| The debate: Creationist versus Skeptic |
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The debate: Creationist versus SkepticOn 24 August 2003, over 1100 people (a huge audience for an event like this in Australia) turned out to hear what had been billed as ‘The Great Debate’. It was held at the Northside Christian Church, Brisbane, which sponsored the debate as well as two creation lectures leading up to it by CMI’s Dr Don Batten. The question to be resolved was: ‘That scientific evidence supports a literal Genesis’. The debaters:Affirmative: Carl Wieland trained and practised as a medical doctor before working for Creation Ministries International (Australia), of which he is CEO. He founded Creation magazine and speaks widely on the issues of creation, evolution and the authority of the Bible. Negative: Paul Willis has a doctorate in paleontology and is a science reporter/broadcaster with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). A self-proclaimed atheist, the Australian Skeptics awarded him ‘Skeptic of the Year’ in 2002. The formal debate, professionally moderated by Dr Robert Herschel, involved 20 minutes constructive for each speaker, 15 minutes rebuttal, and 10 minutes summary/conclusion. Dr Wieland drew the short straw, so to speak, and had to speak first, giving Dr Willis the last say in each segment. The audience was very well-behaved and courteous to both speakers. No vote was taken as to who had ‘won’, which would have been unreasonable with a largely Christian–creationist audience. The affirmative caseWieland opened by defining the topic and scope of the debate. He discussed briefly the limitations of science, especially when it came to historical analyses. He explained how the same evidence can support (be consistent with) a variety of views, depending on one’s presuppositions [see ‘It’s not science’]. As an example, he cited the five digits of the frog and human hand, which can be used to support either the notion of a common ancestor or a common designer. But the common ancestry explanation was gravely undermined by the radically different ways in which frog and human digits develop in the embryo.1 He next dealt with the mathematical absurdity of obtaining even one functional protein, citing Professor Paul Davies as admitting that no one has any idea how life could have originated in the first place,2 which, said Wieland, in a sense undermined the rest of the evolutionary story. We know from scientific observation that it takes intelligence to explain information systems, so life’s informatics provide strong evidence consistent with a literal Genesis, i.e. God imposing intelligent programming on the first groups of living things. Evolution requires not only a way of creating information in the first place, but adding to it relentlessly. Natural selection doesn’t create information, it removes it. Wieland cited Israeli biophysicist (and DNA-information expert) Dr Lee Spetner as saying that despite the large number of information-increasing mutations which neo-Darwinism should expect, so far all mutations studied decrease the information, including the rare beneficial ones (like wingless beetles on windy islands) [see Mutations Q&A and Natural Selection Q&A]. Wieland quoted a modern-day fossil expert as confirming that the number of transitional-form candidates had actually declined since Darwin’s day, adding that one could argue over a handful of controversial candidates, but the myriads expected by Darwin had simply not been found. Stephen Gould was cited to show how the ‘slow and gradual’ philosophy had been ‘imposed’ on the evidence using a lawyer’s imagination, and that the rocks demand catastrophic explanations [see Quotable Quote: Gould on Lyell]. Wieland presented evidence consistent with rapid formation of rocks (over continent-wide areas) and fossils, supporting the Bible’s description of a global Flood. He also presented evidence against radiometric dating methods used to ‘prove’ an old earth, showing an example of a carbon-14 ‘age’ of thousands of years for wood found in the Hawkesbury Sandstone (near Sydney, Australia) that is supposed to be hundreds of millions of years old [see Dating dilemma: fossil wood in ‘ancient’ sandstone]. He closed with a detailed exposition of recent laboratory evidence of helium diffusion rates in ‘1.5 billion-year-old’ uranium-containing zircons which not only showed conclusively that there must have been a burst of accelerated decay in the past, but that the Precambrian granite from which these crystals were extracted could not be more than about 6,000 years old—positive evidence supporting literal Genesis [see RATE group reveals exciting breakthroughs!]. The negative caseWillis opened engagingly and confidently. He stated that he had far more evidence than he could possibly present in 20 minutes and to check out a website for the lot (this is known as ‘elephant hurling’, an informal fallacy commonly used in argument). Willis began by quoting a US scientist (whose research CMI has cited at times) as saying that the majority of the evidence supports an old earth and that this scientist only believes in a young earth because of the Bible.3 He then proceeded to claim that:
Rebuttals(Some of the rebuttals listed below came up in the last session—i.e. some of the summary/conclusion time was taken up with further rebuttal.) Wieland
The only point that Willis made that was not rebutted was the issue of dinosaur nests. Dr Wieland used every second of the time allocated very efficiently, making succinct points, but there was just not enough time to cover everything.11 In his summing up, Wieland outlined the importance of the issue for the gospel—that this is not just about science or even history, but about the eternal destinies of the people present. If the Bible is the Word of God, then it is of utmost importance that all present consider what God has said to us and that we respond to God’s offer of forgiveness in Jesus Christ. WillisWillis’s rebuttal was done with passion and energy. He dismissed the Mt St Helens layers, saying that it was common knowledge that such things happen, but these were merely flows of ash driven along by hot air, and not an issue at all [Wieland pointed out that this sedimentary event was not expected at all; when Dr Steve Austin presented the information to around 1,000 geologists at a Petroleum Association meeting, the chairman, after a hushed silence, recommended reconsidering the role of catastrophism in geology]. Rather than try to explain how the information in organisms arose, Willis attempted to dismiss the information arguments by claiming that biologists were not really able to measure or define information properly. Some effort went into pointing out that one could not quantify the total amount of information in an organism. He seemingly implied that because there was no all-encompassing definition of biological information, it therefore did not need to be explained [the Spetner arguments refer to the information in one enzyme—does it go up or down—see Information Theory]. He addressed the issue of the Liaoning find being younger than true birds: part of a population may evolve to something else while the original population remains unchanged. [Wieland pointed out in his summing up that for this to be the explanation in every one of the cases of the various ‘transitional forms’ claimed at Liaoning amounts to special pleading. Even a bird with a true beak, Confuciusornis, is dated by evolutionists as 10 million years older than the Liaoning fossils; Archaeopteryx is not the only problem.] Caudipteryx had a ‘half-wing’, just what creationists have been challenging evolutionists to produce for years. [Wieland cited evolutionary experts who claimed that this creature was in fact a flightless bird, including gizzard stones; Willis later asked why, then, had it evolved some dinosaurian features, to which Wieland subsequently responded by saying that he was certainly not claiming that it had evolved any features at all. For an analysis of the supposed dino-bird fossils, see Fossils.] Even though the most detailed argument in the opening was the zircon data arguing strongly that the earth was only about 6,000 years old, it appears that Willis may have anticipated that CMI would stay away from the age of the earth, as some of his Skeptics friends had assured him would be the case. We say this because he repeated more than once throughout the course of the night (to the obvious puzzlement of many in the audience) that the audience had ‘not heard one piece of evidence’ from Wieland ‘that the earth is less than 10,000 years old’. Right at the end of his closing remarks, Willis did attempt to deal with it by casting aspersion on whether it was real data, saying he was not even aware of it [creationist websites had been buzzing with it for weeks—we were sure he would know of it, and we even splashed a front page article on our website about it just days before the debate]—and by asking why one should trust CMI when they were obviously foolish enough to send a ‘rock instead of wood’ for 14C dating [not true, as indicated earlier]. Willis also introduced new material into his summing up (which is not supposed to be done, except if required for rebuttal of a point), claiming that Martin Luther did not believe a literal Genesis [this is wrong—Luther unambiguously stated his belief in the straight-forward historical reading of Genesis (see Luther on Evolution and What was Martin Luther’s stand on Creation/Evolution?), but Wieland had no further opportunity to counter this misinformation]. Willis also tried to encourage the crowd that they could continue to be Christians who loved God and saw Him as Creator while accepting evolution, claiming that he knows good Christians who do this. When he cited as an example a prominent minister in the Uniting Church of Australia (UCA), it brought a strong ripple of reaction from many in the audience, presumably aware of the recent decision of the UCA hierarchy (dominated by liberals) to ordain practising homosexuals into pastoral ministry. Willis had unwittingly made a point which CMI majors on, namely that rejecting the Bible’s authority at its Genesis foundations leads to rejection of the Bible’s teaching in other areas. Willis finished his summing up with more than two minutes to spare. Click here to read about the reaction to the debate. References and notes
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