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- From: BLANTON@VAX2.DSEG.TI.COM
- Subject: Slusher/Barnes and Strahler
- Message-ID: <9210281434.AA05492@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1992 08:23:41 -0600
-
- The names of Harold Slusher and Thomas Barnes have cropped up in these
- postings concerning MIOS, the Metroplex Institute of Origin Science.
- In his book "Science and Earth History", Arthur Strahler gives
- excellent synopses of both men's theories. For those interested in
- the creation/evolution controversy, this is THE book. At around $40
- it is a bargain by one of the top science textbook writers. It is a
- thick, large format, hard-bound book with lots of illustrations. It's
- from Prometheus Books, the publishing company owned by Paul Kurtz of
- CSICOP. If you are an NCSE member you can order it from them at a
- discount.
-
- Someone asked how to join the NCSE and get their newsletter. If you
- haven't received a reply yet, drop me a note and I will fill you in
- when I get back from my meeting (around noon).
-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- | John Blanton |
- | Secretary, North Texas Skeptics |
- | blanton@mcopn1.dseg.ti.com |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
- From: BLANTON@VAX2.DSEG.TI.COM
- Subject: Slusher/Schaum's
- Message-ID: <9210281417.AA04656@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1992 08:07:40 -0600
-
- As part of my follow up I purchased a copy of the Slusher/Wells
- Outline. As far as I could tell, the authors provide a
- creditable treatment of undergraduate physics. The examples and
- the problems are meaningful and clearly stated. There is no
- coverage of quantum mechanics or relativity, but I would
- recommend the book to any undergraduate studying physics or
- engineering mechanics. One would never know that one of the
- authors holds such a low opinion of the title subject.
-
- I think that McGraw-Hill is doing a disservice listing Slusher as
- a Ph.D. on the title page. Although one could argue that
- professional titles are worthless in themselves; it's only the
- works of the person that count. If this is the case, then why
- list the professional titles? Helps to sell books. This smacks
- of false advertising in that case. The UTEP undergraduate
- catalog doesn't list Slusher's Ph.D. McGraw-Hill should correct
- the problem.
-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- | John Blanton |
- | Secretary, North Texas Skeptics |
- | blanton@mcopn1.dseg.ti.com |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
- From: S_MURPHY@VAX2.PHYSICS.MANCHESTER.AC.UK
- Subject: Re: Harold Slusher's monograph
- Message-ID: <9210281247.AA29739@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1992 11:22:00 GMT
-
- After looking at the monographs of Slusher that Taner Edis forwarded I can
- only say that I am appalled. The fact that special relativity only applies
- to inertial reference frames is something that is normally drummed home in
- the first year of an undergraduate course in physics. That someone in Slusher's
- position seems to have lost sight of this is, to say the least , disconcerting.
- Does anybody know if the Schaum book suffers because of it? (I'm going to see
- if I can track a copy down over lunch, but I probably won't have time to do
- more than skim over it.)
-
- Sean Murphy.
-
-
-
-
-
- From: Murray Voight <BI08%UTEP.BITNET@pucc.Princeton.EDU>
- Subject: Metroplex Institute of Origin Science
- Message-ID: <9210280759.AA12798@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1992 00:51:12 MST
-
- > Don Patton, chairman of MIOS has informed me that the lecture on
- > Tuesday night next week (election day) will be Harold Slusher. Harold
- > Slusher is a well known proponent of "creation science". He has a
- > legitimate master's degree in physics and is the co-author of the
- > Schaum's Outline "Physics for Engineers and Scientists" (I believe
- > that is the title). He claims to have a Ph.D. in geophysics from
- > Columbia Pacific University. He is an assistant professor of physics
- > at the University of Texas at El Paso. Here is some additional
- > information: 1) He lists his "Ph.D." on the title page of the
- > Schaum's Outline, but the UTEP undergraduate catalog does not list any
- > Ph.D. 2) I can't find "Columbia Pacific University" in any college
- > reference. 3) He is the author of a monograph titled "The Origin of
- > the Universe: An Examination of the Big Bang and Steady State
- > Cosmogonies" in which he generally bashes modern cosmology and makes
- > some bizarre statements concerning special relativity.
- >
- > Can anyone on this forum provide me with additional information
- > regarding Slusher and his claims? I plan to attend the MIOS meeting
- > on Tuesday and make a first hand assessment. I would appreciate any
- > assistance.
-
- I received my B.S. from U. T. El Paso. I took a course under
- Harold Slusher and two courses under Dr. Thomas Barnes (who is
- also a proponent of creationism.)
-
- Both men are intelligent and both teach their courses with almost
- no reference to creationism.
-
- They understand that had they pushed their personal ideas in the
- classroom they would probably have been fired.
-
- Barnes taught the best two courses in E&M I ever had.
-
- Both can follow the status quo very well and understand it perfectly,
- but it seems they feel that they have had some special insight into
- the "TRUE" nature of the universe that only they have had.
-
- Years ago I approached both privately on the subject of creationism.
- They became very animated and really tried to explain the essence of
- their understanding. (It didn't take.)
-
- Out of several hundred students, maybe four or five "understood" and
- became members of their fold. Which to them was just right. Only the
- elite really understand.
-
- This of course allows them to be impervious to all attacks. They
- consider all attacks as coming from ignorance and misunderstanding.
-
- They have created their own confortable, secure little world and
- are happy therein.
-
- I would only attend a lecture of this nature if I had not been
- previously exposed to a creationist.
-
- Murray Voight
- BI08@UTEP.BITNET
-
-
-
-
- From: Taner Edis <edis@ETA.PHA.JHU.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Harold Slusher's monograph
- Message-ID: <9210280104.AB20018@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Tue, 27 Oct 1992 17:38:16 EST
-
- Assuming that it is of some interest, I'll share the excerpts
- from Slusher's stuff that was sent to me, and my comments on them.
- Pretty typical creationist abuse of physics.
-
- > From: BLANTON@VAX2.dseg.ti.com
- >
- > Here are two excerpts from Slusher's monographs on the origin of the
- > universe. I have tried to type them in accurately (noting minor typos
- > in the original), so if you see major grammatical disconnects you
- > should attribute them to me.
- >
- > The first section is from an argument using the third law of
- > thermodynamics (pretty standard for creationists). In my opinion, it
- > starts out not half bad. I wish my high school physics text had given
- > as good a treatment of the subject. The part that seems puzzling to
- > me is the delta-entropy equation toward the end. You might skip to
- > there if you want.
- >
- > The second section is from Slusher's Appendix A, in which he discusses
- > a theory of Herbert Dingle. Admittedly this is not Slusher's own, but
- > he endorses it and uses its arguments. My own impression is that
- > Dingle seems to overlook the consequences of the accelerating frame of
- > reference in the earth orbital example. I have had the standard
- > graduate E&M course from Professor Rindler here at UT Dallas, so I
- > know not to make rash assumptions about the expected observations of
- > moving charges (and masses, too). However, I do not have the ability
- > to fully analyze Dingle's argument. Any suggestions?
-
- Both suspicions are correct, i.e. his thermodynamics fails on
- account of making up a nonsensical equation, and his relativity
- totally ignores the acceleration. The details follow after Slusher's
- arguments:
-
- > Here is Slusher on thermodynamics:
- > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
- > The entropy increases that occur in natural processes measure the
- > increased disorder, a total entropy increase is associated with a lost
- > opportunity to obtain useful mechanical work. When a process leads to
- > an increase in the total entropy, some energy which could have been
- > used to perform macroscopic mechanical work has been degraded to a
- > form in which it is unavailable for work. Natural processes occur in
- > a direction such that, on a scale of unavailability, energy runs
- > downhill.
- >
- > All conceivable processes can be conveniently divided into three
- > classes:
- >
- > 1) Natural processes, for which dS = S - S0 > 0.
- > 2) Reversible processes, for which dS = S - S0 = 0.
- > 3) Unnatural processes, for which dS = S - S0 < 0.
- >
- > Natural processes are spontaneous, irreversible processes that
- > actually take place in the cosmos. An unnatural process may be
- > thought of as the exact opposite of some natural one. Examples of
- > unnatural processes are the flow of heat from a cold body to a hot
- > body, a gas compressing itself to a smaller volume, a mixture
- > separating itself into pure substances, etc. Unnatural processes are
- > unnatural only in closed systems. They can always be brought about if
- > outside agents act on a system.
- >
- > It is claimed by some that somehow highly complex bodies with much
- > information can arise in parts of an isolated system even though the
- > total entropy of the system increases. It is contended that if the
- > places where entropy decreases are more than offset by regions of
- > increasing entropy the Second Law is not violated. It has been argued
- > that if a place is "open" to energy the entropy can be reduced and
- > order and complexity arise. This would appear to be nonsense. Dr.
- > David R. Boylan in the excellent monograph published by the Creation
- > Research Society, "Thermodynamics and the Development of Order" (pp.
- > 52-54), argues against this scheme in the following manner.
- >
- > For a system the total entropy change is given by
- >
- > dS[total] = dS[random] - dS[order].
- >
- > The first term on the right of the equation is the entropy change in
- > the system due to random effects and the second term that of entropy
- > change due to increasing order. As Dr. Boylan emphasizes, the two
- > entropy terms are from different "types" of energy transfer, and the
- > exchange of energy between the system and its surroundings must be of
- > the same "kind." In other words, as Boylan maintains: "The decrease
- > in entropy due to increasing order cannot be financed by an increase
- > in entropy in the sun or in any other random process in the
- > surroundings. It can only be financed by energy from an equivalent
- > 'quality' source." If the parts of an auto in a junk yard were made
- > open to the sun, or to the uiverse [sic], this would not lead to an
- > automobile. Only the introduction of a certain "kind" of ordered
- > energy could make the auto. An automobile mechanic is necessary.
-
- Separation of entropy into "random" and "order" parts is bad
- enough (I'd like to see what distinction is to be employed), and it is
- made worse by pulling what amounts to a "conservation of order" law
- out of a hat. This is garbage, and has only a tenuous connection to
- real statistical mechanics.
- As usual, what is attempted is a rephrasing of the classical
- argument from design, but in quasi-physical language. Unfortunately,
- the evolution of functional complexity in dynamical systems that can
- be described quite simply has been known for a while now. Natural
- selection in a biological context is but one (early) example of
- general "self-organizing" behavior.
- Entropy is a concept very strongly tied to information and
- complexity. Perhaps a description of how a "2nd law" operates in
- informational terms can be useful:
- All "microscopic" physical theories we currently think well of
- have an "information-preserving" quality: complexity is not created
- (say by random injection of new particles) or destroyed (which is just
- creation in a time-reversed sense). The natural question is how can
- so many of our *macroscopic* theories be very successful, when they
- very often include an irreversibility in time? Slusher's
- natural/unnatural event description assumes this: normally things run
- down and decay (entropy is increased, complexity lessened), while some
- events he "explains" by invoking design involves generation of "order"
- (entropy goes down, complexity goes up).
- The standard reply is that nothing in a global picture of
- increasing "disorder" prevents local fluctuation. This is entirely
- correct, and not affected by bogus conservation laws, but there is
- more to the story, i.e. how we can get irreversibility in a seemingly
- reversible universe. It would seem that global entropy does not
- change at all!
- What saves the day is the observation that humans and similar
- information processors cannot handle the infinite amounts of
- information necessary to perfectly track the time evolution of most
- physical systems. *The presence of dynamical randomness -- chaos --
- will create irreversibility from the point of view of a finite
- information processor*. In fact, one can justify many irreversible
- phenomenological equations that are irreversible (such as diffusion),
- based on reversible dynamics that possess a positive Kolmogorov-Sinai
- entropy (a relative of conventional entropy that is useful for chaos).
- In other words, a physical theory that posits a constant
- complexity can still give rise to increases and decreases in "order,"
- at a macroscopic level where only finite computational resources are
- available. A macroscopic decrease in entropy is not the same thing as
- a microscopic complexity increase. Self-organization can and does
- occur, just like disorganization does, neither are "unnatural."
- Slusher's distinction between "kinds" of entropy is
- ill-defined (reminding me of the creationist "kind" concept in their
- version of biology), and no conservation law of the form invoked
- exists.
-
- > <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- > Here is Slusher on Dingle on relativity and Doppler shift
- > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
- >
- > Efforts to deny Professor Dingle's contention as discussed in this
- > Appendix were ably refuted by him in two very important papers:
- > "Observatory," No. 949, December, 1965, pp. 264, 265; No. 953, August,
- > 1966, pp. 165-167.
- >
- > Some years ago, the late professor Herbert Dingle [1, 2] pointed out a
- > most profound effect that the acceptance of Einstein's postulate of
- > relativity would have on current ideas in cosmology and cosmogony.
- > This effect is seen in the interpretation of the Doppler shift. The
- > Doppler effect is a relation between the relative motion of a source
- > of light and the spectrum of that light as recorded for instance on a
- > spectrometer. If a source and an observer are approaching each other,
- > the spectrum is shifted to shorter wavelengths; but the shift is to
- > longer wavelengths if they are receding from each other. These shifts
- > are measured relative to position of the spectrum of the light when
- > the source of light and the observer have no relative motion. This
- > paper is a discussion of Dingle's examination of the meaning of the
- > Doppler shift in the light of the postulate of relativity. Dingle's
- > examination is little known but of tremendous significance and
- > therefore the subject of this paper.
- >
- > Dingle proceeded in the following manner in proposing a simple but
- > far-reaching problem regarding Doppler shift. Suppose that initially
- > the source and observer are stationary with no motion toward or away
- > from each other and are separated, being a distance s apart [reference
- > here to a figure]. Then suppose the source begins to move with speed
- > V toward the observer [reference to the figure]. The light-waves will
- > be compressed and, thus, shifted toward the blue side of the spectrum
- > that existed before this motion began. However, this Doppler shift
- > should not begin to be detected until a time s/c after the motion
- > began, since it would take this long for the effect caused by the
- > motion of the source to reach to observer at a distance s away; c is
- > the speed of light.
- >
- > But now suppose that the source is stationary and the observer (say a
- > spectrometer on Earth) begins to move with a speed V toward the source
- > [refers to figure]. The spectrum will be shifted to the blue side an
- > identical amount as before; but the shift will be detected
- > immediately, since the Doppler shift is caused by the observer
- > encountering the waves with a greater frequency. The amount of shift
- > is the same in both cases. The only observable difference between a
- > Doppler shift caused by a speed of the source towards the observer and
- > an equal speed of the observer towards the source is that in the first
- > case, there is a delay in detection of the Doppler shift, while in the
- > second case its detection is instantaneous. Synchronized clocks
- > placed at the source and observer should show which has moved since
- > the time of movement of the source or the observer and the detection
- > of the Doppler-shifted light can be determined.
- >
- > In Einstein's hypothesis, the relativity postulate maintains that
- > there can be no observable difference between the motion of the source
- > towards the observer and that of the motion of the observer towards
- > the source. Only the relative motion can be detected. So either
- > observation of the motion causing the Doppler shift is instantaneous
- > in both cases or there is a time delay in both cases. There cannot be
- > two answers. Common experience should tell us which of these answers
- > we must take.
- >
- > Consider the orbital motion of Earth about the Sun and observations of
- > a distant star. There will be an oscillation of the spectral lines of
- > that distant star as the Earth revolves in its orbit. Superimposed on
- > this oscillation of the spectrum due to Earth's orbital motion will be
- > a shift due to the relative motion of the solar system and the distant
- > star. This however, does not affect the oscillation of the spectral
- > lines. The Doppler effect corresponding to this orbital motion is
- > synchronized with the orbital position of the earth. The Doppler
- > shift of the light from the distant star caused by Earth's orbital
- > motion is instantaneous in its detection. As shown in [reference to
- > figure], the Doppler effect is a maximum (in opposite senses) at
- > positions (2) and (4) and a minimum at positions (1) and (3). The
- > expected Doppler shift synchronizes immediately with the positions of
- > the Earth. According to the relativity postulate, the Doppler effect
- > of the motion of the star then must likewise show up immediately;
- > otherwise there would be an observable difference between the two
- > cases. The relativity postulate says that phrases "when the star
- > moves" and "when the observer moves" are meaningless phrases and only
- > a phrase like "when the relative motion occurs" is proper. Two
- > answers are not possible according to the relativity postulate. We
- > know that for the observer moving the Doppler shift is instantaneous.
- > Therefore, this answer must apply regardless of which body moves if
- > the postulate of relativity is to stand. Thus, the Doppler shifts of
- > stars and galaxies must give the speeds which exist when the
- > observations are made, no matter how far away the sources of the light
- > are.
- >
- > Dingle's singling out of this problem regarding the postulate of
- > relativity and/or modern cosmology is little known but obviously of
- > tremendous significance. For it would seem to imply that the red
- > shifts of the spectra of distant galaxies give velocities existing
- > now, not millions or billions of years ago as generally accepted. So,
- > if the relativity postulate is accepted, then a radically different
- > interpretation must be placed on the Hubble law. The Hubble law (V=
- > Hr), a prediction of relativistic cosmology, says the distance of an
- > object is proportional to its velocity which is found from its red
- > shift. This velocity presumably was that of the object years into the
- > past. Of course, today, there is a great deal of question as to
- > whether red-shifts are truly Doppler effects at all. If the postulate
- > of relativity is not accepted so as to eliminate this problem, a vast
- > reconstruction must be made of modern cosmology and cosmogony since
- > they are laid down on the assumption of the validity of the hypotheses
- > of special and general relativity. Both the hypotheses of special and
- > general relativity and their child, modern cosmogony, have several
- > distinct failures when attempting to represent the real Universe.
- >
- >
- >
- > 1,2 Dingle, Herbert, 1960. The Doppler effect and the foundations of
- > physics, (I) and (II) British Journal for the Philosophy of Science XI
- > (41) 11-31 and (42) 113-129. In this article Dingle remarked: "It is
- > doubtful if there is a serious rival to the Doppler effect as the
- > department of modern science in which the experimental basis is
- > slightest in comparison with the structure raised on it."
-
- Special relativity declares that only relative motion is
- meaningful for *inertial* frames of reference, i.e. those at
- *constant* velocity. Once acceleration (or, equivalently,
- gravitation) is present, it is general relativity that must be
- invoked. Dingle's argument fails on this count, in that the purported
- illegal distinction between frames is entirely based on the
- acceleration, invalidating the assumption of inertiality.
- There is a very closely related, but more dramatic puzzler
- about special relativity, the "Twin Paradox." This is traditionally
- sprung on undergraduates just when they think they conceptually
- understand relativity, after having performed a few Lorentz
- transforms. Remember the well-known illustration of time dilation
- (where the elapsed time between events depends on the relative
- velocities), that of the astronaut zooming through space close to the
- speed of light? Well, she comes home after a year of her time, in
- which her twin has aged twenty years. But then, you spring the
- question on the unsuspecting (they never do) students: if only the
- relative velocity of the frames (rocket and earth) matter, is it not
- the case that the earth twin is traveling very fast relative to the
- one in the rocket? In this case, why doesn't the earth twin age one
- year to the rockets' twenty?
- Again, the distinguishability, allowing us to point at one
- twin as getting older than the other, has to do with acceleration --
- special relativity doesn't apply. If the twins were on separate
- rocket ships all their lives, going at constant velocity, fine, except
- that they'd never meet again. In order to meet again, the rocket twin
- has to decelerate at some point in his journey, reverse velocities,
- and head back to the home planet. At this point, you can roughly
- calculate the aging difference from special relativity, but the
- equivalence of frames is destroyed -- by the huge mass of the earth.
- The Doppler shift pseudoproblem is essentially the same thing,
- and is no argument against special relativity. And in cosmological
- questions, it is general relativity that is indispensable, where the
- general Doppler shift is related also to the curvature in space-time.
- Talking about Doppler shifts giving the velocities at the time
- of observation is nonsense, and not only because of Dingle's
- misunderstanding of the theory he criticizes: it smuggles in a notion
- of a "now" that is the same across the universe -- the time of
- observation -- that is at best a conceptual roadblock in a
- relativistic universe.
-
- Taner Edis
-
-
-
-
-
- From: "Orville G. Marti" <OMARTI%TIFTON.BITNET@pucc.Princeton.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Metroplex Institute of Origin Science
- Message-ID: <9210271415.AA18699@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Tue, 27 Oct 1992 08:57:56 EST
- On Mon, 26 Oct 1992 10:50:34 -0600 <BLANTON@VAX2.DSEG.TI.COM> said:
-
- > He claims to have a Ph.D. in geophysics from
- >Columbia Pacific University. He is an assistant professor of physics
- >at the University of Texas at El Paso. Here is some additional
- >information: 1) He lists his "Ph.D." on the title page of the
- >Schaum's Outline, but the UTEP undergraduate catalog does not list any
- >Ph.D. 2) I can't find "Columbia Pacific University" in any college
- >reference.
- >
-
- Columbia Pacific University is a "diploma mill", but I think it is
- "better" (if I can use that word) than most. Rather than merely mailing
- you a diploma in return for your check, they actually go thru the motions
- of providing some instruction. For a Ph.D., for example, you are supposed
- to conduct research at your location (not at theirs) and enlist the
- aid of a local expert in your field, all the while maintaining contact with
- your CPU advisor. In due course, you will receive your degree.
-
- >+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- >| John Blanton |
- >| Secretary, North Texas Skeptics |
- >| blanton@mcopn1.dseg.ti.com |
- >+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
-
- ************************************************************************
-
- Orville G. Marti, Jr. OMARTI@TIFTON Dick Marti
-
- ........................................................................
- "...the world is not to be narrowed till it will go into the
- understanding (which has been done hitherto), but the understanding is
- to be expanded and opened till it can take in the image of the world."
- .....Francis Bacon from "The Parasceve"
- ************************************************************************
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- From: BLANTON@VAX2.DSEG.TI.COM
- Subject: Metroplex Institute of Origin Science
- Message-ID: <9210262058.AA23087@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Mon, 26 Oct 1992 10:50:34 -0600
-
- In Dallas there is a local creationist group called the Metroplex
- Institute of Origin Science (MIOS). The hold monthly meetings at
- which they preach the evils of evolution and host lectures generally
- aimed at discrediting legitimate science, particularly as it supports
- 1) biological evolution of species, 2) modern concepts in geology (old
- age of the earth, natural processes accounting for geological
- phenomena, etc.) and 3) modern concepts in cosmology (Big Bang, etc.).
- They seem to believe emphatically that the earth is about 6000 years
- old, the flood of Noah was a real event just as described, and humans
- and dinosaurs lived contemporaneously, as evidenced by the so-called
- "man tracks" in Cretaceous limestone in the Paluxy River about 90
- miles west of here.
-
- Don Patton, chairman of MIOS has informed me that the lecture on
- Tuesday night next week (election day) will be Harold Slusher. Harold
- Slusher is a well known proponent of "creation science". He has a
- legitimate master's degree in physics and is the co-author of the
- Schaum's Outline "Physics for Engineers and Scientists" (I believe
- that is the title). He claims to have a Ph.D. in geophysics from
- Columbia Pacific University. He is an assistant professor of physics
- at the University of Texas at El Paso. Here is some additional
- information: 1) He lists his "Ph.D." on the title page of the
- Schaum's Outline, but the UTEP undergraduate catalog does not list any
- Ph.D. 2) I can't find "Columbia Pacific University" in any college
- reference. 3) He is the author of a monograph titled "The Origin of
- the Universe: An Examination of the Big Bang and Steady State
- Cosmogonies" in which he generally bashes modern cosmology and makes
- some bizarre statements concerning special relativity.
-
- Can anyone on this forum provide me with additional information
- regarding Slusher and his claims? I plan to attend the MIOS meeting
- on Tuesday and make a first hand assessment. I would appreciate any
- assistance.
-
- Fellow North Texas Skeptic, Ron Hastings, will hopefully be there, as
- well. Ron has a (real) Ph.D. in physics from Texas A&M University,
- and he is on the board of directors of NCSE, the National Center for
- Science Education. He is one of the better authorities on the Paluxy
- River "man tracks" (see Arthur Strahler's book, "Science and Earth
- History"). Even so, we could use some help.
-
- If anybody is interested, please drop me a note. If you would like, I
- can supply you with specific excerpts from Slusher's monograph for
- your own evaluation. Taner Edis, this should be your concern. It is
- the science of physics that's being trashed.
-
-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- | John Blanton |
- | Secretary, North Texas Skeptics |
- | blanton@mcopn1.dseg.ti.com |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
- From: BLANTON@VAX2.DSEG.TI.COM
- Subject: More on young earth creationists
- Message-ID: <9301271739.AA19647@lll-winken.llnl.gov>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 11:24:38 -0600
- In my previous post I didn't explain my relief at encountering
- old earth creationism. Our problem here (Dallas area) is not
- only countering anti-evolution propaganda but also having to
- argue that the Cretaceous limestone that abounds in these parts
- is really more than 6,000 years old. Local creationists seem
- to have given up entirely on science.
-
- Speaking of local creationists, I will be attending the meeting
- of MIOS, the Metroplex Institute of Origin Science, on Tuesday.
- If anyone in the area is interested I can provide directions.
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- John Blanton
- Secretary, North Texas Skeptics
- blanton@lobby.ti.com
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