Lionizing Darwin 02/20/2009
![]() The BYU Biology Department’s efforts to lionize Darwin and find meaningful parallels between his life and those of great men have me wondering. Perhaps the BYU Darwin Bicentennial celebrations attempted to make a Darwinian mole hill into a Darwinian mountain. Of course Darwin did a great job at uncovering a mechanism driving microevolutionary processes (he did not “invent” evolution), but I am not inclined to put him into the same category as other great men. I would argue that in the grand scheme of things, his scientific accomplishments and their impact on society pale in comparison to those from scientists like Boyle, Newton, Galileo, Faraday, and James Clerk Maxwell. CommentsJeff G Fri, 20 Feb 2009 3:32:59 pm The only thing that I can see which prevents you from replacing "Galileo" with "Darwin" through out is that you simply do not believe Darwin's theory. Well, that and that Darwin was never imprisoned and lived too late to be a precursor to the Restoration. Dave C. Fri, 20 Feb 2009 4:41:38 pm Jeff, Fri, 20 Feb 2009 7:08:32 pm I didn't see the lecture, but based on your report I think I would agree with you. Rather than a comparison of lives, per se, I think it's interesting to consider chronological parallels. It's easy to think of history as a bunch of independent stories, forgetting that some of them were happening at the same time. Fri, 20 Feb 2009 7:19:07 pm What you don't seem to recognize is that the entire biological scientific establishment accept Darwin's theories as scientific law, and therefore lionize him. Dave C. Fri, 20 Feb 2009 8:06:32 pm (Please note that I have changed the post so that its arguments are not so much directed toward the presenter. My intent is to focus on the content of the presentation). Dave C. Fri, 20 Feb 2009 8:19:45 pm "What you don't seem to recognize is that the entire biological scientific establishment accept Darwin's theories as scientific law, and therefore lionize him." Fri, 20 Feb 2009 9:58:00 pm Fighting words because of a narrow view of miracles meaning going against laws of nature, a view that I have always been under the impression that Mormonism doesn't share. Darwin was trying to understand a law of nature and refused to be swayed from that goal by those who would proclaim these things unexplainable and settled by holy writ. Sat, 21 Feb 2009 2:36:15 am Dave: Mon, 02 Mar 2009 7:59:44 pm On the evolution thing - "... on the one hand, we have the atheistic scientists with their theories because they managed to find the fossils, and they sat and talked to the bones face-to-bones, and they managed to guess what the bones purportedly were telling them... On the other hand, we have the prophets with their testimonies because they managed to find God, and they walked and talked with God face-to-face, and they were shown visions of the creation of the earth and its inhabitants, and were even shown visions of the creation of worlds without number... " ( http://www.kinematicrelativity.com/article_006.php ) Dave C. Wed, 04 Mar 2009 2:03:13 pm Castel, Thu, 12 Mar 2009 7:45:18 pm
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