Witamy w serwisie internetowym Polskiego Towarzystwa Kreacjonistycznego
Aktualności
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J.T. Trevors, D.L. Abel, "Chance and necessity do not explain the origin of life" (2004)
- Cell Biology International 2004, vol. 28, pp. 729-739. --- Abstract. --- Where and how did the complex genetic instruction set programmed into DNA come into existence? The genetic set may have arisen elsewhere and was transported to the Earth. If not, it arose on the Earth, and became the genetic code in a previous lifeless, physicalechemical world. Even if RNA or DNA were inserted into a lifeless world, they would not contain any genetic instructions unless each nucleotide selection in the sequence was programmed for function. Even then, a predetermined communication system would have had to be in place for any message to be understood at the destination. Transcription and translation would not necessarily have been needed in an RNA world. Ribozymes could have accomplished some of the simpler functions of current protein enzymes. Templating of single RNA strands followed by retemplating back to a sense strand could have occurred. But this process does not explain the derivation of ‘‘sense’’ in any strand. ‘‘Sense’’ means algorithmic function achieved through sequences of certain decision-node switch-settings. These particular primary structures determine secondary and tertiary structures. Each sequence determines minimum-free-energy folding propensities, binding site specificity, and function. Minimal metabolism would be needed for cells to be capable of growth and division. All known metabolism is cybernetic e that is, it is programmatically and algorithmically organized and controlled.
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Błędy logiczne ewolucjonistów
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Evolution, Logic and Increasing Doubts
- "Evolution, Logic and Increasing Doubts" by Dr. John Ankerberg and Dr. John Weldon (opis błędów logicznych ewolucjonistów)
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Paul Stokes, "Staff and parents fight to stop takeover by academy that teaches 'creationism'" (2004)
- telegraph.co.uk Monday 21/06/2004; http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/main.jhtml?xml=/education/2004/06/23/tenedu221.xml
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"How Did Life Begin? An Interview with Andy Knoll" (2004)
- NOVA http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/origins/knoll.html
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"New Theory Of How Planets Form Finds Havens Of Stability Amid Turbulence" (2005)
- "Science Daily" 2005-03-19 Source: Indiana University http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/03/050309144659.htm
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Cornelia Dean, "A New Screen Test for Imax: It's the Bible vs. the Volcano" (2005)
- "The New York Times" March 19, 2005; http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/19/national/19imax.html?
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Maggie McKee, "Genes contribute to religious inclination" (2005)
- "New Scientist" 17:38 16 March 2005; http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7147
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Mark Perakh, "Dembski "displaces Darwinism" mathematically -- or does he?" (2005)
- Mark Perakh briefly reviews a recent article by William Dembski (http://www.designinference.com/documents/2005.03.Searching_Large_Spaces.pdf) and shows that, contrary to Dembski's claims, it cannot serve as part of the mathematical foundation of intelligent design. Among several serious faults of Demsbki's paper is his view of biological evolution as a search for a small target in a large search space. In fact, biological evolution is not searching for a target. Probabilities calculated by Dembski, for example, for "finding" a specific protein in the space of all possible proteins of a given length are irrelevant because evolution is not "searching" for a predetermined specific protein. Likewise, Dembski's "displacement problem" (which in his new article is in fact not identical to the problem of the same name as rendered by Dembski in his earlier publications) is equally irrelevant for evolution, since the latter conducts no target-oriented searches. --- http://www.talkreason.org/articles/newmath.cfm
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William A. Dembski, "Searching Large Spaces: Displacement and the No Free Lunch Regress" (2005)
- Abstract --- Searching for small targets in large spaces is a common problem in the sciences. Because blind search is inadequate for such searches, it needs to be supplemented with additional information, thereby transforming a blind search into an assisted search. This additional information can be quantified and indicates that assisted searches themselves result from searching higher-level search spaces–by conducting, as it were, a search for a search. Thus, the original search gets displaced to a higher-level search. The key result in this paper is a displacement theorem, which shows that successfully resolving such a higher-level search is exponentially more difficult than successfully resolving the original search. Leading up to this result, a measure-theoretic version of the No Free Lunch theorems is formulated and proven. The paper shows that stochastic mechanisms, though able to explain the success of assisted searches in locating targets, cannot, in turn, explain the source of assisted searches. --- http://www.designinference.com/documents/2005.03.Searching_Large_Spaces.pdf
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Bruce J. McFadden, "Fossil Horses - Evidence for Evolution" (2005)
- "Science" 18 March 2005, vol. 307, s. 1728-1730. --- Abstract --- The modern day horse Equus is a beloved icon but also, thanks to its many fossil relatives, has proved valuable for understanding macroevolution (that is, the long-term evolution of species). In his Perspective, MacFadden discusses fossil evidence supporting a branching family tree for the Family Equidae and points out why horse fossils have been beneficial for understanding evolution.
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Ks. Andrzej Luter, "Prawda nauki i wiary" (2004)
- "Tygodnik Powszechny" 2004-06-13; http://tygodnik.onet.pl/1563,1169205,1,dzial.html
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"Scopes Snoops. Watching one arm of Kansas’ vast right-wing conspiracy" (2005)
- "The Pitch" Mar 17, 2005; http://www.pitch.com/issues/2005-03-17/news/strip.html
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Alvin Plantinga, "Methodological Naturalism? Part 2" (1997)
- "Origins & Design" 1997, vol. 18, no. 2; http://www.arn.org/docs/odesign/od182/methnat182.htm
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Alvin Plantinga, "Methodological Naturalism? Part I" (1997)
- "Origins & Design" 1997, vol. 18, no. 1; http://www.arn.org/docs/odesign/od181/methnat181.htm
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Oliver Sacks, "Remembering Francis Crick" (2005)
- "The New York Review of Books" Volume 52, Number 5 · March 24, 2005; http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17861
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Michael J. Everhart, "Criticisms of evolution aren't based on science" (2005)
- "The Wichita Eagle" March 15, 2005; http://www.kansas.com/mld/eagle/news/editorial/11135418.htm
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Guillermo Gonzalez, "Habitable Zones in the Universe" (2005)
- Comments: 71 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; to be published in "Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres" --- Abstract: --- Habitability varies dramatically with location and time in the universe. This was recognized centuries ago, but it was only in the last few decades that astronomers began to systematize the study of habitability. The introduction of the concept of the habitable zone was key to progress in this area. The habitable zone concept was first applied to the space around a star, now called the Circumstellar Habitable Zone. Recently, other, vastly broader, habitable zones have been proposed. We review the historical development of the concept of habitable zones and the present state of the research. We also suggest ways to make progress on each of the habitable zones and to unify them into a single concept encompassing the entire universe.
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Michael J. Behe, "Dogmatyczny darwinizm"
- "Azymut" nr 8; http://www.euro-forum.net/strony/uniwers/behe.htm
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Michael J. Behe, "Dogmatyczny darwinizm"
- "Azymut" nr 8; http://www.euro-forum.net/strony/uniwers/behe.htm