15 Jul 2009, 12:31 AM

A Thorough and Spirited Debunking

Oh man. I’m back from The Amaz!ng Meeting 7, and there’s a LOT that I want to write about. For starters, Captain Disillusion hisownself made an appearance (in disguise, naturally) and screened a kickass addendum to his pantry ghost debunk:

Now THAT was satisfying. His prior explanation was good and plausible as an alternative explanation to claims of the paranormal. But in this one, as CD says, “we can pretty much see exactly what’s happening.”

I’ll have a lot more to say about the trip and related topics once I’ve recovered a bit more from late nights, red-eye flights, and jet lag.

7 Jul 2009, 11:43 PM

Grim Figures: A Preview

It has been a month since my last sketch post. I have been lax.

However, though my sketchbook has been collecting dust, my fingers have not been completely idle.

Photos will be on the way once I get a chance to take some during daylight hours, but until then here’s a bit of a preview:

zombie-preview

6 Jul 2009, 11:16 PM

A Laughable Attack on Common Descent

I like to keep tabs on some of the more prominent creationist websites, such as the Discovery Institute’s “Evolution News & Views” page and William Dembski’s group blog “Uncommon Descent.” Cornelius Hunter, author of some cdesign proponentsist book or other, has been making regular appearances on both sites lately, cross-posting items from his own blog.

Many of his rantings have fallen into the classic fallacy of argument from incredulity: “I personally can’t imagine how X could be possible (and I’m going to ignore your attempts to explain X), therefore X is impossible.” It’s hardly worth addressing such resolute and deliberate ignorance.

But one post of his, which appeared at the Disco ‘Tute the other week, contained a particularly glaring abuse of logic. He uses a recent study, an investigation into the potential evolutionary origins of laughter, as an excuse to lash out at the evidence backing common descent:

Evolutionists group species by similarities, thinking this reveals patterns of common descent. Then they find another similarity (not surprisingly with the same pattern) and they conclude it must have evolved. After all, it fits the pattern.

Hunter goes on to call common descent “laughable.” But I’m absolutely stymied by his parenthetical note above. If he rejects common descent, why isn’t he surprised to see a new similarity fit the same pattern? I therefore pose this question to Hunter, or anyone who thinks they can suggest an answer. Please, enlighten me.

Why would otherwise completely unrelated traits exhibit common patterns of shared expression between species, unless those traits conform to an overarching pattern of inheritance via common descent?