Zachriel
Posts: 2723 Joined: Sep. 2006
|
Quote (oldmanintheskydidntdoit @ Oct. 06 2008,05:04) | Salvador Cordova still has it Quote | Actually, I think my 3 science degrees (and, God willing a 4th one from Johns Hopkins in Applied Physics) make me scientifically literate. There was more science in my Applied Physics course last semester than in all of Darwin’s miserable life. Heck, that makes me more scientifically literate than Darwinists Jack Krebs and Liz Craig of Kansas Center For Sewage (KCFS) who have successfully ensured that Darwinist falsehoods are indoctrinated into the next generation of Kids in kansas. Shame on them. |
Yes, shame on you Jack! How many degrees do you have? :D YEC blitherings. |
Yes! He still has it!
If Scordova had merely said he had a more extensive science education than Darwin, he might have been able to support the claim. But he grossly overreaches.
Quote | Scordova: There was more science in my Applied Physics course last semester than in all of Darwin’s miserable life. |
I doubt that Scordova would even want to type out the list of Darwin's scientific publications.
Perhaps Scordova forgot that Darwin sailed around the world collecting evidence nearly thirty years before he published Origin of Species. One of the greatest scientific adventures of all times! Then he spent years collecting and publishing additional evidence to support and develop his nascent theory, long before he was willing to put the theory before his peers. Darwin's incremental approach allowed him to build and refine his argument, on a solid evidentiary basis.
Darwin's intensive, multi-year study of barnacles was sufficient to establish his reputation among scientists, while his study of earthworms was sufficient to establish his public reputation; and the sheer volume of his scientific studies, including observations of moths, orchids, bees, beetles, coral reefs, as well as related studies of geology, made him one of the most important scientists of his age—even without including Origin of Species.
Here is a list of Darwin's primary scientific output:
Quote | * The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle * Natural history and geology of the countries visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle * The Breeding of Animals * The structure and distribution of coral reefs. * Fertilisation of British orchids by insect agency * On the agency of bees in the fertilisation of papilionaceous flowers
As well as published observations on living and fossil Cirripedia, animal intelligence, insectivorous plants; cross breeding hybrid dianths; the effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom; the different forms of flowers on plants of the same species; the effect of seawater on seeds; mouse-coloured breed of ponies; bees and the fertilisation of kidney beans; cross-breeds of strawberries; flowers and their unbidden guests; the power of movement in plants; the formation of vegetable mould, through the action of worms; nectar-secreting organs of plants, Rhea americana, Chiasognathus Grantii, Carabus, Geospiza, Camarhynchus, Cactornis and Certhidea, Sagitta, planariæ; Lizard's eggs; observations of proofs of recent elevation on the coast of Chili; the geology of the Falkland Islands; on certain areas of elevation and subsidence in the Pacific and Indian oceans, as deduced from the study of coral formations; on the connexion of certain volcanic phenomena, and on the formation of mountain-chains and volcanoes, as the effects of continental elevations; vincas, frogs, rates, geese, butterflies, teasel, ants, holly berries and their bees, primrose, black sheep, mosquitoes, cherry blossoms, gladioli, penguin ducks, fumariaceae, influence of pollen on the appearance of seed, etc. |
Without the Theory of Evolution, Darwin was one of the greatest scientist of his age. With the Theory of Evolution, he revolutionized biology, a revolution which is still spawning entire new areas of research today. Intelligent Design, on the other hand, has thus far been a sterile dead-end.
{Previously published on Telic Thoughts.}
--------------
You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.
|