seth:
> Sejak akhir Juni 1964 saya percaya bahwa Yesus adalah kebenaran.
...
> Saya sama bodoh dan picik dengan H.M. Morris, A.E. Wilder Smith, Damadian,
> Lumsden, Kepler, Newton, Luther, Augustinus dan last but not least Yesus
> Kristus.

ja:
betapa memalukan seorang yg mengaku yesus sebagai kebenaran memakai cara2 
ketidakbenaran dan ketidakjujuran. "bodoh" tidak sama dengan "jujur". 
berikut ketidakjujuran creatinosist saintific diekpos oleh robert 
schadewald.

joas

=======

Scientific Creationism and Error
by Robert Schadewald
Copyright © 1986
Reprinted from Creation/Evolution (v. 6, n. 1, pp. 1-9)
with permission from the author.


Scientific creationism differs from conventional science in numerous and 
substantial ways. One obvious difference is the way scientists and 
creationists deal with error.

Science is wedded, at least in principle, to the evidence. Creationism is 
unabashedly wedded to doctrine, as evidenced by the statements of belief 
required by various creationist organizations and the professions of faith 
made by individual creationists. Because creationism is first and foremost a 
matter of Biblical faith, evidence from the natural world can only be of 
secondary importance. Authoritarian systems like creationism tend to instill 
in their adherents a peculiar view of truth.

Many prominent creationists apparently have the same view of truth as 
political radicals: whatever advances the cause is true, whatever damages 
the cause is false. From this viewpoint, errors should be covered up where 
possible and only acknowledged when failure to do so threatens greater 
damage to the cause. If colleagues spread errors, it is better not to 
criticize them publicly. Better to have followers deceived than to have them 
question the legitimacy of their leaders. In science, fame accrues to those 
who overturn errors. In dogmatic systems, one who unnecessarily exposes an 
error to the public is a traitor or an apostate.

Ironically, creationists make much of scientific errors. The "Nebraska Man" 
fiasco, where the tooth of an extinct peccary was misidentified as belonging 
to a primitive human, is ubiquitous in creationist literature and debate 
presentations. So is the "Piltdown Man" hoax. Indeed, creationist 
propagandists often present these two scientific errors as characteristic of 
paleoanthropology. It is significant that these errors were uncovered and 
corrected from within the scientific community. In contrast, creationists 
rarely expose their own errors, and they sometimes fail to correct them when 
others expose them.

Duane Gish, a protein biochemist with a Ph.D. from Berkeley, is vice 
president of the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) and creationism's 
best-known spokesman. A veteran of perhaps 150 public debates and thousands 
of lectures and sermons on creationism, Gish is revered among creationists 
as a great scientist and a tireless fighter for the truth. Among 
noncreationists, however, Gish has a reputation for making erroneous 
statements and then pugnaciously refusing to acknowledge them. One example 
is an unfinished epic which might be called the tale of two proteins.

In July 1983, the Public Broadcasting System televised an hour-long program 
on creationism. One of the scientists interviewed, biochemist Russell 
Doolittle, discussed the similarities of human proteins to chimpanzee 
proteins. In many cases, corresponding human and chimpanzee proteins are 
identical, and in others they differ by only a few amino acids. This 
strongly suggests a common ancestry for humans and apes. Gish was asked to 
comment. He replied:

If we look at certain proteins, yes, man then -- it can be assumed that man 
is more closely related to a chimpanzee than other things. But on the other 
hand, if you look at other certain proteins, you'll find that man is more 
closely related to a bullfrog than he is a chimpanzee. If you focus your 
attention on other proteins, you'll find that man is more closely related to 
a chicken than he is to a chimpanzee.
I had never heard of such proteins, so I asked a few biochemists. They 
hadn't, either. I wrote to Gish for supporting documentation. He ignored my 
first letter. In reply to my second, he referred me to Berkeley 
geochronologist Garniss Curtis. I wrote to Curtis, who replied immediately.

Some years ago, Curtis attended a conference in Austria where he heard that 
someone had found bullfrog blood proteins very similar to human blood 
proteins. Curtis offered an explanatory hypothesis: the "frog" which yielded 
the proteins was (he suggested) an enchanted prince. He then predicted that 
the research would never be confirmed. He was apparently correct, for 
nothing has been heard of the proteins since. But Duane Gish once heard 
Curtis tell his little story.

This bullfrog "documentation" (as Gish now calls it) struck me as joke, even 
by creationist standards, and Gish simply ignored his alleged chicken 
proteins. In contrast, Doolittle backed his televised claims with published 
protein sequence data. I wrote to Gish again suggesting that he should be 
able to do the same. He didn't reply. Indeed, he has never since replied to 
any of my letters.

John W. Patterson and I attended the 1983 National Creation Conference in 
Roseville, Minnesota. We had several conversations there with Kevin Wirth, 
Research Director of Students for Origins Research (SOR). At some point, we 
told him the protein story and suggested that Gish might have lied on 
national television. Wirth was confident that Gish could document his 
claims. He told us that if we put our charges in the form of a letter, he 
would do his best to get it published in Origins Research, the SOR tabloid.

Gish also attended the conference, and I asked him about the proteins in the 
presence of several creationists. Gish tried mightily to evade and/or 
obfuscate, but I was firm. Doolittle provided sequence data for human and 
chimpanzee proteins; Gish could do the same -- if his alleged chicken and 
bullfrog proteins really exist. Gish insisted they exist and promised to 
send me the sequences. Skeptical, I asked him pointblank: "Will that be 
before hell freezes over?" He assured me that it would. After 2-1/2 years, I 
still have neither sequence data nor a report of frost in Hades.

Shortly after the conference, Patterson and I submitted a joint letter to 
Origins Research, briefly recounting the protein story and concluding, "We 
think Gish lied on national television." We sent Gish a copy of the letter 
in the same mail. During the next few months, Wirth (and probably others at 
SOR) practically begged Gish to submit a reply for publication. In response, 
someone at ICR (presumably Gish himself) pressured SOR not to publish our 
letter.(1) Unlike Gish, however, Kevin Wirth was as good as his word. The 
letter appeared in the Spring 1984 issue of Origins Research -- with no 
reply from Gish.

The 1984 National Bible-Science Conference was held in Cleveland, and again 
Patterson and I attended. Again, I asked Gish for sequence data for his 
chicken and bullfrog proteins. This time, Gish told me that any further 
documentation for his proteins is up to Garniss Curtis and me.

I next saw Gish at noon on February 18, 1985, when he debated philosopher of 
science Philip Kitcher at the University of Minnesota. Several days earlier, 
I had heralded Gish's coming (and his mythical proteins) in a guest 
editorial in the student newspaper.(2) Kitcher alluded to the proteins early 
in the debate, and in his final remarks, he demanded that Gish either 
produce references or admit that they do not exist. Gish, of course, did 
neither. His closing remarks were punctuated with sporadic cries of 
"Bullfrog!" from the audience.

That evening, Duane Gish addressed about 200 people assembled in a hall at 
the student union. During the question period, Stan Weinberg, a founder of 
the Committees of Correspondence on Evolution, stood up. Scientists 
sometimes make mistakes, said Weinberg, and when they do, they own up to 
them. Had Gish ever made a mistake in his writings and presentations? If so, 
could his chicken and bullfrog proteins have been a mistake? Gish made a 
remarkable reply.

He has indeed made mistakes, he said. For instance, an erroneous translation 
by another creationist (Kofahl) once led him to believe that hydrogen 
peroxide and hydroquinone, two chemicals used by the bombardier beetle, 
spontaneously explode when mixed. This error led him to claim in a book and 
in his presentations that the beetle had to evolve a chemical inhibitor to 
keep from blowing itself up. When he learned that hydrogen peroxide and 
hydroquinone do not explode when mixed, he said, he corrected the error in 
his book.

Regarding the bullfrog proteins, Gish said he relied on Garniss Curtis for 
them. Perhaps Curtis was wrong. As for the chicken proteins, Gish made a 
convoluted and (to a nonbiochemist) confusing argument about chicken 
lysozyme. It was essentially the same answer he had given me immediately 
after his debate with Kitcher, when I went onstage and asked him once again 
for references. It was the same answer he would give two nights later in 
Ames, Iowa, in response to a challenge by John W. Patterson. I will discuss 
its substance, relevance, and potential for deception after dealing with the 
bombardier beetle.

Gish neglected to mention certain details of the bombardier beetle business. 
Early in 1978, Bill Thwaites and Frank Awbrey of San Diego State University 
mixed hydrogen peroxide and hydroquinone in front of their "two model" class 
with a nonexplosive result.(3) Gish may have corrected his book, but he 
continued to use demonstrably false arguments about the bombardier beetle in 
debate presentations. I personally heard him do so on January 17, 1980, in a 
debate with John W. Patterson at Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa.

About the chicken lysozyme: Three times in three days, Gish was challenged 
to produce references for chicken proteins closer to human proteins than the 
corresponding chimpanzee proteins. Three times, he responded with his 
chicken lysozyme apologetic. Few of his creationist listeners know what 
lysozyme is, and perhaps none of them knew that human and chimpanzee 
lysozyme are identical, and chicken lysozyme differs from both by 51 out of 
130 amino acids.(4) To one unfamiliar with biochemistry and (especially) 
Gish's apologetic methods, it sounded like he responded to the question. 
Whether by design or by some random process, Gish's chicken lysozyme 
apologetic was admirably suited to deceive listeners.

One who was taken in by it was Crockett Grabbe, a physicist with the 
University of Iowa. As a result, Grabbe wrongly accused Gish of claiming 
chicken lysozyme is closer to human lysozyme than is chimpanzee lysozyme. 
Gish then counterattacked, playing "blame the victim" and pretending it was 
Grabbe's own fault that he was deceived.(5) But if the chicken lysozyme 
apologetic fooled a professional scientist, it's unlikely that many of the 
creationist listeners saw through it.

Gish's refusal to acknowledge the nonexistence of his chicken protein is 
characteristic of ICR. His boss, Henry Morris, gave Gish's handling of the 
matter his tacit approval by what he said (and didn't say) about it in his 
History of Modern Creationism. Morris referred to the protein incident and 
took a swipe at Russell Doolittle (who he identified as "Richard 
Doolittle"), but he offered no criticism of Gish's conduct. Instead, he 
accused PBS of misrepresenting Gish!(6)

Meanwhile, Gish has been obfuscating behind the scenes. The only creationist 
publication to directly address the protein affair has been Origins 
Research. In the Fall 1985 issue, editor Dennis Wagner (1) wrongly 
identified Glyn Isaac as the source of Gish's bullfrog and (2) wrongly 
stated that Gish sent me a tape of the lecture in which Isaac supposedly 
made the statement. Wagner's source, it turns out, is a letter Gish wrote to 
Kevin Wirth,(7) in which Gish apparently confused Glyn Isaac with Garniss 
Curtis. He also claimed to have a tape and a transcript of the "Isaac" 
(presumably Curtis) lecture, and he claimed that he had reviewed them. In 
the same sentence, Gish claimed that he sent me his "documentation," and 
Wagner quite naturally assumed that meant at least the tape. But Gish sent 
me neither, nor has he sent copies of said tape or transcript to others 
requesting them. As with his chicken proteins, we have only Gish's word for 
their existence.

For the record, it is no longer important whether Gish's original statements 
about chicken and bullfrog proteins were deceptions or incredible blunders. 
It is now going on four years since the PBS broadcast, and Gish has neither 
retracted his chicken statement nor attempted to justify it. (Obviously, the 
lysozyme apologetic doesn't count, but it took Gish 2-1/2 years to come up 
with that!) And if the Curtis story is all he knows about his chimpanzee 
protein, on what basis did he promise to send me its sequence at the 1983 
National Bible-Science Conference? Gish has woven himself into an incredible 
web of contradictions, and even some creationists now suspect that he has 
been less than candid.

Gish's steadfast refusal to acknowledge the facts seems to characterize 
creationism. Consider the case of the alleged Paluxy River "manprints." 
These have played an important role in creationist apologetics since 
Whitcomb and Morris published photographs of "manprint" carvings owned by 
Clifford Burdick in the Genesis Flood in 1961. The film "Footprints in 
Stone" features several trackways presented as human footprints in 
Cretaceous limestone. ICR has long featured them in its museum, and John D. 
Morris, son of ICR founder Henry Morris, wrote a popular book about them. 
But creationism's Paluxy River apologetics are rapidly collapsing.

Glen Kuban has been investigating the Paluxy River tracks since 1980. In 
1982, Kuban noted that the prints of the principal trail in "Footprints in 
Stone" (called the "Taylor trail" after Reverend Stan Taylor, producer of 
the film) have gradually turned a reddish color. The colored areas represent 
the material which filled the original prints. Extending beyond the visible 
depressions, the markings clearly delineate three-toed dinosaur prints. The 
three other "manprint" trails on the site exhibit the same phenomenon.

Stan Taylor is deceased, but his son Paul now runs Films for Christ. Last 
fall, Kuban persuaded Paul Taylor to revisit the site and see the evidence 
for himself. Taylor was so impressed that he withdrew "Footprints in Stone" 
from circulation. He also repudiated the "mantracks" in a two-page statement 
which was supposed to be sent to those requesting the film. These actions, 
almost unprecedented in the annals of creationism, would be more noteworthy 
except for three things: (1) a second, slightly watered-down statement 
quickly replaced the initial statement, (2) Taylor has not granted 
permission to publish the document, and (3) several persons who have since 
requested the film have not received the statement but instead have been 
told that the film is not available for the requested date.(8)

As for ICR, Kuban also convinced John D. Morris to revisit the site. After 
"Footprints in Stone," Morris's 1980 book Tracking Those Incredible 
Dinosaurs and the People Who Knew Them is the most important piece of 
"manprint" propaganda. He responded to the new evidence in a January 1986 
Impact article, "The Paluxy River Mystery." It is vintage creationism.

In the article, Morris obscures the fact that all of the crucial research 
was done by Kuban and other noncreationists. He backhands knowledgeable 
critics like John Cole, Steven Schafersman, Laurie Godfrey, and Ronnie 
Hastings (collectively, "Raiders of the Lost Tracks"), accusing them of 
"ignoring, ridiculing and distorting the evidence as reported by 
creationists." Near the end, Kuban is mentioned in passing as the first to 
notice the coloration changes, but no reader could guess that it took 
several years for Kuban to convince Morris to come look at the new evidence. 
Through Kuban's charity, Morris was able to preempt publication of Kuban's 
original research, and he showed his gratitude by barely mentioning Kuban's 
name!

Nor is that all. In his windup, Morris muddies the Paluxy waters with a 
vague hint that the colorations might be fraudulent. While he concludes that 
"it would now be improper for creationists to continue to use the Paluxy 
data as evidence against evolution," he says nothing whatever about 
withdrawing his thoroughly-discredited book from the market.

In the March 1986 Acts & Facts, an unnamed author (presumably Henry Morris) 
defends John Morris's half-hearted retraction in an unapologetic apologetic. 
Regarding John Morris's hints about fraudulent colorations, the anonymous 
author of "Following Up on the Paluxy Mystery" notes that "no evidence of 
fraud has been found, and some hints of these dinosaur toe stains have now 
possibly been discerned on photos taken when the prints in question were 
originally discovered." Glen Kuban, who pointed out these stains in the 
early photos,(9) is not mentioned at all. Indeed, the original creationist 
interpretation of the trackways is characterized as "not only a valid 
interpretation but arguably the best interpretation of the data available at 
that time." The "closed-minded" evolutionists who have criticized the Paluxy 
tracks are mentioned only with sneer and smear.

Another creationist organization with a heavy stake in the Paluxy River 
footprints is the Bible-Science Association. Reverend Paul Bartz, editor of 
the Bible-Science Newsletter, has hotly defended "Footprints in Stone" and 
editorially sneered at the work of the "Raiders." After Films for Christ 
withdrew "Footprints in Stone," I watched the Bible-Science Newsletter for a 
reaction. Nothing. BSA headquarters are in Minneapolis, and BSA officials 
are active in the Twin Cities Creation-Science Association. I attended TCCSA 
meetings to hear what BSA had to say in that forum. Nothing. I privately 
showed BSA Field Director Bill Overn an unpublished manuscript on the 
tracks. About a month later, BSA finally broke its silence.

The March 1986 Bible-Science Newsletter carried a column entitled "BSA 
Issues Statement on the Paluxy Footprints." The statement, which is in the 
form of a press release, ignores Kuban altogether, referring only to John 
Morris's Impact article. It quotes a statement by Morris affirming his 
commitment to truth and facts, commenting:

Our stance is identical. Our readership is different, however, and expects 
us to present a more studied and mature documented position. The 
Bible-Science Association is currently engaged in an evaluation of current 
data as well as the exploration of additional data which has not yet been 
fully examined.
Any serious study of the matter, of course, would have to begin with Glen 
Kuban, whose research blew the lid off "Footprints in Stone." Shortly after 
that issue of the Bible-Science Newsletter came out, I called Kuban and 
asked if he had been contacted by BSA. He hadn't. It's not clear how a "more 
mature documented position" on the tracks can be presented without 
contacting the man most knowledgeable about them. But perhaps the BSA writer 
gives a hint of things to come with the next sentence:

We also point out to our readers that current questions concerning the value 
of the Paluxy findings do not revolve around the question of whether any 
kind of evidence ever existed to support the contention of contemporaneous 
human and dinosaur existence in the Paluxy river bed (italics original).
I might similarly point out to my readers that current questions concerning 
the value of perpetual motion machines do not revolve around the question of 
whether any kind of evidence ever existed for machines which could create 
energy from nothing. I prefer to point out that such an argument is 
bankrupt, and therefore, precisely the kind of apologetic to which perpetual 
motionists and creationists must resort.

The BSA statement also neglected to mention three important claims BSA 
itself has made about alleged Paluxy River mantracks:

1. BSA, which has been lavish in its praise for "Footprints in Stone," 
failed to inform its readers that Films for Christ has withdrawn it from 
circulation because it misidentifies dinosaur tracks as human.
2. BSA has been the foremost promoter of the Reverend Carl Baugh and his 
alleged human footprints. Knowledgeable creationists now recognize that 
Baugh's "manprints" are as questionable as his scientific degrees. Two BSA 
insiders told me privately that they have had their doubts about Baugh for 
some time, and they no longer actively promote him in the Bible-Science 
Newsletter. No hint of Baugh's fall from grace has reached subscribers.

3. BSA has long promoted as genuine an alleged giant human print known as 
"the Caldwell Print," and they even sell aluminum casts of it. Besides its 
anatomical absurdities, knowledgable creationists have recently alleged that 
it is a carving. The BSA statement says nothing whatever about this, nor has 
BSA announced that the print is no longer for sale.

For now, at least, it is whitewash as usual from the Bible-Science 
Association. If the past is prologue, the Bible-Science Newsletter will 
eventually acknowledge the action by Films for Christ, and they might 
quietly quit distributing the Caldwell Print (if they haven't already). But 
they will never blow the whistle on Reverend Carl Baugh's misrepresented 
discoveries, mythical degrees, and general scientific incompetence.

With these examples in mind, it is hardly surprising that ICR continues to 
promote errors refuted more than a decade ago. Those who take the time to 
reply to creationist attacks on science find themselves slaying the slain a 
thousand times over. And no matter how dead a creationist error might appear 
to be, it always has the hope of resurrection in the Bible-Science 
Newsletter.

Creationism is not monolithic. Nevertheless, creationism as a movement is 
and ever will be judged by the most visible organizations and individuals. 
On that basis, the public can only conclude that the typical creationist 
response to error is silence, whitewash, or outright denial. If some 
creationists are offended by this interpretation (and several have told me 
privately that they are), I refuse to be their spokesman. If they cannot 
denounce these actions on their own, their silence makes them participants.

NOTES
1. Kevin Wirth, personal communication.
2. Schadewald, Robert J. "The Gospel of Creation: The Book of 
Misinformation," Minnesota Daily, v. 86, n. 112 (February 14, 1985), p. 7.
3. Weber, Christopher Gregory, "The Bombardier Beetle Myth Exploded," 
Creation/Evolution, n. 3 (Winter 1981).
http://www.ncseweb.org/resources/articles/3955_issue_03_volume_2_number_1__2_21_2003.asp#The%20Bombadier%20Beetle%20Myth%20Exploded
4. Awbrey, Frank T. and William M. Thwaites, "A Closer Look at Some 
Biochemical Data that 'Support' Creation," Creation/Evolution, n. 7 (Winter 
1982), p. 15.
http://www.ncseweb.org/resources/articles/8661_issue_07_volume_3_number_1__3_4_2003.asp#A%20Closer%20Look
5. Gish, Duane T., "Creationism Misassailed," Cedar Rapids Gazette, 8/14/85.
6. Morris, Henry M., History of Modern Creationism (San Diego, Master Book 
Publishers, 1984), p. 316.
7. Letter, Duane T. Gish to Kevin Wirth, 2/27/84.
8. Glen Kuban, personal communication.
9. Glen Kuban, personal communication.



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