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When it comes to the science, evolution-denying
creationists are not just unaware of the errors of the bogus concept of
“creation-science”, they are unaware of the broader problem of misunderstanding
science itself, especially the nature of Bayesian probability, which is a
statistical method where accumulated evidence keeps adding to the overall
probability of a hypothesis being true. They are so unapprised of how the whole
body of science (physics, chemistry, biology, geology, etc) provides
multiplicative validations that they are not aware of just how absurd it is to
reject most of mainstream science in favour of their creationist pseudoscience
(as you’ll see in a moment, in a preposterous act of intellectually
self-sabotaging parody they don’t even know how they are actually rejecting
most mainstream science). It’s very easy to apply Bayesian probability to
evolution and an old universe regarding how accumulating evidence affects our
confidence in the theory. Fossils showing transitional forms, comparative
anatomy, nested hierarchies in the phylogenetic tree of life, the coancestry
coefficient (genetic relatedness), endogenous retroviruses, vestigial traits
and atavisms, embryology, radiometric dating (of the moon rocks as well as the
earth), cosmology, light travel and distant galaxies, the cosmic microwave
background radiation, the expanding universe and Hubble’s Law, stars in
different life stages, nuclear fusion in our sun, spiral galaxies, and so
forth. All of these combined demonstrate comprehensively that the universe is
billions of years old, and/or that life has been evolving on our planet for
several billion years.
Now, not that creation science does proper science,
but let’s pretend for a moment that it did. If creationism was true and the
universe and earth were only about 6 thousand years old, we would have
accumulated a similarly impressive array of evidence like the above. The
scientific consensus would show that the Earth’s geological layers are only
thousands of years old with no indication of millions or billions of years of
sedimentation, radiometric dating would consistently yield ages of thousands of
years for rocks, fossils, and meteorites instead of millions or billions, ice
cores would show only a few thousand years of accumulation, the fossil record
would lack any indication of gradual transitions, with all species appearing
suddenly and remaining unchanged, DNA comparisons would not show nested
hierarchies or molecular clocks consistent with deep time but would instead
suggest all species were created independently, human and dinosaur fossils
would probably be found in the same rock layers, light from distant galaxies
billions of light-years away would have reached us instantly or the universe
would be demonstrably much smaller, the cosmic microwave background radiation
would not exist as a remnant of a Big Bang billions of years ago, stars in
different life stages would be absent, with all stars appearing to be of the
same young age, no supernova remnants older than a few thousand years would be
observable, the Earth’s magnetic field would show no signs of past reversals or
gradual decay over millions of years, comets and planetary rings would show no
evidence of replenishment mechanisms, radioactive isotopes in the Earth’s crust
would be consistent with a young age rather than billions of years of decay,
genetic diversity in species, including humans, would indicate a severe genetic
bottleneck only a few thousand years ago without the expected mutational load
of much longer timescales, and nobody alive would laugh at the claim that the
Second Law of Thermodynamics poses a barrier to the formation of complex
biological systems.
If creationism had got it right about a universe of
only a few thousand years old, the majority of the scientific community for the
past few hundred years up to the present day would be in full agreement that
creationism is correct. Of course, a creationist would just dismiss all that
with some ridiculous platitude like “Scientists are just interpreting the
evidence through their secular, evolutionary worldview instead of accepting the
truth of God's creation.", or “No amount of so-called ‘evidence’ can disprove
what the Bible clearly teaches.", or “God's ways are higher than our ways,
and scientists are always changing their minds, but the Bible never changes”,
completely side-stepping the facts – but I’m sad to say from years of
experience that there is little hope of a rational conversation with someone
like that.
But for anyone who wouldn’t be so easily
manipulated, or who rightly has doubts about the integrity of so-called
“creation science”, we might be able to appeal by remembering that creationists
do actually know what it’s like to be part of the consensus for mainstream
science – they are part of the mainstream in many more ways than they are not.
In keeping with the above lists, I assume all (or nearly all) creationists
believe that the Earth is spherical, and accept Newton’s laws of motion, the
atmosphere protects us from harmful space radiation, water boils at 100°C at
sea level, bacteria and viruses cause disease, antibiotics can kill bacterial
infections but not viruses, the speed of light is approximately 186,000 miles
per second, the laws of thermodynamics govern energy transfer, metals conduct
electricity, the heart pumps blood through the circulatory system,
photosynthesis allows plants to convert sunlight into energy, earthquakes are
caused by the movement of tectonic plates, sound travels faster through solids
than through air, combustion requires oxygen, the moon orbits the Earth,
objects fall at the same rate in a vacuum regardless of mass, the freezing
point of water is 0°C at standard atmospheric pressure, the established
principles of aerodynamics, and that friction generates heat when two surfaces
rub together. I assume that most of them also accept that Maxwell’s equations
accurately describe electromagnetism, quantum theory explains the behaviour of
particles at the smallest scales, Einstein’s theory of relativity describes how
time and space are interconnected, sound waves require a medium to travel, and
that energy cannot be created or destroyed.
So,
creationists do mainstream science – they do most mainstream science – they
just happen to revert to pseudoscience when it conflicts with their narrow
interpretation of the Bible. And if they suggest that the above scientific
facts belong in a different category of science to evolution over millions of
years, then they are engaging in special pleading - applying one standard of
evidence to mainstream science they accept while demanding an entirely
different, unreasonable standard for evolution and an old universe. To
understand the fabric of the universe properly is to understand that the
category distinction is bogus; that there is no separating the scientific facts
on the creationist shopping list from all the others – they all nest together
in one integrated, consistent, mutually complementary set of laws and facts
about the universe that confirm evolution and an old universe, and undermine
their own creationist pseudoscience.
For example,
they trust Newton’s laws of motion and gravity, which describe not only how
objects move on Earth but also how planets, stars, and galaxies formed over
billions of years. The same gravity that keeps us grounded explains the orbits
of celestial bodies and the gradual formation of planetary systems from
collapsing gas clouds - processes that undeniably take way longer than
thousands of years. They also accept the laws of thermodynamics, which govern
energy transfer and decay, yet reject radiometric dating - even though
radioactive decay follows the same thermodynamic principles. The predictable
decay of isotopes is used in everything from nuclear power to medical
treatments, and those same decay rates allow us to measure the Earth's age at
4.5 billion years, as well as confirm that the Sun has been burning through
nuclear fusion for a little bit longer than the earth. Creationists accept
Maxwell’s equations, which describe electromagnetism and light, when they
utilise electricity, yet they reject one of the strongest confirmations of the
Big Bang: the cosmic microwave background radiation. This comprehensively
attested residual radiation is electromagnetic in nature, precisely what
Maxwell’s equations describe, and it serves as incontrovertible evidence that
the universe originated approximately 14 billion years ago. Similarly,
creationists acknowledge that the speed of light is a constant 186,000 miles
per second, but reject the clear implications of this fact – whereby if light
has been traveling at this constant speed, then the existence of galaxies
billions of light-years away means their light has been traveling for billions
of years, proving an old universe beyond dispute.
In the field
of biology, creationists accept that DNA carries genetic information, but deny
the molecular clocks that prove common ancestry among species. The same DNA
comparisons that confirm paternity in courtrooms or evidence in crime scenes
also demonstrate our evolutionary relationship to other primates, with shared
genetic markers that could only exist through common descent. They trust the
conservation of energy - the principle that energy cannot be created or
destroyed - but ignore how this same law governs nuclear fusion in stars,
leading to observable stellar lifecycles that unfold over billions of years. We
can actually directly observe stars in different life stages, proving that they
age and evolve over millions and billions of years, not merely thousands.
And in
geology, a subject in which I’m not so well-studied – but I do know that
creationists seem to have no issue with the fact that plate tectonics cause
earthquakes, yet they reject the undeniable evidence that continents have been
drifting for hundreds of millions of years. As any creationist could learn on
the fabulous Life On Our Planet series on Netflix, the expansion of the
Atlantic Ocean is measurable today at just a few centimetres per year - and
basic mathematical calculations confirm that Pangaea, the vast landmass that
predates separate continents, existed hundreds of millions of years ago - far
beyond the 6,000 year timeline creationists propose. Moreover, I think
creationists would acknowledge that radioactive isotopes decay at measurable rates
when used in medicine or industrial applications, but they deny those same
decay rates when conveniently applied to radiometric dating – which, as it
happens, independently confirms an old earth. When they go on their holidays,
creationists gleefully accept aerodynamics to explain how planes fly, but fail
to apply the same physics to the equivalent laws in space travel and orbital
mechanics, which prove the vast distances and timescales of the universe.
From all
this, you can see that creationists are participants in mainstream science -
they accept most of it and rely on all of it for daily living. Which leads to
the inevitably damning question; surely any self-respecting creationist, when
faced with the proposition that the only elements of science they happen to
reject also happen to be the few that they have been told conflict with a
literal interpretation of Genesis, must eventually summon up enough honesty and
integrity to admit that they have succumbed to the most absurd selective
rejection, and that their unwillingness to reflect on their own Biblical
interpretation smacks of gross arrogance, wilful ignorance and the most
ridiculous surrender of the mind to indoctrination. In fact, we can go further
– the willingness to cling to such a deeply flawed and selectively applied
stance, in the face of overwhelming evidence from multiple scientific
disciplines (a perverse avoidance of the very principles they otherwise embrace
and rely upon in every other area of life, we saw earlier), exposes such a
profound intellectual cowardice and satisfaction with foolishness that it
ceases to be mere ignorance and becomes an act of pitiful wilful self-deception
- a stubborn defiance of reason so extreme that it borders on parody.