Just because you are ignorant of the facts does not change the facts.
Science, vol. 210 no. 4472 pp: 883-887
it seems YOU are the one ignorant of the facts.
Just because you are ignorant of the facts does not change the facts.
Science, vol. 210 no. 4472 pp: 883-887
it seems YOU are the one ignorant of the facts.
by your quote above it's clear you did not read the article.leopold
An argument about details of current theories(IE the Modern Synthesis)does not change the fact that evolution occurred, they just indicate a healthy skepticism about our understanding of the causes for the fact of evolution. This thirty year old paper has largely been reflected in later papers, Punctuated Equilibrium is accepted as a possible mechanism in evolution, as is gradual change, gene swapping, etc. The point is both sides of the argument you referenced accept evolution as fact, so I question your understanding of your own cite. What do you think it shows? Certainly not that what I said was false.
Grumpy
BTW, I'll certainly defer to the knowledge of the astronomers who are posting here, but isn't the notion that the universe is infinite and has no center very old-school? Now they're saying that it's a sphere 93 billion light years in diameter, with a center right where the center of any sphere is: equidistant from all points on the surface.
by your quote above it's clear you did not read the article.
what was the consensus of these 50 scientists with phds and years of schooling?
That rather than a smooth, steady evolution, there were abrupt jumps in development.
What do you think it says?
What other than evolution accounts for life's diversity?the kind that accounts for lifes diversity.
Sure it has:it hasn't been shown that micro evolution, AKA adaptation, is the cause.
i don't know.What other than evolution accounts for life's diversity?
nice picture.Sure it has:
you didn't read it either.
go away noob.
new species, as in tulips with bigger leaves or birds with longer beaks.
this is MICRO evolution billvon, adaptation.
Continuing our conversation, I am curious as to how a creature could ever become as smart as the modern human
, and humans nowadays only seem to devolve.
the source i posted says you are wrong.Through very slow steps.
the source i posted says you are wrong.
In 1954, a study published by Princeton and Dartmouth researchers asked their students to watch a recording of a football game between the two schools and count infractions. The Princeton students reported twice as many violations against Princeton as Dartmouth students did. In a 2003 study, Yale researchers asked people to evaluate proposed (fictional) policies about welfare reform, with political parties’ endorsements clearly stated. They found that their subjects sided with their political parties regardless of their personal ideologies or the policies’ content. A study by a different group in 2011 asked people to identify whether certain scientists (highly trained and at well-respected institutions) were credible experts on global warming, disposal of nuclear waste, and gun control. Subjects largely favored the scientists whose conclusions matched their own values; the facts were irrelevant.
People distort facts by putting them through a personal lens.This behavior is called “selective perception”—the way that otherwise rational people distort facts by putting them through a personal lens of social influence and wind up with a worldview that often alters reality. Selective perception affects all our beliefs, and it’s a major stumbling block for science communication.
What divides us, it turns out, isn’t the issues. It’s the social and political contexts that color how we see the issues. Take nuclear power, for example. In the U.S., we argue about it; in France, the public couldn’t care less. (The U.S.’s power is about 20 percent nuclear; France’s is 78 percent.) Look at nearly any science issue and nations hold different opinions. We fight about gun control, climate change, and HPV vaccination. In Europe, these controversies don’t hold a candle to debates about GMO foods and mad cow disease. Scientific subjects become politically polarized because the public interprets even the most rigorously assembled facts based on the beliefs of their social groups, says Dan Kahan, a Yale professor of law and psychology who ran the 2011 science-expert study.
The problem is, our beliefs influence policy. Public attitudes change how politicians vote, the products companies make, and how science gets funded.
So what can we do? The science world has taken note. For example, the National Science Foundation recently emphasized grant–proposal rules that encourage scientists to share their research with the public. And several conferences on science communication have sprung up. It’s not a bad start. As people hear more from scientists, scientists will be absorbed into the public’s social lens--—and maybe even gain public trust. Having scientists tweet is good, but the most influential public figures are the ones folks can relate to (à la Carl Sagan). We need to get more figures like him—fast. According to Kahan, synthetic biology is a prime candidate for the next controversy. Building man-made versions of DNA or engineering better humans can be risky, and the public will need to make decisions about it. To ensure that those decisions are clear-eyed, scientists need to stop communicating as, well, scientists and speak like the rest of us.
Leopold is pulling the same bullshit here that he's been pulling for years. Despite it being explained to him several times, he still pretends not to understand that the punctuated equilibrium hypothesis still features microevolution and speciation.