They call this “science”?


The Institute for Creation Research is a treasure trove of sloppy pseudoscience. I mentioned one “research” article that they put out that was nothing but a flurry of bible verses wrapped around an argument from incredulity; now a reader has pointed me to another article that tries very hard to ape the form of a real scientific paper, and fails horribly.

It’s titled “COMPLEX LIFE CYCLES IN HETEROPHYID TREMATODES: STRUCTURAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DESIGN IN THE ASCOCOTYLE COMPLEX OF SPECIES”, by Mark Armitage. Oooh. Sounds so sciencey. And then you read further, and you see that it almost follows the correct form.

It has the difficult title. It has a list of keywords. It has an abstract. There’s an introduction: it contains a brief summary of the complex life history of these trematode parasites, which are small invertebrates that live in the internal organs of fish, and it promises something.

In this paper, specific, complex life cycles and morphological structures of Ascocotyle leighi, A. pachycystis and A. diminuta, collected from fish hearts in Mississippi, Texas and California are evaluated in the light of the creation/evolution paradigms.

Then the paper has a materials and methods section, just like the big boys — the author extracted parasites from fish and used light and scanning electron microscopy to look at them. Finally, there’s a discussion and conclusion.

Notice anything missing? Right, no results. That’s a metaphor for the whole creationist movement right there. There are some photos imbedded in the methods section, but it’s like a random set of random photos of random parasites this guy found in his fish; there’s nothing systematic about it, and the photos aren’t even very good — the SEMs are way too contrasty.

Since he has no data, he has nothing to evaluate, and his discussion is a rehash of review papers he has read that highlight the complexity of the trematode life cycle (and it’s true, it is complex with a series of hosts), and that every once in a while raise a pointed question, such as, “What allows this cercaria to resist digestion within the fish stomach…?”, which I would have thought would be reasonable kinds of questions for a grad student to actually, you know, study. If this had been my grad student, anyway, I would have told him to knock off the pointless microphotography and focus on one of these questions and try to answer something.

But no. He’s not interested in answering questions, since to the creationist mind the existence of questions calls science into doubt, so it’s sufficient to throw out a flurry of unsolved problems … never mind that a primary research paper should have the task of addressing some problem. Even worse, a big chunk of the discussion is a paean to Michael Behe, who “shows the utter foolishness of expecting that a gradualistic, Darwinian mechanism could have produced such elegant systems, by chance, using the trial and error method”. Behe has shown no such thing. “Irreducibility” is not a barrier to addition of steps to a pathway, and Armitage has done no experiments to test “irreducibility” in his work — the concept is a non sequitur, and it’s introduction is irrelevant to this paper.

The work boils down to a summary of complex life cycles in some trematodes, taken from other people’s work, and a few tourist’s snapshots of trematodes that contribute nothing to the literature. It perpetuates the fundamental error of a common creationist argument against evolution: that something is complex could not have evolved. This is utterly false. Evolution is an undirected process that accumulates variation which is pared into shape by selection; it is eminently capable of generating more noise than signal and creating organisms that are absurdly complex. Complexity not only fails to be a strike against evolution, it’s an expected outcome of evolution.

This paper is completely unpublishable by any legitimate science journal. I doubt that it could get past an editor, who typically screen out the obvious crackpottery, and no reviewer would be fooled by it; it’s experiment-free and even its few observations are incoherent and pointless. Its conclusion reveals that the author doesn’t even understand the theory he claims to be criticizing. This is, apparently, why the creationists at ICR and Answers in Genesis are establishing their own venues for “research” publications: their standards are so appallingly low and the work they do is so pathetic that they need these fake journals to get their work published.

Comments

  1. DLC says

    So, the guy wrote a bunch of pseudo-scientific crap, solving no problems drawing no conclusions ?
    And he expects what from it ? a pat on the back from his fellow cdesign proponentsists ? and to think they scoffed at Galileo. Oh wait. . . Galileo Delivered the Goods.
    (to paraphrase Carl Sagan).
    To me, these cdesign proponentsists are saying “we can’t figure this out, so God must have done it”.
    I know, I know… cheering for the home team . . .
    (trying to get away from “preaching to the choir” as a simile)

  2. extatyzoma says

    i suppose the idea is to write as many papers as possible which look scientific to the lay person (or even a judge) and present them in court and say ‘see, heres the research’.

    i quickly skimmed that article, looks like it kind of says ‘this is what i’d expect to see (in the evolution ‘paradigm’), but i dont, so goddidit’

  3. tsig says

    i would think that god’s design would be beyond human comprehension.

    Their god looks a lot like daddy and daddy looks a lot like him.

  4. says

    “Notice anything missing? Right, no results. That’s a metaphor for the whole creationist movement right there.”

    Ah-hahahaha! You made my morning with this.

    And they say there’s “No Intelligence Allowed” in Big Science. Bwah.

  5. Jason says

    Seems like its another attempt at the diety of the gaps argument. Which isn’t really an arguement but just a statement.

  6. Cheezits says

    They call this science because that is all they’ve been taught that science is – collecting piles of observations.

  7. says

    Funny how you can find all these articles and Mr. Kevin Wirth (from a few posts back) still can’t provide us with the Peer-Reviews articles by the three people he mentioned.

    Articles he says deal specifically with ID and have passed through the peer-review process.

    Odd.

  8. tsig says

    Hi rev BDC

    It passed through peer review in the same manner food passes through the alimentary canal. With much the same result.

  9. says

    I don’t suppose he tries to discuss why God would infest poor innocent fishies with parasites, does he?

    And when he’s done with trematodes, he can go on to the irreducible-unevolvable complexity of the malaria plasmodium…..

    Anyone? Bueller?

  10. says

    Remember when Ohio was going to change its science standards to teach kids about notable scientists, such as “Newton, Galileo, Einstein, and Behe”?

    Man, that still makes me laugh years later.

  11. Gib says

    Nice one PZ.

    May I make one pedantic point ?
    “It’s conclusion reveals that…” should not have an apostrophe in “Its”…

  12. says

    Hi rev BDC

    It passed through peer review in the same manner food passes through the alimentary canal. With much the same result.

    Yeah I’m sorry if that wasn’t clear. I wasn’t suggesting this article above passed through legit peer-review, just the echo chamber.

  13. mikespeir says

    For you mathematical types: I’ve always wondered if a river rock, when described mathematically, is any less complex than an arrowhead. I rather suspect not. Seth Shostak is right. Complexity does not equal artificiality.

  14. says

    “He’s not interested in answering questions, since to the creationist mind the existence of questions calls science into doubt, so it’s sufficient to throw out a flurry of unsolved problems.”

    This really does sum up the poverty of intelligent design. In my youth I attended a small Adventist Christian college in California as a Biology major. With the likes of Gundry, Adventists have been at the ID business a long time. It was impossible for me to grasp the beauty of biology because our sole focus was simply documenting the complexities of life. We had no exposure to the elegant ways that evolution answers questions and makes verifiable predictions. Now that would have excited me as a young student–the prospect of actually contributing to a body of knowledge.

  15. Vernon Balbert says

    I have a fetish involving Google Earth. Whenever I see an address in a town that I don’t know the location of, I drag out GE and look it up. So I looked up the address in the article mentioned and I ended up looking at what appears to be some sort of business or industrial park. Doesn’t look like any school I’ve ever seen. Just to be sure I turned on the school layer of GE. No school there. (There’s a preschool near the address.)

    But wait, does GE’s school layer show colleges and universities? I look for UCLA. Hmm… nope, but it DOES show me Bally’s gym! I’ve since written to GE telling them of there egregious error. (FWIW, it does show UM-Morris. But not West L.A. College! WTF?)

  16. Chris says

    #5 wrote:
    > And they say there’s “No Intelligence Allowed” in Big Science.

    No, no and no.

    You are (or rather PZ was ;-) being expelled, because there’s No Intelligence Allowed — inside the movie theatre.

  17. Joao says

    Gib @ #14:
    you’re right. Someone forgot to do the grammar check…
    “…and its introduction is irrelevant…”
    “…even its few observations…”
    “…Its conclusion reveals…”

    It’s probably the effect of reading good science… Nothing to worry, though. It should last less than 24h.

  18. raven says

    Myers getting it wrong.

    This paper is completely unpublishable by any legitimate science journal. I doubt that it could get past an editor, who typically screen out the obvious crackpottery, and no reviewer would be fooled by it; it’s experiment-free and even it’s few observations are incoherent and pointless.

    Nonsense. This paper is a sure cover article for….Proteomics. I’m sure Mike Dunn and his crew of ace reviewers will pull it out of a hat and slap it in the next issue.

    The coverup continues and Proteomics isn’t worth reading.

  19. negentropyeater says

    On Methodological Beheism.

    Here is described a new method, called “Methodological Beheism” which is to be used by ID pseudoscientists in the future in order to generate an endless stream of ID research papers:

    1. find a biological organism XXX that seems more “irreducibly complex” than “Behe’s flagelum”.
    2. copy and paste whatever one may find in real scientific research on that organism
    3. add the magic paragraph :
    “If Behe can see intelligent, planned design in a bacterial flagella, then clearly he would see intelligent, planned design in the XXX organism. These and other features found within the members of the XXX organism can be no less objects of intelligent, planned design than Behe’s bacterial flagella.”

    And the job is done.

  20. Kseniya says

    Peer review? Hmmm. I think we need a new phrase for situations like these. How about “peek review”?

  21. says

    No, I meant more noise than signal. Look in the genome — a tiny fraction is functional and important for the organism, and most of it is noise. Similarly, most developmental pathways are complex because of how they got there, by a random walk through time.

  22. Lilly de Lure says

    Cheezits said:

    They call this science because that is all they’ve been taught that science is – collecting piles of observations.

    Well, piles of something anyway.

  23. Tim says

    Did anyone notice this in the “paper”?

    Presented at the Fourth International Conference on Creationism
    Pittsburgh, PA, August 3-8, 1998
    Copyright 1998 by Creation Science Fellowship, Inc.
    Pittsburgh, PA USA – All Rights Reserved

    Is this some kind of typo? 1998? The Fourth ICC was indeed in 1998.

  24. says

    They don’t do peer reviews in the same way that God doesn’t do personal appearances now that cameras have been invented.

  25. Pierce R. Butler says

    This posting, as conveyed in the next issue of Creation Research:

    Prof. Paul Z. Myers: The Institute for Creation Research is a treasure trove… “COMPLEX LIFE CYCLES IN HETEROPHYID TREMATODES: STRUCTURAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DESIGN IN THE ASCOCOTYLE COMPLEX OF SPECIES”, by Mark Armitage… highlight[s] the complexity of the trematode life cycle (and it’s true…) … raise[s] a pointed question… a paean to Michael Behe, who “shows the utter foolishness of expecting that a gradualistic, Darwinian mechanism could have produced such elegant systems, by chance, using the trial and error method”. … that something is complex could not have evolved.

    Or maybe just:

    Prof. Paul Z. Myers: it’s true

  26. Andrew says

    Yeah, the “more noise than signal” issue is critical since one would expect no noise whatsoever in a system designed by an omniscient being. In fact, it represents to my mind one of the key indicators that there is no intelligence allowed in ID fantasizing.

    The path of evolution is like that of a hammered drunk on his way home from the bar who is occasionally returned to the sidewalk and /or pointed in the right direction by helpful neighbours who know where he lives. he’ll either make it home eventually, be taken in by a friend who recognizes him or be creamed by a car…

    Intelligent design is a taxi ride home with a driver who cares…

  27. Eric says

    Religion isn’t science.
    http://www.icr.org/article/3777/

    NSF Program Manager Julian Christou stated that one of “the biggest, unresolved question[s] of planet formation [is] how the thick disk of debris and gas evolves into a thin, dusty region with planets.”

    However, Scripture teaches that God created planets on Day Four of creation week. He is no longer creating stars and planets, and there is therefore an alternative explanation to this dust and gas cloud around the star AB Aurigae.

  28. David Marjanović says

    collected from fish hearts

    Hearts!?! Trematodes that live in hearts!?!

    Notice anything missing? Right, no results. That’s a metaphor for the whole creationist movement right there.

    ROTFLMAO!!!

    Cargo-cult science indeed.

  29. David Marjanović says

    collected from fish hearts

    Hearts!?! Trematodes that live in hearts!?!

    Notice anything missing? Right, no results. That’s a metaphor for the whole creationist movement right there.

    ROTFLMAO!!!

    Cargo-cult science indeed.

  30. tony says

    I just emailed the institute with “The “Result” section is missing.

    Does Mr. Armitage realize that the article has ben edited or mis-printed?”

    Lets wait and see!

  31. says

    They call it an article, but I think this drivel stretches the definition of article past the breaking point. Good for a hearty laugh, though.

  32. mothra says

    The reference section appears to have been constructed around the article, i.e. where can we find a reference that states ‘x’. . . There only ‘honest’ way to get numbered references referring to other numbered references is incompetence.

  33. Sastra says

    Then the paper has a materials and methods section, just like the big boys — the author extracted parasites from fish and used light and scanning electron microscopy to look at them. Finally, there’s a discussion and conclusion. Notice anything missing? Right, no results. That’s a metaphor for the whole creationist movement right there.

    Since Intelligent Design has no testable theory, they have no choice but to stick to what amounts to ‘cataloging’:

    “About thirty years ago there was much talk that geologists ought only to observe and not theorize; and I well remember someone saying that at this rate a man might as well go into a gravel-pit and count the pebbles and describe the colours. How odd it is that anyone should not see that all observation must be for or against some view if it is to be of any service!” (Charles Darwin)

  34. Stephen Wells says

    Re. the river rock versus stone arrowhead question: by most measures of complexity, a rough rock is far more complex as it would take far more information to describe an exact duplicate of the rock. The arrowheads’ smooth faces make it quite easy to describe. The hallmark of designed objects is not, in general, their “complexity”; it is the marks of their manufacture. We recognise the arrowhead as a product of human technology because we see the traces of how it was made.

  35. says

    Gee, isn’t sounding ‘sciency’ enough? If the whole point of the exercise is to generate a body of impressive-looking supposedly peer-reviewed papers that one can brandish and allude to in discussions with hell-bound Darwinists, why should they have any actual merit? Dr Myers– you’re just a wet blanket!!

  36. CortxVortx says

    Re: #33

    Hearts!?! Trematodes that live in hearts!?!

    Yes, fish have a trematode-shaped void in their hearts.

    [snurk]

  37. says

    The complaint (“utter foolishness”) is that going through several hosts is inefficient for “survival of the fittest.”

    Which means nothing, because of course they’re not going to consider evolutionary explanations, such as the matter of getting to a host in the first place, and the possibilities for transfer to a more useful host in the second place. Nor, why such bizarre lifestyles might be “designed”.

    One has to wonder, when design of successive hosts is considered preferable to “survival of the fittest” explanation, what this buffoon thinks the point is. Maximum pain, misery, and loss to the hosts?

    Of course they’re not about to consider known design characteristics (rationality, purpose, unrestricted borrowing with non-omniscient designers, and novelty), it’s all that “it’s just too complex,” surely one of the greatest marks of the idiocy of those IDiots. Complexity arising over time, however, is the prediction of evolution, while IDiocy can predict exactly nothing.

    What is more, it’s entirely possible that evolution would produce less efficient life cycles for parasites, since evolution could make a former life cycle less successful at a later time, while the parasite would often be unlikely to be able to switch to unrelated hosts. The whole “efficiency” argument made from their rational design perspective is complete bollocks, since reproductive success is only relative, while targeted efficiency is what is to be expected from the design perspective.

    The whole analysis issue is moot anyhow, certainly, because they’re not even interested in doing anything but using their ignorance to “evaluate” evolution and to find it wanting, then to declare that God designed malaria, mosquitos, and parasites. At least they’ve totally abandoned the notion of a God of love being visible in the world, or that the designer is at all attractive.

    What’s their point now, if we don’t kowtow to their God, he’s going to (re-)design us poorly, or alternatively, he’s going to design parasites (inefficiently) to afflict us? We’re back to the Old Testament God with ID by now, we’re not supposed to be drawn to the Creator, we’re to fear his wrath, his creative power, and his ability to devise parasites and diseases to afflict evilutionists (the pious will get hit, too, which makes their viciousness into self-defense).

    I suppose the best thing about watching these IDiots is how they manage to shift and morph into increasingly different versions of liars and disparagers of God. But it’s all to keep God’s wrath and carefully designed parasites from them, so it’s a good thing.

    Glen D
    http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7

  38. CortxVortx says

    Where’s the grammar-nazi when people violate there/their/they’re? Or is he only the oberleutnant in the Indefinite Pronoun platoon in charge of “it”?

    “It’s –” [explosion]

  39. Gene says

    Unfortunately, the currently rational argument that the IDiots are not published in peer-reviewed journals will be lost when enough of the crackpots and their rich backers create a “scientific journal” that allows all and sundry creationist crap into it. Then they can say “see, we ARE published in a peer-reviewed journal.” Of course, this will not change the merit of their “research” but will buttress their arguments to non-scientists. Just as they want to redefine what “science” itself means, they will redefine what a “peer-reviwed journal” is. Then it will be up to legitmate scientists to expose their “journal” for what it is: crap.

  40. Tulse says

    Not to make SciBlogs all-framing, all-the-time, but I think this article and PZ’s response are a good example of why I’m tremendously doubtful of any approach to communicating science that doesn’t emphasize the importance of rationality, evidence, and the methodology of science. What the ICR is doing is essentially cargo-cult science — it has all the trappings, but none of the substance. But in order to communicate that effectively, one has to communicate what science actually is, what it involves. Trying to counterframe this article in terms of something like “evolution has helped us manage fish stocks better” seems ridiculous. What should be said is exactly PZ’s take — “This is not science.” Likewise, when presented with ID and creationism, the “frame” of utility seems silly compared to “ID and creationism aren’t science”.

  41. Jonathon says

    The ability of creationists to continue to masquerade their faulty theology as science is directly related to the abysmal situation of science education in public schools.

    No student should be allowed to graduate from high school without having a basic understanding of the scientific process – i.e., knowing what a theory is in scientific terms, understanding the process of review and reproducability of results, understanding the interconnectedness of various scientific disciplines, coping with a world in which there are many more questions than there are answers, etc.

    The fact that a large number of Americans believe that evolutions is “just a theory” is ridiculous. The fact that large numbers of Americans believe that the creation story in Genesis is literally true is absurd.

    I oftentimes feel that people would rather believe a lie than to hear the truth. Some people are uncomfortable with the truth – but that does not mean that they are allowed their own reality. Believing something to be true cannot and does not make it true. No matter how fervently or completely one may believe in a creator/designer, there is no way whatsoever to establish the existence of such an entity nor can any amount of stamping of feet and sticking fingers into ears change the fact that species change over time and these changes, from time to time, lead to new species. The fossil record is overwhelming; the Biblical “evidence” is nonexistent.

    Religion must understand its limits. Relgion has its own realm and should learn to leave science alone. Most mainstream religions are in their death throes – hence the desperateness to promote creationism and attack evolution – and are finding that they can provide fewer and fewer answers about the world around us. I don’t need religion to tell me about the origins of life. Yet I don’t need science to tell me about the nature of my soul.

  42. negentropyeater says

    Sastra,

    “Since Intelligent Design has no testable theory…”

    What do you mean, the testable theory is clearly outlined in this article :

    Theory : if an organism is deemed more complex than Behe’s flagelum, than it must have been designed.
    Test : ask Behe, make use of the infailible “detector of irreducible complexity”.

    I’m not inventing it, it’s written in the before last paragraph before the conclusion :

    “If Behe can see intelligent, planned design in a bacterial flagella, then clearly he would see intelligent, planned design in the HCl sensitive cercarial penetration glands and the HCl resistant, yet trypsin and pH sensitive metacercarial cyst of Ascocotyle which requires it to be HCl resistant at one point in its fantastic voyage, and yet precisely trypsin and pH sensitive at another. These and other features found within the members of the Ascocotyle complex can be no less objects of intelligent, planned design than Behe’s bacterial flagella.”

    That’s what I call a simple, easy, testable theory. No need for big science research investments, hard work, expensive equipment, just refer to Behe’s godly capabilities to identify irreducible complexity and the job is done.

  43. Stuart Ritchie says

    What we need… is a Practical Theology of Peer Review. This being the abstract of the latest paper in the h-h-h-hilarious Answers in Genesis Journal:

    ‘Despite the centrality of peer review to the development of a scholarly community, very little is
    known about the biblical basis and Christian conduct of peer review. We find that peer review is
    rooted in several Christian virtues, such as reflecting Christ, being honest, seeking wisdom, humbly
    submitting, showing Christian love, correcting error, and being accountable. Given these principles,
    we recommend that creationists use a double-blind peer review system, wherein the identities of the
    author and peer reviewers are confidential. Additionally, we recommend that creationist publishers
    develop a regular public audit of their peer-review process.’

    ‘Showing Christian love’?!?!!? Oh, that’s brilliant. I’m sure that’s what a lot of scientists have in mind when writing up their papers.

    Anyway, if you read further into this article (which I did, because I’m feeling masochistic), it appears they have rather missed the point – we don’t ridicule their journals because they’re not ‘real’ peer review, we ridicule them becuase they’ve already all made up their minds!

  44. mothra says

    Sorry, failed to proof my last post (#33). The process ICR has begun will over time build up a selection of Sciency sounding titled papers that can be used in court. The judicial function as ‘gatekeeper’ will be all the more burdensome.

  45. Stuart Ritchie says

    Oh lord, sorry about the terrible formatting in my comment there. I didn’t realise it would turn out that way…

  46. Cheezits says

    The complaint (“utter foolishness”) is that going through several hosts is inefficient for “survival of the fittest.”

    It’s even more inefficient as design.

    They say life is too complex to have evolved. I say it’s too complex to be designed.

  47. J-Dog says

    I visited their website. It looks like they are moving, but they still have time to urge YOU to Break The Law!

    They say to buy our products and “…give them to your school science department”. To be fair, you COULD do this at a private school, without breaking the letter of the law, although, IMO this IS child abuse, which, if I am not mistaken, IS against the law.

    Entire quote:
    “Each set contains our popular, but now discontinued, youth ministry resource products. A limited number of “mystery” boxes are available at clearance prices. These resources are suitable for personal, educational, and ministry uses.

    Purchase them for yourself or give them to your church library, school science department, youth ministry, or other places where the message of the Creator needs to be proclaimed.”

    http://www.icr.org/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=2714&cPath=44&zenid=99b0b9d56622a3464146a007435020ae

  48. Tony Kw says

    Yup, They replied

    “Hello Tony,

    Thank you for contacting The Institute for Creation Research (ICR.org) and informing us of this issue. Can you please provide more information (such as an article name, date, link, etc.) so we may track down the problem?

    We appreciate your interest in and support of ICR.

    Best regards,

    Mark Mason
    Institute for Creation Research
    [email protected]

    Renewing minds, defending truth, transforming culture (Romans 12:1-2)”

  49. Hans says

    I hope you all realize that the scientific community is not the target audience for this paper. However, it will do its job quite nicely in school board meetings across the US.

    God, save America from religion! ;)

  50. windy says

    “All things foul and dangerous,
    The Lord God made them all.”

    a few tourist’s snapshots of trematodes

    Hmm, I have some snapshots of huge nasty-looking cercaria, and now I only need to write something about how parasites that bore through your skin prove that there’s a benevolent creator? One easy publication coming up!

  51. xebecs says

    Trying to counterframe this article in terms of something like “evolution has helped us manage fish stocks better” seems ridiculous. What should be said is exactly PZ’s take — “This is not science.”

    Thank you, Tulse. This is the argument I have been musing about for some time but never managed to phrase succinctly.

  52. The Backpacker says

    It nearly makes one want to become a creationist “reasearcher” I mean they must get paid somehting and all they have to do is publish their doodles on something they don’t understand anyway. It would be alot easier then actualy working and produceing output. Now if only I could shake theis darn scruples.

  53. SteveM says

    Re. the river rock versus stone arrowhead question: by most measures of complexity, a rough rock is far more complex as it would take far more information to describe an exact duplicate of the rock. The arrowheads’ smooth faces make it quite easy to describe. The hallmark of designed objects is not, in general, their “complexity”; it is the marks of their manufacture. We recognise the arrowhead as a product of human technology because we see the traces of how it was made.

    Excellent response. If I may, I would just like to add that usually a “river rock” is quite smooth, but even so, I would expect that smooth shape to be actually quite difficult to describe mathematically, more so than most arrowheads. And even if not, like you say, there is the other evidence and the context in which each is found that makes them distinguishable as an act of nature or an act of intelligence.

    Re: the Armitage paper:

    Feynman’s three words come to mind: “cargo cult science”

  54. SteveM says

    Where’s the grammar-nazi when people violate there/their/they’re? Or is he only the oberleutnant in the Indefinite Pronoun platoon in charge of “it”?

    don’t forget “then”/”than” too :-)

  55. Nick Gotts says

    “What the ICR is doing is essentially cargo-cult science — it has all the trappings, but none of the substance.”

    I’m concerned this could well be a libel on cargo cultists, who I have read somewhere (but can’t find where at present) were surprisingly empirical in their approach: when one set of rituals failed to bring the cargo, they modified them repeatedly. I’ve also heard that many Papuans quite reasonably thought that since the missionaries had lots of cargo, and placed great store by the Bible, it must somehow be crucial to attaining the necessary knowledge. Accordingly, they studied hard and learned to read it – but eventually came to the conclusion that the missionaries were tearing out the crucial pages. Not so far off the mark…

  56. charley says

    #53 “I hope you all realize that the scientific community is not the target audience for this paper. However, it will do its job quite nicely in school board meetings across the US.”

    Very true, and a lone voice or two complaining that it’s “not real science” or “not a reputable journal” will not look credible. “You mean they went to all the trouble of writing this paper and publishing this journal just to fool us?” Of course the answer is yes, but it seems unbelievable to an outsider. What then?

    Maybe a highly reputable science organization should maintain a web-accessible list of phony science journals and papers. Suggestions for entries could be submitted by anyone. Only obvious pseudoscience should be on the list, and there should be a disclaimer that the list is incomplete. Because even fake science takes time to produce, this list may soon be quite complete. The list could then be used as a fairly good proof of bogosity. “See, the NSF has this paper listed in its directory of fake science.”

  57. says

    I’m concerned this could well be a libel on cargo cultists, who I have read somewhere (but can’t find where at present) were surprisingly empirical in their approach: when one set of rituals failed to bring the cargo, they modified them repeatedly. I’ve also heard that many Papuans quite reasonably thought that since the missionaries had lots of cargo, and placed great store by the Bible, it must somehow be crucial to attaining the necessary knowledge. Accordingly, they studied hard and learned to read it – but eventually came to the conclusion that the missionaries were tearing out the crucial pages. Not so far off the mark…

    Thanks for this, Nick. I don’t know why the cargo cultists of the Pacific should be unfairly compared to these saboteurs of science: the cargo cultists were genuinely interested in the results of their replication–they honestly wanted cargo.
    These dweebs, on the other hand, have no interest in actually doing science themselves and are actively attempting to destroy it for the rest of us too. Their only goal is a grotesque parody with which we are all forced by legislation to be satisfied.
    The comparison would be apt if the cargo cultists performed their rituals in order to deny cargo to everyone else.

  58. mikespeir says

    #s 38 & 58 (and anyone else I might have missed):

    Thanks for the replies. That’s pretty much what I was thinking. We know and arrowhead is intelligently designed and manufactured because we have experience with intelligent beings designing and manufacturing them. As far as I know (just to be generous) nobody has ever seen any god designing or manufacturing anything.

  59. Olorin says

    Gene (#43) said: “Unfortunately, the currently rational argument that the IDiots are not published in peer-reviewed journals will be lost when enough of the crackpots and their rich backers create a ‘scientific journal’ that allows all and sundry creationist crap into it.”

    But they have already done that. “Progress in Complexity, Information, and Design,” W.A. Dembski, General Editor, is the peer-reviewed journal of the International Society for Complexity, Information, and Design, W.A. Dembski, Executive Director. It got off to a roaring quarterly start in 2002, faltered through a couple of “double issues” for lack of material, and stalled in July 2005. Nothing since then.

    Gene, your trepidation may be premature. Intelligent Design can’t come up with enough “research” even to keep their own vanity journal afloat.

  60. Carlie says

    Perhaps it’s just my browser/resolution combination, but when I click on the article it shows up as a narrow band of text with margins as wide as a third of the screen on either side. I don’t let my freshmen get away with enlarging margins to make it look like they wrote more, but somehow I’m not surprised that ICR does.

  61. Ian says

    The paper may be totally inane, but I think we may have to give ICR some credit for the fact that it doesn’t seem to be publicly linked from anywhere on the main part of their site.

  62. Torbjörn Larsson, OM says

    He is no longer creating stars and planets,

    Seems someone forgot to tell him:

    If the proto-planet is assumed to be the same age as the star it orbits, this would be some one hundred times younger than the previous record holder.

    But there is an intriguing suggestion that the gas giant, which is some 14 times the size of our Jupiter, could be even younger.

    […] he thinks the proto-planet in HL Tau formed relatively quickly when a region of the disc collapsed to form a self-contained structure. This could occur because of gravitational instability in the disc itself.

    Dr Rice said his computer simulations were such a good fit for the observations that it seemed the mechanism might really operate in nature.

    Intriguingly, another young star in the same region called XZ Tau may have made a close pass of HL Tau about 1,600 years ago.

    Although not required for planet formation, it is possible that this flyby perturbed the disc, making it unstable. This would be a very recent event in astronomical terms.

    Oh, I forgot; baby Jesus weren’t there then.

  63. Torbjörn Larsson, OM says

    He is no longer creating stars and planets,

    Seems someone forgot to tell him:

    If the proto-planet is assumed to be the same age as the star it orbits, this would be some one hundred times younger than the previous record holder.

    But there is an intriguing suggestion that the gas giant, which is some 14 times the size of our Jupiter, could be even younger.

    […] he thinks the proto-planet in HL Tau formed relatively quickly when a region of the disc collapsed to form a self-contained structure. This could occur because of gravitational instability in the disc itself.

    Dr Rice said his computer simulations were such a good fit for the observations that it seemed the mechanism might really operate in nature.

    Intriguingly, another young star in the same region called XZ Tau may have made a close pass of HL Tau about 1,600 years ago.

    Although not required for planet formation, it is possible that this flyby perturbed the disc, making it unstable. This would be a very recent event in astronomical terms.

    Oh, I forgot; baby Jesus weren’t there then.

  64. Darby says

    So what exactly did parasites eat before the Fall?

    Trematode life cycles are scarily complex, and hard to account for (I did a seminar years ago on trematode evolution that skirted the really tricky parts), but creationists don’t want to be messing with “intelligently designed” parasites.

  65. Chris says

    The one thing that really gets under my skin: for nitwits like this to do any actual (pseudo)scientific research requires money. That money could be spent on REAL scientific research. The reagents that are wasted for SEM so nitwits like this can whine about evolution could be used in REAL experiments or investigations wherein we might actually learn something.

    Buggers…

  66. Kseniya says

    cargo cultists […] were surprisingly empirical in their approach

    Interesting. Maybe this is my inner Pollyanna speaking (again), but I think this demonstrates something positive about the baseline inquisitiveness and rationality of human beings in the absence of authoritarian pressures that discourage those traits and the activities which naturally follow.

  67. says

    So what exactly did parasites eat before the Fall?

    Trematode life cycles are scarily complex, and hard to account for (I did a seminar years ago on trematode evolution that skirted the really tricky parts), but creationists don’t want to be messing with “intelligently designed” parasites.

    Come on Darby, this is obvious. Don’t you know that Darwin introduced parasites after The Fall©.

  68. Nick Gotts says

    #72. I tend to agree – I’ll try and track down some references on this stuff. Another item I remember hearing/reading was about how fast traditional healers in non-literate communities would discover the useful and/or dangerous properties of newly introduced plants (years rather than decades I think) – only the knowledge would then be attributed to a respected predecessor, or the ancestors.

  69. says

    Perhaps we should ask those Creationists why their Creator would allow parasites to infest fish in the first place. Their response would probably be that parasites are part of the curse brought by God upon the world by man’s Original Sin. But why would man’s sin affect any animals, which cannot sin? Then the Creationists might suggest that the Devil made the parasites. But that would make the Devil a creator as well! And if the Devil is a Creator, wouldn’t that make him a God too?

    Gee, I wonder how many Satanists are also Creationists!

  70. Ichthyic says

    Maybe he should try and send this paper to Proteomics…

    actually, I’m sure it’s been submitted to Rivista di Biologia already.

  71. Ichthyic says

    #53 “I hope you all realize that the scientific community is not the target audience for this paper. However, it will do its job quite nicely in school board meetings across the US.”

    this, and the comments on “peer review” of the paper, makes me think you folks thought this a published work?

    look again:

    Presented at the Fourth International Conference on Creationism

    It’s little more than a poster, presented at a group of guffawing yahoos.

    there is no peer review. there is no publication.

    It’s worthless to anyone outside of the circle jerks who were at that conference.

  72. Sastra says

    If you want to see what it would look like if there were a wide range of pseudoscientific creationist journals accepting woefully substandard research, look at So-Called Alternative Medicine.

    And yes, the general public cannot tell the difference. If you say that a peer-review homeopathy journal is not a real, accepted science journal, they just think you’re prejudiced. “No, studies show homeopathy works.” The studies don’t have to be any good. Non-experts just have to be able to point to them.

  73. Kseniya says

    Whoops! There goes Sastra, dissing “other ways of knowing” again.

    I love it when she does that! 8-D

  74. spudbeach says

    I’m sorry, but as a high school physics teacher, I wouldn’t have given that paper a very high score as a lab report.

    In a lab report, I think there should be four sections, each centered around answering four questions:
    1) Why am I doing this?
    2) What did I do?
    3) What did I see?
    4) What does it mean?

    It seems that the paper left out the third section, which is, as far as I’m concerned, the most important part of a research paper. So they looked at a bunch of parasites. Did they ever condense their observations into a simple statement that relates to their objective? So they saw a bunch of cool parasites — so what? What fraction had what structures? What were the relationships between the structures and anything else? Doesn’t look like it.

    Don’t bother telling me what you think before you tell me what you saw.

    Oh well. Just more proof that creation “scientists” aren’t scientists at all, nor are they even very good high school science students.

  75. amphiox says

    It wouldn’t be difficult to produce a testable hypothesis from ID “theory” if they’d just bite the bullet and make some definite proposals as to the nature of their designer.

    Except if they did that there would be a chance that some experiment or observation would falsify their theory, and that won’t do at all, because it’s revealed truth(tm), dammit!

    And they can’t do what some of the big drug companies do and just not publish their negative studies, because they’re desperate for publications.

    So they’re stuck. They have to come up with a hypothesis and experimental design that would be guaranteed not to produce any results that could in any imaginable way even slightly contradict their theory, and the end result still has to look like science. And that’s pretty hard.

  76. Ichthyic says

    It wouldn’t be difficult to produce a testable hypothesis from ID “theory” if they’d just bite the bullet and make some definite proposals as to the nature of their designer.

    and how the hell are they gonna do that, you suppose?

  77. Kimpatsu says

    …the concept is a non sequitur, and it’s introduction is irrelevant to this paper.
    …and a few tourist’s snapshots…

    Hey, PZ, do you penalise your students for misusing the apostrophe in their essays?

  78. ZekeCDN says

    Someday I’ll learn not to read stuff that’s guaranteed to raise my blood pressure :-

    Armitage at least got off to a reasonable start–when he was citing the work of others. But when he started asking a bunch of rhetorical-sounding questions, without suggesting any hypotheses, red flags started going up. Just when I figured he surely must be about to identify the focus of his investigation–BOOM–there’s the little tribute to Behe and that was it!

    Essentially he synthesized accounts of the trematode life cycle from the works of others, looked at a few of them under the microscope and pronounced his conclusion, i.e. that this qualified under Behe’s (discredited) notion of irreducible complexity. How did this dude even get an undergraduate degree? Was it from Bob Jones by any chance?

    In addition to a stunning lack of science, he’s a terrible writer. All of you grammar nazis picking on the OP should have a go at the paper itself. In my estimation it’d be a better read without about half of the unnecessary, redundant or incorrectly-placed commas it contains. It’s also the very first scientific (“sciency”?) paper I’ve ever read that describes an opposing theory (let alone the dominantly-held view) as “utter foolishness”!

  79. Ichthyic says

    These people have an SEM? Wow, I’d call that a progress…

    nope. he simply went to a lab that gave him access for a day.

    no progress.

  80. ZekeCDN says

    Ok, I”m a sucker for punishment so I thought I’d check out a few of ICR’s other “papers”. This time I approached the task with the appropriate mindset–i.e. I wasn’t even trying to take it seriously. And what glorious results! Just check out this paragraph from “Carbon Dating Undercuts Evolution’s Long Ages” by John Baumgardner:

    Applying the uniformitarian approach of extrapolating 14C decay into the
    indefinite past translates the measured 14C/12C ratios into ages that are on the order of 50,000 years (2-50000/5730 = 0.0024 = 0.24 pmc). However, uniformitarian assumptions are inappropriate when one considers that the Genesis Flood removed vast amounts of living biomass from exchange with the atmosphere–organic material
    that now forms the earth’s vast coal, oil, and oil shale deposits. A conservative
    estimate for the pre-Flood biomass is 100 times that of today. If one takes as a rough
    estimate for the total 14C in the biosphere before the cataclysm as 40% of what
    exists today and assumes a relatively uniform 14C level throughout the pre-Flood
    atmosphere and biomass, then we might expect a 14C/12C ratio of about 0.4% of
    today’s value in the plants and animals at the onset of the Flood. With this more
    realistic pre-Flood 14C/12C ratio, we find that a value of 0.24 pmc corresponds to an
    age of only 4200 years (0.004 x 2-4200/5730 = 0.0024 = 0.24 pmc). Even though these
    estimates are rough, they illustrate the crucial importance of accounting for effects
    of the Flood cataclysm when translating a 14C/12C ratio into an actual age.

    Isn’t that a howler? Back-of-the-envelope equations punctuated with words like “Genesis” and “Flood” really gets my funny bone! As they say, you can’t make this shit up. Well, you can’t and I can’t, but apparently some people can.

  81. says

    No standards, but if they can get a couple of professors with no knowledge of biology to say they look sciency enough, maybe — just maybe — they can sneak it by the board in Texas that would have to okay their awarding graduate degrees in the stuff.

    If only that nasty PZ man wouldn’t put his stuff where the scientists in Texas can see it and laugh, and call the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Committee to let them know . . .

  82. John Morales says

    Kimpatsu #87,

    You do realise PZ isn’t being ungrammatical?

    1 …and a few tourist’s snapshots…
    2 …and a few tourists’ snapshots…
    3 …and a few tourist snapshots…

    1. the snapshots of a specific tourist
    2. the snapshots of tourists
    3. the snapshots of a generic tourist

  83. Kseniya says

    John, PZ has been kimpatsued (rightly, if trivially) yet again. You missed the earlier and simpler catastropostrophe, the one that so often precipitates a kimpatsu:

    “…the concept is a non sequitur, and it’s introduction is irrelevant…”

    A common and easily-committed error, to be sure, but an error nonetheless. I’ve been reading Pharyngula for about two years now, and I think it’s fair to say the “its/it’s” mistake is PZ’s only chronic bugaboo.

  84. Brachychiton says

    The Great (or should that be Grate?) Armitage has previously turned his mighty intellect to lichens.

    Some lichens are large, but most are small. Because of their widespread global distribution, lichens yield a substantial share of the world’s photosynthate. This is reminiscent of God’s challenging words in Zechariah 4:10 to the Israelites as they were rebuilding their temple: “Who hath despised the day of small things?” (KJV).

    Yes. Very reminscent.

    And he quotes Popper for support. Well, not exactly quotes. More quote-mines someone writing about him. Colour me shocked.

    Popper recognized that unfalsifiable theories, such as evolution, are somewhat “like the computer programs with no uninstall option that just clog up the computer’s precious storage space” (Karl Popper web, 2006).

  85. says

    I was wondering if anyone else shared my concern: does the prospect of non-peer-reviewed journals catering to creation science/ID pose a new and somewhat more slippery problem for the public debate?

    I’m obviously not concerned with scientists taking these journals seriously. Informed audiences will see them for what they are. But the creation of journals designed to give a venue for academic-LOOKING papers that just harp on old creationist canards could pose a problem in instances where a state legislature discusses bills designed to weaken science teaching in school. I don’t know how much weight peer review held in prior hearings, but at least a scientist could point out that no ID-based research ever met the scrutiny of a science journal. But with journals that have clever names and indirect funding from the same major players, ID advocates could then say “yes, but you just don’t read the right journals!” or some such nonsense.

  86. Ichthyic says

    oes the prospect of non-peer-reviewed journals catering to creation science/ID pose a new and somewhat more slippery problem for the public debate?

    not once it gets into court.

    as to whether it will influence the public?

    sure it will. Just means more work for the rest of us to debunk the nonsense.

    have you said thankyou to PZ today?

  87. wazza says

    We could snap up all the best names…

    then introduce a rule on cross-reviewing, so that they can’t just review them internally

    but it’s a lot of effort just to debunk creationism

  88. John Morales says

    Kseniya #94, one of these days, you’re going to be wrong.

    Surely.

    <mutter>

  89. John Morales says

    Heh, I’ve just noticed how serendipitously apposite the random quote on the page is:

    Calvin : I think we have got enough information now, don’t you?
    Hobbes : All we have is one “fact” that you made up.
    Calvin : That’s plenty. By the time we add an introduction, a few illustrations and a conclusion, it’ll look like a graduate thesis.

    Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes

  90. Lilly de Lure says

    Brachychiton said:

    And he quotes Popper for support. Well, not exactly quotes. More quote-mines someone writing about him. Colour me shocked.

    Popper recognized that unfalsifiable theories, such as evolution, are somewhat “like the computer programs with no uninstall option that just clog up the computer’s precious storage space” (Karl Popper web, 2006).

    This is a creationist talking? Brachychiton, you owe me one new irony meter!

  91. Colonel Molerat says

    The extract provided by Zeke CDN (No. 91) from ‘Carbon Dating Undercuts Evolution’s Long Ages’ by John Baumgardner scared me. I’m not a scientist (though I like to read about science) and I know little about carbon dating – if this quote had come from a respectable source and not been religious, it could have tricked me. Having ‘facts’ about something that you don’t know much about given to you authoritatively is very convincing, so it’s no surprise that the creationists are able to use this technique so sucessfully.
    “I know about this subject – this is what happened” is always going to be convincing to people who don’t know about a particular subject and who don’t pay careful attention to who’s telling them what (or don’t expect people to try totrick them).
    As has been said by others here, it goes to show how important it is to make people aware of who is telling them what and how those people got that information.
    Hidden agendas and bad scientists need to be exposed for what they are – although a problem lies in the fact that much of the general public trusts these bad scientists (or, rather, ‘good confidence tricksters’) precisely because they are defending a lunatic mindset.

  92. Carlie says

    A conservative
    estimate for the pre-Flood biomass is 100 times that of today.

    I think my head just exploded from trying to figure out where we would fit 100 times current biomass on the planet. Did the Flood wash away part of the earth into outer space, too?

  93. windy says

    Anyone notice this?

    If the goal is to quickly survive and reproduce, why tie survival to the (potentially lethal) digestive process of a mammal or bird? It would seem to be “safer” to infect, say the shell of a shellfish which may be discarded by a raccoon or a bird after the meal is complete.

    *facepalm* Yes, and we must ask ourselves why parasites would not just infect rocks or something?

  94. NOSEYONE says

    “If Behe can see intelligent, planned design in a bacterial flagella, then clearly he would see intelligent, planned design in the HCl sensitive cercarial penetration glands ”

    As if referencing Bebe was not bad enough, say hello to our old friend “bacterial flagella” and irreducible complexity.

    I’m curious if Mark Armitage actually believes his own fairy tales because the evidence is so convincing to him, or that he fears what the real facts will tell him about a lifetime invested in a belief system with no merit.

  95. Wayne McCoy says

    I recall writing a paper some 50 years ago for an undergraduate literature class entitled “Hyperarcuate Whorl Distributions in Multiply-transient Levitron Dynamics Regimes.” About 20 years ago I wrote a paper with scads of references called “Pointless Topology.” My mathematician friends are still laughing over that one. It’s not hard to create bullshit when you put your mind to it. Who knows what goes on in an IDiot’s mind.

  96. Carlie says

    Brachychiton, that lichen paper is a crime against humanity. And algality. And fungality. The acknowledgments are so smug that I can’t even imagine the type of personality it would take to write them:

    “Although disagreeing with the philosophical presuppositions of various lichenologists, we are nonetheless grateful for their detailed studies of God’s little lichens. With deep and final appreciation, we respectfully acknowledge the exceedingly skillful handiwork of the Creator, as reflected repeatedly in the ultrastructure of lichens.”

  97. Kseniya says

    John Morales:

    Kseniya #94, one of these days, you’re going to be wrong.

    Actually, it happens all the time! In fact, I’m (half) wrong about this apostrophe thing!

    I see now that Kimpatsu was trying to kimpatsu PZ over both apostrophes, and the usage you addressed (“tourist’s”) was a valid refutation of the attempted kimpatsu. The now-obvious fact that Kimpatsu was citing two instances of alleged apostrophe misuse had somehow escaped my notice…

    …but not, I suspect, yours!

    Kudos, and I accept any implied correction to my correction. ;-)

  98. Hap says

    #103 : I think the guess is conservative if conservative can be interpreted as “a wild-ass guess backed up with no supporting data and negligible math skills”. Hey, maybe the Republicans are “conservative” after all.

    100 times the biomass? That would have made the Earth’s surface a hundred-foot deep peat bog – why are we running out of oil?

  99. debbyo says

    More from Mark Armitage’s paper:

    Finally, they require a 3rd host, which really begs the evolutionary question. Concern over this is expressed by some authors, in an attempt to supply an evolutionary explanation [40, 41]. Here the definitive host must digest the fish, while the cyst must pass this process unscathed. If the goal is to quickly survive and reproduce, why tie survival to the (potentially lethal) digestive process of a mammal or bird? It would seem to be “safer” to infect, say the shell of a shellfish which may be discarded by a raccoon or a bird after the meal is complete.

    That’s funny. He’s actually criticising the design here. He’s got a better idea than the “creator”.

  100. debbyo says

    Again from the Armitage:

    There is an elephant in the roomful of scientists who are trying to explain the development of life. The elephant is labeled ‘intelligent design.’

    In his dreams. More like: There is a mosquito in a room with Galileo, Newton, Darwin and Einstein feeding on their sweat and blood, spreading disease and distracting everyone with its irritating whine. “Shut up, guys – let’s hear what it has to say”. Bzzzz-zzzzzz.

  101. Lilly de Lure says

    Debbyo said:

    That’s funny. He’s actually criticising the design here. He’s got a better idea than the “creator”.

    You’d also think he would be a little more careful about publishing (or even thinking) something like this if he genuinely believes in the creator as described in the bible. He doesn’t exactly come across as the kind of being that is likely to react well to this type of constructive criticism.

  102. debbyo says

    He didn’t get to where he is today through constructive criticism.

    Did you know that one of the symptoms of Narcissistic Personality Disorder is magical thinking? When you think about it, you’d have to think you were pretty special to be one of the few “saved”.

  103. Lucretius says

    I think that Creationists have misunderstood the concept of “peer review”
    Their version is to take the relevant paper to the coast deposit it at the sea end of a pier, walk back to the shore end and look at it again though binoculars.