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(Music)
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Oh, hi kids! I have an incredible message for you!
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Hey, can someone take Thelma back to the petting zoo?
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Wow, that looks like fun!
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Now where was I? Oh yes, in 2014, kids 12 and under can come free!
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Hey, shouldn't the comets be in the planetarium?
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For the entire year, kids 12 and under come free.
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Hey, T-rex, you better get back to the dinasour den!
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As you can see, it's a very exciting place.
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Now tell your parents, kids 12 and under free in 2014
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when accompanied by a paying adult.
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We hope to see you soon.
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Good evening, I'm please to welcome you to Legacy Hall
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of the Creation Museum in Northern Kentucky
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in the Metropolitan area of Cincinnati.
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I'm Tom Forman from CNN.
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And I'm please to be tonight's moderator for
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this Evolution vs. Creation debate.
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This is a very old question, where did we come from?
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My answer is from Washington this morning by airplane.
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(Laughter) But there is a much more profound, longer answer,
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That people have sought after for a long time.
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So, tonight's question to be debated is the following:
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Is Creation a viable model of origins in today's modern Scientific era?
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Our welcome extends to hundreds of thousands of people
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who are watching on the internet at debatelive.org.
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We're glad you have joined us.
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Of course, your auditorium here,
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all of the folks who've joined us as well.
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We're joined by 70 media representatives from many
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of the world's great news organizations.
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We're glad to have them here as well.
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And now let's welcome our debaters: Mr. Bill Nye and Mr. Ken Ham.
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(audience applauds)
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We had a coin toss earlier to determine
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who would go first of these two men.
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The only thing missing was Joe Namath in a fur coat.
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But it went very well. Mr. Ham won the coin toss
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and he opted to speak first. But first, let me tell you
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a little bit about both of these gentlemen.
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Mr. Nye's website describes him as a scientist,
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engineer, comedian, author, and inventor.
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Mr Nye, as you may know, produced a number of award-winning TV shows,
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including a program he became so well-known for:
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Bill Nye the Science Guy.
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While working on the Science Guy show, Mr. Nye won
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seven national Emmy awards for writing, performing,
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and producing the show. Won 18 Emmys in five years!
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In between creating the shows, he wrote five kids books about science,
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including his latest title, Bill Nye's Great Big Book of Tiny Germs.
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Billy Nye is the host of three television series:
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his program, "The 100 Greatest Discoveries"--
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airs on the Science Channel. "The Eyes of Nye"--
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airs on PBS stations across the country. He frequenly appears
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on interview programs to discuss a variety of science topics.
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Mr. Nye serves as Executive Director of the Planetary Society,
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the world's largest space interest group.
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He is a graduate of Cornell, with a Bachelors
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of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering.
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Mr. Ken Ham is the president and co-founder of Answers in Genesis,
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a bible-defending organization that upholds the authority
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of the scriptures from the very first verse.
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Mr. Ham is the man behind the popular, high-tech
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Creation Museum, where we're holding this debate.
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The museum has had 2 million visitors in six years
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and has attracted much of the world's media.
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The Answers in Genesis website, as well, trafficked
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with 2 million visitors alone last month. Mr. Ham is also
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a best-selling author, a much in-demand speaker,
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and the host of a daily radio feature carried on 700 plus stations.
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This is his second public debate on Evolution and Creation.
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The first was at Harvard, in the 1990s.
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Mr. Ham is a native of Australia. He earned
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a Bachelors degree in Applied Science, with an emphasis in
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Environmental Biology, from the Queensland's Institute of Technology,
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as well as a Diploma of Education at the University
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of Queensland in Brisbon, Australia.
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And now...Mr. Ham, you opted to go first, so you will
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be first with your five minute opening statement.
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Well, good evening. I know that not everyone watching
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this debate will necessarily agree with what I have to say,
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but I'm an Aussie and live over here in America
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and they tell me I have an accent and so it doesn't matter
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what I say, some people tell me. We just like to hear you saying it.
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(laughter) So...um...I hope you enjoy me saying it anyway.
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Well, the debate topic is this: Is Creation
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a viable model of origins in today's modern scientific era?
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You know, when this was first announced on the internet,
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there were lots of statements-- like this one
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from the Richard Dawkins Foundation.
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"Scientists should not debate Creationists. Period."
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And this one from one of the Discovery.com websites.
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"Should Scientists Debate Creationists?"
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You know, right here I believe there's a gross misrepresentation
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in our culture. We're seeing people being indoctrinated
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to believe that Creationists can't be Scientists.
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I believe it's all a part of secularists hi-jacking the word "Science".
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I want you to meet a modern-day scientist who's a Biblical Creationist.
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My name is Stuart Burgess.
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I'm a professor of Engineering Design at Bristol University in the U.K.
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My name is Stuart Burgess.
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I'm a professor of Engineering Design at Bristol University in the U.K.
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I have published over 130 scientific papers on
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the science of design in Engineering and Biological systems.
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From my research work, I have found that the scientific evidence
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fully supports Creationism as the best explanation to origins.
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I've also designed major parts of spacecrafts,
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launched by ESA and NASA.
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So here's a biblical Creationist,
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who's a scientist, who's also an inventor.
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And I want young people to understand that.
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You know, the problem, I believe, is this: we need to define terms correctly.
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We need to define Creation/Evolution in regard to origins
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and we need to define science. And in this opening statement,
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I want to concentrate on dealing with the word "science".
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I believe the word "science" has been hijacked by secularists.
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Now, what is science?
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Well, the origin of the word comes from the Classical Latin "scientia",
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which means know;. And if you look up a dictionary,
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it'll say science means "the state of knowing, knowledge".
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But there's different types of knowledge and I believe
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this is where the confusion lies.
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There's experimental or observational sciences, as we call it.
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That's using the scientific method, observation,
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measurement, experiment, testing. That's what produces
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our technology, computers, spacecraft, jet planes,
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smoke detectors, looking at DNA, antibiotics, medicines and vaccines.
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You see, all scientists, whether Creationists or Evolutionists,
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actually have the same observational or experimental science.
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And it doesn't matter whether you're a Creationist or an Evolutionist,
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you can be a great scientist.
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For instance, here's an atheist, who is a great scientist--
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Craig Venter, one of the first researchers to sequence the human genome.
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Or Dr. Raymond Damadian. He is a man who invented
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the MRI scan and revolutionized medicine. He's a biblical Creationist.
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But I want us to also understand molecules-to-man
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evolution belief has nothing to do with developing technology.
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You see, when we're talking about origins, we're talking about the past.
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We're talking about our origins. We weren't there.
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You can't observe that, whether it's molecules-to-man evolution,
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or whether it's a creation account.
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I mean, you're talking about the past.
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We'd like to call that Origins of Historical Science,
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knowledge concerning the past. Here at the Creation Museum,
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we make no apology about the fact that our Origins or Historical science
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actually is based upon the biblical account of origins.
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Now, when you research science textbooks being used
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in public schools, what we found is this:
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by and large, the Origins of Historical Science
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is based upon man's ideas about the past--for instance, the ideas of Darwin.
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And our research has found that public school textbooks
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are using the same word "science" for Observational Science
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and Historical Science. They arbitrarily define science
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as naturalism and outlaw the supernatural.
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They present molecules-to-man evolution as fact.
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They are imposing, I believe, the religion
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of naturalism or atheism on generations of students.
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You see, I assert that the word "science" has been hijacked
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by secularists in teaching evolution to force the religion
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of naturalism on generations of kids.
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Secular evolutionists teach that all life developed
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by natural processes from some primordial form.
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That man is just an evolved animal, which has great bearing
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on how we view life and death.
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For instance, as Bill states, "It's very hard to accept,
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for many of us, that when you die, it's over.";
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But, you see, the Bible gives a totally different account of origins,
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of who we are, where we came from, the meaning of life, and our future.
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That through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin.
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But that God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son.
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Whoever believes in Him should not perish and have everlasting life.
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So is creation a viable model of origins in today's modern scientific era?
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I say the creation/evolution debate is a conflict
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between two philosophical worldviews based on two different accounts
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of origins or science beliefs and creation
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is the only viable model of historical science confirmed
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by observational science in today's modern scientific era.
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And that is time. I had the unenviable job of being the time-keeper here.
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So I'm like the referee in football that you don't like,
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but I will periodically, if either one of our debaters
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runs over on anything, I will stop them in the name of keeping it fair for all.
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Uh, Mr. Ham, thank you for your comments. Now it's Mr. Nye's
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turn for a five minute opening statement. Mr. Nye.
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Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here.
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I very much appreciate you including me in your, uh, facility here.
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Now, looking around the room I think I see just one bow tie.
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Is that right? Just one. And I'm telling you, once you try it--
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oh, there's yes, two! That's great. I started wearing bow ties
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when I was young, in high school.
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My father showed me how. His father showed him.
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And there's a story associated with this, which I find remarkable.
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My grandfather was in the rotary, and he attended
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a convention in Philadelphia, and even in those days,
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at the turn of the last century, people rented tuxedos.
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And the tuxedo came with a bow tie--untied bow tie.
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So he didn't know how to tie it.
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So...wasn't sure what to do, but he just took a chance.
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He went to the hotel room next door, knocked on the door,
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"Excuse me? Can you help me tie my tie?"
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And the guy said, "Sure. Lie down on the bed."
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So...my grandfather wanted to have the tie on,
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wasn't sure what he was getting into, so he's said
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to have lain on the bed and the guy tied a perfect bow tie knot and,
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quite reasonably, my grandfather said,
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"Thank you. Why'd I have to lie down on the bed?"
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The guy said, "I'm an undertaker."
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(audience laughs)
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"It's the only way I know how to do it."
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Now that story was presented to me as a true story.
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It may or may not be. But it gives you something to think about.
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And it's certainly something to remember.
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So, here tonight, we're gonna have two stories
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and we can compare Mr. Ham's story to the story
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from what I will call the outside, from mainstream science.
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The question tonight is: Does Ken Ham's Creation Model hold up?
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Is it "viable"?
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So let me ask you all: what would you be doing if you weren't here tonight?
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That's right, you'd be home watching CSI.
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CSI Petersburg. Is that coming--I think it's coming.
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And on CSI, there is no distinction made between
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historical science and observational science.
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These are constructs unique to Mr. Ham.
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We don't normally have these anywhere in the world except here.
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Natural laws that applied in the past apply now.
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That's why they're natural laws. That's why we embrace them.
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That's how we made all these discoveries
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that enabled all this remarkable technology.
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So CSI is a fictional show, but it's based absolutely
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on real people doing real work.
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When you go to a crime scene and find evidence,
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you have clues about the past. And you trust those clues
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and you embrace them and you move forward to convict somebody.
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Mr. Ham and his followers have this remarkable view
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of a worldwide flood that somehow influenced everything that we observe in nature.
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A 500 foot wooden boat, eight zookeepers for 14,000 individual animals,
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every land plant in the world underwater for a full year?
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I ask us all: is that really reasonable?
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You'll hear a lot about the Grand Canyon, I imagine, also,
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which is a remarkable place and it has fossils.
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And the fossils in the Grand Canyon are found in layers.
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There's not a single place in the Grand Canyon
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where the fossils of one type of animal cross over
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into the fossils of another. In other words,
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when there was a big flood on the earth, you would expect
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drowning animals to swim up to a higher level.
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Not any one of them did. Not a single one.
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If you could find evidence of that, my friends, you could change the world.
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Now, I just wanna remind us all:
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there are billions of people in the world who are deeply religious,
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who get enriched, who have a wonderful sense of community from their religion.
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They worship together, they eat together, they live
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in their communities and enjoy each others company. Billions of people.
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But these same people do not embrace the extraordinary view
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that the earth is somehow only 6,000 years old. That is unique.
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And here's my concern: what keeps the United States ahead,
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what makes the United States a world leader, is our technology,
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our new ideas, our innovations. If we continue to eschew science,
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eschew the process and try to divide science
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into observational science and historic science,
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we are not gonna move forward. We will not embrace natural laws.
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We will not make discoveries. We will not invent and innovate and stay ahead.
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So if you ask me if Ken Ham's Creation model is viable, I say no.
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It is absolutely not viable. So stay with us over the next period
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and you can compare my evidence to his. Thank you all very much.
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(audience applauds) (moderator) All right.
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Very nice start by both of our debaters here.
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And now each of one will offer a thirty minute,
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illustrated presentation to fully offer their case for us to consider.
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Mr. Ham, you're up.
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Well, the debate topic was "Is creation a viable model
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of origins in today's modern scientific era?"
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And I made the statement at the end of my opening statement:
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creation is the only viable model of historical science
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confirmed by observational science in today's modern scientific era.
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And I said what we need to be doing is actually defining
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our terms and, particularly three terms: science, creation, and evolution.
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Now, I discussed the meaning of the word "science"
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and what is meant by experimental and observational science briefly.
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And that both Creationists and Evolutionists
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can be great scientists, for instance. I mentioned Craig Venter, a biologist.
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He's an atheist and he's a great scientist.
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He was one of the first researchers to sequence the human genome.
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I also mentioned Dr. Raymond Damadian, who actually invented the MRI scanner.
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I want you to meet a biblical creationist who is a scientist and an inventor.
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Hi, my name is Dr. Raymond Damadian.
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I am a Young Earth Creation Scientist and believe that God
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created the world in six 24 hour days,
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just as recorded in the book of Genesis.
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By God's grace and the devoted prayers of my Godly mother-in-law,
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I invented the MRI scanner in 1969.
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The idea that scientists who believe the earth
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is 6,000 years old cannot do real science is simply wrong.
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Well, he's most adamant about that.
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And, actually, he revolutionized medicine! He's a biblical Creationist.
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And I encourage children to follow people like that, make them their heroes.
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Let me introduce you to another biblical Creation Scientist.
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My name is Danny Faulkner.
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I received my PhD in astronomy from Indiana University.
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For 26 and a half years, I was a professor
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at the University of South Carolina, Lancaster,
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where I hold the rank of distinguished professor emeritus.
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Upon my retirement from the university in January of 2013,
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I joined the research staff at Answers in Genesis. I'm a stellar astronomer.
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That means my primary interests is stars, but I'm particularly
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interested in the study of eclipsing binary stars.
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And I've published many articles in the astronomy literature,
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places such as the the Astrophysical Journal,
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the Astronomical Journal, and the Observatory.
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There is nothing in observational astronomy that contradicts a recent creation.
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I also mentioned Dr. Stuart Burgess,
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professor of Engineering Design at Bristol University in England.
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Now he invented and designed a double-action worm gear set
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for the three hinges of the robotic arm on a very expensive satellite.
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And if that had not worked, if that gear set had not worked,
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that whole satellite would've been useless.
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Yet, Dr. Burgess is a biblical Creationist. He believes, just as I believe.
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Now, think about this for a moment.
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A scientist like Dr. Burgess,
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who believe in Creation, just as I do,
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a small minority in this scientific world.
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But let's see what he says about scientists believing in Creation.
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I find that many of my colleagues in academia are sympathetic
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to the creationist viewpoint, including biologists.
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However, there are often afraid to speak out because of the criticisms
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they would get from the media and atheists lobby.
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I agree. That's a real problem today.
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We need to have freedom to be able to speak on these topics.
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You know, I just want to say, by the way, that Creationists,
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non-Christian scientists, I should say,
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non-Christian scientists are really borrowing
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from the Christian worldview anyway to carry out their experimental,
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observational science. Think about it. When they're doing
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observational science, using the scientific method,
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they have to assume the laws of logic,
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they have to assume the laws of nature,
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they have to assume the uniformity of nature.
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I mean, think about it. If the universe came about by natural processes,
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where'd the laws of logic come from? Did they just pop into existence?
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Are we in a stage now where we only have half-logic?
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So, you see, I have a question for Bill Nye.
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How do you account for the laws of logic and the laws of nature
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from a naturalistic worldview that excludes the existence of God?
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Now, in my opening statement I also discussed
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a different type of science or knowledge, origins or historical science.
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See again, there's a confusion here. There's a misunderstanding here.
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People, by and large, have not been taught to look at
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what you believe about the past as different to what you're observing in the present.
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You don't observe the past directly.
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Even when you think about the creation account.
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I mean, we can't observe God creating.
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We can't observe the creation of Adam and Eve. We admit that.
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We're willing to admit our beliefs about the past.
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But, see, what you see in the present is very different.
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Even some public school textbooks actually sort of acknowledge
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the difference between historical and observational science.
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Here is an Earth Science textbook that's used in public schools.
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And we read this. In contrast to physical geology,
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the aim of historical geology is to understand Earth's long history.
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Then they make this statement.
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Historical geology--so we're talking historical science--
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tries to establish a timeline of the vast number of physical
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and biological changes that have occurred in the past.
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We study physical geology before historical geology
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because we first must understand how Earth works before we try to unravel its past.
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In other words, we observe things in the present and then,
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okay, we're assuming that that's always happened in the past
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and we're gonna try and figure out how this happened.
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See, there is a difference between what you observe
-
and what happened in the past. Let me illustrate it this way:
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If Bill Nye and I went to the Grand Canyon,
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we could agree that that's a Coconino sandstone in the Hermit shale.
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There's the boundary. They're sitting one on top of the other.
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We could agree on that. But you know what we would disagree on?
-
I mean, we could even analyse the minerals and agree on that.
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But we would disagree on how long it took to get there.
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But see, none of us saw the sandstone or the shale being laid down.
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There's a supposed 10 million year gap there.
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But I don't see a gap.
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But that might be different to what Bill Nye would see.
-
But there's a difference between what you actually observe
-
directly and then your interpretation regarding the past.
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When I was at the Goddard Space Center a number of years ago
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I met Creationists and Evolutionists who were
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both working on the Hubble telescope.
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They agreed on how to build the Hubble telescope.
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You know what they disagreed on? Well, they disagreed on
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how to interpret the data the telescope obtained
-
in regard to the age of the universe.
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And, you know, we could on and talk about lots
-
of other similar sorts of things. For instance,
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I've heard Bill Nye talk about how a smoke detector works,
-
using the radioactive element Americium. And, you know what?
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I totally agree with him on that. We agree how it works.
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We agree how radioactivity enables that to work.
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But if you're then gonna use radioactive elements
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and talk about the age of the Earth,
-
you've got a problem cause you weren't there.
-
We gotta understand parent elements, daughter elements and so on.
-
We could agree whether you're Creationist or Evolutionist
-
on the technology to put the rover on Mars, but we're gonna
-
disagree on how to interpret the origin of Mars.
-
I mean, there are some people that believed it
-
was even a global flood on Mars, and there's no liquid water on Mars.
-
We're gonna disagree maybe on our interpretation of origins
-
and you can't prove either way because, not from
-
an observational science perspective, because we've only got the present.
-
Creationists and Evolutionists both work on medicines and vaccines.
-
You see? It doesn't matter whether you're a Creationist or an Evolutionist,
-
all scientists have the same experimental observational science.
-
So I have a question for Bill Nye: Can you name one piece
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of technology that could only have been developed
-
starting with the belief in molecules-to-man evolution?
-
Now, here's another important fact.
-
Creationists and Evolutionists all have the same evidence.
-
Bill Nye and I have the same Grand Canyon. We don't disagree on that.
-
We all have the same fish fossils. This is one from the Creation Museum.
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The same dinosaur skeleton, the same animals, the same humans,
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the same DNA, the same radioactive decay elements that we see.
-
We have the same universe...actually, we all have the same evidences.
-
It's not the evidences that are different.
-
It's a battle over the same evidence in regard to how we interpret the past.
-
And you know why that is?
-
Cause it's really a battle over worldviews and starting points.
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It's a battle over philosophical worldviews
-
and starting points, but the same evidence. Now, I admit,
-
my starting point is that God is the ultimate authority.
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But if someone doesn't accept that, then man has to be the ultimate authority.
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And that's really the difference when it comes down to it.
-
You see, I've been emphasizing the difference
-
between historical origin science, knowledge about
-
the past when you weren't there,
-
and we need to understand that we weren't there.
-
Or experimental observational science, using
-
your five senses in the present, the scientific method,
-
what you can directly observe, test, repeat.
-
There's a big difference between those two.
-
And that's not what's being taught in our public schools
-
and that's why kids aren't being taught to think
-
critically and correctly about the origins issue.
-
But you know, it's also important to understand,
-
when talking about Creation and Evolution, both involve
-
historical science and observational science.
-
You see, the role of observational science is this:
-
it can be used to confirm or otherwise
-
one's historical science based on one's starting point.
-
Now, when you think about the debate topic and what I have
-
learned concerning creation, if our origins
-
or historical science based on the bible, the bible's account
-
of origins is true, then there should be predictions
-
from this that we can test, using observational science.
-
And there are. For instance, based on the bible,
-
we'd expect to find evidence concerning an intelligence,
-
confirming an intelligence produced life.
-
We'd expect to find evidence confirming after their kind.
-
The bible says God made kinds of animals and plants
-
after their kind, implying each kind produces it's own,
-
not that one kind changes into another.
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You'd expect to find evidence confirming a global flood of Noah's day.
-
Evidence confirming one race of humans because we
-
all go back to Adam and Eve, biologically, that would mean there's one race.
-
Evidence confirming the Tower of Babel, that God gave different languages.
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Evidence confirming a young universe.
-
Now, I can't go through all of those, but a couple of them we'll look at briefly.
-
After their kind, evidence confirming that--
-
in the Creation Museum, we have a display featuring replicas,
-
actually, of Darwin's finches. They're called Darwin's finches.
-
Darwin collected finches from the Galapagos
-
and took them back to England and we see the different species,
-
the different beak sizes here. And, you know,
-
from the specimens Darwin obtained in the Galapagos,
-
he actually pondered these things and how do you explain this.
-
And in his notes, actually, he came up with this diagram here, a tree.
-
And he actually said, "I think." So he was talking about
-
different species and maybe those species came from some common ancestor,
-
but, actually, when it comes to finches, we actually would agree,
-
as Creationists, that different finch species came from a common ancestor, but a finch.
-
That's what they would have to come from.
-
And see, Darwin wasn't just thinking about species.
-
Darwin had a much bigger picture in mind.
-
When you look at the Origins of Species and read that book,
-
you'll find he made this statement: from such low and intermediate form,
-
both animals and plants may have been developed;
-
and, if we admit this, we must likewise admit that
-
all organic beings which have ever lived on this Earth
-
may be descended from some one primordial form.
-
So he had in mind what we today know as an evolutionary tree of life,
-
that all life has arisen from some primordial form.
-
Now, when you consider the classifications system,
-
kingdom phylum class or the family genus species,
-
we would say, as Creationists, we have many creation scientists
-
that research this and, for lots of reasons,
-
I would say, the kind in Genesis 1 is really more at
-
the family level of classification. For instance, there's one dog kind.
-
There's one cat kind. Even though you have different
-
generative species, that would mean, by the way,
-
you didn't need anywhere near the number of animals
-
on the ark as people think.
-
You wouldn't need all the species of dogs, just two.
-
Not all the species of cats--just two.
-
And, you see, based on the biblical account there in Genesis One,
-
Creationists have drawn up what they believe is a creation origin.
-
In other words, they're saying, "Look. There's great variation
-
in the genetics of dogs and finches and so on."
-
And so, over time, particularly after Noah's flood,
-
you'd expect if there were two dogs, for instance,
-
you could end up with different species of dogs because
-
there's an incredible amount of variability in the genes of any creature.
-
And so you'd expect these different species up here, but there's limits.
-
Dogs will always be dogs, finches will always be finches.
-
Now, as a Creationist, I maintain that observational science
-
actually confirms this model, based on the bible.
-
For instance, take dogs. Okay?
-
In a scientific paper dated January 2014--that's this year--
-
scientists working at the University of California stated this:
-
We provide several lines of evidence supporting
-
a single origin for dogs, and disfavoring alternative models
-
in which dog lineages arise separately
-
from geographically distinct wolf populations.
-
And they put this diagram in the paper.
-
By the way, that diagram is very, very similar
-
to this diagram that Creationists proposed based upon
-
the creation account in Genesis. In other words,
-
you have a common dog ancestor that gives rise
-
to the different species of dogs, and that's exactly
-
what we're saying here. Now, in the Creation Museum,
-
we actually show the finches here and you see the finches
-
with their different beaks, beside dogs skulls, different species of dogs.
-
By the way, there's more variation in the dog skeleton
-
here than there are in these finches. Yet, the dogs,
-
wow, that's never used as an example of evolution,
-
but the finches are, particularly in the public school textbooks.
-
Students are taught, "Ah! See the changes that are occurring here?"
-
And here's another problem that we've got.
-
Not only has the word "science" been hijacked by secularists,
-
I believe the word "evolution" has been hijacked by secularists.
-
The word "evolution" has been hijacked using what I call a bait and switch.
-
Let me explain to you.
-
The word "evolution" is being used in public school textbooks,
-
and we often see it in documentaries and so on,
-
is used for observable changes that we would agree with,
-
and then used for unobservable changes, such as molecules-to-man.
-
Let me explain to you what's really going on because
-
I was a science teacher in the public schools
-
and I know what the students were taught and I checked
-
the public school textbooks anyway to know what they're taught.
-
See, students are taught today, look, there's all
-
these different animals, plants, but they're all part
-
of this great, big tree of life that goes back to some primordial form.
-
And, look, we see changes. Changes in finches,
-
changes in dogs and so on. Now, we don't deny the changes.
-
You see that. You see different species of finches, different species of dogs.
-
But then they put it all together in this evolutionary tree--
-
but that's what you don't observe. You don't observe that.
-
That's belief there. That's the historical science
-
that I would say is wrong. But, you know, what you do observe,
-
you do observe different species of dogs, different species of finches,
-
but then there are limits. You don't see one kind changing into another.
-
Actually, we're told that if you teach creation
-
in the public schools as teaching religion,
-
if you teach evolution as science, I'm gonna say, "Wait a minute!"
-
Actually, the creation model here, based upon the Bible,
-
observational science confirms this. This is what you're observe!
-
You don't observe this tree.
-
Actually, it's the public school textbooks that are teaching a belief,
-
imposing it on students, and they need to be teaching them
-
observational science to understand the reality of what's happening.
-
Now, what we found is that public school textbooks present
-
the evolutionary tree as science, but reject the creation orchard as religion.
-
But observational science confirms the creation orchard--
-
so public school textbooks are rejecting observational science
-
and imposing a naturalistic religion on students.
-
The word "evolution" has been hijacked using a bait and switch
-
to indoctrinate students to accept evolutionary belief
-
as observational science.
-
Let me introduce you to another scientist, Richard Lenski,
-
from Michigan State University. He's a great scientist,
-
he's known for culturing e-coli in the lab...
-
and he found there was some e-coli that actually seemed
-
to develop the ability to grow on cistrate on substrate.
-
But Richard Lenski is here, mentioned in this book,
-
and it's called "Evolution in the Lab".
-
So the ability to grow on citrate is said to be evolution.
-
And there are those that say, "Hey! This is against the Creationist."
-
For instance, Jerry Coin from University of Chicago says,
-
"Lenski's experiment is also yet another poke in the eye
-
for anti-evolutionists."
-
He says, "The thing I like most is it says you can get
-
these complex traits evolving by a combination of unlikely events."
-
But is it a poke in the eye for anti-evolutionists?
-
Is it really seeing complex traits evolving?
-
What does it mean that some of these bacteria are able to grow on citrate?
-
Let me introduce you to another biblical Creationist, who is a scientist.
-
Hi, my name's Dr. Andrew Fabich.
-
I got my PhD from University of Oklahoma in Microbiology.
-
I teach at Liberty University and I do research on e-coli in the intestine.
-
I've published it in secular journals from the American Society for Microbiology,
-
including infection and immunity and applied environmental microbiology
-
as well as several others.
-
My work has been cited even in the past year in the journals Nature,
-
Science Translational Medicine, Public Library of Science,
-
Public Library of Science Genetics. It's cited regularly
-
in those journals and while I was taught nothing but evolution,
-
I don't accept that position.
-
I do my research from a creation perspective.
-
When I look at the evidence that people cite as e-coli,
-
supposedly, evolving over 30 years, over 30,000 generations in the lab,
-
and people say that it is now able to grow on citrate,
-
I don't deny that it grows on citrate,
-
but it's not any kind of new information.
-
The information's already there and it's just a switch
-
that gets turned on and off and that's what they reported in there.
-
There's nothing new.
-
See, students need to be told what's really going on here.
-
Certainly there's change, but it's not change necessary for molecules-to-man.
-
Now, we could look at other predictions.
-
What about evidence confirming one race?
-
Well, when we look at the human population we see lots of differences.
-
But based on Darwin's ideas of human evolution,
-
as presented in The Descent of Man, I mean,
-
Darwin did teach in The Descent of Man there were
-
lower races and higher races.
-
Would you believe, that back in the 1900s, one of the most
-
popular biology textbooks used in the public schools in America taught this:
-
At the present time there exists upon Earth
-
five races or varieties of man...and finally,
-
the highest type of all, the Caucasians, represented
-
by the civilized white inhabitants of Europe and America.
-
Can you imagine if that was in the public schools today?
-
And, yet, that's what was taught, but it was based on
-
Darwin's ideas that are wrong. You have a wrong foundation.
-
You're gonna have a wrong worldview.
-
Now, had they started from the Bible, and from
-
the creation account in the Bible, what does it teach?
-
Well, we're all descendants of Adam and Eve.
-
We go through the Tower of Babel, different languages,
-
so different people groups formed distinct characteristics.
-
But we'd expect, we'd say, you know what,
-
that means there's biologically only one race of humans.
-
Well, I mentioned Dr. Venter before.
-
And he was a researcher with the human genome project.
-
And you'll remember, in the year 2000, this was headline news,
-
and what we read was this: they had put together
-
a draft of the entire sequence of the human genome
-
and unanimously declared, there is only one race - the human race.
-
Wow! Who would have guessed?
-
But you see there we have observational science
-
confirming the Creation account,
-
not confirming at all Darwin's ideas.
-
Now, there's much more that can be said
-
on each of these topics.
-
Obviously, you can't do that in a short time like this.
-
And you could do a lot more research.
-
I suggest you visit our website at Answers in Genesis
-
for a lot more information.
-
So, the debate topic: Is creation a viable model
-
of origins in today's scientific era?
-
I said, we need to define the terms,
-
and particularly, the term science
-
and the term evolution. And I believe we need
-
to understand how they are being used to impose
-
an anti-God religion on generations of unsuspecting students.
-
You see, I keep emphasizing we do need to
-
understand the difference between experimental or
-
observational science and historical science.
-
And you know what?
-
The secularists don't like me doing this
-
because they don't want to admit
-
that there's a belief aspect to what they're saying.
-
And there is. And they can't get away from it.
-
Let me illustrate this with a statement from Bill Nye.
-
"You can show the Earth is not flat.
-
You can show the Earth is not 10,000 years old."
-
By the way, I agree. You can show the Earth is not flat.
-
There's a video from the Galileo spacecraft showing
-
the Earth, and speeded up of course, but spinning.
-
You can see it's a sphere. You can observe that.
-
You can't observe the age of the Earth.
-
You don't see that. You see again, I emphasize,
-
there's a big difference between historical science,
-
talking about the past, and observational science,
-
talking about the present.
-
And I believe what's happening is this, that students are being
-
indoctrinated by the confusion of terms:
-
the hijacking of the word science and the hijacking
-
of the word evolution in a bait-and-switch.
-
Let me illustrate further with this video clip.
-
Because here I assert that Bill Nye is equating
-
observational science with historical science.
-
And I also say it's not a mystery when you understand the difference.
-
Howie, people with these deeply held religious beliefs,
-
they embrace that whole literal interpretation
-
of the Bible as written in English, as a worldview.
-
And, at the same time, they accept aspirin,
-
antibiotic drugs, airplanes, but they're able
-
to hold these two worldviews. And this is a mystery.
-
Actually, I suggest to you it's not a mystery.
-
You see, when I'm talking about antibiotics,
-
aspirin, smoke detectors, jet planes,
-
that's Ken Ham the Observational Science Bloke.
-
I'm an Australian. We call guy's "blokes", okay?
-
But when you're talking about creation and thousands of years
-
of the age of the Earth,
-
that's Ken Ham the Historical Science Bloke.
-
I'm willing to admit that.
-
Now, when Bill Nye's talking about aspirin,
-
antibiotics, jet planes, smoke detectors,
-
he does a great job at that.
-
I used to enjoy watching him on TV too.
-
That's Bill Nye the Observational Science Guy.
-
But when he's talking about evolution and millions of years,
-
I'm challenging him that that's Bill Nye the Historical Science Guy.
-
And I challenge the evolutionist to admit the belief
-
aspects of their particular worldview.
-
Now, at the Creation Museum, we're only too willing
-
to admit our beliefs based upon the Bible,
-
but we also teach people the difference between
-
beliefs and what one can actually observe
-
and experiment with in the present.
-
I believe we're teaching people to think critically
-
and to think in the right terms about science.
-
I believe it's the creationists that should be
-
educating the kids out there because we're teaching
-
them the right way to think. You know, we admit it.
-
Our origins of historical science is based upon the Bible,
-
but I'm just challenging evolutionists to admit
-
the belief aspects of evolution
-
and be upfront about the difference here.
-
As I said, I'm only too willing to admit
-
my historical science based on the Bible.
-
And let me further go on to define the term "creation" as we use it.
-
By creation, we mean, here at Answers in Genesis
-
and the Creation Museum, we mean the account based on the Bible.
-
Yes, I take Genesis as literal history, as Jesus did.
-
And, here at the Creation Museum, we walk people through that history.
-
We walk them through creation, the perfect creation.
-
That God made Adam and Eve, land animal kinds, sea-creatures and so on.
-
And then sin and death entered the world.
-
There was no death before sin.
-
That means how can you have billions of dead things before man sinned?
-
And then, the catastrophe of Noah's flood. If there was a global flood,
-
you'd expect to find billions of dead things buried in rock layers laid down by water all over the earth.
-
Had to say that because a lot of our supporters would want me to.
-
And what do you find?--Billions of dead things buried in rock layers laid down by water all over the earth.
-
Confusion, the tower of Babel. God gave different languages so you get different people groups.
-
So this is the geological, astronomical, anthropological, biological history as recorded in the Bible.
-
So this is concerning what happened in the past that explains the present.
-
And then, of course, that God's Son stepped into history to be Jesus Christ, the God-Man
-
to die on the cross, be raised from the dead. And one day there's going to be
-
a new heavens and a new earth to come. And, you know, not only
-
is this an understanding of history to explain the
-
geology, biology, astronomy, and so on to connect the present to the past.
-
But it's also a foundation for our whole world view.
-
For instance, in Matthew 19, when Jesus was asked about marriage, he said,
-
"Have you not read He who made them at the beginning made them male and female?"
-
And said, "For this cause shall a man leave his mother and father and be joined to his wife. And they'll be one flesh"
-
He quoted from Genesis as literal history--Genesis 1 and 2. God invented marriage, by the way.
-
That's where marriage comes from. And it's to be a man and a woman.
-
And not only marriage. Ultimately, every single Biblical doctrine of theology
-
directly or indirectly, is founded in Genesis.
-
Why is there sin in the world? Genesis.
-
Why is there death? Genesis.
-
Why do we wear clothes? Genesis.
-
Why did Jesus die on the cross? Genesis.
-
It's a very important book. It's foundational to all Christian doctrine.
-
And you see, when we look at that, what I call the seven C's of History
-
that we walk people through here at the museum,
-
think about how it all connects together--a perfect creation.
-
It'll be perfect again in the future.
-
Sin and death--end of the world. That's why God's son died on the cross
-
to conquer death and offer a free gift of salvation.
-
The flood of Noah's day, a reminder that the flood was a
-
judgement because of man's wickedness but at the same time
-
a message of God's grace and salvation.
-
As Noah and his family had to go through a door to be saved,
-
so we need to go through a door to be saved.
-
Jesus Christ said, "I am the door. By me, if any man
-
enter in, he'll be saved. And we make no apology
-
about the fact that what we're on about is this:
-
"If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and
-
believe in your heart God has raised him from the dead,
-
you'll be saved. Now, as soon as I said that,
-
see if people say, "See, if you allow creation in schools,
-
for instance, if you'll ask students to even hear about it,
-
ah, this is religion."
-
You know, let me illustrate this,
-
talking about a recent battle in Texas over textbooks
-
in the public school. A newspaper report said this:
-
"Textbook and classroom curriculum battles have long
-
raged in Texas pitting creationists - those who see
-
God's hand in the creation of the universe-
-
against academics..."
-
Stop right there. Notice creationists... academics.
-
Creationists can't be academics. Creationists can't be scientists.
-
See, it's the way things are worded out there.
-
It's an indoctrination that's going on.
-
We worry about religious and political ideology
-
trumping scientific fact. Wait a minute.
-
What do I mean by science? You're talking about
-
what you observe, or are you talking about your beliefs about the past?
-
Now, Kathy Miller is the president of the Texas Freedom Network and
-
she has vocally spoken out. She's spoken out about this textbook battle there in Texas.
-
And the mission statement of the organization she's president of says, "The Texas Freedom Network
-
advances a mainstream agenda of religious freedom and individual liberties
-
to counter the religious right." Religious freedom... individual liberties. Hmm.
-
And then she makes this statement: "Science education..." What does she mean by science?
-
"should be based on mainstream science education, not on personal idealogical beliefs
-
of unqualified reviewers." Wait a minute. They want religious liberty and not personal
-
ideological beliefs? I assert this: public school textbooks are using the same word "science"
-
for observational and historical science. They arbitrarily define science as naturalism
-
and outlaw the supernatural. They present molecules-to-man evolution as as fact.
-
And they are imposing the religion of naturalism on generations of students.
-
They're imposing their ideology on the students
-
and everything's explained by natural processes.
-
That is a religion. What do you mean by religious liberty?
-
They tolerate their religion.
-
See, the battle is really about authority.
-
It's more than just science or evolution or creation.
-
It's about who is the authority in this world, man or God?
-
If you start with naturalism, then what about morals?
-
Who decides right and wrong? Well, it's subjective.
-
Marriage? Well, whatever you want it to be.
-
Get rid of old people. I mean, why not?
-
They're just animals, they're costing us a lot of money.
-
Abortion. Get rid of spare cats, get rid of spare kids. We're all animals.
-
But if you start from God's word, there are moral absolutes.
-
God decides right and wrong. Marriage--one man and one woman.
-
Sanctity of life--we care for old people. They're made in the image of God.
-
Life begins at fertilization, so abortion is killing a human being.
-
We do see the collapse of Christian morality
-
in our culture and increasing moral relativism
-
because generations of kids are being taught the religion
-
of naturalism and that the Bible can't be trusted.
-
And so, again, I say creation is the only viable model
-
of historical science confirmed by observational science
-
in today's modern scientific era. You know what?
-
I'm a science teacher. I want to see kids taught science.
-
I love science. I want to see more (inaudible) in the world.
-
You know, if we teach them the whole universe
-
is a result of natural processes and not designed
-
by a creative God, they might be looking in the wrong places
-
or have the wrong idea when they're looking
-
at the creation in regard to how you develop technology
-
because if they look at it as just random processes,
-
that could totally influence the way they think.
-
If they understand it was a perfect world marred by sin,
-
that could have a great affect on how they then look
-
for overcoming diseases and problems in the world.
-
I want children to be taught the right foundation,
-
that there's a God who created them, who loves them,
-
who died on the cross for them and that they're special.
-
They're made in the image of God.
-
(moderator) There you go. Thank you, Mr. Ham.
-
-We can applaud Mr. Ham's presentation.
-(audience applauds)
-
And, you know, it did occur to me when you had
-
my old friend Larry King up there, you could've just asked him.
-
He's been around a long time. And he's a smart guy!
-
He could probably answer for all of us. Now, let's all be
-
attentive to Mr. Nye as he gives us his 30 minute presentation.
-
Thank you very much and, Mr. Ham, I learned something.
-
Thank you. But let's take it back around to question at hand:
-
does Ken Ham's creation model hold up? Is it viable?
-
So, for me, of course...well...take a look.
-
We're here in Kentucky on layer upon layer upon layer of limestone.
-
I stopped at the side of the road today and picked up
-
just a piece of limestone. It has a fossil right there.
-
Now, in these many, many layers, in this vicinity of Kentucky,
-
there are coral animal--fossils, Zooxanthella--
-
and when you look at it closely,
-
you can see that they lived their entire lives.
-
They lived typically 20 years, sometimes more than that
-
when the water conditions are correct.
-
And so we are standing on millions of layers of ancient life.
-
How could those animals have lived their entire life,
-
and formed these layers, in just 4,000 years?
-
There isn't enough time since Mr. Ham's flood
-
for this limestone that we're standing on to come into existence.
-
My scientific colleagues go to places like Greenland,
-
the Arctic, they go to Antarctica, and they drill
-
into the ice with hollow drill bits. It's not that extraordinary.
-
Many of you have probably done it yourselves, drilling other things.
-
Hole saws to put locks in doors, for example.
-
And we pull out long cylinders of ice, long ice rods.
-
And these are made of snow and it's called "snow ice".
-
And snow ice forms over the winter as snowflakes fall
-
and are crushed down by subsequent layers. They're crushed together,
-
entrapping the little bubbles and the little bubbles must
-
needs be ancient atmosphere. There's nobody running around
-
with a hypodermic needle, squirting ancient atmosphere into the bubbles.
-
And we find certain of these cylinders to have 680,000 layers.
-
680,000 snow/winter/summer cycles.
-
How could it be that just 4,000 years ago all of this ice formed?
-
Let's just run some numbers.
-
This is some scenes from the lovely Antarctic.
-
Let's say we have 680,000 layers of snow ice
-
and 4,000 years since the Great Flood.
-
That would mean we'd need 170 winter-summer cycles
-
every year, for the last 4,000 years.
-
I mean, wouldn't someone have noticed that? Wow!
-
Wouldn't someone have noticed that there's been
-
winter-summer-winter-summer 170 times one year?
-
If we go to California, we find enormous stands of bristlecone pines.
-
Some of them are over 6,000 years old. 6,800 years old.
-
There's a famous tree in Sweden, Old Tjikko, is 9,550 years old.
-
How could these trees be there if there was an enormous flood just 4,000 years ago?
-
You can try this yourself, everybody.
-
Get, I mean, I don't mean to be mean to trees,
-
but get a sapling and put it under water for a year.
-
It will not survive in general. Nor will its seeds.
-
They just won't make it. So how could these trees
-
be that old if the Earth is only 4,000 years old?
-
Now, when we go to the Grand Canyon--which is an astonishing place
-
and I recommend to everybody in the world to someday visit the Grand Canyon--
-
you find layer upon layer of ancient rocks.
-
And if there was this enormous flood that you speak of,
-
wouldn't there have been churning and bubbling and roiling?
-
How would these things have settled out?
-
Your claim that they settled out in an extraordinary short amount of time
-
is for me, not satisfactory. You can look at these rocks. You can look at rocks that are younger.
-
You can go to seashores where there's sand. This is what geologists on the outside do,
-
study the rate at which soil is deposited at the end of rivers and deltas.
-
And we can see that it takes a long, long time for sediments to turn to stone.
-
Also, in this picture you can see where one type of sediment has intruded on another type.
-
Now, if that was uniform, wouldn't we expect it all to be even, without intrusion?
-
Furthermore, you can find places in the Grand Canyon where you see an ancient riverbed on that side
-
going to an ancient riverbed on that side and the Colorado River has cut through it.
-
And by the way, if this great flood drained through the Grand Canyon,
-
wouldn't there have been a Grand Canyon on every continent?
-
How could we not have Grand Canyons everywhere if this water drained away in this extraordinary
-
short amount of time? Four thousand years? Now when you look at these layers carefully,
-
you find these beautiful fossils. And when I say beautiful, I am inspired by them. They are remarkable
-
because we are looking at the past. You find down low. You'll find what you might consider
-
is, uh, rudimentary sea animals. Up above you'll find the famous trilobytes.
-
Above that you might find some clams, some oysters. And above that you find some mammals.
-
You never, ever find a higher animal mixed in with a lower one. You never find a lower one
-
trying to swim its way to a higher one. If it all happened in such an extraordinary short amount of time,
-
if this water drained away just like that, wouldn't we expect to see some turbulence?
-
And by the way, anyone here, really, if you can find one example of that, one example of that
-
anywhere in the world, the scientists of the world challenge you. They would embrace you. You would be a hero.
-
You would change the world if you could find one example of that anywhere.
-
People have looked, and looked and looked. They have not found a single one.
-
Now here's an interesting thing. These are fossil skulls that people have found all around the world.
-
It's by no means representative of all the fossil skulls that have been found, but these are all over the place.
-
Now, if you were to look at these, I can assure you, not any of them is a gorilla. Right?
-
If as Mr. Ham and his associates claim, there was just man and then everybody else, there were just
-
humans and all other species, where would you put modern humans among these skulls?
-
How did all these skulls get all over the earth in these extraordinary fashion? Where would you put us?
-
I can tell you we are on there and I encourage you, when you go home, to look it up.
-
Now, one of the extraordinary claims associated with Mr. Ham's worldview is that this giant boat
-
a very large wooden ship, went aground safely on a mountain in the Middle, what we now call the Middle East.
-
And so places like Australia are populated then by animals who somehow managed to get
-
from the Middle East all the way to Australia in the last 4,000 years.
-
Now that, to me, is an extraordinary claim. We would expect then, somewhere between the Middle East
-
and Australia, we would expect to find evidence of kangaroos. We would expect to find
-
some fossils, some bones in the last 4,000 years. Somebody would have been hopping along there
-
and died along the way, and we'd find them. And furthermore, there's a claim
-
that there was a land bridge that allowed these animals to get from Asia all the way
-
to the continent of Australia. And that land bridge has disappeared, has disappeared in the last
-
4,000 years. No navigator, no diver, no U.S. Navy submarine, no one has ever detected any evidence
-
of this, let alone any evidence of fossils of kangaroos. So, your expectation is not met.
-
It doesn't seem to hold up. So, let's see. If there are 4,000 years since Ken Ham's flood
-
and let's say, as he said many times, there are 7,000 kinds,
-
today the very, very lowest estimate is that there are about 8.7 million species.
-
But a much more reasonable estimate is it's 50 million, or even 100 million,
-
when you start counting the viruses and the bacteria and all the beetles that must be extant
-
in the tropical rain forests that we haven't found. So we'll take a number which I think is pretty reasonable,
-
16 million species today. If these came from 7,000 kinds,
-
let's say we have 7,000 subtracted from 15 million,
-
that's 15,993. If 4,000 years, we have 365.25 days a year,
-
we would expect to find 11 new species every day.
-
So you'd go out into your yard, you wouldn't just find a different bird, a new bird
-
you'd find a different kind of bird, a whole new species, a bird!
-
Every day, a new species of fish, a new species of organisms you can't see, and so on.
-
I mean, this would be enormous news. The last 4,000 years people would have seen these changes among us.
-
So the Cincinnati Enquirer, I imagine, would carry a column right next to the weather report:
-
Today's New Species, and it would list these 11 every day, but we see no evidence of that.
-
There's no evidence of these species. There simply isn't enough time.
-
Now as you may know, I was graduated from engineering school and I was,
-
I got a job at Boeing. I worked on 747s. I, okay everybody relax, I was very well supervised.
-
Everything's fine. There's a tube in the 747 I kind of think of that's my tube.
-
But that aside, I travelled the highways of Washington state quite a bit.
-
I was a young guy. I had a motorcycle. I used to go mountain climbing in Washington state... Oregon.
-
And you can drive along and find these enormous boulders on top of the ground, enormous rocks,
-
huge, sitting on top of the ground. Now, out there, in regular academic pursuits, regular geology,
-
people have discovered that there was, used to be a lake in what is now Montana
-
which we charmingly refer to as Lake Missoula.
-
It's not there now but the evidence for it, of course, if I may, overwhelming.
-
And so, an ice dam would form at Lake Missoula and once in a while it would break.
-
It would build up and break. And there were multiple floods in my old state of Washington state.
-
And, just, before we go on, let me just say, go Seahawks! That was very gratifying, very gratifying for me.
-
Anyway you drive along the road and there are these rocks. So, if as is asserted here at this facility,
-
that the heavier rocks would sink to the bottom during a flood event,
-
the big rocks, and especially their shape, instead of aerodynamic,
-
the hydrodynamic, the water changing shape, as water flows past,
-
you'd expect them to sink to the bottom. But here are these enormous rocks right on the surface.
-
And there's no shortage of them. If you go driving in Washington state or Oregon
-
they're readily available. So how could those be there if the Earth is just 4,000 years old.
-
How could they be there if this one flood caused that?
-
Another remarkable thing I'd like everybody to consider, alone inherent in this worldview,
-
is that somehow Noah and his family were able to build a wooden ship that would house
-
14,000 individuals. There were 7,000 kinds and then, there's a boy and a girl for each one of those,
-
so there's about 14,000... 8 people. And these people were unskilled.
-
As far as anybody knows they had never built a wooden ship before.
-
Furthermore, they had to get all these animals on there. And they had to feed them.
-
And I understand that Mr. Ham has some explanations for that, which I frankly find extraordinary but
-
this is the premise of the bit. And we can then run a test, a scientific test.
-
People in the early 1900s built an extraordinary, large wooden ship, the Wyoming.
-
It was a six-masted schooner, the largest one ever built. It had a motor on it for winching cables and stuff.
-
But this boat had a great difficulty. It was not as big as the Titanic, but it was a very long ship.
-
It would twist in the sea. It would twist this way, this way, and this way.
-
And in all that twisting, it leaked. It leaked like crazy. The crew could not keep the ship dry.
-
And indeed, it eventually foundered and sank, a loss of all 14 hands. So there were 14 crewmen
-
aboard a ship built by very, very skilled shipwrights in New England.
-
These guys were the best in the world at wooden shipbuilding. And they couldn't build
-
a boat as big as the Ark is claimed to have been.
-
Is that reasonable? Is that possible that the best shipbuilders in the world couldn't do
-
what eight unskilled people, men and their wives, were able to do?
-
If you visit the National Zoo, in Washington D.C., it's 163 acres. And they have 400 species.
-
By the way, this picture that you're seeing was taken by spacecraft in space, orbiting the Earth.
-
If you told my grandfather, let alone my father, that we had that capability,
-
they would have been amazed. That capability comes from our fundamental understanding
-
of gravity, of material science, of physics, and life science, where you go looking.
-
This place is often, as any zoo, is often deeply concerned and criticized for how it treats its animals.
-
They have 400 species on 163 acres, 66 hectares. Is it reasonable that Noah and his colleagues,
-
his family, were able to maintain 14,000 animals and themselves, and feed them, aboard a ship
-
that was bigger than anyone's ever been able to build?
-
Now, here's the thing, what we want in science, science as practiced on the outside,
-
is an ability to predict. We want to have a natural law that is so obvious and clear,
-
so well understood that we can make predictions about what will happen.
-
We can predict that we can put a spacecraft in orbit and take a picture of Washington D.C.
-
We can predict that if we provide this much room for an elephant, it will live healthily
-
for a certain amount of time. I'll give you an example.
-
In the explanation provided by traditional science, of how we came to be,
-
we find as Mr. Ham alluded to many times in his recent remarks,
-
we find a sequence of animals in what, generally, is called "the fossil record."
-
This would be to say when we look at the layers, that you would find in Kentucky,
-
you look at them carefully, you find a sequence of animals, a succession.
-
And as one might expect, when you are looking at old records
-
there's some pieces seem to be missing, a gap.
-
So scientists got to thinking about this.
-
There are lungfish that jump from pond to pond in Florida
-
and end up in people's swimming pools.
-
And there are amphibians, frogs and toads, croaking and carrying on.
-
And so people wondered if there wasn't a fossil or an organism,
-
an animal, that had lived, that had characteristics of both.
-
People over the years had found that in Canada,
-
there was clearly a fossil marsh--
-
a place that used to be a swamp that had dried out.
-
And they found all kinds of happy swamp fossils there:
-
ferns, organisms, animals, fish that were recognized.
-
And people realized that if this, with the age of the rocks there,
-
as computed by traditional scientists, with the age of the rocks there,
-
this would be a reasonable place to look for an animal,
-
a fossil of an animal that lived there. And, indeed, scientists found it.
-
Tiktaalik, this fish-lizard guy.
-
And they found several specimens, it wasn't one individual.
-
In other words, they made a prediction, that this animal
-
would be found and it was found. So far, Mr. Ham and his worldview,
-
the Ken Ham creation model, does not have this capability.
-
It cannot make predictions and show results.
-
Here's an extraordinary one that I find remarkable.
-
There are certain fish, the Topminnows, that have
-
the remarkable ability to have sex with other fish,
-
traditional fish sex, and they can have sex with themselves.
-
Now, one of the old questions in life science, everybody,
-
one of the old chin strokers is why does any organism,
-
whether you're an ash tree, a sea jelly, a squid, a marmot,
-
why does anybody have sex? I mean, there are more bacteria
-
in your tummy right now then there are humans on Earth.
-
And bacteria, they don't bother with that, man.
-
They split themselves in half, they get new bacteria!
-
Like, let's get her done! Let's go. But why does any--
-
think of all the trouble a rose bush goes to make a flower and the thorns
-
and the bees flying around, interacting--why does anybody bother with all that?
-
And the answer seems to be...your enemies.
-
And your enemies are not lions and tigers and bears...oh my!
-
No, your enemies are germs and parasites.
-
That's what's gonna get you. Germs and parasites.
-
My first cousin's son died tragically from essentially the flu.
-
This is not some story I heard about. This is my first cousin, once removed.
-
Because, apparently, the virus had the right genes to attack his genes.
-
So when you have sex you have a new set of genes.
-
You have a new mixture. So people studied these Topminnows.
-
And they found that the ones who reproduced sexually
-
had fewer parasites that the ones who reproduced on their own.
-
This Black Spot disease--wait, wait, there's more.
-
In these populations, with flooding and so on, when river ponds get isolated,
-
then they dry up, then the river flows again.
-
In between, some of the fish will have sex with other fish,
-
sometimes, and they'll have sex on their own, what's called asexually.
-
And those fish, the ones that are in between, sometimes this,
-
sometimes that, they have an intermediate number of infections.
-
In other words, the explanation provided by evolution made a prediction.
-
And the prediction's extraordinary and subtle, but there it is.
-
How else would you explain it?
-
And to Mr. Ham and his followers I say this is something we in science want.
-
We want the ability to predict. And your assertion
-
that there's some difference between the natural laws
-
that I use to observe the world today and the natural laws
-
that existed 4,000 years ago is extraordinary and unsettling.
-
I travel around. I have a great many family members
-
in Danville, Virginia, one of the U.S's most livable cities.
-
It's lovely. And I was driving along and there was a sign in front of a church:
-
"Big Bang theory? You got to be kidding me. God."
-
Now, everybody, why would someone at the church, a pastor for example,
-
put that sign up unless he or she didn't believe
-
that the big bang was a real thing? I just want to review,
-
briefly, with everybody why we accept,
-
in the outside world, why we accept the Big Bang.
-
Edwin Hubble, sorry, there you go, you gotta be kidding me God.
-
Edwin Hubble was sitting at Mount Wilson, which is up from Pasadena, California.
-
On a clear day you can look down and see where the Rose Parade goes.
-
It's that close to civilization.
-
But even in the early 1900's, the people who selected this site for astronomy
-
picked an excellent site. The clouds and smog are below you.
-
And Edwin Hubble sat there at this very big telescope night after night studying the heavens.
-
And he found that the stars are moving apart. The stars are moving apart.
-
And he wasn't sure why. But it was clear that the stars are moving farther and farther apart all the time.
-
So people talked about it for a couple decades.
-
And then eventually another astronomer, almost a couple decades, another astronomer
-
Fred Hoyle just remarked, "Well, it was like there was a big bang.
-
There was an explosion. This is to say; since everything's moving apart,
-
it's very reasonable that at one time they were all together.
-
And there's a place from whence, or rather whence, these things expanded."
-
And it was a remarkable insight.
-
But people went still questioning it for decades.
-
Scientists, conventional scientists, questioning it for decades.
-
These two researchers wanted to listen for radio signals from space--radio astronomy.
-
And this is while we have visible light for our eyes, there is a whole other bunch of waves of light
-
that are much longer. The microwaves in your oven are about that long.
-
The radar at the airport is about that long. Your FM radio signals about like this.
-
AM radio signals are a kilometer--they're a couple, several soccer fields.
-
They went out listening. And there was this hiss, this hisssssss, all the time
-
that wouldn't go away. And they thought "Oh! Doggone it. There's some loose
-
connector." They plugged in the connector. They rescrewed it. They made it tight.
-
They turned it this way. The hiss was still there.
-
They turned it that way. It was still there.
-
They thought it was pigeon droppings that had affected the reception of this "horn" it's called.
-
This thing is still there. It's in Basking Ridge, New Jersey.
-
It's a national historic site. And Arno Pinzius and Robert Wilson had found
-
this cosmic background sound that was predicted by astronomers.
-
Astronomers running the numbers, doing math, predicted
-
that in the cosmos would be left over this echo,
-
this energy, from the Big Bang that would be detectable.
-
And they detected it. We built the Cosmic Observatory for Background Emissions, the COBE spacecraft,
-
and it matched exactly, exactly the astronomers predictions.
-
You gotta respect that. It's a wonderful thing.
-
Now, along that line is some interest in the age of the earth.
-
Right now, it's generally agreed that the Big Bang happened 13.7 billion years ago.
-
What we can do on earth. These elements that we all know on the Periodic Table of Chemicals,
-
even ones we don't know, were created when stars explode.
-
And I look like nobody. But I attended a lecture by Hans Betta who won a Nobel
-
Prize for discovering the process by which stars create all these elements.
-
The one that interests me especially is our good friends Rubidium and Strontium.
-
Rubidium becomes Strontium spontaneously. It's an interesting thing to me.
-
A neutron becomes a proton. And it goes up the Periodic Table.
-
When lava comes out of the ground, molten lava,
-
and it freezes, turns to rock, when the melt solidifies,
-
or crystalizes, it locks the Rubidium and Strontium in place.
-
And so by careful assay, by careful, by being diligent, you can tell when the rock froze.
-
You can tell how old the Rubidium and Strontium are. And you can get an age for the earth.
-
When that stuff falls on fossils, you can get a very good idea of how old the fossils are.
-
I encourage you all to go to Nebraska, go to Ashfall State Park
-
and see the astonishing fossils. It looks like a Hollywood movie.
-
There are rhinoceroses. There are three-toed horses in Nebraska.
-
None of those animals are extant today. And they are buried, catastrophically, by a
-
volcano in what is now Idaho. Is now Yellowstone National Park.
-
What is called the hot spot. People call it the super-volcano.
-
And it's the remarkable thing. Apparently, as I can tell you, as a Northwesterner around
-
for Mount St. Helen's. For full disclosure I'm on the Mount St. Helen's Board.
-
When it (explosive sound), when it goes off it gives out a great deal of gas
-
that's toxic and knock these animals out. Looking for relief, they go to a watering
-
hole. And then when the ash comes they were all buried. It's an extraordinary place.
-
Now if in the bad old days, you had heart problems, they would right away cut you open.
-
Now, we use a drug based on Rubidium to look at the inside of your heart without cutting you open.
-
Now, my Kentucky friends, I want you to consider this. Right now, there is no place
-
in the Commonwealth of Kentucky to get a degree in this kind of nuclear medicine--
-
this kind of drugs associated with that.
-
I hope you find that troubling. I hope you're concerned about that.
-
You want scientifically literate students in your commonwealth for a better tomorrow for everybody.
-
You can, you can't get this here. You have to go out of state.
-
Now as far as the distance to stars. Understand this is very well understood.
-
We, it's February. We look at a star in February. We measure an angle to it.
-
We wait six months. We look at that same star again and we measure that angle.
-
It's the same way carpenters built this building. It's the same way surveyors surveyed the land that we're standing on.
-
And so by measuring the distance to a star, you can figure out how far away it is, that star,
-
and the stars beyond it, and the stars beyond that. There are billions of stars.
-
Billions of stars more than six thousand light years from here.
-
A light year is a unit of distance, not a unit of time.
-
There are billions of stars. Mr. Ham, how could there be billions of stars more distant
-
than six thousand years, if the world's only six thousand years old?
-
It's an extraordinary claim. There's another astronomer, Adolphe Quetele, who remarked first
-
about the reasonable man. Is it reasonable that we have ice older by a factor of a hundred than you claim the earth is?
-
We have trees that have more tree rings than the earth is old.
-
We have rocks with Rubidium and Strontium, and Uranium-Uranium, and Potassium-Argon dating
-
that are far, far, far older than you claim the earth is.
-
Could anybody have built an ark that would sustain the better than any ark anybody was able to build on the earth?
-
So, if you're asking me, and I got the impression you were,
-
is Ken Ham's creation model viable? I say "No! Absolutely not!"
-
Now, one last thing. You may not know that in the US Constitution, from the founding fathers,
-
is the sentence "to promote the progress of science and useful arts..."
-
Kentucky voters, voters who might be watching online,
-
in places like Texas, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Kansas, please
-
you don't want to raise a generation of science students
-
who don't understand how we know our place in the cosmos,
-
our place in space, who don't understand natural law.
-
We need to innovate to keep the United States where it is in the world.
-
Thank you very much.
-
(applause)
-
Moderator: That's a lot to take in. I hope everybody's holding up well.
-
That's a lot of information. What we're going to have now is a five minute
-
rebuttal time for each gentleman to address the other one's comments.
-
And then there will be a five minute counter rebuttal after that.
-
Things are going to start moving a little more quickly now.
-
So at this point in particular, I want to make sure we don't have applauding or anything else going on that slows it down.
-
So, Mr. Hamm, if you'd like to begin with your five minute rebuttal first.
-
Mr. Hamm: First of all, Bill, if I was to answer all the points that you brought up,
-
the moderator would think that I was going on for millions of years. (laughter)
-
So I can only deal with some of them.
-
And you mentioned the age of the earth a couple of times, so let me deal with that.
-
As I said in my presentation, you can't observe the age of the earth.
-
I would say that comes under what we call historical origin science.
-
Now, just so you understand where I'm coming from.
-
Yes, we admit we build our origins from historical science on the Bible.
-
The Bible says God created in six days. A Hebrew word "yon" as it's used in Genesis 1
-
with evening/morning number means an ordinary day. Adam was made on day six.
-
And so, when you add up all those geneologies specifically given in the Bible
-
from Adam to Abraham you've got 2,000 years; from Abraham to Christ 2,000 years; from Christ to the present 2,000 years.
-
That's how we get 6,000 years. So that's where it comes from. Just so you know.
-
Now a lot of people say. Now, by the way, the earth's age is 4.5 billion years old.
-
And we have radioactive decay dating methods that found that.
-
But you see, we certainly observe radioactive decay
-
whether it's rubidium-strontium, whether it's uranium-lead, potassium-argon
-
But when you're talking about the past, we have a problem.
-
I'll give you a practical example. In Australia, there were engineers
-
that were trying to search out about a coal mine.
-
And so they drilled down and they found a basalt layer, a lava flow that had woody material in it--
-
branches and twigs and so on. And when Dr. Andrew Snelling, our PhD geologist,
-
sent that to a lab in Massachusetts in 1994, they used potassium-argon
-
dating and dated it at 45 million years old.
-
Well, he also sent the wood to the radio-carbon section of the same lab
-
and that dated at 45,000 years old. 45,000 year old wood in 45 million year old rock.
-
The point is there's a problem.
-
Let me give you another example of a problem.
-
There was a lava dome that started to form in the 80's after Mt. St. Helen's erupted.
-
And in 1994 Dr. Steve Austin, another PhD geologist, actually sampled the rock there.
-
He took whole rock, crushed it, sent it to the same lab actually, I believe, and got a date of .35 million years.
-
When he separated out the minerals amphibole and pyroxene and used potassium-argon dating,
-
he got .9 million and 2.8 million. My point is all these dating methods actually give all sorts of different dates.
-
In fact, different dating methods on the same rock, we can show, give all sorts of different dates.
-
See there's lots of assumptions in regard to radioactive dating.
-
Number one, for instance, the amounts of the parent and daughter isotopes at the beginning when the rock formed.
-
You have to know them. But you weren't there. See that's historical science.
-
Assumption 2: that all daughter atoms measured today
-
must have only been derived in situ radioactive decay of parent atoms.
-
In other words it's a closed system.
-
But you don't know that. And there's a lot of evidence that that's not so.
-
Assumption Number 3: that the decay rates have remained a constant.
-
Now they're just some of them. There's others as well.
-
The point is there's lots of assumptions in regard to the dating methods.
-
So there's no dating method you can use that you can absolutely age date a rock.
-
There's all sorts of differences out there.
-
And I do want to address the bit you brought up about Christians believing in millions of years.
-
Yeah, there's a lot of Christians out there that believe in millions of years,
-
but I'd say they have a problem. I'm not saying they're not Christians, but
-
because salvation is conditioned upon faith in Christ, not the age of the earth.
-
But there's an inconsistency with what the Bible teaches.
-
If you believe in millions of years, you've got death and bloodshed, suffering, and disease
-
over millions of years leading to man, because that's what you see in the fossil record.
-
The Bible makes it very clear death is a result of man's sin.
-
In fact, the first death was in the garden when God killed an animal, clothed Adam and Eve,
-
first blood sacrifice pointing towards what would happen with Jesus Christ.
-
He would be the one who would die once and for all.
-
Now if you believe in millions of years as a Christian, in the fossil record
-
there's evidence of animals eating each other, Bible says originally all the animals
-
and man were vegetarian. We weren't told we could eat meat until after the flood.
-
There's diseases represented in the fossil record like brain tumors, but the Bible
-
says when God made everything it was very good.
-
God doesn't call brain tumors very good.
-
There's fossilized thorns in the fossil record said to be hundreds of millions of years old,
-
the Bible says thorns came after the curse.
-
So these two things can't be true at the same time.
-
You know what? There's hundreds of dating methods out there, hundreds of them.
-
Actually, 90% of them contradict billions of years. And the point is, all such dating methods are fallible.
-
And I claim, there's only one infallible dating method, it's a witness who was there,
-
who knows everything, who told us. And that's from the word of God.
-
And that's why I would say that the earth is only 6,000 years. And, as Dr. Faulkner said,
-
there's nothing in astronomy, and certainly Dr. Snelling would say, there's nothing in geology
-
to contradict a belief in a young age for the earth and the universe.
-
Moderator: Thank you Mr. Ham. Mr. Nye, your five-minute rebuttal please.
-
Mr. Nye: Thank you very much. Let me start with the beginning.
-
If you find 45 million year old rock on top of 45 thousand year old trees,
-
maybe the rock slid on top. Maybe that's it. That seems much more reasonable explanation
-
than, "It's impossible." Then as far as dating goes, actually the methods are
-
very reliable. One of the mysteries, or interesting things that people in my business,
-
especially at the Planetary Society, are interested in is why all the asteroids seem to be
-
so close to the same date in age. It's 4.5, 4.6 billion years.
-
It's a remarkable thing. People at first expected a little more of a spread.
-
So, I understand that you take the Bible as written in English, translated countless,
-
not countless, but many, many times over the last three millenia as to be a more accurate,
-
more reasonable assessment of the natural laws we see around us
-
than what I and everybody in here can observe. That to me is unsettling, troubling.
-
And then about the disease thing, are the fish sinners? Have they done something wrong to get diseases?
-
That's sort of an extraordinary claim that takes me just a little past what I'm comfortable with.
-
And then, as far as you can't observe the past, I have to stop you right there.
-
That's what we do in astronomy.
-
All we can do in astronomy is look at the past.
-
By the way, you're looking at the past right now. Because the speed of light bounces off of me
-
and then gets to your eyes. And I'm delighted to see that the people in the back of the room
-
appear just that much younger than the people in the front.
-
So this idea that you can separate the natural laws of the past from the natural laws that we have now,
-
I think is at the heart of our disagreement.
I don't see how we're ever going to agree with that
-
if you insist that natural laws have changed. It's, for lack of a better word, it's magical.
-
And I have appreciated magic since I was a kid, but it's not really what we want
-
in conventional, mainstream science. So, your assertion that all the animals were vegetarians
-
before they got on the ark. That's really remarkable. I have not spent a lot of time with lions,
-
but I can tell they've got teeth that really aren't set up for broccoli.
-
That these animals were vegetarians til this flood is something that I would ask you
-
to provide a little more proof for. I give you the lion's teeth, you give me verses
-
as translated into English over, what, 30 centuries?
-
So, that's not enough evidence for me. If you've ever played telephone, I did, I remember very well
-
in kindergarten where you have a secret and you whisper it to the next person, to the next person,
-
to the next person. Things often go wrong. So it's very reasonable to me that instead of lions being vegetarians on the ark,
-
lions are lions, and the information that you used to create your world view is not consistent with
-
what I, as a reasonable man, would expect. So, I want everybody to consider the implications of this.
-
If we accept Mr. Ham's point of view, that the Bible as translated into American English,
-
serves as a science text, and that he and his followers will interpret that for you,
-
Just, I want you to consider what that means. It means that Mr. Ham's word or his interpretation
-
of these other words, is somehow to be more respected than what you can observe in nature.
-
Than what you can find literally in your backyard, in Kentucky.
-
It's a troubling and unsettling point of view, and it's one I very much like you to address when you come back.
-
As far as the five races that you mentioned, it's kind of the same thing.
-
The five races were claimed by people who were of European descent,
-
and said, "Hey, we're the best! Check us out!" And that turns out to be,
-
if you've ever traveled anywhere or done anything, not to be that way.
-
People are much more alike than they are different.
-
So, are we supposed to take your word for English words translated over the last 30 centuries,
-
instead of what we can observe in the universe around us?
-
Moderator: Very good. And Mr. Ham, would you like to offer your five minute counter rebuttal?
-
Ken Ham: Uh, first of all, Bill, just so, I just don't want a misunderstanding here,
-
and that is, the 45,000-year-old wood, or supposedly 45,000 was inside the basalt.
-
Um, so, it was encased in the basalt. Uh, and that's why I was making that particular point.
-
And I would also say that natural law hasn't changed. As I talked about, you know,
-
I said we had the laws of logic, the uniformity of nature. And that only makes sense
-
within a biblical worldview anyway, of a creator God, who set up those laws,
-
and that's why we can do good experimental science, because we assume those laws are true,
-
and they'll be true tomorrow. I do want to say this, that you said a few times, you know,
-
Ken Ham's view or model. It's not just Ken Ham's model. We have a number of PhD scientists
-
on our own staff. I quoted, had video quotes, from some scientists.
-
It's Dr. Damadian's model. It's Dr. Fabich's model. It's Dr. Faulkner's model. It's Dr. Snelling's model.
-
It's Dr. Purdom's model. And so it goes on, in other words. And you go on our website,
-
and there are lots of creation scientists who agree with exactly what we're saying concerning
-
the Bible's account of creation. So it's not just "my model" in that sense.
-
There is so much that I can say, but, as I listen to you, I believe you're confusing terms
-
in regard to species and kinds. Because we're not saying that God created all those species.
-
We're saying God created kinds. And we're not saying species got on the ark, we're saying kinds.
-
In fact, we've had researchers working on what is a kind. For instance, there's a number of papers,
-
published on our website, where, for instance, they look at dogs. And they say, well, this one
-
breeds with this one, with this one, with this one. And you can look at all the papers around the world
-
and you can connect them all together and say that obviously represents one kind.
-
In fact, as they have been doing that research, they have predicted probably less than actually a thousand
-
kinds were on Noah's ark, which means just over 2,000 animals. And the average size of a land animal
-
is not that big so, you know, there was plenty of room on the ark. I also believe that
-
a lot of what you were saying was really illustrating my point. Uh, you were talking about tree rings
-
and ice layers and, just talking about kangaroos getting to Australia, and all sorts of things like that.
-
But see, we're talking about the past, when we weren't there. We didn't see those tree rings actually forming.
-
We didn't see those layers being laid down. You know, in 1942, for instance, there were some planes
-
that landed on the ice in Greenland. They found them, what, 46 years later, I think it was,
-
three miles away from the original location with 250 feet of ice buried on top of them.
-
So, ice can build up catastrophically. If you assume one layer a year, or something like that,
-
it's like the dating methods. You are assuming things in regard to the past that aren't necessarily true.
-
In regard to lions and teeth, bears, most bears have teeth very much like a lion or tiger, and yet, most bears
-
are primarily vegetarian. The panda, if you look at its teeth, you'd say, maybe it should be a
-
savage carnivore. It eats mainly bamboo. The little fruit bat in Australia has really sharp teeth,
-
looks like a savage little creature, and it rips into fruit.
-
Uh, so, just cause an animal has sharp teeth doesn't mean it's a meat eater. It means it has sharp teeth.
-
Uh, so again, it really comes down to our interpretation of these things.
-
I think too, in regard to the Missoula, uh, example that you gave, you know,
-
creationists do believe there's been post-flood catastrophism.
-
Noah's flood, certainly, was a catastrophic event. But then there's been post-flood catastrophism since that time as well.
-
And again, in regard to historical science, why would you say Noah was unskilled?
-
I mean, I didn't meet Noah, and neither did you. And you know, really, it's an evolutionary view of origins I believe
-
cause you're thinking in terms people before us aren't as good as us.
-
Hey, there are civilizations that existed in the past, and we look at their technology,
-
and we can't even understand today how they did some of the things that they did.
-
Who says Noah couldn't build a big boat? By the way, the Chinese and the Egyptians built boats.
-
In fact, some of our research indicates that some of the wooden boats that were built
-
had three layers interlocking so they wouldn't twist like that and leak, which is why,
-
here at the Creation Museum, we have an exhibit on the ark, where we've rebuilt 1% of the ark to scale
-
and shown three interlocking layers like that. And one last thing, concerning the speed of light,
-
and that is, I'm sure you're aware of the horizon problem. And that is, from a Big Bang perspective,
-
even the secularists have a problem of getting light and radiation out to the universe
-
to be able to exchange with the rest of the universe, to get that even microwave background radiation.
-
On their model, 15 billion years or so, they can only get it about halfway.
-
And that's why they have inflation theories, which means, everyone has a problem concerning the light issue.
-
There's things people don't understand. And we have some models on our website
-
by some of our scientists to help explain those sorts of things.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye, your counter rebuttal.
-
Bill Nye: Thank you Mr. Ham, but I'm completely unsatisfied.
-
You did not, in my view, address this fundamental question. 680,000 years of snow ice layers
-
which require winter summer cycle. Let's say you have 2,000 kinds instead of seven.
-
That makes the problem even more extraordinary, multiplying eleven by what's, three and a half?
-
We get to 35... 40 species every day that we don't see, they're not extant.
-
In fact, you probably know we're losing species due to mostly human activity and the loss of habitat.
-
Then, as far as Noah being an extraordinary shipwright, I'm very skeptical.
-
The shipwrights, my ancestors, the Nye family in New England, took, spent their whole life learning to make ships.
-
I mean, it's very reasonable, perhaps, to you that Noah had superpowers
-
and was able to build this extraordinary craft with seven family members, but to me, it's just not reasonable.
-
Then, uh, by the way, the fundamental thing we disagree on, Mr. Ham,
-
is this nature of what you can prove to yourself. This is to say, when people make assumptions
-
based on radiometric data, when they make assumptions about the expanding universe,
-
when they make assumptions about the rate at which genes change in populations of bacteria
-
in laboratory growth media, they are making assumptions based on previous experience.
-
They're not coming out of whole cloth. So, next time you have a chance to speak,
-
I encourage you to explain to us why... why we should accept your word for it that natural law changed
-
just 4,000 years ago, completely. And there's no record of it. You know, there are pyramids that are older than that.
-
There are human populations that are far older than that, with traditions that go back farther than that.
-
And it's just not reasonable to me that everything changed 4,000 years ago.
-
By everything, I mean the species, the surface of the Earth, the stars in the sky,
-
and the relationship of all the other living things on Earth to humans.
-
It's just not reasonable to me that everything changed like that. (Snaps fingers.)
-
And another thing I would very much appreciate you addressing:
-
there are billions of people in the world who are deeply religious. And I respect that.
-
People get tremendous community and comfort and nurture and support from their religious fellows
-
in their communities, in their faiths, in their churches.
-
And yet, they don't accept your point of view.
-
There are Christians who don't accept that the Earth could somehow be this extraordinary young age
-
because of all the evidence around them. And so, what is to become of them, in your view?
-
And by the way, this thing started, as I understand it, Ken Ham's creation model is based on the Old Testament.
-
So when you bring in, I'm not a theologian, when you bring in the New Testament,
-
isn't that little, uh, out of the box? I'm looking for explanations of the creation of the world
-
as we know it, uh, based on what I'm gonna call science. Not historical science, not observational science.
-
Science: things that each of us can do akin to what we do, we're trying to outguess the characters
-
on murder mystery shows, on crime scene investigation, especially.
-
What is to become of all those people, who don't see it your way?
-
For us, in the scientific community, I remind you, that when we find an idea that's not tenable,
-
that doesn't work, that doesn't fly, doesn't hold water, whatever idiom you'd like to embrace, we throw it away.
-
We are delighted. That's why I say, if you can find a fossil that has swum between the layers, bring it on!
-
You would change the world. If you could show that somehow the microwave background radiation
-
is not a result of the Big Bang, come on! Write your paper. Tear it up!
-
So, your view, that we're supposed to take your word for this book written centuries ago,
-
translated into American English, is somehow more important that what I can see with my own eyes,
-
is an extraordinary claim. And, for those watching online, especially, I want to remind you
-
that we need scientists, and especially engineers for the future.
-
Engineers use science to solve problems and make things. We need these people
-
so that the United States can continue to innovate and continue to be a world leader.
-
We need innovation, and that needs science education. Thank you.
-
Moderator: All right. Thank you both. Uh, now we're going to get to the things moving a little bit faster.
-
I think they might be quite interesting here. It's 40 to 45 minutes, maybe a little bit more, actually.
-
We'll have a little more. For questions and answers submitted by our audience here in the Creation Museum.
-
Beforehand, we handed out these cards to everyone. I shuffled them here in the back,
-
and in fact, I dropped a lot of them, and then I scooped them up again.
-
And if you saw me sorting through them here, it was to get a pile for Mr. Nye and a pile for Mr. Ham,
-
so that we can alternate reasonably between them. Other than that, the only reason I will skip over one
-
is if I can't read it, or if it's a question that I don't know how to read because it doesn't seem to make any sense,
-
which sometimes happens just because of the way people write. (Audience laughs.)
-
What's going to happen is we're gonna go back and forth between Mr. Nye and Mr. Ham.
-
Each debater will have two minutes to answer the question addressed to him,
-
and then the other will have one minute to also answer the question, even though it was addressed to the other man.
-
And I did pull one card aside here, because I noticed it was to both men.
-
So we may be able to get to that at some point. Mr. Ham, you've been up first, if you'll hop up first this time.
-
And Mr. Nye, you can stand by for your responses. Two minutes.
-
How does creationism account for the celestial bodies: planets, stars, moons moving further and further apart?
-
And what function does that serve in the grand design?
-
Ken Ham: Well, when it comes to looking at the universe, of course, we believe, that in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
-
And I believe our creationist astronomers would say, "Yeah, you can observe the universe expanding."
-
Why God is doing that? In fact, in Bible it even says He stretches out the heavens.
-
And seems to indicate that there is an expansion of the universe.
-
And so, we would say, yeah, you can observe that. That fits with what we call observational science.
-
Exactly why God did it that way? I can't answer that question, of course,
-
because, you know, the Bible says that God made the heavens for his glory.
-
And that's why he made the stars that we see out there. And it's to tell us how great He is and how big He is.
-
And in fact, I think that's the thing about the universe. The universe is so large, so big out there.
-
One of our planetarium programs looks at this. We go in and show you how large the universe is.
-
And I think it shows us how great God is, how big He is, that He's an all-powerful God,
-
He's an infinite God, an infinite, all-knowing God who created the universe to show us his power.
-
I mean, can you imagine that, and the thing that's really remarkable in the Bible.
-
For instance, it says on the fourth day of creation, and oh, he made the stars also.
-
It's almost like, "Oh, by the way, I made the stars." Um, and just to show us He's an all-powerful God.
-
He's an infinite God. So, "I made the stars." And he made them to show us how great He is.
-
And He is. He's an infinite creator God. And the more that you understand what that means,
-
that God is all-powerful, infinite, you stand back in awe. You realize how small we are.
-
You realize, wow, that God would consider this planet, is so significant that he created human beings here,
-
knowing they would sin, and yet stepped into history to die for us and be raised from the dead.
-
Our verse, the free gift of salvation. Wow! What a God!
-
And that's what I would say when I see the universe as it is.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye, one minute. And your response?
-
Bill Nye: There's a question that troubles us all from the time when we are absolutely youngest and first able to think.
-
And that is, where did we come from? Where did I come from?
-
And this question is so compelling that we've invented the science of astronomy.
-
We've invented life science. We've invented physics.
-
We've discovered these natural laws so that we can learn more about our origin and where we came from.
-
To you, when it says, He invented the stars also, that's satisfying. You're done.
-
Oh, good. Okay. To me, when I look at the night sky, I want to know what's out there.
-
I'm driven. I want to know if what's out there is any part of me, and indeed, it is.
-
The "oh, by the way" I find compelling you are satisfied.
-
And the big thing I want from you, Mr. Ham, is can you come up with something that you can predict?
-
Do you have a creation model that predicts something that will happen in nature?
-
Moderator: And that's time. Mr. Nye, the next question is for you.
-
How did the atoms that created the Big Bang get there?
-
Bill Nye: This is the great mystery. You've hit the nail on the head. No, this is so, where did, what was before the Big Bang?
-
This is what drives us. This is what we want to know. Let's keep looking. Let's keep searching.
-
Uh, when I was young, it was presumed that the universe was slowing down.
-
It's a big bang, phrooo! Except it's in outer space, there's no air, so (quietly) it goes out like that.
-
And so people presumed that it would slow down, that the universe, the gravity, especially,
-
would hold everything together and maybe it's going to come back and explode again.
-
And people went out. And the mathematical expression is: is the universe flat?
-
It's a mathematical expression. Will the universe slow down, slow down, slow down asymptotically without ever stopping?
-
Well, in 2004, Saul Perlmutter and his colleagues went looking for the rate at which the universe was slowing down.
-
Let's go out and measure it. And we're doing it with this extraordinary system of telescopes around the world,
-
looking at the night sky, looking for supernovae. These are a standard brightness that you can infer distances with.
-
And the universe isn't slowing down. It's accelerating! The universe is accelerating in its expansion.
-
And do you know why? Nobody knows why! (audience laughs) Nobody knows why.
-
And you'll hear the expression nowadays, dark energy, dark matter, which are mathematical ideas that seem
-
to reckon well with what seems to be the gravitational attraction of clusters of stars, galaxies, and their expansion.
-
And then, isn't it reasonable that whatever's out there, causing the universe to expand, is here also?
-
And we just haven't figured out how to detect it.
-
My friends, suppose a science student from the commonwealth of Kentucky pursues a career in science
-
and finds out the answer to that deep question? Where did we come from? What was before the Big Bang?
-
To us, this is wonderful and charming and compelling. This is what makes us get up and go to work everyday,
-
is to try to solve the mysteries of the universe.
-
Moderator: And that's time. Mr. Ham, a response?
-
Ken Ham: Uh, Bill, I just want to let you know that there actually is
-
a book out there that actually tells us where matter came from. (Audience laughs.)
-
And, the very first sentence in that book says, "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.
-
And really, that's the only thing that makes sense. That's the only thing that makes sense of why, not just matter is here,
-
where it came from, but why matter, when you look at it, we have information and language systems that build life.
-
We're not just matter. And where did that come from? Because matter can never produce information.
-
Matter can never produce a language system. Languages only come from intelligence.
-
Information only comes from information. The Bible tells us that the things we see, like in the book of Hebrews,
-
are made from things that are unseen. An infinite creator God who created the universe,
-
created matter, the energy, space, mass, time universe, and created the information for life.
-
It's the only thing that makes logical sense.
-
Moderator: Alright, Mr. Ham, a new question here. The overwhelming majority of people in the
-
scientific community have presented valid, physical evidence, such as carbon dating and fossils,
-
to support evolutionary theory. What evidence besides the literal word of the Bible supports creationism?
-
Ken Ham: Well, first of all, you know, I often hear people talking about "the majority".
-
I would agree that the majority of scientists would believe
-
in millions of years and the majority would believe in evolution,
-
but there's a large group out there that certainly don't.
-
But, first thing I want to say is, it's not the majority that's the judge of truth.
-
There have been many times in the past when the majority have got it wrong.
-
The majority of doctors in England once thought after you cut up bodies,
-
you could go and deliver babies and wondered why
-
the death rate was high in hospitals,
-
till they found out about diseases caused by bacteria and so on.
-
The majority once thought the appendix was a leftover organ
-
from evolutionary ancestry, so, you know, when it's okay,
-
rip it out. When it's diseased, rip it out. Rip it out anyway.
-
But these days we know that it's for the immune system
-
and it's very, very important.
-
So, you know, it's important to understand that just because
-
the majority believe something doesn't mean that it's true.
-
And then, I'm sorry, I missed the last part of the question there.
-
Moderator: What was the--let me make sure I have the right question here--
-
So what evidence besides the literal word of the bible--
-
Ken Ham: Okay, one of the things I was doing was making predictions.
-
I made some predictions. There's a whole list of predictions.
-
And I was saying, if the Bible's right and we're all descendants
-
of Adam and Eve, there's one race. And I went through and talked about that.
-
If the Bible's right and God made kinds, I went through
-
and talked about that. And, so, really that question comes down
-
to the fact that we're again dealing with the fact that there's aspects
-
about the past that you can't scientifically prove because
-
you weren't there, but observational science in the present.
-
Bill and I all have the same observational science. We're here in the present.
-
We can see radioactivity, but when it comes to then talking about the past,
-
you're not going to be scientifically able to prove that.
-
And that's what we need to admit. We can be great scientists in the present,
-
as the examples I gave you of Dr. Damadian or Dr. Stuart Burgess
-
or Dr. Fabich and we can be investigating the present.
-
Understanding the past is a whole different matter.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye, one minute response.
-
Thank you, Mr. Ham. I have to disabuse you of a fundamental idea.
-
If a scientist, if anybody, makes a discovery that changes
-
the way people view natural law, scientists embrace him or her!
-
This person's fantastic. Louis Pasteur--you made reference to germs.
-
Now, if you find something that changes, that disagrees with common thought,
-
that's the greatest thing going in science.
-
We look forward to that change. We challenge you--
-
tell us why the universe is accelerating.
-
Tell us why these mothers were getting sick.
-
And we found an explanation for it. And the idea that the majority
-
has sway in science is true only up a point.
-
And then, the other thing I just want to point out, what you may
-
have missed in evolutionary explanations of life
-
is it's the mechanism by which we add complexity.
-
The earth is getting energy from the sun all the time.
-
And that energy is used to make lifeforms somewhat more complex.
-
Moderator: And that's time.
-
New question for you, Mr. Nye.
-
How did consciousness come from matter?
-
Bill Nye: Don't know. This is a great mystery.
-
A dear friend of mine is a neurologist. She studies the nature of consciousness.
-
Now I will say I used to embrace a joke about dogs.
-
I love dogs. I mean, who doesn't?
-
And you can say, this guy remarked,
-
"I've never seen a dog paralyzed by self-doubt." Actually, I have.
-
Furthermore, the thing that we celebrate, there are three sundials
-
on the planet Mars that bare an inscription to the future:
-
"To those who visit here, we wish you a safe journey and the joy of discovery."
-
It's inherently optimistic about the future of humankind,
-
that we will one day walk on Mars. But the joy of discovery...
-
that's what drives us. The joy of finding out what's going on.
-
So we don't know where consciousness comes from. But we want to find out.
-
Furthermore, I'll tell you it's deep within us. I claim that I
-
have spent time with dogs that have had the joy of discovery!
-
It's way inside us! We have one ancestor, as near as we can figure.
-
And, by the way, if you can find what we in science call "a second genesis",
-
this is to say, "Did life start another way on the earth?"
-
There are researchers at Astrobiology Institute,
-
researchers supported by NASA, your tax dollars,
-
that are looking for answers to that very question.
-
Is it possible that life could start another way?
-
Is there some sort of life form akin to science fiction
-
that's crystal instead of membranous. This would be a fantastic
-
discovery that would change the world!
-
The nature of consciousness is a mystery.
-
I challenge the young people here to investigate that very question.
-
And I remind you--taxpayers and voters that might be watching--
-
if we do not embrace the process of science,
-
and I mean in the mainstream, we will fall behind economically.
-
This is a point I can't say enough.
-
Moderator: Mr. Ham, a one minute response.
-
Ken Ham: Bill, I do want to say that there is a book out there... (audience laughs)
-
that does document where consciousness came from.
-
And in that book, the one who created us said that he made man in His image,
-
and He breathed into man, and he became a living being.
-
And so, the Bible does document that. That's where consciousness came from,
-
that God gave it to us. And, you know, the other thing I want to say is,
-
I'm sorta of a little, I have a mystery. That is, you talk about the joy of discovery
-
but you also say that when you die, it's over, and that's the end of you.
-
And if when you die, it's over, and you don't even remember you were here, what's the point of the joy of discovery anyway?
-
I mean, in an ultimate sense? I mean, you know, you won't ever know you were ever here,
-
and no one who knew you will know they were ever here, ultimately, so what's the point anyway?
-
I love the joy of discovery because this is God's creation,
-
and I'm finding more out about that to take dominion for man's good and for God's glory.
-
Moderator: And that's time. Mr. Ham, a new question.
-
This is a simple question, I suppose, but one that actually is fairly profound for all of us, in our lives.
-
What, if anything, would ever change your mind?
-
Ken Ham: Hmm. Well, the answer to that question is,
-
I'm a Christian, and as a Christian, I can't prove it to you,
-
but God has definitely, shown me very clearly
-
through His Word, and shown Himself in the person of Jesus Christ.
-
The Bible is the Word of God. I admit that that's where I start from.
-
I can challenge people that you can go and test that.
-
You can make predictions based on that. You can check the prophecies in the Bible.
-
You can check the statements in Genesis. You can check that.
-
I did a little bit of that tonight. And I can't ultimately prove that to you.
-
All I can do is to say to someone, "Look, if the Bible really is what it claims to be,
-
if it really is the Word of God, and that's what it claims, then check it out."
-
And the Bible says, "If you come to God believing that He is, He'll reveal Himself to you."
-
And you will know. As Christians, we can say we know.
-
And so, as far as the Word of God is concerned, no, no one's ever going to convince me
-
that the Word of God is not true. But I do want to make a distinction here.
-
And for Bill's sake. We build models based upon the Bible.
-
And those models are always subject to change.
-
The fact of Noah's flood is not subject to change.
-
The model of how the flood occurred is subject to change
-
because we observe in the current world,
-
and we're able to come up with different ways this could have happened or that could have happened.
-
And that's part of that scientific discovery. That's part of what it's all about.
-
So, the bottom line is that as a Christian, I have a foundation.
-
That as a Christian, I would ask Bill a question. What would change your mind?
-
I mean, you said, even if you came to faith, you'd never give up believing in billions of years.
-
I think I quoted you correctly. You said something like that recently.
-
So that would be also my question to Bill.
-
Moderator: Time. Mr. Nye?
-
Bill Nye: We would just need one piece of evidence.
-
We would need the fossil that swam from one layer to another.
-
We would need evidence that the universe is not expanding.
-
We would need evidence that the stars appear to be far away, but in fact, they're not.
-
We would need evidence that rock layers can somehow form
-
in just 4,000 years instead of the extraordinary amount.
-
We would need evidence that somehow you can reset atomic clocks and keep neutrons from becoming protons.
-
You bring on any of those things and you would change me immediately.
-
The question I have for you though, fundamentally,
-
and for everybody watching. Mr. Ham, what can you prove?
-
What you have done tonight is spent most of the, all of the time
-
coming up with explanations about the past. What can you really predict?
-
What can you really prove in a conventional scientific,
-
or a conventional, "I have an idea that makes a prediction and it comes out the way I see it?"
-
This is very troubling to me.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye, a new question. Outside of radiometric methods,
-
what scientific evidence supports your view of the age of the Earth?
-
Bill Nye: The age of the earth.. Well, the age of stars.
-
The... let's see... radiometric evidence is pretty compelling.
-
Also, the deposition rates. It was, it was, Lillel, a geologist,
-
who realized, my recollection, he came up with the first use of the term "deep time,"
-
when people realized that the Earth had to be much, much older.
-
In a related story, there was a mystery as to how the Earth could be old enough to allow evolution to have taken place.
-
How could the Earth possibly be three billion years old?
-
Lord Kelvin did a calculation, if the sun were made of coal, and burning,
-
it couldn't be more than 100,000 or so years old.
-
But radioactivity was discovered. Radioactivity is why the Earth is still as warm as it is.
-
It's why the Earth has been able to sustain its internal heat all these millenia.
-
And this discovery, it's something like, this question, without radiometric dating,
-
how would you view the age of the Earth,
-
to me, it's akin to the expression, "Well, if things were any other way, things would be different."
-
This is to say, that's not how the world is. Radiometric dating DOES exist. Neutrons DO become protons.
-
And that's our level of understanding today. The universe is accelerating.
-
These are all provable facts. That there was a flood 4.000 years ago, is not provable.
-
In fact, the evidence for me, at least, as a reasonable man, is overwhelming that it couldn't possibly have happened.
-
There's no evidence for it. Furthermore, Mr. Ham, you never quite addressed this issue of the skulls.
-
There are many, many steps in what appears to be the creation, or the coming into being of you and me.
-
And those steps, are consistent with evolutionary theory.
-
Moderator: And that is time. Mr. Ham, your response.
-
Ken Ham: By the way, I just want people to understand, too,
-
in regard to the age of the Earth being about four and a half billion years,
-
no Earth rock was dated to get that date. They dated meteorites,
-
and because they assumed meteorites were the same age as the Earth,
-
leftover from the formation of the solar system, that's where that comes from.
-
People think they dated rocks on the Earth to get the four and a half billion years. That's just not true.
-
And the other point that I was making, and I just put this slide back up,
-
cause I happened to just have it here. And that is,
-
I said at the end of my first rebuttal time, that there are hundreds of physical processes
-
that set limits on the age of the Earth. Here's the point.
-
Every dating method involves a change with time. And there are hundreds of them.
-
And, if you assume what was there to start with, and you assume something about the rate,
-
and you know about the rate, you make lots of those assumptions. Every dating method has those assumptions.
-
Most of the dating methods, 90% of them, contradict the billions of years.
-
There's no absolute age dating method from scientific method because you can't prove scientifically, young or old.
-
Moderator: And, here is a new question.
-
It starts with you, Mr. Ham. Can you reconcile the change in the rate continents are now drifting,
-
versus how quickly they must have traveled at creation, 6,000 years ago?
-
Ken Ham: Uh, the rate. Sorry I missed that word.
-
Moderator: Can you reconcile the speed at which continents are now drifting, today, to the rate
-
they would have had to have travelled 6,000 years ago, to reach where we are now? I think that's the question.
-
Ken Ham: Okay, I think I understand the question. Um, actually, this again,
-
illustrates exactly what I'm talking about in regard to historical science and observational science.
-
We can look at continents today. And we have scientists who have written papers about this on our website.
-
I am definitely not an expert in this area and don't claim to be.
-
Uh, but there are scientists, even Dr. Andrew Snelling, our Ph.D. geologist,
-
has done a lot of research here, too, as well. There are others out there into plate tectonics and continental drift.
-
And certainly, we can see movements of plates today. And if you look at those movements,
-
and if you assume the way it's moving today, the rate it's moving, that it's always been that way in the past,
-
see that's an assumption. That's the problem when it comes to understanding these things.
-
You can observe movement, but then to assume that it's always been like that in the past,
-
that's historical science. And in fact, we would believe basically in catastrophic plate tectonics,
-
that as a result of the flood, at the time of the flood, there was catastrophic breakup of the Earth's surface.
-
And what we're seeing now is sort of, if you like, a remnant of that movement.
-
And so, we do not deny the movement. We do not deny the plates.
-
What we would deny is that you can use what you see today as a basis for just extrapolating into the past.
-
It's the same with the flood. You can say layers today only get laid down slowly in places,
-
but if there was a global flood, that would have changed all of that.
-
Again, it's this emphasis on historical science and observational science.
-
And I would encourage people to go to our website at Answers in Genesis
-
because we do have a number of papers, in fact, very technical papers.
-
Dr. John Baumgardner is one who's written some very extensive work dealing with this very issue.
-
On the basis of the Bible, of course, we believe there's one continent to start with,
-
cause the waters were gathered here there into one place. So we do believe that the continent has split up.
-
But particularly, the flood had a lot to do with that.
-
Moderator: And time on that. Mr. Nye, a response.
-
Bill Nye: It must have been easier for you to explain this a century ago
-
before the existence of tectonic plates was proven.
-
If you go into a clock store and there's a bunch of clocks, they're not all gonna say exactly the same thing.
-
Do you think that they're all wrong?
-
The reason that we acknowledge the rate at which continents are drifting apart,
-
one of the reasons, is we see what's called sea floor spreading in the Mid-Atlantic.
-
The earth's magnetic field has reversed over the millennia
-
and as it does it leaves a signature in the rocks
-
as the continental plates drift apart.
-
So you can measure how fast the continents were spreading.
-
That's how we do it on the outside.
-
As I said, I lived in Washington state when Mount St. Helen's exploded.
-
That's a result of a continental plate going under another continental plate
-
and cracking. And this water-laden rock led to a steam explosion.
-
That's how we do it on the outside.
-
Moderator: Time. And this is a question for you Mr. Nye. But I guess I could put it to both of you.
-
One word answer, please. Favorite color? (laughter)
-
Mr. Nye: I will go along with most people and say green. And it's an irony that green plants reflect green light.
-
Moderator: Did I not say one word answer? (laughter) I said one word answer.
-
Mr. Nye: Most of the light from the sun is green. Yet they reflect it. It's a mystery.
-
Mr. Hamm: Well, can I have three words seeing as he had three hundred?
-
Moderator: You can have three.
-
Mr. Hamm: OK. Observational science. Blue. (laughter)
-
Moderator: All right. We're back to you, Mr. Nye.
-
How do you balance the theory of evolution with the second law of thermodynamics? And I'd like to add a question here.
-
What is the second law of thermodynamics?
-
Mr. Nye: Oh, the second law of thermodynamics is fantastic. And I call the words of Eddington who said,
-
"If you have a theory that disagrees with Isaac Newton, that's a great theory.
-
If you have a theory that disagrees with relativity, wow, you've changed the world. That's great.
-
But if your theory disagrees with the second law of thermodynamics, I can offer you no hope. I can't help you."
-
The second law of thermodynamics basically is where you lose energy to heat.
-
This is why car engines are about 30% efficient. That's it, thermodynamically. That's why you want the hottest explosion
-
you can get in the coldest outside environment. You have to have a difference between hot and cold.
-
And that difference can be assessed scientifically or mathematically with this word entropy, this disorder of molecules.
-
But the fundamental thing that this questioner has missed is the earth is not a closed system.
-
So there's energy pouring in here from the sun. If I may, day and night. Ha, Ha.
-
'Cause the night, it's pouring in on the other side.
-
And so that energy is what drives living things on earth especially for, in our case, plants.
-
By the way, if you're here in Kentucky, about a third and maybe a half of the oxygen you breathe is made in the ocean by phytoplankton.
-
And they get their energy from the sun. So the second law of thermodynamics is a wonderful thing.
-
It has allowed us to have every thing you see in this room because our power generation depends on the
-
robust and extremely precise computation of how much energy is in burning fuel,
-
whether it's nuclear fuel, or fossil fuel, or some extraordinary fuel to be discovered in the future.
-
The second law of thermodynamics will govern any turbine that makes electricity
-
that we all depend on; and allowed all these shapes to exist.
-
Moderator: Any response, Mr. Hamm?
-
Mr. Hamm: Let me just say two things if I can. If a minute goes that fast along.
-
One is, you know what, here's a point we need to understand.
-
You can have all the energy that you want, but energy or matter will never produce life.
-
God imposed information, language system. And that's how we have life.
-
Matter by itself could never produce life, no matter what energy you have.
-
And, you know, even if you've got a dead stick, you can have all the energy in the world in that dead stick,
-
it's going to decay, and it's not going to produce life.
-
From a creationist perspective, we certainly agree. I mean, before man sinned, you know,
-
there was digestion, and so on, but because of the Fall, now things are running down.
-
God doesn't hold everything together as He did back then.
-
So now we see, in regard to the second law of thermodynamics, we would say it's sort of,
-
in a sense, a bit out-of-control now, compared to what it was originally, which is why we have a running-down universe.
-
Moderator: And that's time. A new question for you, Mr. Ham.
-
Hypothetically, if evidence existed that caused you to have to admit that the Earth was older than 10,000 years,
-
and creation did not occur over six days, would you still believe in God and the historical Jesus of Nazareth
-
and that Jesus was the Son of God?
-
Ken Ham: Well, I've been emphasizing all night. You cannot ever prove using, you know,
-
the scientific method in the present, you can't prove the age of the Earth.
-
So you can never prove it's old. So there is no hypothetical. (Mr. Nye quietly chuckles.)
-
Because you can't do that. Now, we can certainly use methods in the present and making assumptions,
-
I mean, creationists use methods that change over time. As I said, there's hundreds of
-
physical processes that you can use, but they set limits on the age of the universe,
-
but you can't ultimately prove the age of the Earth, not using the scientific method.
-
You can't ultimately prove the age of the universe.
-
Now, you can look at methods, and you can see that there are many methods that contradict billions of years,
-
many methods that seem to support thousands of years.
-
As Dr. Faulkner said in the little video clip I showed, there is nothing in observational astronomy
-
that contradicts a young universe. Now, I've said to you before, and I admit again,
-
that the reason I believe in a young universe is because of the Bible's account of origins.
-
I believe that God, who has always been there, the infinite creator God, revealed in His Word what He did for us.
-
And, when we add up those dates, we get thousands of years.
-
But there's nothing in observational science that contradicts that.
-
As far as the age of the Earth, the age of the universe, even when it comes to the fossil record.
-
That's why I really challenge Christians, if you're gonna believe in millions of years for the fossil record,
-
you've got a problem with the Bible. And that is, then, that you've got to have death and disease and suffering before sin.
-
So, there is no hypothetical in regard to that. You can't prove scientifically, the age of the Earth or the universe, bottom line.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye.
-
Mr. Nye: Well, of course this is where we disagree.
-
You can prove the age of the earth with great robustness by observing the universe around us.
-
And I get the feeling, Mr. Hamm, that you want us to take your word for it.
-
This is to say your interpretation of a book written thousands of years ago,
-
as translated into American English, is more compelling for you than everything that I can observe in the world around me.
-
This is where you and I, I think, are not going to see eye to eye.
-
You said you asserted that life cannot come from something that's not alive. Are you sure?
-
Are you sure enough to say that we should not continue to look for signs of water and life on Mars?
-
That that's a waste. You're sure enough to claim that.
-
That is an extraordinary claim that we want to investigate.
-
Once again, what is it you can predict? What do you provide us that can tell us something about the future; not just about your vision of the past?
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Moderator: A new question, Mr. Nye.
-
Is there room for God in science?
-
Mr. Nye: Well, we remind us. There are billions of people around the world who are religious and who accept science
-
and embrace it, and especially all the technology that it brings us.
-
Is there anyone here who doesn't have a mobile phone that has a camera?
-
Is there anyone here whose family members have not benefited from modern medicine?
-
Is there anyone here who doesn't use e-mail? Is there anybody here who doesn't eat?
-
Because we use information sent from satellites in space to plant seeds on our farms.
-
That's how we're able to feed 7.1 billion people where we used to be barely able to feed a billion.
-
So that's what I see. That's what we have used science for the process.
-
Science for me is two things. It's the body of knowledge--the atomic number of rubidium.
-
And it's the process--the means by which we make these discoveries.
-
So for me that's not really that connected with your belief in a spiritual being or a higher power.
-
If you reconcile those two. Scientists, the head of the National Institutes of Health is a devout Christian.
-
There are billions of people in the world who are devoutly religious.
-
They have to be compatible because those same people embrace science.
-
The exception is you, Mr. Ham. That's the problem for me.
-
You want us to take your word for what's written in this ancient text to be more compelling than what we see around us.
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The evidence for a higher power and spirituality is, for me, separate.
-
I encourage you to take the next minute and address this problem of the fossils, this problem of the ice layers,
-
this problem of the ancient trees, this problem of the ark. I mean really address it.
-
And so then we could move forward. But right now, I see no incompatibility between religions and science.
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Moderator: That's time. Mr. Ham, response?
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Mr. Ham: Yeah, I actually want to take a minute to address the question.
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Let me just say this, my answer would be God is necessary for science.
-
In fact, you know you talked about cell phones. Yeah, I have a cell phone. I love technology.
-
We love technology here at Answers in Genesis. And, I have e-mail, probably had millions of them
-
while I've been speaking up here. And, satellites and what you said about the information we get,
-
I agree with all that. See, they're the things that can be done in the present.
-
And that's just like I showed you. Dr. Stuart Burgess who invented that gear set for the satellite, creationists can be great scientists.
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But, see, I say God is necessary because you have to assume the laws of logic. You have to assume the laws of nature.
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You have to assume the uniformity in nature. And that is the question I had for you.
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Where does that come from if the universe is here by natural processes.
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And, Christianity and science, the Bible and science, go hand in hand.
-
We love science. But again, you've got to understand. Inventing things, that's very different
-
than talking about our origins. Two very different things.
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Moderator: Mr. Ham, a new question. Do you believe the entire Bible is to be taken literally?
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For example, should people who touch pigs' skin, I think it says here, be stoned?
-
Can men marry multiple women?
-
Mr. Ham: Do I believe the entire Bible should be taken literally? Remember in my opening address
-
I said we have to define our terms. So, when people ask that question, say literally, I have to know
-
what that person meant by literally. Now, I would say this.
-
If you say "naturally" and that's what you mean by "literally", I would say, yes, I take the Bible "naturally".
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What do I mean by that? Well, if it's history, as Genesis is,
-
it's written as typical historical narrative, you take it as history.
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If it's poetry, as we find in the Psalms, then you take it as poetry.
-
It doesn't mean it doesn't teach truth, but it's not a cosmological account in the sense that Genesis is.
-
There's prophecy in the Bible and there's literature in the Bible concerning future events and so on.
-
So, if you take it as written, naturally, according to typal literature, and you let it speak to you
-
in that way, that's how I take the Bible. It's God's revelation to man. He used different people.
-
The Bible says that all scripture's inspired by God. So God moved people by his spirit
-
to write his words. And, also, there's a lot of misunderstanding in regard to scripture
-
and in regard to the Israelites. I mean we have laws in our civil government here in America
-
that the government sets. Well there were certain laws for Israel. And, you know, some people
-
take all that out of context. And then they try to impose it on us today as Christians
-
and say, you should be obeying those laws. It's a misunderstanding of the Old Testament.
-
It's a misunderstanding of the New Testament.
-
And, you know, again, it's important to take the Bible as a whole. Interpreting scripture as scripture.
-
If it really is the word of God, there's not going to be any contradiction. Which there's not.
-
And by the way, when men were married to multiple women, there were lots of problems.
-
(Laughter) ...and the Bible condemns that for what it is, and the Bible is very clear.
-
You know the Bible is a real book. There were people who did things that were not in accord with scripture,
-
and it records this for us. It helps you understand it's a real book. But marriage was one man for
-
one woman. Jesus reiterated that in Matthew 19, as I had in my talk.
-
And so those that did marry multiple women were wrong.
-
Moderator: Time there. Mr. Nye, a response?
-
Mr. Nye: So it sounds to me, just listening to you over the last two minutes,
-
that there's certain parts of this document of the Bible that you embrace literally
-
and other parts you consider poetry. So it sounds to me, in those last two minutes,
-
like you're going to take what you like, interpret literally, and other passages you're gonna interpret as poetic or descriptions of human events.
-
All that aside, I'll just say scientifically, or as a reasonable man, it doesn't seem possible that
-
all these things that contradict your literal interpretation of those first few passages,
-
all those things that contradict that, I find unsettling, when you want me to embrace the rest of it
-
as literal. Now, I, as I say, am not a theologian. But we started this debate,
-
Is Ken Ham's creation model viable? Does it hold water? Can it fly? Does it describe anything?
-
And I'm still looking for an answer.
-
Moderator: And time on that. Mr. Nye, here's a new question.
-
I believe this was miswritten here because they've repeated a word. But I think I know what they were
-
trying to ask. Have you ever believed that evolution was accomplished through way of a higher power?
-
I think that's what they're trying to ask here. This is the intelligent design question, I think.
-
If so, why or why not? Why could not the evolutionary process be accomplished in this way?
-
Mr. Nye: I think you may have changed the question just a little but, no, it's all good.
-
Moderator: The word for word question is, have you ever believed that evolution partook through way of evolution?
-
(talking at the same time) Mr. Nye: Let me introduce these ideas for Mr. Ham to comment.
-
The idea that there's a higher power that has driven the course of the events in the universe
-
and our own existence, is one that you can not prove or disprove. And this gets into this expression, "agnostic."
-
You can't know. I'll grant you that.
-
When it comes to intelligent design, which is, if I understand your interpretation of the question,
-
intelligent design has a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of nature.
-
This is to say, the old expression is if you were to find a watch in the field,
-
and you pick it up, you would realize that it was created by somebody who was thinking ahead,
-
somebody with an organization chart, somebody at the top. And you'd order screws from screw manufacturers
-
and springs from spring manufacturers and glass crystals from crystal manufacturers.
-
But that's not how nature works.
-
This is the fundamental insight in the explanation for living things that is provided by evolution.
-
Evolution is a process that adds complexity through natural selection, this is to say,
-
nature has its mediocre designs eaten by its good designs.
-
And so, the perception that there is a designer that created all this, is not necessarily true,
-
because we have an explanation that is far more compelling and provides predictions, and things are repeatable.
-
I'm sure, Mr. Ham here, at the facility, you have an organization chart.
-
I imagine you're at the top, and it's a top-down structure.
-
Nature is not that way. Nature is bottom-up.
-
This is the discovery. Things merge up. Whatever makes it, keeps going. Whatever doesn't make it, falls away.
-
And this is compelling and wonderful and fills me with joy and is inconsistent with a top-down view.
-
Moderator: And that's time. Mr. Ham.
-
Ken Ham: What Bill Nye needs to do for me is to show me an example of something, some new function
-
that arose that was not previously possible from the genetic information that was there.
-
And I would claim, and challenge you, that there is no such example that you can give.
-
That's why I brought up the example in my presentation of Lensky's experiments in regard to e coli.
-
And there were some that seemed to develop the ability to exist on citrate,
-
but as Dr. Fabich said, from looking at his research,
-
he's found that that information was already there.
-
It's just a gene that switched on and off. And so, there is no example, because information that's there,
-
and the genetic information of different animals, plants and so on, there's no new function that can be added.
-
Certainly, great variation within a kind, and that's what we look at.
-
But you'd have to show an example of brand-new function that never previously was possible.
-
There is no such example that you can give anywhere in the world.
-
Moderator: Uh, fresh question here. Mr. Ham, name one institution, business, or organization,
-
other than a church, amusement park, or the Creation Museum
-
that is using any aspect of creationism to produce its product.
-
Ken Ham: Any scientist out there, Christian or non-Christian, that is involved in
-
inventing things, involved in scientific method, is using creation.
-
They are, because they are borrowing from a Christian worldview.
-
They are using the laws of logic. I keep emphasizing that.
-
I want Bill to tell me, in a view of the universe, as a result of natural processes,
-
explain where the laws of logic came from. Why should we trust the laws of nature?
-
I mean, are they going to be the same tomorrow as they were yesterday?
-
In fact, some of the greatest scientists that ever lived: Isaac Newton, James Clerk Maxwell, Michael Faraday were creationists.
-
And as one of them said, you know, he's thinking God's thoughts after Him.
-
And that's really, modern science came out of that thinking, that we can do experiments today,
-
and we can do the same tomorrow. And we can trust the laws of logic. We can trust the laws of nature.
-
And if we don't teach our children correctly about this, they're NOT going to be innovative.
-
And they're not going to be able to come up with inventions to advance in our culture.
-
And so, I think the person was trying to get out that, see, you know,
-
there are lots of secularists out there doing work. And they don't believe in creation.
-
And they come up with great inventions, yeah. But my point is, they are borrowing from the Christian worldview to do so.
-
And as you saw from the video quotes I gave, people like Andrew Fabich
-
and also Dr. Faulkner have published in the secular journals.
-
There's lots of creationists out there who publish.
-
People mightn't know that they're creationists because the topic doesn't specifically pertain to creation vs. evolution.
-
But there's lots of them out there. In fact, go to our website.
-
There's a whole list there of scientists who are creationists,
-
who are out there doing great work in this world and helping to advance technology.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye
-
Bill Nye: There's a reason that I don't accept your Ken Ham model of creation.
-
Is that it has no predictive quality as you had touched on,
-
and something that I've always found troubling.
-
It sounds as though and next time around you can correct me.
-
It sounds as though you believe your world view, which is a literal interpretation of most parts of the Bible, is correct.
-
Well, what became of all those people who never heard of it?
-
Never heard of you? What became of all those people in Asia?
-
What became of all those first nations people in North America?
-
Were they condemned and doomed? I mean, I don't know how much time you've spent talking to strangers,
-
but they're not sanguine about that. To have you tell them that they are inherently lost or misguided.
-
It's very troubling. And you say there are no examples in nature.
-
There are countless examples of how the process of science makes predictions.
-
Moderator: Mr. Nye, since evolution teaches that man is evolving and growing smarter over time,
-
how can you explain the numerous evidences of man's high intelligence in the past?
-
Bill Nye: Hang on, there's no evidence that man or humans are getting smarter.
-
No, especially if you ever met my old boss. Heh, heh, heh. (laughter)
-
No, it's that what happens in evolution. And there's, it's a British word that was used in the middle 1800's.
-
It's survival of the fittest. And this usage, it doesn't mean the most push-ups or the highest scores on standardized tests.
-
It means that those that "fit in" the best. Our intellect, such as it is, has enabled us to dominate the world.
-
I mean, the evidence of humans is everywhere.
-
James Cameron just made another trip to the bottom of the ocean, in the deepest part of the ocean,
-
the first time since 1960. And when they made the first trip, they found a beer can.
-
Humans are everywhere. And so, it is our capacity to reason that has taken us to where we are now.
-
If a germ shows up, as it did, for example, in World War I, where more people were killed by the flu
-
than were killed by the combatants in World War I.
-
That is a troubling and remarkable fact. If the right germ shows up, we'll be taken out.
-
We'll be eliminated. Being smarter is not a necessary consequence of evolution.
-
So far, it seems to be the way things are going because of the remarkable advantage it gives to us.
-
We can control our environment and even change it, as we are doing today, apparently by accident.
-
So, everybody, just take a little while and grasp this fundamental idea.
-
It's how you "fit in" with nature around you. So, as the world changed, as it did, for example, the ancient dinosaurs,
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they were "taken out" by a worldwide fireball, apparently caused by an impacter.
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That's the best theory we have. And we are the result of people, of organisms that lived through that catastrophe.
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It's not necessarily smarter. It's how you "fit in" with your environment.
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Moderator: Mr. Ham, a response?
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Ken Ham: I remember at university, one of my professors was very excited to give us some evidence for evolution.
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He said, "Look at this. Here's an example. These fish have evolved the ability not to see."
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And, he was going to give an example of blind cave fish.
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And he said, "See, in this cave, they're evolving, because now the ones that are living there, their ancestors had eyes.
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Now these ones are blind." And I remember, I was talking to my professor, "But wait a minute!
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Now they can't do something that they could do before." Yeah, they might have an advantage in this sense.
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In a situation that's dark like that, those with eyes might have got diseases and died out.
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Those that had mutations for no eyes are the ones that survived.
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It's not survival of the fittest. It's survival of those who survive.
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And it's survival of those that have the information in their circumstance to survive,
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but you're not getting new information. You're not getting new function.
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There's no example of that at all. So, we need to correctly understand these things.
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Moderator: Alright. Um, we're down to our final question here, which I'll give to both of you.
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And in the interest of fairness here, because it is a question to the both of you,
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let's give each man two minutes on this if we can, please.
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And also, in the interest of you having started first, Mr. Ham, I will have you start first here.
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You'll have the first word. Mr. Nye will have the last word.
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The question is: what is the one thing, more than anything else, upon which you base your belief?
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Mr. Ham: What is the one thing upon anything else which I base my belief?
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Well, again, to summarize the things that I've been saying, there is a book called the Bible.
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It's a very unique book. It's very different to any other book out there.
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In fact, I don't know of any other religion that has a book that starts off by
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telling you that there's an infinite God, and talks about the origin of the universe,
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and the origin of matter, and the origin of light, and the origin of darkness,
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and the origin of day and night, and the origin of the earth, and the origin of dry land,
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and the origin of plants, and the origin of the sun, moon and stars, the origin of sea creatures,
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the origin of flying creatures, the origin of land creatures, the origin of man,
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the origin of woman, the origin of death, the origin of sin, the origin of marriage,
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the origin of different languages, the origin of clothing, the origin of nations,
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I mean it's a very, very specific book.
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And it gives us an account of a global flood and the history and the tower of Babel,
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and if that history is true, then what about the rest of the book?
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Well, that history also says man is a sinner and it says that man is separated from God.
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And it gives us a message, that we call the gospel, the message of salvation, that God's
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son stepped in history to die on the cross, to be raised from the dead,
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and offers a free gift of salvation.
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Because the history is true, that's why the message based on history is true.
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I actually went through some predictions and listed others, and there's a lot more that you can look at,
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and you can go and test it for yourself. If this book really is true,
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it is so specific, it should explain the world, it should make sense of what we see.
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The flood. Yeah, we have fossils all over the world.
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The tower of Babel, yeah, different people groups, different languages,
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they have flood legends very similar to the Bible. Creation legends similar to the Bible.
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There's so much you can look at, and prophesy and so on.
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Most of all, as I said to you, the Bible says, if you come to God, believing that he is,
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he'll reveal himself to you. You will know. If you search after truth,
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you really want God to show you, as you would search after silver and gold,
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he will show you. He will reveal himself to you.
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Moderator: Mr. Nye?
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Mr. Nye: Would you repeat the question?
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Moderator: The question is: What is the one thing, more than anything else, upon which you base your belief?
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Mr. Nye: As my old professor Carl Sagan said so often,
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when you're in love, you want to tell the world. And I base my beliefs on the information
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and the process that we call science.
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It fills me with joy to make discoveries every day of things I'd never seen before.
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It fills me with joy to know that we can pursue these answers.
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It is a wonderful and astonishing thing to me, that we are, you and I,
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are somehow, at least one of the ways that the universe knows itself.
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You and I are a product of the universe. It's astonishing. I admit, I see your faces.
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That we have come to be because of the universe's existence.
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And we are driven to pursue that. To find out where we came from.
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And the second question we all want to know:
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Are we alone? Are we alone in the universe? And these questions are deep within us,
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and they drive us. So the process of science, the way we know nature is the most compelling thing to me.
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And I just want to close by reminding everybody what's at stake here.
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If we abandon all that we've learned, our ancestors, what they've learned about nature and our place in it,
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if we abandon the process by which we know it,
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if we eschew, if we let go of everything that people have learned before us,
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if we stop driving forward, stop looking for the next answer to the next question,
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we, in the United States, will be outcompeted by other countries, other economies.
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Now, that would be okay, I guess, but I was born here. I'm a patriot.
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So we have to embrace science education. To the voters and taxpayers that are watching,
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please keep that in mind. We have to keep science education in science and science classes. Thank you.
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Moderator: One tiny bit of important housekeeping for everyone here, the county is now under a level two snow emergency.
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Drive home carefully. You'll have a lot to talk about, but drive carefully.
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This debate will be archived at debatelive.org. That's debatelive.org, one word.
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It will be found at that site for several days. You can encourage friends and family to watch and take it over.
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Thanks so much to Mr. Nye and to Mr. Ham (Loud applause) for an excellent discussion.
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I'm Tom Foreman, thank you, good night from Petersburg, Kentucky and the Creation Museum.
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(applause)
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(orchestral music)
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ORDER TONIGHT! Here or online
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(silence)
Camille Martínez
Holy cow, great work, Sara and Cathy! It's fantastic that of you both took the time to tackle this right away. I'm not able to help for a few more hours, but I plan to check back later to see how things are going and try to chip in.
I'm not a moderator or related to the Captions Requested team in any capacity other than plain old contributor, in case it sounds otherwise up top. I'm just a teammate and subtitler* who knows that doing this takes time, and for you guys to get so much done so quickly is pretty awesome.
Cheers,
Camille
*doesn't appear to 'officially' be a word at present, but, like, why?
Sara Huang
Hey, Camille! Thanks so much! And many thanks to Cathy for adding more dialogue. It was great to wake up to. I hope we'll be able to get this done soon!
Mahmoud Aghiorly
thank you very much , with out your work i wont be able to translate it into other language
thanx , thanx
waiting to finish it
Cathy
I'm enjoying the work, and I want to make sure the debate can be heard. It was really interesting to hear in its entirety. :-)