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Christian medical students want anti-evolution lectures
Aftenposten (Norway News) ^ | 19 Nov 2003 | Jonathan Tisdall

Posted on 11/19/2003 10:15:28 AM PST by yonif

Medical student John David Johannessen and the leader of the Christian Medical Students Circle have petitioned the medical faculty at the University of Oslo for lectures "that not only argue the cause for evolution, but also the evidence against", student newspaper Universitas reports.

"The theory of evolution doesn't stand up and does not present enough convincing facts. It is one theory among many, but in education it is discussed as if it is accepted by everyone," Johannessen said.

Johannessen is a believer in creationism, based on the biblical account.

"Of course one has to know the theory of evolution, it is after all part of the curriculum. But certain lecturers demand that one believe it as well. Then it becomes a question of faith and not subject," Johannessen said.

Johannessen told the newspaper that he and his fellows are often compared to American extremists. Besides not being taken seriously or being able to debate the topic relevantly, Johannessen said that 'evolutionists' practically harass those who do not agree with them.

Dean Per Brodal said it was regrettable if any university staff were disparaging to creationists, but that there was no reason to complain about a lack of relevant evidence. Brodal also felt that evolution had a rather minor spot in medical education.

Biology professor Nils Christian Stenseth argued that instead of indulging an 'off-topic' debate the medical faculty should offer a course in fundamental evolutionary biology, saying that nothing in biology could be understood out of an evolutionary context.

The Christian Medical Students Circle want three basic points to be included in the curriculum:

1 According to the theory of evolution a mutation must be immediately beneficial to survive through selection. But many phenomena explained by evolution (for example the eye) involve so many, small immediately detrimental mutations that only give a long-term beneficial effect.

2 There is no fossil evidence to indicate transitional forms between, for example, fish and land animals or apes and humans.

3 Evolution assumes too many extremely improbably events occurring over too short a span of time.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christianstudents; creationism; crevolist; evolution; evolutionisatheory; medicalschool; norway; scienceeducation
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To: Last Visible Dog
Links prove nothing by themselves.

A link is an article containing statements. Believe it or not, the assumption is that you will click on the link and read the statements. Thus, a link is a way to make statements on a thread without blasting whole long articles inline the way creationists do. Links avoid spamming FR's server with multiple copies of the same thing, the way creationists do. Nevertheless, anything contained on a link is expected to count, especially when the link is posted to contradict something you said earlier.

Some of you evolutionists get so pissy really quickly? If somebody challenges one evolutionist statement, the insults and pissiness immediately begins.

Some of you creationists get so stupid so fast, forgetting what was just said to you and refusing to read links. As soon as anyone posts some contrary evidence, the whole "I don't remember!--Post it inline!--I've never heard that!--You can't make me understand!" thing starts.

341 posted on 11/20/2003 2:08:19 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: whattajoke
I'm content to wait and find out for certain who's right and wrong. If and when I'm wrong, humanist legalistic science is proved right, God is dead, and my existence turns out to mean nothing, it won't matter what I believed. If I am correct, however, the implications still matter for you. So, hey, let's just find out.
342 posted on 11/20/2003 2:11:10 PM PST by Abe Froman
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To: VadeRetro
As soon as anyone posts some contrary evidence, the whole "I don't remember!--Post it inline!--I've never heard that!--You can't make me understand!" thing starts.

Ah yes. I've seen it before -- in "meteor crater science" freaks. It's the craterite mentality. They will cling to it as long as they want to continue taking drugs, having sex with unknown and uncountable partners, and cheering for Hillary. If you'll believe in random rocks from the sky, you'll believe in anything.

343 posted on 11/20/2003 2:13:49 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.)
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To: scannell
You would benefit from the ring species link in post 305, too. As for the word "theory," it means something different in science than in common usage. A scientific theory is a "best evidence"-supported framework researchers use for modeling and prediction making. It is NOT a hypothesis.
344 posted on 11/20/2003 2:14:22 PM PST by Junior ("Your superior intellects are no match for our puny weapons!")
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To: VadeRetro
A link is an article containing statements. Believe it or not, the assumption is that you will click on the link and read the statements. Thus, a link is a way to make statements on a thread without blasting whole long articles inline the way creationists do. Links avoid spamming FR's server with multiple copies of the same thing, the way creationists do. Nevertheless, anything contained on a link is expected to count, especially when the link is posted to contradict something you said earlier.

If you can’t explain your position – why do you enter a debate?

345 posted on 11/20/2003 2:16:38 PM PST by Last Visible Dog
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To: Abe Froman
If and when I'm wrong, humanist legalistic science is proved right, God is dead, and my existence turns out to mean nothing, it won't matter what I believed.

I tend not to think of our world in such black and white terms. I think it is wrong to do so. I believe the science and the religion can be readily separated. In fact, I believe that they must be.

If I am correct, however, the implications still matter for you.

I choose not to devote my life to "maybes." But that's just me.
346 posted on 11/20/2003 2:17:42 PM PST by whattajoke (Neutiquam erro.)
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To: Abe Froman
I do not deny that some quotes were made 50 years ago (but the assertion that some unbelievable paleontologic discovery unlocking the secrets of evolution has been made in the last 50 years is nonsense.)

The last fifty years have probably more than doubled whatever paleontological/transitional data base we had going in. East African hominids, walking and amphibious whales, Chinese feathered dinosaurs, legged sirenians ... those are just the well-known ones that I can name off of the top of my head.

For most of that period, creationism has been trumpeting the gaps in the fossil record as proof of real gaps in the historical process, of non-continuity in what we call the tree of life. It has been sneering about missing links, essentially predicting that, whatever we may have found so far that looks somewhat transitional, we'd never find another one because those gaps are real, baby!

And creationism has been wrong, wrong, wrong, as the transitionals keep turning up. Real scientists make wrong predictions too, but they have the wit and the integrity to acknowledge what has happened, withdraw the prediction, and go scratching their heads back to the drawing board. That creation science never does this is proof that it's not about evidence, not about science, not about truth at all.

347 posted on 11/20/2003 2:19:03 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: whattajoke
Since you have all the answers to the mysteries of life, perhaps you could enlighten the rest of us neanderthals?
348 posted on 11/20/2003 2:19:10 PM PST by Abe Froman
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To: Last Visible Dog
If you can’t explain your position – why do you enter a debate?

I do explain my position. If you can't read links, why do you demand evidence?

349 posted on 11/20/2003 2:19:59 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: PatrickHenry
If you'll believe in random rocks from the sky, you'll believe in anything.

Show me where I said they were random! The Illuminati bring the rocks down where they want them.

350 posted on 11/20/2003 2:21:21 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: Last Visible Dog; Abe Froman
Post #323.

You guys are always making standards and specifications for everyone else that you don't apply to yourselves. It looks like the Democrats when they ran Congress.

I'll bet you haven't repeated any Biblical events in the lab.
351 posted on 11/20/2003 2:21:57 PM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: VadeRetro
Anti-bludgeoning-with-ignorance placemarker.
352 posted on 11/20/2003 2:22:26 PM PST by balrog666 (Humor is a universal language.)
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To: Junior
You would benefit from the ring species link in post 305, too.

The ring species example is merely two types of Gulls that can't reproduce (calling that a species change is a bit of a stretch they are still both birds and both Gulls). Two variations of the same animal is far from one species becoming another as in a fish becoming a bird, dog becoming an ape, worm becoming a platypus, or whatever.

353 posted on 11/20/2003 2:26:29 PM PST by Last Visible Dog
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To: scannell
Since we can no longer apparently post links, I will just cut and paste the entire thing (What a pain in my ass):

Evolution is a Fact and a Theory by Laurence Moran Copyright © 1993-2002 [Last Update: January 22, 1993]

hen non-biologists talk about biological evolution they often confuse two different aspects of the definition. On the one hand there is the question of whether or not modern organisms have evolved from older ancestral organisms or whether modern species are continuing to change over time. On the other hand there are questions about the mechanism of the observed changes... how did evolution occur? Biologists consider the existence of biological evolution to be a fact. It can be demonstrated today and the historical evidence for its occurrence in the past is overwhelming. However, biologists readily admit that they are less certain of the exact mechanism of evolution; there are several theories of the mechanism of evolution. Stephen J. Gould has put this as well as anyone else:

In the American vernacular, "theory" often means "imperfect fact"--part of a hierarchy of confidence running downhill from fact to theory to hypothesis to guess. Thus the power of the creationist argument: evolution is "only" a theory and intense debate now rages about many aspects of the theory. If evolution is worse than a fact, and scientists can't even make up their minds about the theory, then what confidence can we have in it? Indeed, President Reagan echoed this argument before an evangelical group in Dallas when he said (in what I devoutly hope was campaign rhetoric): "Well, it is a theory. It is a scientific theory only, and it has in recent years been challenged in the world of science--that is, not believed in the scientific community to be as infallible as it once was." Well evolution is a theory. It is also a fact. And facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts don't go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them. Einstein's theory of gravitation replaced Newton's in this century, but apples didn't suspend themselves in midair, pending the outcome. And humans evolved from ape-like ancestors whether they did so by Darwin's proposed mechanism or by some other yet to be discovered.

Moreover, "fact" doesn't mean "absolute certainty"; there ain't no such animal in an exciting and complex world. The final proofs of logic and mathematics flow deductively from stated premises and achieve certainty only because they are not about the empirical world. Evolutionists make no claim for perpetual truth, though creationists often do (and then attack us falsely for a style of argument that they themselves favor). In science "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional consent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.

Evolutionists have been very clear about this distinction of fact and theory from the very beginning, if only because we have always acknowledged how far we are from completely understanding the mechanisms (theory) by which evolution (fact) occurred. Darwin continually emphasized the difference between his two great and separate accomplishments: establishing the fact of evolution, and proposing a theory--natural selection--to explain the mechanism of evolution.

- Stephen J. Gould, " Evolution as Fact and Theory"; Discover, May 1981

Gould is stating the prevailing view of the scientific community. In other words, the experts on evolution consider it to be a fact. This is not an idea that originated with Gould as the following quotations indicate: Let me try to make crystal clear what is established beyond reasonable doubt, and what needs further study, about evolution. Evolution as a process that has always gone on in the history of the earth can be doubted only by those who are ignorant of the evidence or are resistant to evidence, owing to emotional blocks or to plain bigotry. By contrast, the mechanisms that bring evolution about certainly need study and clarification. There are no alternatives to evolution as history that can withstand critical examination. Yet we are constantly learning new and important facts about evolutionary mechanisms. - Theodosius Dobzhansky "Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution", American Biology Teacher vol. 35 (March 1973) reprinted in Evolution versus Creationism, J. Peter Zetterberg ed., ORYX Press, Phoenix AZ 1983

Also:

It is time for students of the evolutionary process, especially those who have been misquoted and used by the creationists, to state clearly that evolution is a fact, not theory, and that what is at issue within biology are questions of details of the process and the relative importance of different mechanisms of evolution. It is a fact that the earth with liquid water, is more than 3.6 billion years old. It is a fact that cellular life has been around for at least half of that period and that organized multicellular life is at least 800 million years old. It is a fact that major life forms now on earth were not at all represented in the past. There were no birds or mammals 250 million years ago. It is a fact that major life forms of the past are no longer living. There used to be dinosaurs and Pithecanthropus, and there are none now. It is a fact that all living forms come from previous living forms. Therefore, all present forms of life arose from ancestral forms that were different. Birds arose from nonbirds and humans from nonhumans. No person who pretends to any understanding of the natural world can deny these facts any more than she or he can deny that the earth is round, rotates on its axis, and revolves around the sun. The controversies about evolution lie in the realm of the relative importance of various forces in molding evolution.

- R. C. Lewontin "Evolution/Creation Debate: A Time for Truth" Bioscience 31, 559 (1981) reprinted in Evolution versus Creationism, op cit.

This concept is also explained in introductory biology books that are used in colleges and universities (and in some of the better high schools). For example, in some of the best such textbooks we find: Today, nearly all biologists acknowledge that evolution is a fact. The term theory is no longer appropriate except when referring to the various models that attempt to explain how life evolves... it is important to understand that the current questions about how life evolves in no way implies any disagreement over the fact of evolution. - Neil A. Campbell, Biology 2nd ed., 1990, Benjamin/Cummings, p. 434

Also:

Since Darwin's time, massive additional evidence has accumulated supporting the fact of evolution--that all living organisms present on earth today have arisen from earlier forms in the course of earth's long history. Indeed, all of modern biology is an affirmation of this relatedness of the many species of living things and of their gradual divergence from one another over the course of time. Since the publication of The Origin of Species, the important question, scientifically speaking, about evolution has not been whether it has taken place. That is no longer an issue among the vast majority of modern biologists. Today, the central and still fascinating questions for biologists concern the mechanisms by which evolution occurs.

- Helena Curtis and N. Sue Barnes, Biology 5th ed. 1989, Worth Publishers, p. 972

One of the best introductory books on evolution (as opposed to introductory biology) is that by Douglas J. Futuyma, and he makes the following comment:

A few words need to be said about the "theory of evolution," which most people take to mean the proposition that organisms have evolved from common ancestors. In everyday speech, "theory" often means a hypothesis or even a mere speculation. But in science, "theory" means "a statement of what are held to be the general laws, principles, or causes of something known or observed." as the Oxford English Dictionary defines it. The theory of evolution is a body of interconnected statements about natural selection and the other processes that are thought to cause evolution, just as the atomic theory of chemistry and the Newtonian theory of mechanics are bodies of statements that describe causes of chemical and physical phenomena. In contrast, the statement that organisms have descended with modifications from common ancestors--the historical reality of evolution--is not a theory. It is a fact, as fully as the fact of the earth's revolution about the sun. Like the heliocentric solar system, evolution began as a hypothesis, and achieved "facthood" as the evidence in its favor became so strong that no knowledgeable and unbiased person could deny its reality. No biologist today would think of submitting a paper entitled "New evidence for evolution;" it simply has not been an issue for a century.

- Douglas J. Futuyma, Evolutionary Biology, 2nd ed., 1986, Sinauer Associates, p. 15

There are readers of these newsgroups who reject evolution for religious reasons. In general these readers oppose both the fact of evolution and theories of mechanisms, although some anti-evolutionists have come to realize that there is a difference between the two concepts. That is why we see some leading anti-evolutionists admitting to the fact of "microevolution"--they know that evolution can be demonstrated. These readers will not be convinced of the "facthood" of (macro)evolution by any logical argument and it is a waste of time to make the attempt. The best that we can hope for is that they understand the argument that they oppose. Even this simple hope is rarely fulfilled.

There are some readers who are not anti-evolutionist but still claim that evolution is "only" a theory which can't be proven. This group needs to distinguish between the fact that evolution occurs and the theory of the mechanism of evolution.

We also need to distinguish between facts that are easy to demonstrate and those that are more circumstantial. Examples of evolution that are readily apparent include the fact that modern populations are evolving and the fact that two closely related species share a common ancestor. The evidence that Homo sapiens and chimpanzees share a recent common ancestor falls into this category. There is so much evidence in support of this aspect of primate evolution that it qualifies as a fact by any common definition of the word "fact."

In other cases the available evidence is less strong. For example, the relationships of some of the major phyla are still being worked out. Also, the statement that all organisms have descended from a single common ancestor is strongly supported by the available evidence, and there is no opposing evidence. However, it is not yet appropriate to call this a "fact" since there are reasonable alternatives.

Finally, there is an epistemological argument against evolution as fact. Some readers of these newsgroups point out that nothing in science can ever be "proven" and this includes evolution. According to this argument, the probability that evolution is the correct explanation of life as we know it may approach 99.9999...9% but it will never be 100%. Thus evolution cannot be a fact. This kind of argument might be appropriate in a philosophy class (it is essentially correct) but it won't do in the real world. A "fact," as Stephen J. Gould pointed out (see above), means something that is so highly probable that it would be silly not to accept it. This point has also been made by others who contest the nit-picking epistemologists.

The honest scientist, like the philosopher, will tell you that nothing whatever can be or has been proved with fully 100% certainty, not even that you or I exist, nor anyone except himself, since he might be dreaming the whole thing. Thus there is no sharp line between speculation, hypothesis, theory, principle, and fact, but only a difference along a sliding scale, in the degree of probability of the idea. When we say a thing is a fact, then, we only mean that its probability is an extremely high one: so high that we are not bothered by doubt about it and are ready to act accordingly. Now in this use of the term fact, the only proper one, evolution is a fact. For the evidence in favor of it is as voluminous, diverse, and convincing as in the case of any other well established fact of science concerning the existence of things that cannot be directly seen, such as atoms, neutrons, or solar gravitation ....

So enormous, ramifying, and consistent has the evidence for evolution become that if anyone could now disprove it, I should have my conception of the orderliness of the universe so shaken as to lead me to doubt even my own existence. If you like, then, I will grant you that in an absolute sense evolution is not a fact, or rather, that it is no more a fact than that you are hearing or reading these words.

- H. J. Muller, "One Hundred Years Without Darwin Are Enough" School Science and Mathematics 59, 304-305. (1959) reprinted in Evolution versus Creationism op cit.

In any meaningful sense evolution is a fact, but there are various theories concerning the mechanism of evolution.

354 posted on 11/20/2003 2:26:45 PM PST by whattajoke (Neutiquam erro.)
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To: <1/1,000,000th%
Perhaps America was formed instantly from crater ejecta?
355 posted on 11/20/2003 2:27:56 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Junior
Two variations of the same animal is far from one species becoming another as in a fish becoming a bird, dog becoming an ape, worm becoming a platypus, or whatever.

Goalposts moved to absurdist distance. Sigh.
356 posted on 11/20/2003 2:29:26 PM PST by whattajoke (Neutiquam erro.)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
You're projecting anthropomorphically. You were formed from ejecta in the back of an old Buick.

Out for a few hours.
357 posted on 11/20/2003 2:30:08 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: whattajoke
Not much left of the definition of "species" either!
358 posted on 11/20/2003 2:31:09 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: Last Visible Dog
... two types of Gulls that can't reproduce...

Is the inability to reproduce insufficient to make them different species? What then, is your definition of species?

359 posted on 11/20/2003 2:31:49 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
LOL!
360 posted on 11/20/2003 2:35:13 PM PST by <1/1,000,000th% (Craterites are taking over America!)
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