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Posts Tagged ‘charles darwin’

“On the Origin of Species” Turns 150

November 24th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments

150 years ago today, Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life“. A monumental book, considered by biologists around the world to be the foundation of evolutionary biology.

In the 150 years since its publication, evolutionary theory has expanded and grown in ways that Darwin himself could not have imagined. The discovery of the multitude of transitional forms that match Darwin’s original prediction, and the work of others (the prediction and subsequent discovery of Tiktaalik being perhaps the most notable) helped bolster the theory, and firmly establish it as scientific fact.

Not only that, but all discoveries of biology since Darwin proposed his idea have complemented it perfectly, with DNA confirming common ancestry, and the various evolutionary development experiments that have captured evolution in action[1].

So, happy anniversary to Charles Darwin’s masterpiece! May it inspire many more of the generations to come!

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Charles Darwin 200th Anniversary £2 Coin

July 13th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments

The Royal Mint commissioned a special edition £2 coin in honour of Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday. The coin is a limited edition of 25,000, and mine arrived this morning!

Presentation Pack

Presentation Pack

The presentation pack (above) has a short but detailed biography of Charles Darwin, as well as information about Evolution, and of course the coin itself. I think the front of the coin is pretty awesome:

Darwin vs. Monkey

Darwin vs. Monkey

There are still coins available if you want to buy one. They cost £7.99 each (plus shipping), and well worth it if you want a nice souvenir of Darwin’s 200th year. You can buy the coin from the Royal Mint website.

God & Darwin

May 26th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments

Well, after almost a month of inactivity on the blog, I’m back! I firstly want to apologise for not making even small posts during my absence, but I honestly had so much to do I either forgot or couldn’t get the time to write anything. I have been reading and following my favourite blogs though, so I haven’t missed any of the things that have happened recently. The reason for my absence was a large number of exams that I always try to prepare for, but tend to ignore right up until they are actually upon me. Thus for the last 3 weeks I was studying like crazy, only stopping to send the occasional message on Twitter. I think that during that period, Twitter replaced my blog almost completely, and I know that large number of my readers follow me on Twitter as well (and if you don’t yet, please follow!).

So, now that exams were over, I went to stay with my mother for the weekend, and was cut off from the internet (apart from my mobile phone’s internet) for 3 days. To top it off, when I arrived back from a 3 hour train journey yesterday, I was whisked away by my friends to a Godfather film marathon. It was the first time I’d seen any of the movies (please forgive me), and I thoroughly enjoyed them all. With the help of two bloggers and Skype friends of mine, Splendid Elles (@elles) and Andrew Milne (@footbullet), we successfully created a new religion using Twitter, based on a truly awesome British snack: JaffaCakeology. If you want to join, simply hashtag all your tweets with #JAFFACAKES, and pledge devotion to our prophet, @cmkempe.

Back to business then, and I have 4 months off doing practically nothing other than some programming and various projects. This leaves plenty of time for writing blog posts, both short and long. Today I’m going to write about a presentation I saw over the weekend. It was the start of Salisbury Festival, which is an event spanning several months in which numerous activities are run in the city where I grew up. One of the events this weekend was a talk given by Charles Foster, a lawyer who has written a book called “The Selfless Gene”. His talk was entitled “Living with God and Darwin” and promised to

[demonstrate] that orthodox Christianity is not incompatible with what evolutionary biology says about our world.

The real problem, he said,

centres around the ethical implications of natural selection, and what such a system – based on selfishness, waste and death – might say about the loving creator God of the Christian faith.

I thought such claims were interesting, so I went along to hear his argument. However the talk was not what was promised. Instead of showing how Christianity wasn’t incompatible, he simply spent his time laughing at creationist claims (along with the rest of the non-creationist audience). He talked at length about how Young Earth Creationists were foolish, how the evidence contradicts their claims, how nobody can possibly claim such things without being ignorant. This was all very well, but he didn’t cover how this was wrong in a Biblical sense, which would have actually supported his argument. I highly doubt there were any Young Earth Creationists in the audience; this is England we’re talking about! I highly doubt there were any Old Earth Creationists there either! He spent a good 20 minutes talking about creationism in it’s various forms, spending a few extra on Intelligent Design, and ending his case against creationism with a passionate argument against a “god of the gaps”.

The rest of the talk was a haphazard presentation on the evidence for evolution, and I wasn’t impressed. He didn’t go into any detail, and his slides were all extremely bad quality, as if they had been photographed from some other talk. He never mentioned the mechanisms that make evolution tick, and he kept on blaming the “neo-darwinists” and “disciples of Dawkins” on most of the confusion over evolution. Overall though, there was nothing there that could convince anyone of either position. At the beginning he told people he would make creationists in the audience “very angry”, and atheists (well, “disciples of Dawkins”) very angry too. Neither of his prophecies held true.

At the end of the talk, an atheist at the back stood up and asked him to give the evidence for God, since his talk was about showing how God was compatible with Darwin. Mr Foster explained that the way he saw it, the lack of explanation for civilisation and morality is an indicator that a God exists. In other words, because science cannot explain everything about us, God must still have some hold. What a strange conclusion for the man to make, given his argument against a “god of the gaps” that he made clear earlier on. I started to raise my hand, but another atheist across the room from me got there first, pointing out his contradiction.

So poor Mr Foster lost out to the regular thorn in the side of theists: self contradiction. Such a pity. His book was on sale in the lobby afterwards, but there was no way I was paying £11.99 for it. I suspect it will include all the same repeated arguments against creationism, which in this country aren’t really needed. Nobody apart from the fringe churches accept creationism as a legitimate claim anymore. I further suspect that the arguments for evolution will be equally bad, thus misleading the people who read it into thinking that science knows very little about the subject.

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Children of Evolution

February 25th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments

Great video, great song. Those Germans certainly know how to celebrate science!

H/T to Pharyngula

Happy Darwin Day!

February 12th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments

charlesdarwin_09Happy Darwin Day everyone! Only one day after this blog’s birthday as well, hurrah! Seems like Google is getting into the spirit, so I guess a load of fundie Googlers have resorted to using Yahoo Search for the day. What is everyone doing for Darwin Day? I’m personally sitting at home watching movies, but on Saturday I’m going to the Darwin exhibition in London (and I’ll take loads of photos to show you all).

I’ve also realised that Ive gone a whole week without writing up a report of the debate I participated in, so expect some kind of elaborate re-telling of that later on today. Oh, and thanks for all the blog birthday messages you’ve been leaving on the birthday post; they really help inflate my ego, so keep them coming.

Carnival of the Godless #110

February 9th, 2009 Adrian Hayter View Comments
Adrian Hayter: Now available in CANDY!!!

Adrian Hayter: Now available in CANDY!!!

The latest Carnival of the Godless is up at The Greenbelt, so go over there and check it out! Every member of the carnival (myself included) got a little love heart made for them in honour of the quickly approaching Valentine’s Day. Speaking of which, this Valentine’s Day I will be in London visiting the Darwin Exhibition at the Natural History Museum, and then I will be marching to the Italian Embassy to protest the medieval attitudes of the Vatican have against women and homosexuals. I’ll be taking photos at both events, and hopefully I’ll be able to link my blog to my facebook albums easily thanks to a new plugin I’m trying out.

Anyway, the next CotG is arriving here in two weeks time on the 22nd Feb, so don’t forget to send me your submissions! See you then (if not before).

Darwin’s First Draft Goes Online

April 17th, 2008 Adrian Hayter View Comments

Just something people might be interested in. The first draft of Charles Darwin’s book “Origin of Species” is online at Darwin Online. Read more about the story at BBC News.

It’s quite amazing the size of this archive though:

The online archive about Charles Darwin is so vast it would take someone two months to view it all if they downloaded one image per minute.