Yes- I've seen Bart's book. I've already debated him at Portland State University and I have that debate at my YouTube channel here:steve wrote:Backwoodsman wrote:
Did you read the description of Rask's book on Amazon.com?
http://www.amazon.com/Evolution-Affirmi ... 936320606/
I couldn't help but notice this: "There is found to be universally a logical disconnect between the purported evolutionary experiments or observations and their evolutionary conclusion. The most common logical error was the fallacy of affirming the consequent."
A quick explanation of "Affirming the consequent":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirming_the_consequent
Apparently you don't recognize that most of what you say is based on this logical disconnect and fallacy. You won't listen to us; Rask has some scientific education, so maybe you'll listen to him.
Dr. Rask sent me his book (he is a listener to The Narrow Path) and I have read it. I don't know if Truman has. If he has, he shows no evidence of understanding Dr. Rask's argument.
Dr. Rask is very sharp. Before publication he subjected his manuscript to be reviewed by two evolutionary scientists, asking them to notify him of any factual or reasoning errors that they might find. He includes their criticisms and his responses. It appears to me that even they did not quite grasp his point. It is becoming clearer to me all the time that scientists are not necessarily the most logical thinkers (you'd think they would be).
Dr. Rask's logic seems impeccable. He is 100% correct about evolutionist's case resting on the logical fallacy of "affirming the consequent." He also has debated Truman before. It is on Youtube. Truman gave no indication of understanding Dr. Rask's obvious (and repeated) point.
To put Dr. Rask's thesis in a nutshell, the concept of evolution is not empirically nor logically provable, and it is statistically impossible. Every alleged proof of evolution comes down to "affirming the consequent", which looks like this:
1. If evolution is true, then such-and-such data would be observable;
2. Such-and-such data is observed, and is consistent with evolution's prediction;
2. Therefore, evolution is true.
The failure here is to ask whether the data might be equally consistent with any number of other assertions besides evolution by random mutation and natural selection (e.g., special creation, panspermia, spontaneous generation of each species separately, etc.). A simple example of this fallacy would be (and Dr. Rask gives this example, as I recall):
1. If I had eaten a whole pizza, I would feel full;
2. I do feel full (consistent with the thesis that I ate a whole pizza),
3. Therefore, I have eaten a whole pizza.
This is a logical fallacy, because there might be some thesis alternative to my eating a whole pizza that might as surely account for my feeling full.
I am pretty sure that Truman does not understand this logical fallacy and does not know when he is engaged in it, even when it is pointed out to him (watch his previous debate with Dr. Rask).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IO3xfGgCrmQ
http://youtu.be/IO3xfGgCrmQ
I'm going to debate him again 9-22-13, details:
https://www.facebook.com/events/212927125534150/
Bart's book wasn't really peer reviewed, like he claims. In actuality, he just got some feedback and printed it. It wasn't thorough or anything like a real peer-reviewed scientific paper. So basically, he's using a different meaning for the word "peer-reviewed," not like how normal scientists would use it.
Steve Gregg, said, unwiitingly: "The failure here is to ask whether the data might be equally consistent with any number of other assertions besides evolution by random mutation and natural selection (e.g., special creation, panspermia, spontaneous generation of each species separately, etc.)"
Steve is right, and I pointed this out (except about panspermia, which is not about creating species but rather origins of the first life). What other hypotheses is there? I pointed this out in the debate. Bart offered none. What about ID? He still declined, saying he didn't know enough about ID to defend it. So the failure is really on Bart by not offering potential other hypotheses... and the only alternative really is creationism, which fails on many fronts. Bart offered some calculations in the book and I offered some reasons as to why they couldn't be trusted (flaws in assumptions); and a biologist in the audience offered more reasons.