Exposing Discovery Institute Part 1: Casey Luskin

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  • čas přidán 14. 04. 2022
  • Have you heard of the Discovery Institute? Have you fallen under the impression that they know what they are talking about, or can be considered an even remotely legitimate source of information? Well, you've come to right place. They aren't. They're a propaganda mill, and all of their content is full of lies. They hide behind a paper-thin roster of scientists who have deluded themselves into dishonestly preaching outside of their expertise, and they blatantly misrepresent any scientific research or scientists they are referring to. Constantly. Sometimes they even commit slander. That's what this video is about, and it is the first installment in a series where I will expose the fraudulent activity of all the major contributors at the Discovery Institute, one clown at a time. Part 1 addresses Casey Luskin, and it is centered around some very serious slander he committed against an esteemed anthropologist. But don't worry, I cover lots of other lies and stupidity that come out of his mouth as well. If you're a fan of the DI, do please find the courage to watch this rather than running to the comments section to yell at me. It's not all that long, and I promise that I make it extremely clear and undeniable that Casey is a liar. If you have a shred of honesty within you, you will quickly see that this is the case. Enjoy!
    Watch me expose many more Discovery Institute IDiots: bit.ly/ProfDaveDI
    Watch my other debunks/debates/discussions: bit.ly/ProfDaveDebunk
    The DI video, if you absolutely must subject yourself to torture: • Human Evolution: The M...
    PBS Nova documentary transcript: www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcr...
    Collard & Aiello paper: www.nature.com/articles/35006181
    Richmond & Strait paper: www.nature.com/articles/35006045
    Henry Gee supplement: www.nature.com/articles/news0...
    Jim Seward's blog post which aided in the construction of this content: jimspace3000.blogspot.com/2021...
    Watch my other debunks/debates/discussions: bit.ly/ProfDaveDebunk
    EMAIL► ProfessorDaveExplains@gmail.com
    PATREON► / professordaveexplains
    Check out "Is This Wi-Fi Organic?", my book on disarming pseudoscience!
    Amazon: amzn.to/2HtNpVH
    Bookshop: bit.ly/39cKADM
    Barnes and Noble: bit.ly/3pUjmrn
    Book Depository: bit.ly/3aOVDlT

Komentáře • 6K

  • @ProfessorDaveExplains
    @ProfessorDaveExplains  Před 2 lety +1501

    Hey everyone, it has come to my attention that some people are having trouble with the audio for the PBS Nova doc segments. This is very confusing to me, it works just fine on every single one of my devices. Luckily I later show the transcript for these sections so you can read that, or the subtitles, but I think if you mess around with headphones and/or plug in speakers and/or try other devices everyone should be able to get it to work one way or another. I'm not sure how to fix this, otherwise I would delete and reupload. Sorry for the inconvenience!

    • @Gxlto
      @Gxlto Před 2 lety +147

      Hey Dave, just wanted to say that I'm with you on everything but minimize the character and motive analysis. Many people who disagree with you use this as an excuse to accuse you of Ad hominem attacks and thereby discard your objections. Others just call you arrogant or rude.
      Regardless of whether they are even remotely correct, I suggest you just focus on the argumentation, as that is the main show in their circus and flood them (no pun intended) with evidence. I just think it's unjust for such content to be unappreciated because people find it "mean". Thanks for everything you've done.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Před 2 lety +485

      If you give people a mirror, some will turn away and hide, but some will have the courage to look and change.

    • @gs7296
      @gs7296 Před 2 lety +20

      Awesome video !

    • @dongiovanni4331
      @dongiovanni4331 Před 2 lety +109

      @@Gxlto unfortunately, cherry picking is a common trope of YEC argumentation.
      It needs to be called out for what it is whenever it happens.

    • @dalstein3708
      @dalstein3708 Před 2 lety +62

      Dave, I did indeed hear very little when playing those segments. My device is a simple tablet. But after plugging in headphones the audio was acceptable.
      Perhaps the 2 audio channels were merged on the (single) speaker on my tablet, and they canceled each other out.

  • @jasonmccomb280
    @jasonmccomb280 Před 2 lety +3071

    I am a recovering evangelical christian. I believed them hook, line, and sinker. To escape, I actually had to get divorced. I am so appreciative of channels like this. Thanks for helping to keep me sane and educating me.

    • @magicker8052
      @magicker8052 Před 2 lety +153

      wow.. religion can really suck :(

    • @freddan6fly
      @freddan6fly Před 2 lety +123

      There are many more that combine science and education with refuting religious claims, for instance Aron Ra, Pauologia, Viced Rhino, Gutsick Gibbon, Forrest Valkai, Conspiracy Catz, SciManDan (on tinfoil tuesday), Emma Thorne, Skep Tick, Thunderf00t.

    • @freddan6fly
      @freddan6fly Před 2 lety

      @@jordan7634 "all of these people are cringe. Their arguements are weak" - ha ha ha. You believe in god, without any evidence. That is cringe. You don't even have an argument, not even a weak one. That is super cringe. You did not dare to watch this video. That is pathetic.

    • @Luan-RT
      @Luan-RT Před 2 lety +37

      @@jordan7634 Nah scimandan is nice

    • @vkyal5810
      @vkyal5810 Před 2 lety +15

      @@jordan7634 Why?

  • @oldguy6976
    @oldguy6976 Před rokem +870

    Had a high school biology teacher who said" You enter my class naive. You leave either informed or belligerently stupid " .Love that guy.

    • @himwhoisnottobenamed5427
      @himwhoisnottobenamed5427 Před rokem +14

      Sounds like Mr. Sutcliffe. My 10th grade bio teacher. 😂

    • @quintonsm2616
      @quintonsm2616 Před rokem +24

      Hard to argue against that. Just as long as he backed up with facts his position.

    • @jfinney225
      @jfinney225 Před rokem +9

      i call it intentional ignorance, but i think i like his phrasing better 🤣🤣

    • @achyuththouta6957
      @achyuththouta6957 Před rokem +2

      Haha

    • @paulcastle2019
      @paulcastle2019 Před rokem +12

      My high school biology teacher said about evolution "I have to teach this but we all know where we really come from." Then we spent one hour "learning" about evolution.

  • @kevinmurphy65
    @kevinmurphy65 Před rokem +512

    Speaking to a Catholic priest many years ago, he cautioned me to beware a new version of creationism. He literally said "You'll hear it as Intelligent Design and they will pretend it's science. It an attempt by evangelicals to repackage creationism. It is neither Intelligent nor God's design...it's bullshit" I was left rather stunned by this most vehement denial of ID by a man of the cloth.

    • @lsrpjune3500
      @lsrpjune3500 Před rokem +21

      Is it though? The pope has said that the devil isn’t real. Neither is hell. This has been said by men of cloth

    • @lsrpjune3500
      @lsrpjune3500 Před rokem +13

      Maybe you were stunned however, it isn’t that stunning when you look into the Vatican and prior behaviors of prior popes

    • @kevinmurphy65
      @kevinmurphy65 Před rokem +12

      @@lsrpjune3500 This is true.

    • @markangeloporcare5289
      @markangeloporcare5289 Před rokem

      Damn son

    • @tonyc223
      @tonyc223 Před rokem

      @@lsrpjune3500 There is a lot of us Catholics that do not believe in hell or the devil. We believe in good and evil and a higher power ,science and human evolution. Many Catholics could give a shit about the pope. Much of this new religion is a cult. Woke is a cult also.

  • @AlphaOfCrimson
    @AlphaOfCrimson Před 9 měsíci +230

    Creationists not agreeing on whether a fossil is a human or ape is the funniest thing in the world. They are basically admitting that the find is transitional.

    • @ballasog
      @ballasog Před 5 měsíci +1

      That's a linguistic argument.

    • @nemanjalazarevic9249
      @nemanjalazarevic9249 Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@ballasog How?

    • @ballasog
      @ballasog Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@nemanjalazarevic9249 The human/ape argument among creationists is: I define human like this; I define ape like this; this does/doesn't meet my definition. Membership in a broadly defined category doesn't mean anything, especially one defined the way creationists define it - based on what they want to say are humans or apes.

    • @kingjames104
      @kingjames104 Před 3 měsíci +1

      How? When a fossil is almost completely destroyed how are to tell if it belongs to one animal or another? You do realize that almost all animals on earth share some similarities to one degree or another depending on the species.

    • @juanchymartin7824
      @juanchymartin7824 Před 3 měsíci +7

      ​@@kingjames104Genetics, Phisiology, Biology and other sciences work together to get a possible idea. The nearest to reality.

  • @retrowave762
    @retrowave762 Před 2 lety +1836

    Thank you, Dave.
    A friend of mine had become a full creationist again after finding Discovery Institute, and when I showed this video, he immediately apologized for falling for the lies and promised to check sources the next time. I just wanted to type this so you knew that your video does have an affect, even on people formerly part of their fanbase.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Před 2 lety +535

      Now that's what I call progress!

    • @SoulDelSol
      @SoulDelSol Před 2 lety +47

      What does your friend flip flop world views every time he watches a CZcams video? Sounds like it. I'd hate for him to see a debate, his head will be spinning believing both people after each response!

    • @retrowave762
      @retrowave762 Před 2 lety +204

      @@SoulDelSol Uh, no? He was sucked into Discovery Institute over the course of months, watching every video they made as far back as 2020. Then when I showed him this video proving all of those videos did nothing but lie blatantly to his face, he realized truth. This is completely normal, and happens all the time. Want an example?
      You meet a Wing Chun "master" who says Wing Chun is the best martial art ever. He shows you several demonstrations where his paid actors fly across the room with slight little slaps to the neck, and then when Xu Xiaodong comes along and TKOs him in three hits, you realize you were lied to and move on a bit smarter.
      It really just seems like you wanted to insult my friend more than anything, though, so I doubt you care about what I typed.

    • @flyfree78644
      @flyfree78644 Před 2 lety +26

      Your friend sounds fairly untethered to a rational assessment of reality. Would not be surprised if your friend invests in the next multilevel marketing scheme to pass by.

    • @retrowave762
      @retrowave762 Před 2 lety +107

      @@flyfree78644 Most people don't have a rational assessment of reality, especially nowadays, but unlike most he at least tries to better himself. As for investing anything, he doesn't trust the stock market at all.

  • @vampiregoth9
    @vampiregoth9 Před 2 lety +600

    I'm an evolutionary biologist and behavioral ecologist - I like to read DI articles just to keep tabs on what these people are saying so I can keep on top of rebutting them when students bring it up. I appreciate the work you've put into this, this will be a great resource to point people towards if they're DI fans.

    • @qurkatimilaz3787
      @qurkatimilaz3787 Před 2 lety +44

      -Knowing your opponent, you can fight 100'ths of battles without loosing.

    • @yasyasmarangoz3577
      @yasyasmarangoz3577 Před 2 lety +3

      @@qurkatimilaz3787 👌

    • @amywjn
      @amywjn Před 2 lety +5

      Have you listened to Stephen C Meyer’s videos? He has a good one with Michael Shermer.

    • @DrReginaldFinleySr
      @DrReginaldFinleySr Před 2 lety +65

      I do the same. I'm a scientific literacy and biology professor. My students quite often come to me with arguments that they have heard and I already know where they get them from. Sometimes, students will send me links directly to DI or AIG. It's very upsetting but I keep my cool and take the time to show them how they are being deceived.

    • @yasyasmarangoz3577
      @yasyasmarangoz3577 Před 2 lety +25

      @@DrReginaldFinleySr respect+
      Loosing your mind is not worth it.

  • @RobertsfunWords
    @RobertsfunWords Před rokem +54

    I appreciate your work. I used to be an evangelical pastor. The road out of the religion was costly and painful in many ways.
    Towards the end you are trying to encapsulate the motives and goals of these people. That is hard to do as it is so multifaceted. Certainly fear of mortality is a major tool they work with.
    You are doing something valuable and for some will give a huge gift of joy. Let me explain that with a personal anecdote:
    Not long after departing the faith, I took my binoculars out one night and for the first time spotted the Andromeda Galaxy. I suppose for any astronomy lover that can be a great moment. For me is was symbolic: I was able to embrace the truth: that the light travelled 2.5 million years to get here, unaided by a deity lying about creating an fakely-old universe 6,000 years ago.
    It was an emotional high for me, similar to the "come to Jesus moment" the evangelicals promote. The difference being that falling in love with curiosity and truth starts a life full of many such joys.
    I think you are an enabler of this joy for many. Humans thrive in curiosity and truth: you help bring this to people.

    • @Dananlol
      @Dananlol Před rokem +2

      When even you, an ex pastor agree, its a clear sign this is a masterpiece

    • @AW-uv3cb
      @AW-uv3cb Před 3 měsíci +5

      I really love your comment. It's a great thing to find the beauty and joy of the world as it is.

  • @akiblue
    @akiblue Před rokem +178

    My physical anthropology 101 prof walked into class on day 1 and before introducing himself said "I will not answer any questions regarding creationism, you have 30 seconds to pack up your things and drop this class if you can't accept these terms, I will not repeat myself." He waited 30 seconds, noone left so he introduced himself and started class.

    • @Terminator550
      @Terminator550 Před rokem +8

      Then he is not a true professor, if he is not going to accept someone that disagrees.

    • @akiblue
      @akiblue Před rokem +73

      @@Terminator550 so an astronomy professor that has his class interrupted by a flat earther every year has no right to address his class that if you don't believe the earth is a globe you are wasting everyone's time and should drop the class, has no right to do that?

    • @Terminator550
      @Terminator550 Před rokem +7

      @@akiblue A professor does not have that right. You cannot dismiss ideas you disagree with and ask those that have those ideas to drop out of the class.
      A professional professor will establish the rules in the classroom.
      Part of that clarification would be to inform every student that no interruptions will be tolerated. If such interruptions occur, the disruptor will be asked to leave the classroom.
      Having the tile "professor" does not give permission to ask students to drop out of the class simply because they might disagree with the professor. Higher level of education is supposed to allow disagreeing opinions to be discussed, within reason.

    • @akiblue
      @akiblue Před rokem +45

      @@Terminator550 you can absolutely, as a professor, tell somebody that they are not qualified for their class and they will fail if they continue. If you have a challenge to the science, that you wish to hypothesize, you will do it in your thesis to be scrutinized by experts in the field, probably in a post doc not in a 101 anthropology class. You have to know the science before you can challenge it. Two virgins aren't going to "experiment" the very first time they have sex. They'll do it till they find limitations to what they are doing then experiment.

    • @Terminator550
      @Terminator550 Před rokem +1

      @@akiblue The discussion is if a professor should tell students to drop out of his class if they disagree with some of the topics taught.
      Your first comment stated that you had a professor that told your class that anyone that believes in creationism must drop out of the class-such arrogant behavior that indicates a lack of understanding of the science supporting that claim.
      Now you are going off on a tangent stating that students that disagree will have to writes a thesis and have it evaluated by those that likely share the same bias as the professor you have mentioned in your comments.
      Students should be allowed to ask questions about creationism when the class allows for open class discussion.
      A student should not be excluded from the class for having a few opinions that goes against a professor’s stance on certain subjects in science.
      Nothing mentioned above gives reason that students that have different opinions are somehow not qualified to take a class in one of the many disciplines of science.
      If the tables were turned, and a professor of astrology told his class that all atheists that did not agree with any of the creationist models should leave and drop out of the class-that would be wrong for that professor to do so.

  • @RuriRurouni
    @RuriRurouni Před 2 lety +303

    What I love about Professor Dave is that he does not even try to hide his contempt for these absolute charlatans, fraudsters, grifters, and outright criminals. He straight up calls them what they are, and you can hear his seriousness in his vocal inflection. So many debunkers of these liars shy away from outright labeling them as the criminals they are.
    Fight on, Dave. You're doing amazing work with academic outreach and combating disinformation on this platform.

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable Před 2 lety +3

      True, but sometimes it just comes across as borderline abuse, and that doesn't make him look good.

    • @victorfinberg8595
      @victorfinberg8595 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Cheepchipsable That's a question of strategy. Dave's strategy is mostly appropriate.

    • @victorfinberg8595
      @victorfinberg8595 Před 2 lety

      I agree. The creationist content creators, as the flat earth content creators, as all the science deniers, are crooks, whose only purpose is to rob ignorant people. To the end, they also seek to ensure that as many people as possible are ignorant, and they are quite successful in that regard in places such as the USA.
      (I use "content creator" without prejudice.)

    • @TheDeath138
      @TheDeath138 Před 2 lety +21

      ​@@Cheepchipsable The people he's talking about deserve the "abuse" though. For the record I don't find it to be abuse in my opinion, but a perfectly reasonable response to these liars and grifters. Do you think that every view carries the same weight and should be given the same amount of consideration? We can't give these charlatans any leniency, because their views are stupid and destructive and have no place in an educated world.

    • @cochisemorris8537
      @cochisemorris8537 Před 2 lety

      @@Cheepchipsable people who purposely lie, spread misinformation and look to stall the progression of humanity by demonizing science deserve to be dealt with swiftly and harshly, being that this seems to be the only methodology that affects them and their followers

  • @Steelmage99
    @Steelmage99 Před 2 lety +66

    - So, Casey, what's your favorite lie?
    - I don't lie!
    - Yeah, that's my favorite as well....

  • @2Cerealbox
    @2Cerealbox Před rokem +623

    I'm always amazed that a group of people who hold themselves out to be moral authorities are constantly lying.

    • @thunderflare59
      @thunderflare59 Před rokem +20

      Pretty sure God didn't like defamation. His son had some choice words about that are probably against terms of service.

    • @volker2714
      @volker2714 Před rokem +20

      ​@@thunderflare59 Noone knows if this deity actually exists, but you know what the deity thinks about a certain topic? How does that make any sense?

    • @johnnybates7580
      @johnnybates7580 Před rokem +2

      Amen!

    • @robj4078
      @robj4078 Před rokem +36

      @@volker2714
      I think he was taking the theist perspective in jest. That is, the bible says lying is bad.

    • @curtbressler3127
      @curtbressler3127 Před rokem +22

      it's the concept of AUTHORITY that poisons the well. Once a person is considered an authority, especially in religious circles, they're deemed unquestionable. They're the most powerful entity that has ever existed. This is exactly what they think of their deity, the ultimate AUTHORITY.
      This basic concept and required tenet of their ideology corrupts their thought processes which infect most of their day-to-day lives

  • @JimiBurleigh
    @JimiBurleigh Před rokem +105

    As a recovering Christian I can tell you that Professor Dave is 💯% spot on. In that spirit, I offer the words of another professor:
    "He's not afraid of your judgement
    He knows of horrors worse than your hell
    He's a little bit afraid of dying
    But he's a lot more afraid of your lying"
    -Neil "The Professor" Peart
    From the song: "The Weapon (Pt. II of Fear)" by Rush.
    #RushLyricsForEverything🤘🇨🇦😉

    • @froggiewhiskers7205
      @froggiewhiskers7205 Před rokem +4

      I had no idea that Neil Peart was a supporter of secularism until reading this comment, only listened to Rush growing up so I didn't understand the lyrics back then. Though I've considered myself atheist for a while, I hadn't really started exploring these thoughts until recently, and I've felt distant from a lot of (christian) things I was close to growing up. It's really cool and comforting learning that one of my role models growing up had similar beliefs to me!

    • @DavidJones-hk8uy
      @DavidJones-hk8uy Před rokem

      Did you recover back to Christianity or what?

    • @dannygeit
      @dannygeit Před rokem +3

      Truly a peak reference. I can respond only by adding:
      "Fools and thieves are well disguised
      In the temple and marketplace"
      -The Professor
      From "Faithless" by Rush

    • @DR-JOHN-DEJAVU-1984
      @DR-JOHN-DEJAVU-1984 Před rokem +2

      So how are you recovering alongside science? I assume not too well lol. Science and Christianity are two different things. Keep religion out.

    • @DM-he1ug
      @DM-he1ug Před rokem +2

      Great shout out to 'The Professor on the drumkit'. RIP...

  • @freeaccount6770
    @freeaccount6770 Před 2 lety +473

    I've actually had a creationist cite the Lucy pelvis alteration as evidence for pseudoscience. He also portrayed Lucy as the only specimen found to support claims. Thank you for this.

    • @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y.
      @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y. Před 2 lety

      While I agree the DI is optimizing deceptive knowledge tactics indicating epistemic injustice, it is equally inappropriate to claim there are no dogmas in science. Science has dogmas and this has been explored in a variety of academic scholarship on the philosophy of science. Popularly, it is Thomas Kuhn who is attributed for developing the 4 phases model of scientific progress in which he explicates scientific progress by the stages of pre-paradigmatic science, normal science, crisis, and scientific revolution. Leaving aside later scholarship and the developments in the problem of demarcation, it is similarly a lie to claim science cannot be dogmatic. We rely on theoretical dogmas to make reliable predictions until they have been exhausted; there are no perfect theories. Therefore, some of the utterances are similarly biased towards mainstream positivism but it is nonetheless interesting

    • @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y.
      @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y. Před 2 lety +5

      While I agree the DI is optimizing deceptive knowledge tactics indicating epistemic injustice, it is equally inappropriate to claim there are no dogmas in science. Science has dogmas and this has been explored in a variety of academic scholarship on the philosophy of science.

    • @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y.
      @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y. Před 2 lety +1

      Popularly, it is Thomas Kuhn who is attributed for developing the 4 phases model of scientific progress in which he explicates scientific progress by the stages of pre-paradigmatic science, normal science, crisis, and scientific revolution.

    • @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y.
      @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y. Před 2 lety +4

      Leaving aside later scholarship and the developments in the problem of demarcation, it is similarly a lie to claim science cannot be dogmatic. We rely on theoretical dogmas to make reliable predictions until they have been exhausted; there are no perfect theories.

    • @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y.
      @Abdul_Moiz_bin_Muhammad_Y. Před 2 lety +1

      Therefore, some of the utterances are similarly biased towards mainstream positivism but it is nonetheless interesting

  • @bbpp226
    @bbpp226 Před 2 lety +395

    Hey Professor Dave, you might not see this, but I just wanted to tell you how important your work is. I'm only 16 years old and didn't really believe in any pseudoscience (though my relatives and even my science teachers on facebook would post misinformation about science especially evolutionary biology), but after seeing your videos, I began reflecting about how it's easy for someone unknowledgble to fall for these cults, and how this is much more common than I thought. I even remember watching someone with almost 20 MILLION subs (and most of his fans were young teenagers including myself) who made a video about conspiracy theories and in that video was someone talking about the flat earth "theory". I checked that video now and it currently has 40 MILLION views and all of the comments were supportive; people who didn't even believe in it originally began to believe it after just one relatively short video of nonsense. They were even begging him to start making conspiracy videos about COVID and the vaccines etc (though he didn't probably only because he was taking a break from youtube because he was exposed for being a pedophile, but that's irrelevant here.) I know you probably already know that many people fall for this shit, but I just wanted to say how much more common this is becoming almost everywhere in the world, which is terrifying.
    Edit: Just some grammar mistakes. I also just realized that the heart gets removed if I edit the comment so there's that lol.

    • @Megan-cd6sh
      @Megan-cd6sh Před 2 lety +53

      Yeah, Shane and his conspiracy videos are very harmful. As someone old enough to be your parent, it makes me very happy to see our youth embracing the truth and discarding magical thinking. You have a great head on your shoulders, keep it up!

    • @VaughanMcCue
      @VaughanMcCue Před 2 lety +23

      @@Megan-cd6sh
      You took the words out of my mouth. At Shane's age, I wish I was as informed as this wise person. People like him give us hope for the world.

    • @markshort9098
      @markshort9098 Před 2 lety +1

      All of the comments are supportive because they delete ever comment that calls them out on their B.S and they do that while complaining about censorship

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před 2 lety +9

      This is nice to read.

    • @Jesuisunknown
      @Jesuisunknown Před 2 lety +1

      Use quilbot to correct grammar

  • @Rfc1394
    @Rfc1394 Před rokem +110

    "They don't let just anyone write a book." - Prof. Dave giving an example of what ordinary people would think. As the people who say that don't realize, it was never true because there have always been "vanity presses" that will print anything if you pay them. Now, with Amazon's e-book Kindle and the ability for anyone to upload a book for publication, essentially anyone can be a published author for zero or almost no cost.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před rokem

      Sure enough the IDiots from Seattle have their own vanity press.

    • @Abhishek-ue6tj
      @Abhishek-ue6tj Před rokem +15

      Yea well that's the point he was making... It was sarcasm

  • @akka8588
    @akka8588 Před rokem +92

    As someone who recently graduated with a BA in Geology, let me just say that Luskin does not represent us as a whole. Considering that he participated in deliberate slander, personally he should have his pHD revoked for participating in slander with religious institution that is known for lying.

    • @Sarah-re7cg
      @Sarah-re7cg Před rokem +10

      Honestly, who knows the best route from here? I could definitely see him getting his credentials revoked as a rallying cry (that tired "IM BEING CENSORED!! line). Ugh. This is exhausting.

    • @kingjames104
      @kingjames104 Před 3 měsíci

      An undergrad? Wow aren't u special.

  • @sammyk7024
    @sammyk7024 Před 2 lety +541

    it is utterly disgraceful to admit that this kind of content is actually vitally important to be produced, in this day and era. thank you for stepping up and doing it so brilliantly.
    no mercy, Dave. go for them!

    • @OzkanArac
      @OzkanArac Před 2 lety +18

      Dave is holding the ring... He has my sword.

    • @williamchamberlain2263
      @williamchamberlain2263 Před 2 lety +9

      @@OzkanArac And Occam's razor!

    • @Csizzorhandz
      @Csizzorhandz Před 2 lety +9

      *Gimli voice* “…AND MY AXSHE”

    • @milesmungo
      @milesmungo Před 2 lety

      What makes it vital in your eyes? What are the potential repercussions you see?

    • @wipemeoff8388
      @wipemeoff8388 Před 2 lety +2

      Yep, hopefully after you watch a few deconstructions of those you can start to recognise some warning patterns hehe.

  • @ResetToZero3210
    @ResetToZero3210 Před 11 měsíci +84

    As a molecular biologist, I really admire your efforts to debunk all this non-sense that continues to be propagated in our society. These individuals show not only complete misunderstanding of basic evolutionary biology but more importantly, poor understanding of very basic biology. I would be surprised if any of them ever read even introductory textbooks on evolutionary biology, let alone spending some time in the lab doing hands on experiments.

    • @rachelnyn5543
      @rachelnyn5543 Před 8 měsíci +3

      They’ll tell you they don’t need to understand because it’s Gods will…

  • @awdimmick
    @awdimmick Před 3 měsíci +10

    As a Christian myself, It’s really interesting to me how many people take the Creation story so literally. All it takes is a few hours worth of study and research on the origin of the Hebrew Bible to know that it was not written as a history book. Numbers have symbolic meaning. Names have symbolic meaning. It was never meant to be a rote description of every step that led to mankind’s existence.
    Plus, the Hebrew words used in Genesis has been the subject of a LOT of debate among Biblical scholars. Three different words are used, bara (create), asah (make), and yatsar (form). There’s been a lot of debate on were these words used intentionally, to spell out what God created vs what he simply organized, or are they used as synonyms. We don’t really know, but in my opinion it further speaks to the Creation story being a rhetorical device used to communicate a theological idea (what is our relationship with God) and not be a science textbook. It’s intended to communicate that there is a purpose for our being here beyond just simply existing.
    I’m very proud of the fact that I went to a Christian University that taught evolutionary biology as part of the undergraduate curriculum. It ended up being one of my favorite courses with one of my favorite professors.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 3 měsíci

      Oh, even top Young Earth Creacrapper Ol'Hambo from Answers in Genesis recognizes that the Bible can't always be taken literally. His "logic" is: if the Biblical creation story is not literal history neither is Original Sin and Jesus was crucified for nothing. As a staunch atheist I'll leave it to theologists to rip that apart. I only wish they would that do more often in public.
      CaseyL though doesn't take the creation story literally. He's okay with a 13,6 billion years old universe and a 4,5 billion years old Earth. He merely rejects evolution theory but never refers to the Bible when doing so.

    • @Defy5
      @Defy5 Před 3 měsíci

      Good for you sir! I' m glad you can find the best of two worlds.

    • @deaconofbiology6249
      @deaconofbiology6249 Před 2 měsíci +2

      As an ex-young eather creationist and now an atheist, I can understand why many christains take the creation story literally. If one doesnt, then there are issues to be resolved like "What was the original sin", "Death is necessary for evolution. That being the case, how could death have existed before Adam and Eve if death was the result of their sin", "If its the case that there wasnt actually an original sin, then what was the purpose of Jesus' death". Im not saying there arent answers for these questions, but its these very questions (and some) that kept me a young earth creationist for so long. But, I am glad that you have been able to balance your beliefs with the science. I'll I want is people to accept the science.

  • @mcwoodrum2366
    @mcwoodrum2366 Před 2 lety +264

    Prof. Dave, I’m a conservation biology undergrad who sometimes has a hard time formulating my rebuttals to this type of absolutely ridiculous anti-science argumentation. Thank you so much for helping me organize these points! You’re awesome!

    • @lordorion5776
      @lordorion5776 Před rokem +12

      The problem with this is they go around prepared to get into an argument and typically dance all around people because you're not trained to fight that because your learning to be a scientist not a buricrat

    • @mingledingle1556
      @mingledingle1556 Před rokem +6

      Take some philosophy courses. Science and philosophy are wonderful together because A) it gets you thinking, and B) you’ll get really good at forming arguments

    • @Loctorak
      @Loctorak Před rokem +4

      Honestly, if you wanna get good at these kind of debates, start beefing with people on forums. Topic doesn't matter, but you get a free "debate" opponent and some of them will argue in circles forever, which is also great for learning how to control the overall discussion and how to cut through BS and get to the point. They could be anyone, so it also forces you to practise articulating your thoughts such that most people could understand them
      Trust me i was as average as anyone, then i moderated a large forum for like 8 years and occasionally trolled people on CZcams and now ill argue about anything with anyone

    • @lordorion5776
      @lordorion5776 Před rokem +2

      @lukev4613 That is actually a really good idea. I basically do the same thing in CZcams comments

    • @madeline6951
      @madeline6951 Před rokem +4

      @@mingledingle1556 Science is the daughter of philosophy, so of course they go well together, totally agree

  • @GamesFromSpace
    @GamesFromSpace Před 2 lety +87

    The craziest idea is that of any anthropologist, no matter how insanely fraudulent, going whole-ass with a powertool at some fossils, while an onlooker glares at them, and a cinematic camera records them. A fraud would be *careful*, not just jam a grinder into the bone like he's slicing stale bread.

  • @ConradSpoke
    @ConradSpoke Před 11 měsíci +65

    I used to think the Discovery Institute was just clownish and dumb. Now I'm convinced they are truly sinister.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 11 měsíci +1

      All three. Plus dishonest, hypocrite and stupid.

    • @WokeandProud
      @WokeandProud Před 9 měsíci +1

      They've been sinister from the getgo just read the wedge document thier goal is outright tyrannical christofascist theocracy.

  • @aldunlop4622
    @aldunlop4622 Před 9 měsíci +24

    Can you imagine if someone took a priceless fossil of Lucy, taking an angle grinder to it, filming it and distributing it in a documentary? There would be an absolute uproar. It’d be like someone painting a smile on the Mona Lisa different to the original. Can’t believe anyone would believe this crap.

    • @magnetiktrax
      @magnetiktrax Před 11 dny

      xtians are very gullible though. I mean they actually believe the nonsense in the buy-bull, why wouldn't they believe an anthropologist would angle grind a priceless fossil?

  • @aidanmahar5192
    @aidanmahar5192 Před 2 lety +310

    I love how you contact the actual researchers for these videos. Not only does it support everything you’re saying and show the dishonesty of creationists, but it also helps your audience see that science is accessible and open. I really love all the work you do with science literacy

    • @Limepopsicle07
      @Limepopsicle07 Před 2 lety +17

      I know right! It’s one of my favorite things to see. Having things be open and accessible is useful to so many people, especially something as crucial as science! You don’t need a formal education to learn about science (although that’s always a plus), you just need a drive to learn. And boy howdy is it fun when you finally do get to.
      Science is one of my personal passions, but I’m not old enough to get a formal education, so I stick to studying hard in my science class, taking good notes, and listening to videos about science on CZcams. Hell, might as well start taking notes on science videos, too! I go to a private Christian school and, since Creationism is being pushed on Christian youth more and more, most of my friends and pretty much every Christian who goes there isn’t being given fully correct information. Luckily, the science teachers aren’t pushing *Young* Earth Creationism, and I’ve had a couple of good conversations with them when trying to correct the more dogmatic things that they teach due to their somewhat misplaced trust in their church leaders and online sources (seriously, my biology teacher showed a Genesis Apologetics anti-human evolution movie clip in class and I wrote so many criticisms on a sheet of notebook paper that I ran out of space in the margins, and I’m a lay person).
      When I become a biology teacher, I’m gonna try my best to fight against the rampant Creationist dogma in Christian circles. I’m not personally a Christian, but so many of my friends are (I’m in the United States’ Deep South) and so are most people I’m acquainted with, and it’s sad that they are fed misinformation and form incorrect views about the world based on that “education.” I’ve been trying to have more productive conversations about their misinformed opinions, and it’s actually working in most cases. I’m trying to get one of my friends into Gutsick Gibbon’s channel, since she has quite a few good anti-YEC videos that I find very informative, and soon I’m gonna send her Professor Dave’s biology series, since it was really informative to me in places where my school education either hasn’t reached or hasn’t covered very well.
      Being able to help others with their personal scientific literacy is very rewarding for me, since teaching has always been somewhat of a passion of mine, and seeing the gears in their head turning and their eyes lighting up when they start to understand what I’m trying to say always makes me happy. That reaction may take a little while, but some of my friends have gotten into things like workers’ rights and general equality because of my urging.
      One of my friends even wants to try starting a big tech business and be the CEO while also not stealing from their paychecks to line his own pockets. He’s very passionate about it. We recently had a career day at our school, and he started talking to the guy who was telling us about IT work about his tech business dream. Just hearing him talk about it made me so happy, since there was that little selfish happiness of “I taught him that.”
      I know that was off-topic, I’m just trying to say that Prof. Dave here has inspired me to actually pursue teaching as a future job rather than just having it as a hobby, since I want to do some of what he does in helping inform lots of people. I urge anyone reading this to also watch more of his content, it’s so good and always very informative. His slight hostility towards people he is debunking is simply because they are lying, and, in science specifically, that is possibly the worst thing you can do. Spreading misinformation and causing scientific illiteracy is a horrible thing, and he is right in going after their fraudulent behavior while also correcting the things they are lying about. Prime example: his videos on James Tour. Some of the things he says don’t make a ton of sense to us lay people, but he does a very good job explaining those concepts through examples.
      Anyways, sorry for the rant, I tend to get super enthusiastic about something and then I go way off topic. TLDR: I 100% agree and Prof. Dave’s videos inspire me to teach and inform others with things I learn from his and similar creators’ content.

    • @baconghoti
      @baconghoti Před 2 lety +9

      @@Limepopsicle07 with your goal in mind you would be helped by also learning about the Hellenistic influence on Christianity and how embedded parables limit the ability for biblical sources being literal. Getting some good exposure to history and development of theology will also help you wean people onto a scientific approach without directly challenging their ability to retain a core faith. The old adage about leading horses to water but not being able to make them drink can be resolved if you take the horse on a long walk in the sun of enlightenment. The trick is to make them thirsty by the time you arrive at the trough.

    • @neoqwerty
      @neoqwerty Před 2 lety +8

      @@baconghoti You know about the Hellenistic stuff too! You have no idea how hype I am to see people address that-- there's a LOT of stuff that comes from Aristotle's ideas on how things work that got co-opted into Christian "logic".
      I only know it in vague passing (I'm researching christianity for a fantasy story) because a lot of Christian and Hellenistic philosophy is present in Alchemy, and cracking the code on that's accidentally caused me to stumble on a bunch of doors my possible ADHD couldn't resist opening.

    • @baconghoti
      @baconghoti Před 2 lety

      there more to the influence than just how they thought about things as it influenced how they disseminated 'truth'. Hellenic mysticism has the concept of outer and inner and secret knowledge. Outsiders can be shown a 'diluted' truth obscured by wrapping it as a parable or fable. As one gets closer to the centre one would shown a different way to understand the parable bringing one closer to the truth until eventually the parable was removed and the 'truth' was stated clearly. By quizzing someone on their understanding of a parable the differing answers would reveal how initiated the queried was without revealing the core mystery. Another aspect can be seen in the bible and that is the evolution of the Christian god itself. At the beginning it is a personal humanesque god of the tribe, one among others. Then it becomes the only true God amongst godlings and finally the one and only contending against incarnations and agents of it's lesser adversary - Satan. This happens at a time when Greco-Roman expansion occurs. For them other gods and religions are not squashed, but some gods are elevated and certain gods must be honored at certain times. Sometimes certain gods are demonized to weaken sociopolitical power of opponents giving rise to state and public gods and household or personal gods. However they do not deny other gods exist, just their relative power and influence. The Abrahamic faith during the Roman Empire goes one further and enforces that followers must not only foreswear loyalty to all other gods, but also deny they are really gods at all or ever have been. This elevation to a singular supreme being dramatically improves the religion's uptake and reduces apostasy.
      If you are researching a religion's implementation I would recommend Aron Ra's Quran for the Infidel series. It is a walkthrough of Islam in order of revelation where he is helped to understand it mainly by atheists and apostates raised in Islam. Some of the apologists involved can be quite difficult to deal with, but they only last a couple of episodes before being dropped. I recommend it as it is not only is it essentially Christianity 2.0, but should also give you an insight on how to look at Christianity yourself in a critical mein for your story. GL in your research.

    • @baconghoti
      @baconghoti Před 2 lety

      @@WilsonFox123 er,.clearly no.

  • @shadyzz954
    @shadyzz954 Před 2 lety +208

    Crazy that you made this video... in the early 1990s, having made my professional start building internet tech (coding applications, servers, etc...) I built a small internet radio show, in which I literally argued with Alex Jones re: his conspiracy theories.
    I started this show BECAUSE of the Wedge Document aka Wedge Strategy, authored by who else but The Discovery Institute.
    I had been warning everyone since that day of EXACTLY what you explained in this video... no joke, every single person I explained this entire thing to, thought I was insane. They thought I was the conspiracist...
    at that point, the conspiracies we see normalized today were nothing but a few thousand followers on late-night radio like Art Bell, etc...
    I'd love to talk with you, and discuss this stuff, as I was doing this back in the day, I may have a lot to offer you insofar as connectivity because it goes far deeper than anything you mentioned in here.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Před 2 lety +79

      Please email me and give me all the details! professordaveexplains@gmail.com

    • @geekdivaherself
      @geekdivaherself Před rokem +1

      Thanks for fighting them early on. And on. And on.
      I used to laugh at them back in the 1980s-late 1990s in my Presbyterian church, where I was actually taught that the greatest miracle and word of God was learning how science says a leaf works, for example.
      Now when I think of them, I don't even have the energy to cry! I think of Jesus getting angry at the money changers in the temple. I also think of a video I saw, somewhere on CZcams, of a _Catholic priest_ who belonged to some astronomical wing of the Holy See, getting SO ANGRY at one of them that his
      bald head shone red against his white, shaking fringe!
      Sigh. I wish you well.

    • @AleisterCrowleyMagus
      @AleisterCrowleyMagus Před rokem +4

      Seriously internet friend contact Professor Dave as well as the gentlemen of the popular podcast Knowledge Fight (Dan in particular) as Dan has spent years debunking Alex’s absurd claims, and he assisted in the recent lawsuits

    • @ralphreinert
      @ralphreinert Před rokem +1

      @@geekdivaherself " I also think of a video I saw, somewhere on CZcams, of a Catholic priest who belonged to some astronomical wing of the Holy See, getting SO ANGRY at one of them that his bald head shone red against his white, shaking fringe!"
      Be careful when you accuse someone of having a bald head. Remember 2 Kings 2:23-24. ;-P

    • @geekdivaherself
      @geekdivaherself Před rokem

      @@ralphreinert HAH! Yeah, you don't want wild bears ripping you apart. However, I think that only happens if you call a prophet a baldy.

  • @mikerittall8754
    @mikerittall8754 Před rokem +109

    I had to stop the video because I lost it laughing when Dave said "In science when you prove a pillar of science wrong you get a Nobel prize."
    I can't tell you how many times I've tried to explain this sentiment to people who think "science" is trying to cover up "truth". When, in fact, the opposite is true. Want a Nobel prize? Prove something wrong or discover something new.
    Hahaha, I will be paraphrasing Dave's quote from now on.
    Edit: I lost it laughing because what Dave said is so undeniably true that's it funny to think anyone thinks otherwise.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před rokem +14

      Yup. That's why Bednorz and Müller received there Nobel Price within a year after publishing.
      I have told YECers several times to find me a Cambrian rabbit.

    • @mrnobodytheuser2950
      @mrnobodytheuser2950 Před 7 měsíci

      The Nobel prize that thing they gave to Obama while he was droning women and children the day.

  • @lischa3573
    @lischa3573 Před rokem +34

    I’ve noticed over the years frauds are getting more clever with the angles & psychology they use, hearing they have a institute tho training people to be this way & that it’s becoming main stream , these frauds have never really worried me til now!
    More than ever the World needs more guys like you Dave, keep up theGood work

    • @jvjjjvvv9157
      @jvjjjvvv9157 Před 9 měsíci +1

      To be fair, the whole ruse is so closely connected to 'why people want to believe what', that once you're capable of seeing this from an outside perspective it feels extremely transparent.
      Like, I haven't watched this whole video, but the moment I see the first excerpt with a guy wearing the V For Vendetta mask and all the visual effects and fake glitches, it all instantly seems so ridiculously naif and childish to me that I could never imagine myself watching that with a straight face. It is honestly like their target is not just people with an anti-authority bias, but among those the ones that see the world in such terms of black and white that even the most ridiculous symbols do not stand out to them as cheap tricks.
      I don't want to sound elitist or pretentious, but I think that in order to be duped by these shams you probably have to be a person who really wants to believe in them to begin with. Otherwise, you would have to reason that if you distrust authority so much that you could believe in massively bizarre and vague conspiracies involving half the world's population, you should at least apply the same skepticism to the Internet rando who, while speaking completely freely, is weirdly going out of his way to look like a persecuted truth teller even before he starts speaking.

  • @arich20
    @arich20 Před 2 lety +76

    I still remember when I was early in my Anthropology degree, one of my first physical anth classes there were a group of people who sat in the back and didn't talk much. When we went over modern examples of adaptation, the professor was explaining the Peppered moth adaptation during the industrial revolution and one of the guys blurted out "but doesn't that... doesn't that prove evolution then?" I won't ever forget his voice, he was astonished, vulnerable and completely serious.
    My professor was so great, she calmly and kindly glossed over it with, "Yes, yes it does" and launched right back into her lecture like 😎💅
    I know what it's like to grow up being lied to, but I'm very grateful I wasn't taught a visceral fear and hatred of scientific exploration.

    • @DartNoobo
      @DartNoobo Před rokem

      So moth can change ıt's color and this is how single cell evolved into the world we got today?

    • @arich20
      @arich20 Před rokem +3

      @@DartNoobo lol 😆 I think you'll find it's a bit more complicated than that, but the general idea is the same: 1. everything is accidents and variable mutations; 2. some of those mutations end up being advantageous; 3. If those advantageous mutations end up allowing some members of a species to survive to reproductive age while other members of the species without the mutation don't, then that mutation survives with the majority of the population and members without it can die out. If/when this happens over a long enough period of time and results in a new "species," the species is said to "evolve." (Again, a drastic oversimplification that ignores lots of untidy things like "where are the arbitrary lines drawn that define a species" and "what about when populations are separated and both survive but become different") If you're interested in how cells developed, you might find it fun and useful to look up the hot springs hypothesis on origins of life, which discusses the necessity of lipids. The cliffs notes is that cooperative, dynamic actions by substances with flexible barriers in fluctuating warm/cool/moist/dry areas ultimately resulted in the emergence necessary for pre-life groupings of substances to eventually pave the way toward the first cells. The flexibility of those groups of lipids with their flexible membranes contained the characteristics needed for "sharing" information and change over time which could allow future processes of our earliest cells to change over time to became the cells we now know about on the planet. Again, DRASTIC oversimplification here. But a good place to start! And very interesting stuff. Further reading: David Deamer

    • @DartNoobo
      @DartNoobo Před rokem

      @@arich20 i don not think you oversimplified it that much. I get the idea of mutations and advantages.
      The question is where does complexity come from. Every advantageous mutation i was presented with thus far is caused by damage to DNA, not development of new genes. Like sickle anemia allowing some people to resist malaria. It is a loss of function, rather than gain.
      So the question is where do new genes come from, and how did simple cell become more complex. Please give me some links to that.
      As for the theories of how life began, i am more in interested in creating life in laboratory from scratch. Is there any successful experiments with creating life from lipids or w/e, without involvement of more complex already existing molecules?

    • @arich20
      @arich20 Před rokem +3

      @@DartNoobo why do you think all mutation is about damage?

    • @arich20
      @arich20 Před rokem

      @@DartNoobo also for the thing you're looking for, I already recommended Deamer - look up his work with Bruce Damer lol I'm not going to curate Google for you but have fun , peace and love fam.

  • @fazergazer
    @fazergazer Před 2 lety +413

    Dave, reading through the comments, it’s uplifting and encouraging to note the number of folks who were rescued from the abyss of anti-science fundamentalism. The world needs more of you, Dave.

    • @TomSmith-mc3ip
      @TomSmith-mc3ip Před 2 lety

      @Matt Finish You are a condescending jerk who still believe in God science makes way more sense and yes scientists can make mistakes. Also you know who else can make mistakes creationists and people that believe in God you guys do it all the time half of you don't even live in reality.

    • @guytheincognito4186
      @guytheincognito4186 Před 2 lety

      @Matt Finish
      So what is it you don't understand 🤔
      Is "leaving an poorly defined Apriori belief system based off watching incredibly clear and coherent demonstrations of people heading such belief, be shown objectively lying in an undeniable, unambiguous and clear way" somehow irrational to you.
      Was it the side by side clips of the overt Lie and the original PBS original that somehow didn't compute with you 🤔
      Also Which one of the countless examples of lying, cheating scientists you have in mind are you specifically thinking of?. Obviously the scientific community is flooding with falsified evidence and scientists are losing their positions left and right as the remaining ones are all corrupt millionares that only pretend to have a school teachers salary for show and only fake live in apartments to hide the thousands of mansions they all own where we can't see them.
      Surely you would never make these assertions without objective examples to convince me by. No no don't over extend yourself with deep history research, objective examples from just the last 50 years forwards is enough. I'll be waiting in strained excitement 😆

    • @teonyi
      @teonyi Před 2 lety +10

      @Matt Finish That is quite a ridiculous statement and no one in the scientific community thinks that way

    • @LetsConquerTheUniverseTogether
      @LetsConquerTheUniverseTogether Před 2 lety +12

      ​@Matt Finish Don't project your insecurities onto others.

    • @freddan6fly
      @freddan6fly Před 2 lety

      @Matt Finish We don't believe in science. We got education. We accept science. We got evidence. You don't have any education. You don't accept science. You don't have any evidence.

  • @Sarah-re7cg
    @Sarah-re7cg Před rokem +28

    It is so horrifying how there are people who are so well funded just blatantly gaslighting the public. Also I just want to say thank you so much for putting all of this together. This is so important.

    • @kingjames104
      @kingjames104 Před 3 měsíci

      I suggest you do your own research not this pseudo intellectual clickbait.

  • @SincerelyBradley
    @SincerelyBradley Před 8 měsíci +6

    As a Christian, these folks have always bothered me. I mainly just wish they would stop marketing themselves as scientists and instead as “natural theologians”. It’s obviously not science and it’s a bit offensive to claim to be so.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 7 měsíci +4

      It's not natural theology either. Not anymore at least. All modern academic theology (institutes like Biola don't count) accepts evolution theory. I write this as a staunch atheist.

  • @bensrandomshows1482
    @bensrandomshows1482 Před 2 lety +334

    Really cool how you managed to get in contact with the misrepresented scientists and gave them a chance to correct the record!

    • @vestafreyja5000
      @vestafreyja5000 Před 2 lety +19

      For the most part you could contact the actual scientists yourself and when you mention that you are not a scientist but rather just some random person that has questions the overwhelming reaction from the scientist is going to be excitement that you contacted them.

    • @Limepopsicle07
      @Limepopsicle07 Před 2 lety +15

      @@vestafreyja5000 yeah, I really like letting people info dump to me about something they’re really passionate about. I’d imagine it’d be even more exciting for a scientist to both educate a lay person and also get to ramble about something they’ve put so much time into without having to use a certain type of language. It’s just so fun to see that sparkle in their eye or the enthusiastic way they speak or punctuate their sentences. Tangents are a plus, so much extra info I didn’t ask for and yet am always to happy to receive.
      And when people let me info dump to them about biology? It’s one of my favorite things! I’m not formally educated in it, I’ve just learned a lot through CZcams and looking up random scientific papers for fun! I’m actually 15 years old, and I’m not enough of a prodigy to already be in a university. However, I do plan to become a biology teacher after I get a PhD in basically any type of biology. I might even minor in paleoanthropology or something similar. Just any science, really. It’s so intriguing to me, and I love that anyone who studies hard and works harder could become a big name in any scientific field. Equal opportunity for all!
      But yeah, I’d love to get in contact with any scientist. It’d be such a great chance to learn, as well as give me a stronger starting point when I go into formally studying science. I try my best to not be the most lay lay person, if that makes any sense. I know this comment wasn’t towards me, but it just got me really excited to see and I decided to throw in my own two cents, for fun.

    • @neoqwerty
      @neoqwerty Před 2 lety +2

      @@Limepopsicle07 EFF YEAH BIOLOGY!!!
      A friend I made while nerding out with them about marine biology and realistic mermaids has just started work into a job that, if everything goes well, is going to do GMO stuff to create antigens and things!!! I love to hear about their new job and all the funky things they know, and I may be using their academic access to get to a bunch of research papers just to fuel my science nerdery so I kind of drag them along on my adventures.
      Best of luck to you about achieving your dream, kiddo! (i'm 35 let me be old)
      (in case you wonder: one of my story settings has "deep-sea" (technically they can go anywhere including survive space for a few hours, like bigger and slightly less indestructible tardigrades) merfolk who were engineered from ancient sea-butterfly-like gastropods about 250 million years ago by an alien war bioweapons designer who turned her DNA and RNA-editing skills to creating basically a "mega-keystone" species who instinctively step in as stopgaps to reverse human destruction of species and habitats and mitigate environmental disasters)

    • @rychei5393
      @rychei5393 Před 2 lety +4

      That's always my fav bit of what Dave does.

    • @vestafreyja5000
      @vestafreyja5000 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Limepopsicle07 I'm 66, in my youth I was considered to be a child prodigy having completed my primary school education in 9 years, started university when I was 15 and for the next 13 years earned BSc in Psychology with a minor in Biochemistry, BSc & MSc in Computer Science and PhD in Computer Science and Engineering. When I was earning my BSc's I took courses ranging literally from A to Z (Anthropology, Archaeology, Astronomy, Biology, Classics (Babylonian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman history and mythology), Chemistry, Genetics, Geology, Geophysics, Logic, Mathematics, and Zoology). Being 15 when I started university was bit of a bummer as I could not legally head to the campus pub until I was half way thru my final semester of my first degree. ;-)
      I truly envy you as you start out on your academic journey, based upon what we have learned over the last 50 years and trying to project what we will know in the next 50 years is truly stupefying. For example you having a smart phone the computing power in such a common place device has more computing power that all the computers used on all the Apollo missions. When I was 15 we had no evidence of other planets around distant stars; now we have a huge catalog of planets orbiting distance stars. The image of dinosaurs from 50 years ago was that they were little more than cold blooded reptiles; now the image has been radically updated.
      When talking or interacting with Scientists you will often get some of the most interesting information when they go off on a tangent. The passion the scientist has for their particular field is almost contagious and when they are interacting with a interested lay person it is like the cherry on top of a Sundae.

  • @PubicGore
    @PubicGore Před 2 lety +196

    I find it incredibly strange that a geologist, though he may not have specialized knowledge in evolutionary biology, would still be willing to believe in some of the consequences that are necessarily implied by intelligent design. It reminds me of that PhD paleontologist who believed in young earth creationism. Of course, it is strange that someone with a PhD in any field of science could believe in such things, although for a geologist to do so is particularly strange, moreso than a synthetic chemist, perhaps.

    • @freddan6fly
      @freddan6fly Před 2 lety

      Cognitive dissonance at display with this creatard.

    • @bokononbokomaru8156
      @bokononbokomaru8156 Před 2 lety +28

      I'm not surprised if he's on the payroll of religious cons. It leans more to dishonesty..not belief.

    • @Hecarim420
      @Hecarim420 Před 2 lety +3

      Most PhD people actually don't understand how SCIENCE work (they don't know history of science of humans in general
      ==>
      They are busy with their daily "life"
      ==>
      Most of them know and understand some math so i believe they still would "choose" science, but they usually don't think like "scientists" (idk if it make sense for you).
      ==>
      Dave has this scientific approach, also Dr Joscha Bach (cognitive science, most coherent storyteller), Dr Michael Levin (Bioelectricity - really great "new" things, wouldn't surprise if this guy would win Nobel prize in future for this), with physic and math you can really make sense of this madness
      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @freddan6fly
      @freddan6fly Před 2 lety

      @@Hecarim420 "Most PhD people actually don't understand how SCIENCE work (they don't know history of science of humans in general " - I think you are referring to pretend universities. All PhD at my university, even the stupid lying theologians got a mandatory science 101 course. Granted they did not understand it, but most other students did.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 2 lety

      Most IDiots don't have any problem with an old earth. Luskin is one of them. They have a problem with "Darwinian evolution", ie evolutionism. Don't ask what the difference is with their own brand of evolution. IDiots never clarify.
      These people are such big liars that they even claim that they accept evolution. Mickey Behe, famous for the Kitzmiller-Dover trial and the irreducable mousetrap, even accepts common descent. Everything is OK with them as long as you reject evolution theory.

  • @SeikoshoKaiShorei
    @SeikoshoKaiShorei Před rokem +45

    Your work exposing these liars is incredibly important. We now live in a time where we are more at risk then ever of slipping back to the dark ages or even worse , the Stone Age
    Thank you you for your service Dave
    Keep up your incredibly important work .
    ❤it

    • @SamuelAdams0
      @SamuelAdams0 Před 9 měsíci +3

      call me intolerant but i feel like religion can genuinely be a hinderance to scientific progress

    • @mhm77887
      @mhm77887 Před 4 měsíci

      @@SamuelAdams0 both scientific and social progress

    • @SamuelAdams0
      @SamuelAdams0 Před 4 měsíci

      @@mhm77887 yeah, hating gays, women, and people of different races and loving slavery also do harm

  • @ayhamhalalsheh221
    @ayhamhalalsheh221 Před rokem +14

    In arabic countries anyone speaks about evolution will be considered as an atheist which is seen as crime and in some cases can cost you your life , so don't loose the fight for us

  • @jonasking9587
    @jonasking9587 Před 2 lety +132

    I live with purpose, without a "soul." I'm an emergency dispatch operator, veteran, father, and husband. I wake up every single day hoping I can help ONE person, and I end every day knowing I have. I'm an atheist. I just do that shit to help people. WEIRD, RIGHT?!?

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 2 lety +5

      Perhaps. I am as weird as you.

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 Před 2 lety

      Doesn’t matter, atheist or not, you will still have judgement day nonetheless. You likely will still get into heaven though with all you’ve done.

    • @jonasking9587
      @jonasking9587 Před 2 lety +42

      @@wolfetteplays8894 Oh thank God. Wolflette Plays says I'm getting in to heaven. (triumphet kazoo)

    • @MasterShakeeee
      @MasterShakeeee Před 2 lety +11

      @@jonasking9587 haha that had me cracking up 😄

    • @SomeUniqueHandle
      @SomeUniqueHandle Před rokem +25

      @@wolfetteplays8894 According to many variants of Christianity, good deeds won't get you to heaven - only worshipping the "proper" version of God and following the "proper" rituals (going to church, tithing, etc.) will work. It's nice that your version says that being a good person and helping others, regardless of personal religion, will "likely" get someone into heaven but how do you know your version is the correct one? Maybe our only chance at heaven involves not eating meat on Fridays or not working on the Sabbath (not that there's clear agreement on which day that is).

  • @gustavogodoy9626
    @gustavogodoy9626 Před 2 lety +627

    oh boy, Professor Dave debunking biblical literalists on Easter.

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian Před 8 měsíci +9

    Do you know what’s proper sad? In order for people like Luskin to find all these mined quotes, they have to have read through tons of material, and must therefore know at least some of the content. They must know that they’re wrong.
    It just makes their lies that much more brazen.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Actual scientists have to do that as well before starting their research. So their work is not that hard.
      But of course they're lying. When pointed out that they get something wrong they never correct it. Never. And willfully repeating an error equals lying.

  • @mkweae44
    @mkweae44 Před 8 měsíci +17

    You are doing good work, Dave! It has to be exhausting to continually have to debunk these liars. I'm grateful you're taking the time to do it.

    • @cantopig9639
      @cantopig9639 Před 7 měsíci +1

      someone else should make their own series to take part of the burden off of Dave's shoulders

  • @PZMyersBiology
    @PZMyersBiology Před 2 lety +496

    I just realized I've only been telling everyone that Luskin is a godawful liar for about 16 years. I hope this finally sinks in.

    • @brettvv7475
      @brettvv7475 Před 2 lety +31

      Well there's a name I haven't seen in a while...

    • @CostaExtranjero
      @CostaExtranjero Před 2 lety +21

      Thank you for your work, professor!!!

    • @DrReginaldFinleySr
      @DrReginaldFinleySr Před 2 lety +29

      Nice to see you PZ! Keep up the good fight, sir. - Formerly, The Infidel Guy, now Biology Professor. 🙂

    • @penguinuprighter6231
      @penguinuprighter6231 Před 2 lety +5

      Great work Mr Myers..thanks for your efforts.

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 Před 2 lety +1

      @@brettvv7475 Like ebola, every now and again it pops up.

  • @Myrrydyn1950
    @Myrrydyn1950 Před 2 lety +94

    Hi Dave! I love your videos, and am excited to see every new one. I find you to be credible, honest, wildly entertaining, and just plain likeable! I'm an Anti-theist, published author in trucking information, I'm educated, and a debater in Atheist areas. I hold a Bachelor in Psychology, but mostly I'm a trucker, biker, family man, lover of truth and honesty, and have used your information to make points in debates, ROCK ON BROTHER!

  • @slavicprogrammer6100
    @slavicprogrammer6100 Před rokem +68

    Dave is like the Doomslayer except instead of demons he mows down pseudoscientific shills, and instead of the Crucible and a chainsaw he wields research and common sense

    • @robertjackson1813
      @robertjackson1813 Před rokem +10

      It wouldn't hurt for for him to wield a B.F.G.!

    • @breedcrumbs
      @breedcrumbs Před 11 měsíci +5

      LMAO TRUE, but people who push pseudoscientific beliefs (wether they really believe in them or are doing it to deepen their pockets) are no different than literal demons, thanks for the analogy it had me laughing for like a striaght minute xD

    • @asherwoodrow7471
      @asherwoodrow7471 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@robertjackson1813 well, it wouldnt hurt *him*

    • @Pink_MMNTO
      @Pink_MMNTO Před 6 měsíci +2

      Teach and Expose, until it is done~

  • @JakeWitmer
    @JakeWitmer Před rokem +26

    This is really outstanding content. You really nailed these charlatans, and I'm really happy with your "big picture" reasoning for doing so. You're right: Nothing stops destructive religious ideas from regressing society to violent "rule by theocratic false authority," except for the fact that, thus far, they've been losing the war for "hearts and minds" to actual science. That should continue, and your work is one of the reasons it is. Kudos.

    • @braesidebikes4344
      @braesidebikes4344 Před rokem +3

      i do not think they have been losing the war. The religious rather than scientific grounds for the us' roe v. wade ruling is one example of many of what seems to be a massive and horrifying backslide. i've got a ton of anecdotes about idiots coming out of the woodwork in my own life, weaponizing their religious madness with politics, but i know my personal experience doesn't prove anything about the collective.

    • @JakeWitmer
      @JakeWitmer Před rokem +2

      ​@@braesidebikes4344 I like Norbert Wiener's "Cybernetics" framework. Wiener pointed out that there are all kinds of agency-driven phenomena that use feedback and correction to pursue goals. One thing religious people love to do (it's why many of them are religious, and why many more con-men pretend to be religious) is point out that Christians often obtain good outcomes from either positive thinking or Christian cybernetic networks. (I.e.: "Praise the lord, for he has given Bob a new house after Bob's house burned down" ...but wait...Bob was a member of the church and the church members pitched in and all went to Bob's business and donated to his relief fund...the fact that your cybernetic network bailed Bob out says nothing about the existence of God...it merely says something about the types of people who form Christian cybernetic networks.) One thing Wiener and others have pointed out is that physical reality is governed by different rules than cybernetic networks are governed by, and that the scientist who conducts himself by trying to detect and outsmart devils that don't exist is wasting his time, but that the detective, campaign manager, military strategist, or lawyer who does the same is the only one who prevails, and sometimes the only one who survives.
      From a cybernetic perspective, your personal experience is valid, and useful for analysis. From a scientific or "physics only" perspective, it's not as useful or valid. ...From a cybernetic perspective, it would be surprising if cybernetics-based heuristics didn't apply to your anecdotes. For example, we can expect religious entities to use feedback and correction to attain goals, and for the nodes in christian networks to have certain kinds of communication that organize their efforts and future beliefs, as well for them to be weak in certain ways... (I.e. "how much do the network nodes refer to the Bible?" ...Are they subject to communications that better reference the Bible, or better reference their feelings of conscience?)
      Also, I should mention that anecdotes are politically powerful, and that the king of using anecdotes for political gain was Ronald Reagan. (Most were never corroborated, but were "highly realistic." The man lied without compunction, because he knew that "anecdotes force someone who thinks you are 80% honest to believe your anecdote words are 100% honest." ...They either happened[100%], or they didn't happen at all and you're 0% honest. It forces a binary judgment. ...And...usually...people keep listening.) My aunt actually verified a similar event to Reagan's "welfare queen" apocryphal anecdote...but she was in Chicago, working with people on welfare at the time...Reagan only ever passed through...and couldn't give any date or other corroborating evidence for his claims. ...But did he say, "I have hazily updated my worldview with thousands of partial events that have a similar overall theme"? No. He told a story.
      I hope what I've said is of some use to you. Religion is a great force for evil in this world. Not so much in what the individuals in the churches are doing, but because the churches will never fight the prison profiteers and incumbent government ...lest they lose their tax-exempt status.
      Why stand for right when you can enrich yourself and win personal comfort? It's a very common problem among the churches. ...And, as you've noted...they're often more corrupt in extremely overt ways that directly contradict the best scientific and medical information that's available.

  • @Steelmage99
    @Steelmage99 Před 2 lety +39

    "We are the silent majority, and we will be silent no more."
    Have you noticed how, the more extreme positions people hold, the more they believe that are representing a HUGE, but somehow silent, majority?

    • @Nixeu42
      @Nixeu42 Před rokem +8

      I suspect they have a lot of trouble grasping that not everyone thinks the way they do. That's why a lot of them project their own flaws onto their opposition, hard.

  • @fazergazer
    @fazergazer Před 2 lety +240

    What makes Darwin the more remarkable is precisely that he crystallized the early concepts of natural selection on speciation and adaptation before the modern understanding of evolutionary biology and the molecular basis of genetics. In essence he described the machine and predicted it’s behavior before the hood was lifted.

    • @MicheleGardini
      @MicheleGardini Před 2 lety +41

      Not only that, he was aware about the limits of his theory, so he wrote on flaws and gaps and anticipated it would need a lot of refinement in the future and space for alternative models. He was the opposite of a bigot.

    • @Juggler4071
      @Juggler4071 Před 2 lety +30

      And what's amazing is that in 150 years of research - including in fields like molecular biology and genetic, that didn't even exist at the time - there has been zero evidence AGAINST his theory. Sure, there have been modifications and improvements to the theory, but in essence it's still valid.
      That did not have to be the case. It takes a wilful and desperate ignorance to understand that multiple fields of science and 150 years of discoveries all corroborate the theory... and yet still pretend that it's not true.

    • @chlorineismyperfume
      @chlorineismyperfume Před 2 lety +8

      A great thinker, indeed.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 2 lety +13

      Yes, I think Darwin was as great a mind as Newton or Einstein. He saw through to the core systems dynamics of biological survival and development without knowing anything about the mechanism of inheritance or the chemistry of living creatures, and without extrapolating stuff to fill in the gaps of his own ignorance.

    • @StixFerryMan
      @StixFerryMan Před 2 lety +3

      I think it more amazing that other ppl didnt come to such conclusions before.
      But, i have heard it say that a true genius isnt someone who invents something new, but someone that sees what is in front of them that others take for granted.

  • @KAP_KiRiGi
    @KAP_KiRiGi Před rokem +21

    Not sure if you'll see this, but since I've started university you've taught me topics related to my course but more than that you've taught me critical thinking and to appreciate what science is for human kind.
    For that, I thank you

  • @boxboi6259
    @boxboi6259 Před rokem +6

    Good man we here that believe in truth and fact that modern day science brings forward appreciate you for showing real evidence towards mediocre debates from institutes like this it is a disgrace to all mankind and aswell as our own history I do not see religion as a horrible thing but the moment you give it any political power the corruption leaks through like a broken glass and for you coming forward to discuss topics such as this gives me hope that humanity still has a chance in this world Thank you Dave and I mean it with all my being THANK YOU

  • @sandem4515
    @sandem4515 Před 2 lety +91

    Recently in biology we started going on about human biology, and the first class was about evolution. Loved that the teacher had to say (paraphrasing and translating) "Evolution might not go with your religious beliefs, I am not forcing you to believe it, but you'll at least have to understand it assuming you want to pass."

    • @annk.8750
      @annk.8750 Před 2 lety +19

      My daughter is a geology professor in a bible belt state, and that's exactly what she has to tell the undergraduate classes.

    • @annk.8750
      @annk.8750 Před 2 lety +14

      I might add: since the broader topic of geology embraces a certain amount of paleontology, Dave is incorrect when he says that geology and evolution are unrelated. Understanding fossil evidence in rock strata is an important topic, and a grasp of evolution is essential for that.

    • @sandem4515
      @sandem4515 Před 2 lety +1

      @@annk.8750 Fossils came to my mind as well when I said that it didn't involve evolution.

    • @lunchtreyy
      @lunchtreyy Před 2 lety +6

      @@sandem4515 Geology and Paleontology are not the same thing. Yes, paleontology has principles pulled from geology, but to say that having a PhD in Geology gives you prerequisite knowledge that is equal to or more than a PhD in Paleontology would be stupid.

    • @Lamster66
      @Lamster66 Před 2 lety +2

      @@annk.8750 Incorrect!
      Rocks are not fossils. Sometimes Fossils are found in Rocks.
      A geologist might be good at explaining where you might find fossils.
      But lacks the knowledge of anatomy and biology to know what they are when he finds them. It's kind of why you have paleontologists, If there was no need then we would only have geologists!

  • @kobayashi1194
    @kobayashi1194 Před 2 lety +86

    20 minutes in and this is probably my favorite debunking video you’ve ever done. Dave can now join the Creationist Debunking Avengers, other members being Aron Ra, Thunderf00t, GutSick Gibbon, and Emma Thorne. Amazing job as always!
    Edit: Holy crap that final segment about what Creationists really want and Iran was super compelling. Shows in perfectly simple terms why Creationism is such a threat today.

    • @dandromeda1
      @dandromeda1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thefrznrose5114 me too, he's one of my favorites

    • @mitsunori222000
      @mitsunori222000 Před 2 lety +8

      @@kennethkho7165 Try Sir Sic for an added dose of irreverent humor

    • @kobayashi1194
      @kobayashi1194 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kennethkho7165 I have, though personally I’d say this is WAY more scathing towards creationism than that entire little series with James. It’s either this, or that 15 part series Aron Ra made about David C Pack about the existence of god.

    • @GodofAbraham
      @GodofAbraham Před 2 lety +8

      How Could you not mention potholer54 🤨

    • @bacchusevolution7875
      @bacchusevolution7875 Před 2 lety +4

      Potholer54 is the true elite.

  • @user-wi4sd2pd2c
    @user-wi4sd2pd2c Před 4 měsíci +7

    I for many many years thought I was smarter than most, listening to the wrong (at the time, I thought they were right) people sprout their ideology and I lapped it up. I even went as far to persuade others to follow my Immature and Anti establishment ways. BUT, I am one of the lucky one's who actually opened my mind and started to listen to those that DO know about what they are talking about. Thank you Prof Dave for making me realize the errors in my foolish thoughts, and to let you know that I have opened my eyes to the ways of "Real Science". (I was an 50% EU supporter until watching your debunking video, once again, Thank You Kindly..."Eyes open, Fear Prof Dave"

  • @dr.nebulanovae8398
    @dr.nebulanovae8398 Před rokem +11

    "Everyone in science is trying to prove something wrong."
    An absolutely necessary point that every single layperson and doubter of science should drill into their brains.

  • @thewritingengineer
    @thewritingengineer Před 2 lety +22

    "The coupling of religious institutions with political ones can turn any religion, even one that preaches peace and love, into a murdering machine." - Professor Dave
    This is the most concise and accurate statement for the continuation of the separation of Church and state I have ever come across. As a scientist with degrees in Nuclear Engineering and Materials Science, and as a catholic, I would never consent to a state or country run by ANY religious institution, even my own. What the DI is doing here, in stark contrast to their states purpose, is evil. This type of behavior makes me want to scream at the top of my lungs, the sheer denial of demonstrable facts put forward by these charlatans of all stripes, is deplorable and hurts so many people.
    I know that the stated purpose on your channel is to educate people about science, and that the destruction of science denying institutions is not your primary goal, but I thank you for every one of these videos that you produce. I'll end with a quote, as I began:
    "All that is necessary for evil to succeed is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke

    • @smears6039
      @smears6039 Před rokem

      May I ask how you became catholic? Were you raised in it or convert later in life? I am very curious how someone can be a scientist while also being a theist, I used to be a very devout Christian myself but as I learned more and more about science I had to abandon my religious beliefs, would love to hear your thoughts and beliefs

    • @thewritingengineer
      @thewritingengineer Před rokem +2

      @@smears6039 I don't mind at all. I was raised in the Catholic faith and had always had an inclination to discovering how things worked. I never felt that the knowledge and information that I gained from my education was forcing me to reexamine my beliefs or to abandon my beliefs as a Christian. I've always felt that in the massive universe that we live in, with the knowledge that we have, the knowledge of what we don't know, and the understanding that there may be some things which we might never understand, there is no reason why there couldn't be a God. It's rather akin to things like dark matter and string theory. These things have inferred to exist, but we don't actually know. I suppose the point is, maybe there are levels of existence that we haven't thought of and aren't aware of, but affect our reality. I just happen to believe in a God, and follow a certain set of beliefs, the core of them being "love your neighbor as yourself". It seems to me that if everyone could do more of that, we'd all be better off. Certainly better off than the people in this video want us to be.

    • @thureintun1687
      @thureintun1687 Před 8 měsíci

      yes, Russia and China is disgusting, as nationalism is disgusting
      Nationalism, the main dividing factors among men alongside religion. Very very dangerous indeed indeed indeed
      I wouldn't be surprised this ID thing turns out to be state funded just to exploit American society(which is the literal easiest society to exploit mainly due to the lack of societal deterrence such as nationalism)

  • @m.g7408
    @m.g7408 Před 2 lety +37

    Im from Iran, and I once thought before all this social media that the US being so advanced in every way must have such an intelligent and logical and science minded population to have brought on this advancement, in comparison to my own population which were majorly superstitious stuck in the ways of the past lacking critical thinking skills and so on, after all this social media and getting the feel and news like somebody actually living in the us that image in my mind shattered to a million pieces, I found out (Being completely unbiased) that the US population was not only not superior in those criteria stated, but maybe even inferior. And that baffled my mind, then how come Iran is stuck in such a shitty place and the US is one of the most advanced? And the answer after many hours of thinking, I have come to the conclusion that each of the populations has idiots and has geniuses, only in the US 300 years ago the people who founded it were not idiots and by separating state and religion in the constitution, guaranteed that mostly the idiot part of the population does not get to make decisions for the whole country, but in Iran due to some circumstances like rapid change and historical context among others the population was duped into thinking the idiots were actually the geniuses, and after that the theocratic regime having the experience of a recent revolution clinged on like a serpent wrapping onto its prey and squeezing it firmly so it had no way out and used religion as a tool to first deceive and if that doesn’t work to use it as an excuse to use excessive force on its own population and justify that. That I think is the biggest difference in how the US and Iran turned out to be. Dont try to test what has already been tested. Theocracy leads to destruction and misery, it has been seen in europe and now the middle east and it mostly lead to shit, getting religion the fuk out of government is a recent human achievement, do not let lies convince you otherwise, read history so you wont have to experience it yourself.

    • @m.g7408
      @m.g7408 Před 2 lety +1

      This is very simplified cuz I couldn’t write for pages, of course there are many other factors involved, but in my opinion most of those factors also factor into what I have said so I boiled it down.

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 Před 2 lety

      Meanwhile: Donald Trump says “Hold my beer…”

    • @richmax8486
      @richmax8486 Před 2 lety

      @@bob_the_bomb4508 lol you mean Donald the atheist who pretends to be religious so his backwards followers will kneel. I wonder what part of the Bible tells you to steal from your own fake charity and run a scam university? 😂🤣😂🤣 Oh and to try and destroy democracy.

    • @m.g7408
      @m.g7408 Před 2 lety

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters thanks, what for english?

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 2 lety

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters There is no digital translator that can come remotely close to the cogent, well expressed post that M.G. made. Such translators are very stupid robots that cannot comprehend different meanings of a single word, or actually meaning at all. If you don't know that, then you haven't watched the myriads of robo translations on YT videos.

  • @DonLee1980
    @DonLee1980 Před 11 měsíci +11

    I just remembered that I actually have seen the actual fossil specimen in Ethiopia of Lucy. It's just mind boggling how someone would completely fabricate something like that. Discovery Institute needs to be charged and sued.

  • @sthom1967
    @sthom1967 Před rokem +7

    The 'Burn' of DI contributors was amazing. I found particularly interesting, the 'extra' commentary giving clarity (and the terrible history) about separation of Church & State, especially in these divided times - Lest We Forget ! Amazingly comprehensive , I share the gratitude of your many viewers for all your tremendous efforts.

  • @jeremybrezenoff1280
    @jeremybrezenoff1280 Před 2 lety +125

    I love how you don't stop at just debunking the fake science but also go into the political implications of this farce of a movement. Stay based, Dave.

  • @frufrujabenderps5300
    @frufrujabenderps5300 Před 2 lety +273

    I was a creationist for a few years, was really into it too. then one day I just decided to google how radioisotope dating works and the whole charade just fell apart. Love this content!

    • @davidbutler1857
      @davidbutler1857 Před rokem +18

      I was never a creationist, but some 20 years ago I figured that the best way to check the validity of radiometric dating was to see if any industries used it in any practical way... and voila... I found even a helpful website by several Nuclear related groups (IAEA, etc) that outlined the uses of the method.

    • @krioni86sa
      @krioni86sa Před rokem +4

      @@davidbutler1857 what's the link?

    • @tor4569
      @tor4569 Před rokem

      God youre pathetic, hahaha

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas Před rokem

      Yeah, carbon dating has been a topic of complaining for many decades, in the 1970's Josh McDowell "debated" using the argument that it's not accurate.

    • @davidbutler1857
      @davidbutler1857 Před rokem +2

      @@2degucitas Only by creationists

  • @sturtfc
    @sturtfc Před 2 měsíci +1

    Interesting series Dave. Would it be possible to add two videos on “Intelligent Design” please? 1) Focus on the maths of William Dembski and “Specified Complexity” plus some brief discussion of the concept of “Information”. 2) A more stepped back and brief overall summary of why ID is not science, perhaps from a more philosophical basis. Without all of the endless details and depths which, while important, risk becoming very mind numbing and confusing after a point. Your detailed analysis is useful but it can lead one to get lost from the overall picture. As part of this, I think it would be useful to run through Steven Meyer’s own concept of “science”, in particular his notion of “science by analogy” as opposed to “science by explanations/mechanisms/operational definitions”. Rather than “inference to the best explanation”, I would characterise Meyer’s approach to science as “Inference (by analogy) to the preferred ideology”. It would also be interesting to hear you discuss Meyer’s (and Dembski’s) notions (NOTIONS) of “biological information” and complexity. Hey, do you have a “ask me anything” section?

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I'm not sure if 2 is worth a video. Basically your question is: could ID be valid if we strip all falsehoods off? I think not. All creationism, including IDiocy rests on three fallacies.
      1. Evolution is wrong, hence goddiddid;
      2. Paley's False Watchmaker Analogy is valid, so goddiddid;
      3. Science can't explain, hence goddiddid.
      To obscure this IDiots like Luskin lie that they do science. At the same time they reject methodological naturalism. See the Wedge Document. It's online and Prof Dave discusses it on his video about StevieM in this series.
      Without this lie they have to admit that they don't have a case. With this lie ID can't be valid (that's why I call it IDiocy).

  • @Schizniit
    @Schizniit Před 9 měsíci +5

    Wait so they want evolution to be taught objectively? Kinda like how it's already taught, since it is an objective fact and not a belief? Saying evolution exists is sort of like saying air exists.

  • @TheNightWatcher1385
    @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 2 lety +91

    Used to be a hardline creationist back in the day. Just letting you know that the work you do does make an impact. Keep up the good work! An angle that I’d encourage you to take is to show how a belief in religion does not require a belief in creationism. The reason why so many creationists are hard to reach is because they see an attack on creationism as an attack on their religion.

    • @fepeerreview3150
      @fepeerreview3150 Před 2 lety +14

      I think one of the things people struggle with is that they want to consider the Bible inerrant and then conclude they must take it literally.
      The irony is that the Bible, when taken literally, not only contradicts physical reality in many respects, it also contradicts itself. Whereas if they would view it as a text that is more poetry than prose, where the meaning is between the lines, they could avoid both layers of contradictions.
      They can't do that, though, because then they would not be able to differentiate it from the holy books of any other religious traditions.

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 2 lety +7

      @@fepeerreview3150 I forget who said this, but a well known paleontologist once said, “to take the Bible as literal history is to dilute its eternal meaning.”

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheNightWatcher1385 Eternal meaning. Cute. So, tell me, what is the eternal meaning of the story of Lot, or of Romans 1.
      Anyway, is encouraging/requiring faith loving?
      I think the eternal meaning is valuable, like our history lessons of WWII and what lead up to it.

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 2 lety

      @@stylis666 WWI and WWII and the upcoming WWIII are largely the result of the death of the concept of objective moral truth.

    • @kyle82barker
      @kyle82barker Před rokem

      Or you can tune your religious friend's to Atheist Experience and learn how there is no god... And then start getting billions of dollars back into the pockets of our society who are struggling praying for something that is never going to happen, and we can have a better chance of saving ourselves on this planet.

  • @AlwaysANemesis
    @AlwaysANemesis Před 2 lety +23

    While I'm no lawyer, I _do_ know that slander lawsuits are typically hard to pursue, as you need to prove 'actual malice,' which, in legal terms, basically means that the defendant knew that their statements were false and damaging to the plaintiff's work or reputation, but deliberately did so regardless.
    In this instance, however, the proof is in the pudding; I think actual malice would be easily proven, should this turn into a legal battle. The question is if it's fiscally worth it.

    • @balam314
      @balam314 Před 2 lety +3

      The "actual malice" standard only applies if the plaintiff is a public figure (like Casey Luskin and Prof Dave). If the plaintiff is a private citizen, like that scientist was, then they only need to show negligence. Source: LegalEagle

    • @AlwaysANemesis
      @AlwaysANemesis Před 2 lety +4

      @@balam314 Ah, I had forgotten the different stipulations for private peoples. Though I don't know; would the scientist not classify as a public figure?

    • @DavidSmith-vr1nb
      @DavidSmith-vr1nb Před 2 lety +1

      The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Sorry, I just don't like the short form of this saying.

  • @tone2812
    @tone2812 Před 7 měsíci +5

    I don’t know what the CZcams algorithm is doing, but I got weed and 30 minutes

  • @David_in_Thailand
    @David_in_Thailand Před rokem +9

    Being a geologist, how does he sit with the 6,000 year age of the Earth as taken from the Bible? Maybe he is living his life as a total lie.

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před rokem +5

      His bank account speaks the truth.

    • @alanthompson8515
      @alanthompson8515 Před rokem +1

      An age taken from the margin of the Bible, not even from the body of the text.
      To be a Young Earth Creationist, you have to believe that The Almighty waited until the 16th C CE before "inspiring" John Lightfoot of Cambridge and Bishop Ussher of Armagh to calculate the date of Creation. (Ussher gets the credit, even though Lightfoot got there first!). You also need to believe that the publication of these dates in subsequent printings of the King James' (Authorised) Version elevated them to "Gospel Truth".
      Ironically, by all accounts, neither Ussher or Lightfoot were charlatans; they did not take all those BC genealogies through arcane twists and turns to prove a point (something modern Creationists are quite good at). They were not trying to disprove science. No doubt there were errors of interpretation, and perhaps errors of omission. There were certainly difficulties in aligning events according to the Julian, Gregorian, and Hebrew calendars, as other scholars have pointed out.
      We often think of the Enlightenment as the beginning of modern science, but in the 17th century it was still nascent, and in a state of almost continuous tension with approved church doctrine. Ussher and Lightfoot may have been sympathetic with the emerging science (I’m not sure historians really know this), but they were also immersed in theological tradition. They took the information that was available and used it in a scholarly fashion.

  • @roderickshaka3626
    @roderickshaka3626 Před 2 lety +554

    *"intelligent design is not science, it is religion trying to Trojan horse it's way into science"* sir I have to clap 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

    • @jasonmethystine6516
      @jasonmethystine6516 Před rokem +4

      I'm pretty irreligious but believe in intelligent design
      Won't deny it's difficult to reconcile the two 😩

    • @RavingMad
      @RavingMad Před rokem

      But trojan horse was able to get in due to blind believers, so iD should not be able to get into science, given science is being performed by qualified scientists 🤔🤔🤔

    • @Storm-_-rider
      @Storm-_-rider Před rokem +28

      @@jasonmethystine6516 how can you not be religious but believe we are made by a deity?

    • @killerraccoons
      @killerraccoons Před rokem +1

      Do you feel comfortable perhaps doing those of us who admittedly don't understand how those two beliefs can be simultaneously held with a legitimate degree of intellectual honesty? I certainly don't want to come across in any way as if I believed myself somehow capable and/or qualified in any way,or entitled, or, or, or?..to look down my nose at you from high upon mynivory tower climbing high horse, ibdoht

    • @jerrylong6238
      @jerrylong6238 Před rokem

      @@jasonmethystine6516 If you buy intelligent design bullshit you are not anti-religious, you're just a very poor liar. Your religion must
      have taught you that shit.

  • @derhafi
    @derhafi Před 2 lety +34

    The ill-named “Discovery Institute” where one of it’s founders Howard F. Ahmanson, Jr. openly wants to replace democracy with a fundamentalist theocracy. He told the Orange County Register in 1985: "My goal is the total integration of biblical law into our lives." He stated since that "I may have had 'a plan to change American society' once....Now I'm just trying to be faithful with what I have." 1) but given that he pays for the lies the DI pumps out, I doubt this.
    1)"Avenging angel of the religious right"
    By Max BlumenthalPublished January 6, 2004

    • @stevepierce6467
      @stevepierce6467 Před 2 lety +1

      It is this terrifying push by radical fundamentalists that keeps me active trying to counter their theocratic propaganda.

    • @jefftheriault3914
      @jefftheriault3914 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you for bringing this person out of the shadows he's been standing in.

    • @derhafi
      @derhafi Před 2 lety +2

      @@jefftheriault3914 Thanks, but I did basically nothing. Dave Farina is doing all the work.

  • @angusyang5917
    @angusyang5917 Před rokem +5

    On the contrary, I do believe that in fact, religion should be taught in schools, in science class...
    more specifically, in the social sciences class. Not in an indoctrinating, "This is why this religion is good, and you should follow it and not question it," but rather in an academic and unbiased way, "Here's the religion, here's the beliefs of that religion, there's people then and now who follow it, here's why it was so relevant in world history." In fact, not only should Christianity (all of Christianity, Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant, not just whatever the local evangelical Creationist pastor says) be taught in such a manner, but all the major world religions now and in the past, specifically Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. The point is to educate people about religion, not influence them to convert to it. The point is to explain the relevance of these religions to the story of humanity, and allow the students to make up their own judgement about it.
    TL;DR Religions don't belong in the science class at all, it's academic relevance and beliefs belong in the social sciences class.

  • @edwebber679
    @edwebber679 Před 10 měsíci +15

    Casey Luskin is the intellectual equivalent of a 10 year old having a temper tantrum because his mommy won't buy him candy.

  • @Saturnium_
    @Saturnium_ Před 2 lety +72

    If creationists cared about the truth, they wouldn't be creationists.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 Před 2 lety +156

    These creationists can’t even agree among themselves on a single lie. They attack each other on whose version is the Biblically correct version.

    • @jaymac7203
      @jaymac7203 Před 2 lety +18

      Hilarious isn't it? Looool 😭😭😂😂😂

    • @n8ture690
      @n8ture690 Před 2 lety +16

      @@jaymac7203 It'd be way funnier if they didn't have a following and more people joined us in the laughter.

    • @danf1862
      @danf1862 Před 2 lety

      Belief + snowflake self importance = the "my god beats your god" back and forth that causes wars. They will attack anything that doesn't mimic their own ideologies. It's always shocking to see.

    • @asagoldsmith3328
      @asagoldsmith3328 Před 2 lety

      @@jaymac7203 would be if they didn't control the government

    • @donaldbarber3829
      @donaldbarber3829 Před 2 lety +17

      I like the people who insist that the dinosaurs were a pre-human sentient race that sided with the fallen angels. If you're gonna do the wacky, I say go all out!

  • @equilibriumuirbiliuqe
    @equilibriumuirbiliuqe Před 10 měsíci +9

    Woah Prof Dave manages to pack maximum damage into all his debunking videos!! Straightforward, concise and easy to understand! I'm impressed and grateful for you!

  • @Sarah-re7cg
    @Sarah-re7cg Před rokem +4

    Professor Dave, you are a national treasure. Actually, international treasure since this kind of theocratic propaganda has no borders. I've watched a lot of videos pushing back on propaganda and they are excellent, but I think the sheer amount of time, rigor and work you've put in for due diligence is unbeatable. Seriously. This (along with your other videos) is one of if not, the most thorough and in-depth takedown of propaganda I have ever seen. I hope you're compensated well, but at the same time you really cannot put a price on its worth because of just how important it is.

  • @dark666razor
    @dark666razor Před 2 lety +40

    Although education is super important, these videos exposing the misinformation and the frauds are equally important. Its good to have people, like you, who point out their bullshit and show why its bullshit. Thank you for your hard work Dave, big fan.

  • @mitsunori222000
    @mitsunori222000 Před 2 lety +63

    As a teacher in High School Biology, I have been a subscriber to your channel for a long time, both 'Explains' and 'Debunkings' and this video maintains the high standards that I would like my students to emulate.
    Especially appreciated: your research, evidence and patient, pointed exposition.

  • @whatabouttheearth
    @whatabouttheearth Před 2 lety +6

    What they did with the PBS NOVA documentary is a form of defamation called slander (the other is libel), but what they probably know is that in order to sue for defamation you must prove that personal, professional or financial harm was caused, and I doubt this caused that.
    Libel is defamation by printed word, and Slander is defamation by spoken word.
    Dr. Lovejoy might actually have a chance to sue them since they so egregiously and intentionally misrepresented him and essentially asserted that he is committing fraud.

  • @craigbikes8831
    @craigbikes8831 Před 8 měsíci +7

    I used to be Christian and I will just openly admit the reason I believed that religion was because I had emotional problems and I felt like I could replace my bad personality with a Christian personality and people would accept me. I thought I could join the church and get a girlfriend and make friends etc. I wish religious people would just admit that it's a social club and they don't actually believe this stuff

  • @TirarADeguello
    @TirarADeguello Před 2 lety +139

    Thank you so much for doing this entire series.

  • @JOpethNYC
    @JOpethNYC Před 2 lety +25

    The amount of anti-intellectualism happening in modern times is an embarrassment to our species. 🤦‍♂️

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, like people suddenly dissing religion despite literal historic evidence suggesting the existence of a god

    • @alexanderofrhodes9622
      @alexanderofrhodes9622 Před rokem +4

      @@wolfetteplays8894
      There is 0 evidence anywhere or at any time in favor of the existence of a deity of any type.

    • @SparkleFoxMutt
      @SparkleFoxMutt Před rokem +7

      @@wolfetteplays8894 People have been dissing religion for ages, it's just that nowadays those people aren't as likely to be executed by religious institutions. Most religions think they have historical evidence to prove their god/gods to have existed, so is every religion true?

    • @michaellozada1077
      @michaellozada1077 Před rokem +3

      agreed.

    • @large1965
      @large1965 Před rokem +2

      ​@@wolfetteplays8894
      Quote: " Literal historic evidence"
      Can you please produce some and amuse the rest of us?
      Thanks!

  • @sgavin111
    @sgavin111 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I've loved your videos for a long time. Then I saw the Radiohead poster in the background--love you even more. Thank you so much for your brilliant service to humanity.

  • @jayro2996
    @jayro2996 Před rokem +6

    Pure entertainment for me. Whatever brain chemistry keeping ignorant people ignorant, ya know, the types who follow the Institutes publications and accept at face value whatever is tossed out as truth. Thanks for doing what you do. Individuals such as yourself keep their feet to the fire and we would be in a darker place without it. Todays politics is trying to restrict the freedoms of every American and videos such as yours shine a bright light on these charlatans. Thanks again, count me in as a new subscriber, looking forward to the next.

  • @Megan-cd6sh
    @Megan-cd6sh Před 2 lety +8

    Wow Dave, thank you so much for covering this. I cannot imagine how Dr. Lovejoy must feel upon this revelation. Thank you for including his comment on the matter. I always find it hard to wrap my mind around people's willingness to engage in magical thinking past a certain age. Although I suppose that the fear of being insignificant and essentially pointless leads these fools to all sorts of strange conclusions. Being so willing to lie and slander, and for what? For what? As an aside, I absolutely love your videos, Dave. Not only your debunking videos but also your straightforward educational ones where you don't have to eviscerate anyone. You remind me very much of my brother. He too is insanely sharp, wry and very very funny. Thank you for providing such quality content and educational information for free for anyone willing to listen and learn.

  • @ms.nettimusic6429
    @ms.nettimusic6429 Před 2 lety +57

    Professor Dave’s tone is awesome. I love how much shade he can put in normal sentences that are simply laying out facts. Keep up the great and important work!!

  • @jamesm.9285
    @jamesm.9285 Před rokem +45

    As a Catholic biology & evolution nerd, I feel obliged to say many - perhaps most - Christians aren't this ignorant to science. Science and faith often work hand-in-hand when referring to the objective reality; the discrepancies lie in the fact that most science does not deal with philosophy, mythology, symbolism, or metaphysics, but rather is as you referred to it: materialism. Interesting video btw! 🙌

    • @marknieuweboer8099
      @marknieuweboer8099 Před rokem +18

      In Canada, most European countries and the USA it's definitely most. I'd appreciate it if more christians spoke out against creacrap, like Francis Collins, Kenneth Miller and Judge Jones. Creacrappers are just loud mouthed fanaticals.

    • @jamesm.9285
      @jamesm.9285 Před rokem +15

      @@marknieuweboer8099 Exactly. 💯 It's sad because they set a poor reputation and often gross misunderstanding upon the rest of us.

    • @erinys2
      @erinys2 Před 9 měsíci +2

      The thing is, Most often religion and science do not go hand in hand. And more things we discover more they will diverge, trying to imply that religion specifically christianity fits into science is just blatant ignorance

    • @jamesm.9285
      @jamesm.9285 Před 9 měsíci

      @@erinys2 you might find the majority of the religious and scientists will disagree, because most fo not accept pure materialism - to do so is considered "blatant ignorance" in the regards of many. I hope we can come to have fair discourse on the objective matters and not throw insults. How would you feel about that?

    • @erinys2
      @erinys2 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @jamesm.9285 I did not mention what they believe, I simply stated that religion and science do not go hand in hand, Its interpretation could be but whats objectively Known Generally doesent hint at anything religious, simply stating that theres no material evidence And they are completely different fields, Also i am not insulting you personally In any way just stating what this sort of thinking is to me
      (also many things from the bible actively go against Scientific theories, Creationism for example,but if we're reffering to general faith and using bible as a metaphor the previous point stands)

  • @Matthooses
    @Matthooses Před 2 lety +7

    A close friend of mine had become an evangelist, fundamental Christian and at the same time I had become an agnostic atheist. He has stated multiple times that he’s unwilling to change his mind and when I asked why he said “I just know I’m correct” We would argue a bunch over the course of a couple months (it’s less occurrent now) and I don’t think I will ever get through to him. I’ve presented him with mountains of evidence against creationism and he thinks that it’s all fake, no joke. He thinks that fossils are fake and were either synthetically created or put there by Satan or something. It’s even more frustrating bc he thinks that I’m the stubborn one, even though I’ve stated multiple times that I’m willing to change my mind given evidence. And then he says that I “think too physically and not spiritually” Its so especially frustrating bc we’ve been friends for so long and we’re only in high school and we have all the same friends, some of whom are also tired of his mentioning of Christianity. Even the other Christians in our friend group have to explain basic science to him. I feel like it’s not even worth my time to talk to him about it anymore.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 2 lety

      Believe me, it's not worth your time.

    • @jefftheriault3914
      @jefftheriault3914 Před 2 lety

      When I took a look at the natural world surrounding us, and the evidence that we came from it, and are still part of it, I realized that the only possible God that could exist would have to be God level depraved. What else could you call a being that created a universe sized snuff flick that it could endlessly wallow In? Experiencing both the terror and pain of the captured prey, and the exultant predator swallowing the hot blood and the quivering flesh in it's jaws? That's what they want to worship? Human beings have done what we can to wall that off. Let us fervently hope that there is no God behind what we see.

  • @POLARTTYRTM
    @POLARTTYRTM Před 2 lety +36

    Your debunking/exposing videos are one of the best things to have ever appear on youtube. Your tone, your deliveries and points are just too good. Sometimes I find myself coming back to these videos just to watch again you demolishing these people, videos that I've watched multiple times.

    • @POLARTTYRTM
      @POLARTTYRTM Před 2 lety

      @@williamduke2743 I'll rephrase. DEMOLISHING them.

  • @Ice03_13
    @Ice03_13 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Dave, I’m going to have to apologize. I’ve been watch you for years now and I CANT believe I missed this series! Love what you do for the community keep up the great work!

  • @rallandtariv2139
    @rallandtariv2139 Před rokem +8

    When you disprove a pillar of science, you’re given a Nobel Prize. When you try to disprove a pillar of a religion, you’re executed for heresy.

    • @9_1.1
      @9_1.1 Před rokem +3

      yep, science accepts theories being disproven and uses the new info to make a new, better theory. religion just cries and says “nuh uh!”

  • @Raviell87
    @Raviell87 Před 2 lety +61

    It's so absurd for me, that after everything we learned and accomplished as a species, there are still ppl who are trying to "debunk" science with their mumbo jumbo "evidence"

    • @glennpearson9348
      @glennpearson9348 Před 2 lety +10

      Attracting attention to yourself, making money, and feeling special or important are all powerful motivators.

    • @OldSchoolZ-wy2yx
      @OldSchoolZ-wy2yx Před 2 lety +8

      @@glennpearson9348 Preying on the ignorant and the gullible. There's no limit to how low some people would go for money.

    • @Raviell87
      @Raviell87 Před 2 lety +4

      @@glennpearson9348 yeah, that's true. Personally I would never want to be "special" for a small percentage of ppl, if it would make me a laughable clown for the rest of society. Definitely not worth making a fool out of myself imo

    • @glennpearson9348
      @glennpearson9348 Před 2 lety

      @@Raviell87 That's probably because you already have a circle of friends. From my perspective, most of these whack jobs who are in it to feel special probably don't have many friends outside of their little ring of like-minded whack jobs. They've got nothing to lose, whereas you probably do.

    • @glennpearson9348
      @glennpearson9348 Před 2 lety

      @@OldSchoolZ-wy2yx What's really interesting to me is that many who are preying on the gullible are, themselves, gullible. They've fallen into a rabbit hole, likely led there by someone else, and now they're trying to pull other equally gullible people into the rabbit hole with them.
      Idiocy, like misery, loves company.

  • @saildu6965
    @saildu6965 Před 2 lety +18

    I’m blown away by the amount of work that went into what could have been a simple rebuke: you actually emailed the people whose work had been represented, provided clear and concise explanations for every one of your counter-points… Great content, thank you!

  • @brucewayneissupermanquinn601
    @brucewayneissupermanquinn601 Před 6 měsíci +13

    Not a science teacher, but a history teacher: have spent the last 4 or so years trying to correct the blatant lies, whitewashing, and “fake news” that is spewed out. You’re doing an invaluable service! Great work!

  • @lizzykayOT7
    @lizzykayOT7 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The ending scared me. As you get older you realise that this fight has never really ended, it just ebbs and peaks. It's disheartening.

    • @WokeandProud
      @WokeandProud Před 9 měsíci +3

      It's an old saying but it reigns true through the ages "the price of liberty is eternal vigilance" the moment you let your guard down those that lust for power will happily take it all away from you.

  • @CinematicSeriesGaming
    @CinematicSeriesGaming Před 2 lety +16

    I absolutely love your approach. Too many educators try to be polite and non-confrontational when being confrontational is the correct approach. Misinformation and fundamentalist propaganda need to be exposed for what they are.

  • @darklordofsword
    @darklordofsword Před 2 lety +30

    I'm not sure what's worse: the delusions they have, or that they HAVE TO KNOW THEYRE LYING, because they're editing the video.

    • @danf1862
      @danf1862 Před 2 lety +6

      This is the part that most people miss. Those at the top of religious groups don't really have to believe to wield the power of belief. It's disgusting.

    • @jumpingisuseless4037
      @jumpingisuseless4037 Před 2 lety

      The saddest part is religion is such a great coping strategy as it allows for hope in a hopeless world. Just wish the lying would stop. Why not embrace science and move on? They would have so many more followers. I know I'm clumping as a whole and some may embrace but just saying it would be nice to have a majority that did.

  • @RubixCubix_
    @RubixCubix_ Před 9 měsíci +4

    Damn, I gave these guys money a year ago.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Před 9 měsíci +20

      Oh no! Well spread the word to anyone you know who got fooled!

    • @RubixCubix_
      @RubixCubix_ Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@ProfessorDaveExplains Yeah, I was born into a really religious household. I did not chose to be convinced of the evidences of evolution, it just happened. I cant control that, and holding this belief takes me out of the fold of the religion.
      Now according to the religion, I could stay in hell for disbelief, the skin regrows just to be burnt again for eternity. Scary stuff.

  • @gagnepower
    @gagnepower Před 11 měsíci +11

    I left christiannity 6 months ago, and it's partly because of you, thanks man

  • @johnboettcher1962
    @johnboettcher1962 Před 2 lety +22

    My degree’s in geology. I have no idea how he could get through his first year as a creationist.

    • @OnASeasideMission
      @OnASeasideMission Před 2 lety

      True.
      One of the staff back in London/Chelsea (not there, anymore) was a palaeobotanist and a Christian.
      And a damn good teacher.

    • @tma2001
      @tma2001 Před 2 lety

      aye kinda ironic given the major geologic divisions were originally distinguished by their fossils (which clearly evolve in complexity).

    • @johnboettcher1962
      @johnboettcher1962 Před 2 lety +4

      @@OnASeasideMission
      Sure. I was a Christian until way after I graduated. But a young earther? I don’t see how…

    • @OnASeasideMission
      @OnASeasideMission Před 2 lety

      @@johnboettcher1962 Yes, appreciate the difference, but the man in question did discuss - and even held a seminar on - the double-think he needed to be a Christian evolutionist.
      As I said, a very good man all round, but I had already dropped the religious mindset I was raised with in Wales.
      And note that there are geologically trained creationists out there. Steve Austin comes to mind.

    • @kevinturner7509
      @kevinturner7509 Před 2 lety

      Pride and willful ignorance. The human mind is incredibly capable of compartmentalization, and it's hard to find a better example of this than with highly educated, conservative religious people. They may be erudite and highly capable of critical thought in a narrow field, but when it comes to matters that challenge what they consider sacred, their minds become endarkened and their behavior abominably zealous.

  • @bigbeefscorcho
    @bigbeefscorcho Před 2 lety +23

    4:24 As a writer myself, I can say (with whatever minute amount of authority that gives me on the matter) that there’s plenty of published morons and unpublished geniuses. One of the most deeply mentally unwell and irrational people I’ve ever met was a published author of several books. Crazy people write books all the time! Hell, *most* writers are probably nuts, myself included!

    • @Nixeu42
      @Nixeu42 Před rokem +1

      A lot of famous authors had serious mental disorders, and some probably couldn't have been as influential without them. H.P. Lovecraft is likely the most glaring example.

    • @mythicalducky
      @mythicalducky Před 11 měsíci +1

      Which was the crazy writer jk Rowling?

    • @bigbeefscorcho
      @bigbeefscorcho Před 10 měsíci

      @@mythicalducky she’s not just crazy, she’s deliberately evil. Fuck terfs!

  • @inshadowz
    @inshadowz Před 7 měsíci +3

    Thanks for excellent insight and compilation of reference material. I'm currently re-watching your Exposing DI videos because a “friend” has tripped over and fallen head first into the Discovery Institute, and he is now using Tour et al to support his arguments in order to destroy my “detrimental religious belief in scientism”. Apparently he has run out of Ken Ham, Kent Hovind and Matt Powell garbage, and finally understood that direct Bible references don't work even when he shouts them at me. One of his latest is in fact the Lucy skeleton “manipulative vandalism” as addressed in this very video.

  • @seanmeehan5955
    @seanmeehan5955 Před rokem +7

    Delightful. Seeing institutes and organizations that prey on the gullible challenged and exposed in such a methodical manner is a pleasure to behold. Thank you, Dave!

  • @qurkatimilaz3787
    @qurkatimilaz3787 Před 2 lety +11

    Something very unrelated to the video conclusion and unneeded info:
    The mask (Guy Fawkes mask) comes from the franchise 'V for Vendetta' and not the hacker group anonymous (they in turn based it on 'V for Vendetta') but it was popularized by the hacker group and is therefore sometimes refereed to as 'anonymous mask'.
    I guess Casey Luskin sees himself as Guy Fawkes, here to "blow up" the 'evolution biology community'.

    • @derhafi
      @derhafi Před 2 lety

      All in all that is quite fitting given that Guy Fawkes was basically a fundamentalist who wanted to reestablish Cathlic rule over England by blowing up the house of lords including King James, the senior judges of the English legal system and most of the Protestant aristocracy.
      If anyone made a poor choice in regards to masks, it was Alan Moore.