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- Wesley R. Elsberry on March 26, 2004 03:12 PM
- PZ Myers on March 25, 2004 05:03 AM
- Ed Brayton on March 24, 2004 08:22 PM
- Jeff on March 24, 2004 08:17 PM
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Posted by PZ Myers on March 24, 2004 07:30 PM
...and now a link from Carl Zimmer!
Dang it, now I've got to get to work and post something substantial here.
Trackback URL: http://www.pandasthumb.org/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/21
Comment #79
Posted by Ed Brayton on March 24, 2004 08:22 PM (e) (s)
LOL. At the rate this is going, we’re going to be a marauding marsupial by the weekend. Talk about punctuated equilibrium!
Comment #105
Posted by PZ Myers on March 25, 2004 05:03 AM (e) (s)
It might be more appropriate for us to talk about the perverse and annoying <i>scala natura</i> used at the TTLB…
Comment #252
Posted by Wesley R. Elsberry on March 26, 2004 03:12 PM (e) (s)
Jeremy at <a href=”http://personalknowledge.blogspot.com/2004_03_01_personalkno…“>Personal Knowledge</a> gave us a link with this comment:
<blockquote>Unfortunately, most of the activity at the blog seems to be focused on critiquing Intelligent Design, which is neither “anti-evolution,” nor a serious threat to the integrity of science. Of course the nice gents over at the Thumb would probably disagree with me about that.</blockquote>
As Jeremy predicted, I disagree with him on his assessment of “intelligent design” as not being antievolution and not a serious threat to the integrity of science.
I’ll direct Jeremy’s attention to <a href=”http://service.bfast.com/bfast/click?bfmid=2181&sourceid=296…“>Creationism’s Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design</a> by Barbara C. Forrest and Paul R. Gross, which scrupulously documents the historical and conceptual links between “intelligent design” and earlier antievolution efforts in the USA. ID advocates utilize the very same hoary chestnuts of the young-earth creationists; it is hard for me to imagine anyone seriously trying to argue that these folks are not antievolutionists. Further, they are anti-science, as they are after nothing less than a redefinition of how science gets done, so as to bring about a “theistic science”. I was there at the 1997 “Naturalism, Theism, and the Scientific Enterprise” conference where most of the big names from the ID movement presented their thoughts on how to bring about the desired redefinition of science.
As for the threat posed, let’s take a look around the country. ID advocates have been extremely active in attempting to have legislation passed, textbooks altered, school boards pass their policies, and science standards rewritten. They haven’t been entirely unsuccessful in all these endeavors, either. I tend to think that these things <i>do</i> make them a threat.

Comment #78
Posted by Jeff on March 24, 2004 08:17 PM (e) (s)
Something tells me you guys are going to evolve into something a little more advanced than an “<a HREF=”http://www.truthlaidbear.com/showdetails.php?host=http://pan…“>insignificant microbe</a>” in the TTLB ecosystem…congrats.
Looks great already!