of Medicine Emory University
David Van Dyke Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry University of Illinois, Urbana
John Walkup Emeritus Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering Texas Tech University
Tom Belanger Professor of Environmental Science Florida Institute of Technology
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Pieder Beeli Ph.D. Physics University of Notre Dame
Robert Waltzer Associate Professor of Biology Belhaven College
James R. Brawer Professor of Anatomy & Cell Biology (Ph.D., Harvard) McGill University (Canada)
Todd Watson Assistant Professor of Urban & Community Forestry Texas A & M University
Weimin Gao Microbiologist Brookhaven National Laboratory
Woody Weed Mechanical Engineer, Science & Technology Division Sandia National Labs
Heikki Martikka Professor of Machine Design Lappeenranta University of Technology (Finland)
Gerald Wegner Ph.D. Entomology Loyola University
Richard R. Neptune Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Texas, Austin
Jonathan Wells Ph.D. Molecular & Cell Biology University of California, Berkeley
Alexandre S. Soares Ph.D. Mathematics Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)
Robert Wentworth Ph.D. Toxicology University of Georgia
James Wanliss Associate Professor of Physics Embry-Riddle University
Einar W. Palm Professor Emeritus, Department of Plant Pathology University of Missouri, Columbia
R. P. Wharton Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Sandra Gade Emeritus Professor of Physics University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Elden Whipple Affiliate Professor of Earth & Space Sciences University of Washington
Chee K. Yap Professor of Computer Science (Ph.D., Yale University) Courant Institute, New York University
Mark White Professor of Chemical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Charles Detwiler Ph.D. Genetics Cornell University
Terrance Murphy Professor of Chemistry Weill Cornell Medical College
Ed Neeland Professor of Chemistry Okanagan University
Gregg Wilkerson Ph.D. Geologic Science University of Texas, El Paso
Joseph M. Marra Director, Interventional Radiology, & Adjunct Professor of Medicine Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center
Ken Pascoe Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Air Force Institute of Technology
John H. Whitmore Associate Professor of Geology Cedarville University
Ernest L. Brannon Professor Emeritus, Distinguished Research Professor (Ph.D. Fisheries) University of Idaho
Miroslav Hill Former Director of Research Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France)
Christopher Williams Ph.D. Biochemistry Ohio State University
Georg A. Speck Ph.D. Biology, Molecular Pharmacology University of Heidelberg (Germany)
J. Mitch Wolff Professor of Mechanical Engineering Wright State University
Thomas D. Gillespie Research Professor Emeritus Transportation Research Institute, University of Michigan
John Worraker Ph.D. Applied Mathematics University of Bristol (UK)
Alexander Yankovsky Assistant Professor of Physical Oceanography Nova Southeastern University
John C. Zink Former Assistant Professor of Engineering University of Oklahoma
Patrick Young Ph.D. Chemistry Ohio University
David Zartman Ph.D. Genetics & Animal Breeding Ohio State University
Charles T. Rombough Ph.D. Engineering University of Texas
Henry Zuill Emeritus Professor of Biology Union College
Jane M. Orient Clinical Lecturer in Medicine University of Arizona College of Medicine
Frank Young Ph.D. Computer Engineering Air Force Institute of Technology
Murray E. Moore Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering Texas A&M University
William J. Powers Ph.D. Physics University California, San Diego
Max G. Walter Associate Professor of Radiology Oklahoma University Health Science Center A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—13
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Rosa María Muñoz Head of Biopharmacy Department Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Scott R. Fulton Ph.D. Atmospheric Science Colorado State University
Don Olson Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry Purdue University
Graham Marshall Ph.D. Analytical Chemistry University of Pretoria (South Africa)
Philip R. Page Ph.D. Theoretical Particle Physics University of Oxford (UK)
Roger Wiens Ph.D. Physics University of Minnesota
Mark Toleman Ph.D. Molecular Microbiology Bristol University (UK)
Robert O. Kalbach Ph.D. Physical Chemistry University of South Florida
Gregory J. Brewer Prof. of Neurology, Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Cell Biology Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
Neil Huber Dr. rer. nat. (Ph.D. Anthropology) Tuebingen University
Marc C. Daniels Assistant Professor of Biology William Carey College
J.D. Moolenburgh Ph.D. Epidemiology University of Rotterdam (The Netherlands)
Roger Lien Ph.D. Physiology North Carolina State University
Dean Schulz Ph.D. Computer Science Colorado State University
John Millam Ph.D. Computational Chemistry Rice University
Joseph Lary Epidemiologist and Research Biologist (retired) Centers for Disease Control
Richard S. Beale, Jr. Ph.D. Entomology University of California, Berkeley
Ernest M. Thiessen Ph.D. Civil & Environmental Engineering Cornell University
Tianyou Wang Research Scientist Center for Advanced Studies in Measurement & Assessment, University of Iowa
Øyvind A. Voie Ph.D. Biology University of Oslo (Norway)
David K. Shortess Professor of Biology (Retired) New Mexico Tech
A.D. Harrison Emeritus Professor of Biology University of Waterloo
William P. Shulaw Professor of Veterinary Preventive Medicine The Ohio State University
Darrell R. Parnell Ph. D. University Level Science Education Kansas State University
Daniel W. Barnette Ph. D. Aerospace Engineering Stanford University
David William Jensen Professor of Biology Tomball College
Edward M. Bohn Ph. D. Nuclear Engineering University of Illinois
Robert G. Vos Ph.D. Civil/Structural Engineering Rice University
Yvonne Boldt Ph. D. Microbiology University of Minnesota
William B. Collier Ph. D. Physical Chemistry Oklahoma State University
Edward Gade Professor Emeritus of Mathematics University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
James E. Nymann Emeritus Professor of Mathematics University of Texas at El Paso
Malcolm A. Cutchins Ph. D. Engineering Mechanics Virginia Tech
Lisanne D’Andrea-Winslow Ph. D. Cell Biology & Biochemistry Rutgers University
Holger Daugaard Ph. D. Agronomy Danish Institute of Agricultural Sciences (Denmark)
Shieu-Hong Lin Assistant Professor of Computer Science (Ph.D., Brown University) Biola University
W. John Durfee Assistant Professor of Pharmacology Case Western Reserve University
Dominic M. Halsmer Ph. D. Mechanical Engineering UCLA
Charles B. Lowrey Ph.D. Chemistry University of Houston
Jeffrey H. Harwell Ph. D. Chemical Engineering University of Texas, Austin
Frank Cheng Associate Professor of Chemistry University of Idaho
David Heddle Ph. D. Physics Carnegie Mellon University
Yoshiyuki Amemiya Professor of Advanced Materials Science & Applied Physics The University of Tokyo
Barbara S. Helmkamp Ph.D. Theoretical Physics Louisiana State University A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—14
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David C. Kem Professor of Medicine University of Oklahoma College of Medicine
C. Thomas Luiskutty Ph.D. Physics Univ. of Louisville
Wusi Maki Research Asst. Professor, Dept. of Microbiology, Mol. Biology, & Biochem. University of Idaho
A. Cordell Perkes Ph.D. Science Education Ohio State University
John D. Cook Head of Software Development (Ph.D. Mathematics, U.T. Austin) Department of Biostatistics & Applied Mathematics, U. of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Tony Prato Prof. of Ecological Economics University of Missouri
Charles G. Sanny Prof. of Biochemistry Oklahoma State University Ctr. for Health Sciences
Jairam Vanamala Postdoctoral Research Associate, Faculty of Nutrition Faculty of Nutrition, TAMU, College Station
Gordon L. Wilson Ph.D. Environmental Science and Public Policy George Mason University
Robin D. Zimmer Ph.D. Environmental Sciences Rutgers University
Karl Duff Sc.D. Mechanical Engineering MIT
David Jansson Sc.D. Instrumentation and Automatic Control MIT
C. Steven Murphree Professor of Biology Belmont University
Alfred G. Ratz Ph.D. Engineering Physics University of Toronto (Canada)
Chris Cellucci Associate Professor of Physics Ursinus College
Gary Maki Director, Ctr. for Advanced Microelectronics and Biomolecular Research University of Idaho
Ronald S. Carson Ph.D. Nuclear Engineering University of Washington
Joseph A. Strada Ph.D. Aeronautical Engineering Naval Postgraduate School
Olaf Karthaus Associate Professor, Chemistry Chitose Institute of Science & Technology (Japan)
Arnold Eugene Carden Professor Emeritus of Engineering Science & Mechanics University of Alabama
John B. Marshall Professor of Medicine University of Missouri School of Medicine
Robert B. Sheldon Ph.D. Physics University of Maryland, College Park
B. K. Nelson Research Toxicologist (retired) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Hansik Yoon Ph.D. Fiber Science Seoul National University (South Korea)
David Conover Ph.D. Health Physics Purdue University
Luis Paulo Franco de Barros D.Sc. Mechanical Engineering Pontificia Universidade Católica (Brazil)
Richard W. Pooley Professor of Surgery (retired) New York Medical College
Arthur Chadwick Ph.D. Molecular Biology University of Miami
Lennart Saari Adjunct Professor, Wildlife Biology University of Helsinki (Finland)
Douglas G. Frank Ph.D. Surface Electrochemistry University of Cincinnati
James G. Tarrant Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of Texas, Austin
N. Ricky Byrn Ph.D. Nuclear Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Jeffrey E. Lander Ph.D. Biomechanics University of Oregon
Curtis Hawkins Asst. Clinical Professor of Dermatology Case Western Reserve Univ. School of Medicine
Mary A. Brown DVM (Veterinary Medicine) Ohio State University
Thomas H. Marshall Adjunct Professor, Food Agricultural and Biological Engineering Ohio State University
Charles H. McGowen Assistant Professor of Medicine Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine
Ronald R. Crawford Ed.D. Science Education Ball State University
Matti Junnila DVM, Ph.D. Veterinary Pathology University of Helsinki (Finland)
Dean Svoboda Ph.D. Electrical Engineering The Ohio State University
Ruth C. Miles Professor of Chemistry Malone College
Mark J. Lattery Associate Professor of Physics University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
William McVaugh Associate Professor of Biology Department of Natural Sciences, Malone College
Jeffrey M. Goff Associate Professor of Chemistry Malone College A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—15
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Jarrod W. Carter Ph.D. Bioengineering University of Washington
David B. Medved Ph.D. Physics University of Pennsylvania
Theodore W. Geier Ph.D. Forrest Hydrology University of Minnesota
Christian Heiss Post-Doctoral Associate Complex Carbohydrate Res. Ctr., Univ. of Georgia
G. Bradley Schaefer Professor of Pediatrics University of Nebraska Medical Center
Bruce Simat Associate Professor of Biology Northwestern College
Teresa Gonske Assistant Professor of Mathematics Northwestern College
Thomas Mundie Dean of the School of Science & Technology Georgia Gwinnett College
Scott S. Kinnes Professor of Biology Azusa Pacific University
James A. Huggins Chair, Dept. of Biology & Dir., Hammons Center for Scientific Studies Union University
Jonathan A. Zderad Assistant Professor of Mathematics Northwestern College
Michael R. Egnor Professor and Vice-Chairman, Dept. of Neurological Surgery State University of New York at Stony Brook
I. Caroline Crocker Ph.D. Immunopharmacology University of Southampton (UK)
Donald J. Hanrahan Ph.D. Electrical Engineering University of Maryland
Gintautas Jazbutis Ph.D. Mechanical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology
Paul S. Darby Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of Georgia
Changhyuk An Ph.D. Physics University of Tennessee
L. Kirt Martin Professor of Biology Lubbock Christian University
Gerald Schroeder Ph.D. Earth Sciences & Nuclear Physics MIT
Rod Rogers Ph.D. Agronomy/Plant Breeding Iowa State University
David W. Herrin Research Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering University of Kentucky
Glen Needham Associate Professor of Entomology The Ohio State University
E. Byron Rogers Professor of Chemistry; Chair, Dept. of Mathematics & Physical Sciences Lubbock Christian University
Vladimir L. Voeikov Vice-Chairman, Chair of Bio-organic Chemistry, Faculty of Biology Lomonosov Moscow State University (Russia)
Ricardo Leon Dean of School of Medicine Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Eugene C. Ashby Regents’ Professor and Distinguished Professor Emeritus Georgia Institute of Technology
JoAnne Larsen Assistant Professor of Industrial Engineering University of South Florida, Lakeland
Douglas Axe Director (Ph.D. Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology) Biologic Institute
Joel Brind Professor of Biology Baruch College, City University of New York
William F. Basener Associate Professor of Mathematics Rochester Institute of Technology
L. Whit Marks Emeritus Professor of Physics University of Central Oklahoma
Jan Peter Bengtson Associate Professor (M.D., Ph.D. Intensive Care Medicine) University of Gothenburg (Sweden)
Perry Mason Professor of Mathematics and Physical Science Lubbock Christian University
Timothy A. Mixon Assistant Professor of Medicine Texas A&M University
Lawrence DeMejo Ph.D. Polymer Science and Engineering University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Charles Garner Professor of Chemistry Baylor University
Lynne Parker Professor of Computer Science (Ph.D. MIT) Distributed Intelligence Lab, University of Tennessee
Ivan M. Lang Ph.D. Physiology and Biophysics Temple University
David J. Lawrence Ph.D. Physics Washington University, St. Louis
John G. Hoey Ph.D. Molecular and Cellular Biology City University of New York Graduate School
Theodore J. Siek Ph.D. Biochemistry Oregon State University
John P. Rickert Ph.D. Mathematics Vanderbilt University
Christian M. Loch Ph.D. Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics University of Virginia
David W. Rusch Sr. Research Scientist, Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics University of Colorado
Charles A. Signorino Ph.D. Organic Chemistry University of Pennsylvania A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—16
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Luke Randall Ph.D. Molecular Microbiology University of London (UK)
Jan Frederic Dudt Associate Professor of Biology Grove City College
Glenn A. Marsch Associate Professor of Physics Grove City College
Eduardo Sahagun Professor of Botany Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Mark A. Chambers Ph.D. Virology University of Cambridge (UK)
Daniel Howell Ph.D. Biochemistry Virginia Tech
Joel D. Hubbard Associate Professor, Dept. of Lab. Science and Primary Care Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
C. Roger Longbotham Ph.D. Statistics Florida State University
Hugh L. Henry Lecturer (Ph.D. Physics, University of Virginia) Northern Kentucky University
Jonathan D. Eisenback Professor of Plant Pathology Dept. of Plant Pathology and Weed Science Virginia Tech
Eduardo Arroyo Professor of Forensics (Ph.D. Biology) Complutense University (Spain)
Peter Silley Ph.D. Microbial Biochemistry University of Newcastle upon Tyne
E. Norbert Smith Ph.D. Zoology Texas Tech University
Peter C. Iwen Professor of Pathology and Microbiology University of Nebraska Medical Center
Paul Roschke A.P. and Florence Wiley Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering Texas A&M University
Luman R. Wing Associate Professor of Biology Azusa Pacific University
Edward F. Blick Ph.D. Engineering Science University of Oklahoma
Wesley M. Taylor Former Chairman of the Division of Primate Medicine & Surgery New England Regional Primate Research Center, Harvard Medical School
Don England Professor Emeritus of Chemistry Harding University
Wayne Linn Professor Emeritus of Biology Southern Oregon University
James Gundlach Associate Professor of Physics John A. Logan College
Guillermo Gonzalez Associate Professor of Astronomy Iowa State University
Tim Droubay Ph.D. Physics University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Gregory D. Bossart Director and Head of Pathology Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution
Barry Homer Ph.D. Mathematics Southampton University (UK)
Jiøí Vácha Professor Emeritus of Pathological Physiology Institute of Pathophysiology, Masaryk University (Czech Republic)
Richard J. Neves Professor of Fisheries, Dept. of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Virginia Tech
David Deming Associate Professor of Geosciences University of Oklahoma
Gregory A. Ator Associate Professor, Department of Otolaryngology University of Kansas Medical Center
Erkki Jokisalo Ph.D. Social Pharmacy University of Kuopio (Finland)
John S. Roden Associate Professor of Biology Southern Oregon University
Donald W. Russell Adjunct Assistant Clinical Professor University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Neil Armitage Associate Professor of Civil Engineering University of Cape Town (South Africa )
Geoff Barnard Senior Research Scientist, Department of Veterinary Medicine University of Cambridge (UK)
Richard Hassing Ph.D. Theoretical Physics Cornell University
Olivia Torres Professor-Researcher (Human Genetics) Autonomous University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
Donald A. Kangas Professor of Biology Truman State University
Alvin Masarira Senior Lecturer for Structural Engineering and Mechanics University of Cape Town (South Africa)
George A. Ekama Professor, Water Quality Engineering, Dept of Civil Engineering University of Cape Town (South Africa)
Alistair Donald Ph.D. Environmental Science/Quaternary or Pleistocene Palynology University of Wales (UK)
Thomas C. Majerus PharmD; FCCP University of Minnesota
Ferenc Farkas Ph.D. Applied Chemical Sciences Technical University of Budapest (Hungary)
Scott A. Chambers Affiliate Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science & Engineering University of Washington A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—17
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Cris Eberle Ph.D. Nuclear Engineering Purdue University
A SCIENTIFIC DISSENT FROM DARWINISM—18
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Dennis M. Sullivan Professor of Biology and Bioethics Cedarville University
Rodney M. Rutland Department Head & Associate Professor of Kinesiology Anderson University
Alastair M. Noble Ph.D. Chemistry University of Glasgow (Scotland)
Robert D. Orr Professor of Family Medicine University of Vermont College of Medicine
Laverne Miller Clinical Associate Professor of Family Medicine Medical College of Ohio
Laura Burke Former Associate Professor of Industrial Engineering Lehigh University
Terry W. Spencer Former Chair, Department of Geology & Geophysics Texas A&M University
Bert Massie Ph.D. Physics University of California, Los Angeles
Mark C. Porter Ph.D. Chemical Engineering MIT
S. Thomas Abraham Assistant Professor of Pharmacology & Toxicology Campbell University School of Pharmacy
John L. Hoffer Professor of Engineering; Texas A&M University College of Engineering; (also) Professor of Anesthesiology Texas A&M Univ. Syst. Health Science Center
Anita McElroy Ph.D. Biology University of California, San Diego
Herman Branover Professor of Mechanical Engineering Ben-Gurion University (Israel)
Martin Krause Research Scientist (Astronomy) University of Cambridge (UK)
James G. Bentsen Ph.D. Chemistry M.I.T.
Charles N. Delzell Professor of Mathematics (Ph.D. Stanford) Louisiana State University
Curtis Hrischuk Ph.D. Electrical Engineering Carleton University (Canada)
Guang-Hong Chen Assistant Professor of Medical Physics & Radiology University of Wisconsin-Madison
Doug Hufstedler Ph.D. Animal Nutrition Texas A&M University
Justin Long Ph.D. Chemical Engineering Iowa State University
James E. Rankin Ph.D. General Relativity Yeshiva University (Israel)
Donald F. Smee Research Professor (Microbiology) Utah State University
Colin R. Reeves Professor of Operational Research (Ph.D. Evolutionary Algorithms) Coventry University (UK)
Eugene K. Balon University Professor Emeritus, Department of Integrative Biology University of Guelph (Canada)
Chrystal L. Ho Pao Assistant Professor of Biology (Ph.D. Molecular Genetics, Harvard U.) Trinity International University
*= Deceased since signing statement.
Note: Unless updated information has been received, positions listed are those held by signers when they signed the statement.
Posted by: Stanton
|
June 22, 2009 11:01 PM
Oh, look, Drew the moron posted the Discovery Institute's bullshit "Dissent From Darwinism" petition.
Posted by: tresmal | June 22, 2009 11:05 PM
Drew: 1) We know about the dissent from Darwinism petition. It's stupid and dishonest.
2) You don't need to copypasta the whole damn thing. There is this new invention called a link.
Posted by: Rorschach | June 22, 2009 11:11 PM
Spammer @ 68,
thank you kindly for posting this useful summary of people with reality impairment.
Posted by: Drew | June 22, 2009 11:19 PM
@ 70
Garbage defense. Apparently you assume that because these scientists are skeptical of your religion that they are also incapable of reading and understanding what they are signing?
Posted by: Dahan | June 22, 2009 11:22 PM
OK, just seconding tresmal. Drew, exhibiting you're ignorance here in no way changes reality. It goes on despite your wishes to the contrary.
In case you aren't aware, here's a link (what a concept) to over 700 scientists names Steve who agree with us "pompous punks". Of course, Ad Populum arguments are fallacious, but even if they weren't, you wouldn't want to try that one in this case.
Does it hurt to be as ignorant as you are? I imagine it doesn't. It must almost be soothing or fun, like being totally stoned off your ass and thinking you're being very clever but everyone around you just thinks you're a stupid asswipe because you're spouting drivel. What's your take?
Posted by: Rick R | June 22, 2009 11:27 PM
Oh good. Idiot spam.
Drew, why should anyone think you're a reliable source for anything when you don't even know how the fucking internet works?
Posted by: Stanton
|
June 22, 2009 11:31 PM
Drew, many were, in fact, tricked into signing it.
Secondly, the list has not grown since 2000.
Thirdly, Evolutionary Biology is not a religion.
Posted by: Smoggy Batzrubble | June 22, 2009 11:33 PM
Dear Brother Drew,
Well done for mastering the copy and paste functions on your computer, you earn two Jesuspoints.
Soon you will graduate to reading whole words, and then basic sentences, and perhaps some time after that a skill known as comprehension. With comprehension mastered you may gradually develop understanding, which will enable you to discriminate between real scientists and people who use long words and post long lists but are actually telling lies. Perhaps one day you will even learn to do your own research and discover the beauty of the scientific method. I don't hold out hope for the latter, but pigs might fly and God might be more than a fairy tale about a murderous heavenly psychopath invented by ignorant desert dwellers.
Yours up Christ's fundament
Smoggy
Posted by: Drew | June 22, 2009 11:36 PM
@ 73
Nice link. You prove my point when you cite the ever-so-reliable wikipedia definition of ad populum arguments. They are precisely the tactics your side has used for decades to try to convince the world's population that you are right. Ie: no "true scientist" disagrees with TENS, etc, etc. I just wanted to remind you that there are.
Posted by: SciencePundit
|
June 22, 2009 11:38 PM
@Drew
The Steve-O-Meter is up to #1092. I would print the entire list here, but I'm not an inconsiderate troll (like some people).
Posted by: Rick R | June 22, 2009 11:41 PM
Drew hasn't caught on to the fact that "There's a bunch of people as stupid as I am" doesn't make his argument valid.
Drew, you're awesome! There was nothing on TV tonight!
*Grabs popcorn*
Posted by: Stanton
|
June 22, 2009 11:42 PM
So, how many of these 761 scientists are biologists, and how many of them reject Evolutionary Biology because of scientific reasons, and not theological reasons or misconceptions about Evolutionary Biology?Posted by: Smoggy Batzrubble | June 22, 2009 11:44 PM
Dear Science Pundit,
Please don't be harsh on Drew by suggesting he is inconsiderate. He is, after all, a considered troll in the best YEC traditions. He may not have mastered the art of linking, but God is mightily pleased with his efforts, as any stone age deity faced with the marvels of the internet would be.
Bless you Brother Drew, keep this up and you'll be able to change your name to Brother Write and give up Jesus pictures entirely.
Smoggy
Posted by: Nominal Egg | June 23, 2009 12:22 AM
Drew, follow the link provided by tresmal in #70, and read all of it. Then, STFU.Posted by: Wowbagger, OM | June 23, 2009 12:22 AM
Drew, the number of people who believe evolution to be untrue is irrelevant; it's about whether or not they have any evidence that it's untrue.
Can any of your scientists provide that? If they cannot then they have a problem, because, without evidence, it ain't science. That they might be intellectually honest some of the time - i.e. when performing the science pertaining to their chosen field - doesn't change that.
It's more of a case of No True Science™ than No True Scientist™.
Posted by: James F | June 23, 2009 12:24 AM
Drew #68
And here's the corresponding list of peer-reviewed scientific publications that provide experimental evidence - or even a testable mechanism - for ID or refute evolution:
......
Why do you suppose this is? Some possibilities:
1) The scientific community is engaged in a global, decades-long conspiracy of suppression
2) Pro-ID researchers are completely incompetent
3) ID is not science
Posted by: Tom Coward | June 23, 2009 12:33 AM
What is the longest running Creationist lie? "There are no transitional fossils?" "Archeaopteryx is a hoax?" "The Grand Canyon was carved in one day 5000 years ago?" No. The longest running Creationist lie is: "Evolution is a theory in crisis, on the brink of collapse!" Here's the link (Drew, you higlight the navigation bar, hit Control+C to copy, then Control+V to paste, like this)
http://home.entouch.net/dmd/moreandmore.htm
Voila!
Posted by: tresmal | June 23, 2009 1:38 AM
First thing you need to know, Drew, is that this is carefully worded to be completely compatible with "evolutionism" while appearing, to a layperson to disagree with it. As written there is nothing in it to stop any evolution accepting scientists from signing it. Even the "pompous punk" who runs this blog could sign it if he didn't know the agenda of the people pushing it. Consider the first sentence:Many, if not most, "evolutionists" believe that other natural processes in addition to random mutation and natural selection play a role in evolution. Genetic Drift is one example.
There is nothing in that sentence that is remotely hostile or doubtful about evolution. Scientists believe that "careful examination of the evidence" for any theory or hypothesis "should be encouraged". That is nothing more than standard scientific practice. In fact evolution has become overwhelmingly accepted among scientists because of careful examination of the evidence.Now the second sentence:
Lastly the use of the term "Darwinian theory" is just a wee bit deceptive. To a layperson the term is synonymous with evolution. To a scientist it refers to a specific version of the TOE, and not to the idea of evolution itself. Thus a scientist can accept purely natural evolution while disagreeing with, or considering incomplete, "Darwinian theory" with no inconsistency at all.
Posted by: Kel | June 23, 2009 2:05 AM
Evolution will always be a theory in crisis, will always be on the brink of collapse; and it will remain that way up until this civilisation's end. Lets just hope that the information age somewhat shields knowledge from the fate of the Library of Alexandria.
Posted by: articulett | June 23, 2009 2:10 AM
So is our time still nigh or am I too late?
Posted by: cygnus | June 23, 2009 2:54 AM
#68
Wow. It never occured to me that anyone would ever possibly disagree with me. I guess I must be wrong. I'll have to update my beliefs to only those no-one disagrees with. Oh, wait, I disagree with that... Yikes, I'm in trouble....
Posted by: Richie P | June 23, 2009 5:15 AM
No doubt one could also produce a long list of people who agree with the proposition that "the universe is less than 10,000 years old" as well. Some of them may be fine standing members of the community, some of them might be sucessful businessmen/women, and some may possibly even have jobs that involve some degree of technical or maybe even scientific know-how. But that does not make a scrap of difference. Why? Because every sane and unbiased individual on the entire planet knows that the proposition is complete and utter bollocks.
Right that's that one dealt with.
Posted by: Andyman | June 23, 2009 6:36 AM
For every scientist that support ID there is 100 scientists that support Evolution. Heck more scientists with the name Steve support evolution than there are scientists who support ID.
http://ncseweb.org/taking-action/project-steve
Posted by: Widgetas
|
June 23, 2009 7:19 AM
Oh man that is brilliant!
"God did it, of course... we're just not sure just how as yet. Erm... The whole "snap the fingers and wiggle the nose" isn't really a theory is it? But it's a start. We'll come up with one, people! Have faith!"
Knobbers...
*shakes head*
Posted by: Knockgoats | June 23, 2009 8:00 AM
“We are skeptical of claims for the ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of life. Careful examination of the evidence for Darwinian theory should be encouraged.” - A Scientific Dissent from Darwinism, as quoted by Drew@68.
It is now generally, although not universally, accepted among evolutionary biologists that the eukaryotic cell arose through endosymbiosis. Since this is neither random mutation nor natural selection, those accepting this theory could all sign. (Acceptance of this theory, on the evidence, is of course a magnificent disproof of the creationist lie that evolutionary theory is a dogma.) In fact, most would not, as they would rightly be very suspicious of the motives behind, this declaration - which comes from that bunch of shameless liars the "Discovery Institute", in case anyone couldn't guess.
According to the National Science Foundation, there were approximately 955,300 biological scientists in the United States in 1999. Since most of those signing this dishonest appeal to authority are not even biologists, its total of a few hundred signatories - many from outside the US - is risible. Peddle your lies elsewhere, Drew.
Posted by: Hurin | June 23, 2009 8:29 AM
Someone needs to buy the IDiots a copy of The God Delusion. I think the discussion of "cranes" vs "skyhooks" might benefit them in figuring out why they don't have a theory.
Posted by: Dahan | June 23, 2009 8:40 AM
Drew @ 77,
"Nice link. You prove my point when you cite the ever-so-reliable wikipedia definition of ad populum arguments. They are precisely the tactics your side has used for decades to try to convince the world's population that you are right."
Sorry I forgot to paste in the link. Doesn't change anything of course, just means I got distracted. Here ya go.
http://ncseweb.org/taking-action/list-steves
I don't need to bother with Wikipedia to understand what a fallacious argument is, but I'm glad it works for you. More importantly, our "side" (whatever that means, aren't we all supposed to be looking for the true nature of things? Oh, that's right, you're not.) doesn't go by popular vote, we go by data. When you've got some of that to support your "side" let us know, OK? Until then, STFU.
Posted by: Wayne Hollyoak | June 23, 2009 9:43 AM
Drew, thanks for the reminder! More and more are jumping ship it seems. But, for now hard line evolutionism continues to be the "official" religion of the scientific establishment.
They think they've got it all figured out... a zero IQ designer(natural selection) did it all! Darwin, your whimsical "natural" creation story makes good fiction, but alas adaptation is an ill equipped design engineer..
ID is an open ended "theory" unlike darwinism. It presupposes that the designer may very well surpass human dissection and analysis. That may irritate the scientific establishment, but like small children you sometimes need to teach them that they can't always have their way.
Wayne Hollyoak
Posted by: Stephen Wells | June 23, 2009 9:51 AM
Replacing "I don't know" with "God did it by magic" doesn't actually constitute a theory, Wayne.
Posted by: John Morales | June 23, 2009 9:56 AM
Wayne @96, almost right. That should read:
"ID is an open ended "theory" unlike
darwinismevolutionary biology."Clearly, the former is a "theory", whilst the latter is a theory.
Open-ended is redundant, of course.
Posted by: John Morales | June 23, 2009 9:59 AM
<groan> I too was almost right.
'evolutionary biology' → 'theory of evolution'
Posted by: Nerd of Redhead, OM
|
June 23, 2009 10:01 AM
Lets see: God-none Holy book-none Church-none Preachers-none teaching from a holy book, which doesn't exist. Some might call professors like PZ who teach from the peer reviewed scientific literature preachers, but the first two letters are wrong, they are teachers Tithes-noneMassive failure of logic Wayne Holyoak. You get an "F" for your analysis. Also, absolutely no physical evidence for your imaginary designer was present. Another "F".
Posted by: Kel | June 23, 2009 10:16 AM
So ID is a theory? Great. I've always had two questions about ID that I've never seen any ID advocate answer. Perhaps you can answer them and shed light on the "theory".Question 1: What role has the Designer played in the history of nature?
Question 2: How can we test for an Intelligent Designer in nature?
If you don't answer these questions, then how is ID a theory? How is it even a hypothesis? It seems that without answering these questions, ID is nothing more than conjecture so that believers can feel that they are being "intellectual" by saying Goddidit.
Posted by: Rev. BigDumbChimp | June 23, 2009 10:31 AM
So ID isn't a theory in scientific terms and isn't science.
Thanks.
Posted by: Cosmic Teapot | June 23, 2009 10:36 AM
Wayne Hollyoak
How does ID explain the muscles that I have to move my ears, that I no longer need.
The theory of evolution explains it perfectly.
Posted by: Nerd of Redhead, OM
|
June 23, 2009 10:39 AM
What, Wayne isn't sticking around to defend ID against the million or so scientific papers in the peer reviewed scientific literature, directly and indirectly backing evolution? With essentially none backing ID? Where is his dedication?
Posted by: Blue Girl | June 23, 2009 11:59 AM
Holy chocolate-covered Christ in a fig tree, Drew is an abject moron!
First, learn to embed a fucking hyperlink, you drooling, moronic fuckwit!
Second, show us some peer reviewed research to back up your position, or shut the fuck up.
Posted by: kermit | June 23, 2009 2:04 PM
Drew & Wayne... No, natural selection did not do it all. Genetic drift did some, sexual selection did some, and there are other natural processes which produced the diversity of life on Earth. This is one reason that dozens of real scientists could sign that petition. The other is that scientists are often geeks, with poor social skills, and they live an a social milieu of people seeking genuine understanding of the world. In other words, they are unaware of the deceptive nature of some people, and were taken in by the slimy mendacity of the wording of this petition. Many were horrified to discover this petition is being misrepresented, and have repudiated their signing. It is clear that neither of you have any contact with the scientific community, of you would know that evolutionary science is not in any danger. On the contrary, it is supported by more diverse fields of scientific evidence than any other major theory.
Deceptions, cons, and wishful thinking are all you have. You do not address the evidence, nor offer an alternative theory of your own. Perhaps a God named Yahweh *did do it all. But if he did, then he lied about it by producing a world that looks as though it came about entirely thru natural processes, including we humans. And he has hidden himself away - why would he do that?
Posted by: Mike Caton | June 23, 2009 2:05 PM
If you can't get creationists (or conspiracy nutbars of any stripe) to make coherent predictions about their own claimed theories, you can at least get them to make predictions about the *debate*, as Dembski did here. And the reason that's awesome is you can either embarass the nutcase in question, or make money off them. Challenge them to a bet! For all I know someone did this, but you could say "Okay Dembski. Five years? You're sure? HOW sure? A thousand-bucks sure? Let's each put our thousand in escrow big guy." For all I know someone tried this, but I really think our community could benefit from more Randi-like challenges. Either you get a little richer, or (admittedly more likely) he slinks away mumbling something about how betting is immoral. Either way it greatly damages his apparent courage in his convictions.
More on betting creationists for fun and profit here:
http://luckyatheist.blogspot.com/2009/06/talk-is-cheapso-charge-for-being-wrong.html
Posted by: wasd | June 23, 2009 5:32 PM
What kind of pussy scientist are you guys arguing over the exact wording of DI-drews petition instead of, you know, looking at the data?
What you do is you take the list, you ignore all the US park rangers and mathematicians that are on the list. Then you start emailing all the biologist or biochemists that are left. None of that silly NCSE trick of asking a only sample like previously linked... no *all* biologists and *all* biochemists.
You email them and you ask them: "do you accept common decent?"
Wanna know how many of those names actually should be on the list... well go over to donexodus his excellent youtube channel and let him tell you yourself.
It turns out so few of these people actually disagree with the idea of common decent that enough time is left to have a brief look at the qualifications that the discovery institute gave some of these people, and it is worth it.
One of donexodus videos was was among those the discover institute tried to censor using an perjurers copyright claim. You can see why ;-)