• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

Dr. Paul Chien

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
The Real Issue
Explosion of Life

A scientist reveals details of the Cambrian explosion,
a biological puzzle that confounds the Darwinists


The Real Issue
Dr. Paul Chien was born in China and graduated from university in Hong Kong where he earned degrees in chemistry and botany. He completed his doctorate at the University of California, Irvine, and his post-doc at Cal Tech in marine biology. Presently he is the chairman of the biology department at the University of San Francisco.



Dr.. Paul Chien, chairman of the biology department at the University of San Francisco, recently accepted a unique invitation to travel to China to study fossils of the Cambrian era. What Chien found at the Chengjiang site, and what he has since learned about the Cambrian fauna, has changed the focus of his career. Today, Chien concentrates on further exploring and promoting the mysteries of the Cambrian explosion of life. Subsequently, Chien possesses the largest collection of Chinese Cambrian fossils in North America.

Chien attended Mere Creation, a conference last November sponsored by Christian Leadership, which was featured in the previous Real Issue. The following is an interview with Paul Chien.

RI: Dr. Chien, what is your interest in the evolution/creation debate?


Chien: Even before I became a Christian, I had doubts about evolution. During my college years I was really interested in finding answers, but I got very little help. For a while I lost interest because I thought, one way or the other, it wasn't very important. But since I started teaching, many people ask me about that. In fact, I often speak at churches and youth groups and conferences, and I have been forced back to that question; it's pretty much my hobby now.


RI: Until recently, you have focused on the effects of pollution on marine organisms. How then did you come to study the Cambrian "explosion of Life"?


Chien: In studying marine organisms, and mainly the invertebrate groups, I have a clear vision of the distinct characteristics of each phyla. The theory of evolution never [seemed to] apply well in my field of marine invertebrates. When the news broke concerning [the discovery of] an explosion of animal life, it really excited me because that [had been] my position for many years. Also, Phil Johnson's chapter on fossils [Darwin on Trial, Intervarsity Press, 1991] really ignited my interest in that area.

When an opportunity came up to talk with Chinese paleontologists and to visit them and the original site of fossil discovery, it became something I had to do. So last March I organized an international group to make a visit there.


RI: So is the Chengjiang site a primary site for the Cambrian explosion?


Chien: Yes, it's the site of the first marine animal found in the early Cambrian times we don't count micro-organisms as animals.


RI: Are there other places in the world where you find the same organisms?


Chien: In some ways there are similarities between the China site and the other famous site, the Burgess Shale fauna in Canada. But it turns out that the China site is much older, and the preservation of the specimens is much, much finer. Even nerves, internal organs and other details can be seen that are not present in fossils in any other place.


RI: And I suppose many of these are probably soft-tissue marine-type animals?


Chien: Yes, including jellyfish-like organisms. They can even see water ducts in the jellyfish. They are all marine. That part of western China was under a shallow sea at the time.


RI: As you became more interested in this and discovered more about it, did you find it really was an "explosion of life"?


Chien: Yes. A simple way of putting it is that currently we have about 38 phyla of different groups of animals, but the total number of phyla discovered during that period of time (including those in China, Canada, and elsewhere) adds up to over 50 phyla. That means [there are] more phyla in the very, very beginning, where we found the first fossils [of animal life], than exist now.

Stephen J. Gould, [a Harvard University evolutionary biologist], has referred to this as the reverse cone of diversity. The theory of evolution implies that things get more and more complex and get more and more diverse from one single origin. But the whole thing turns out to be reversed we have more diverse groups in the very beginning, and in fact more and more of them die off over time, and we have less and less now.


RI: What information is the public hearing or not hearing about the Cambrian explosion?


Chien: The general impression people get is that we began with micro-organisms, then came lowly animals that don't amount to much, and then came the birds, mammals and man. Scientists were looking at a very small branch of the whole animal kingdom, and they saw more complexity and advanced features in that group. But it turns out that this concept does not apply to the entire spectrum of animals or to the appearance or creation of different groups. Take all the different body plans of roundworms, flatworms, coral, jellyfish and whateverall those appeared at the very first instant.

Most textbooks will show a live tree of evolution with the groups evolving through a long period of time. If you take that tree and chop off 99 percent of it, [what is left] is closer to reality; it's the true beginning of every group of animals, all represented at the very beginning.

Since the Cambrian period, we have only die-off and no new groups coming about, ever. There's only one little exception cited the group known as bryozoans, which are found in the fossil record a little later. However, most people think we just haven't found it yet; that group was probably also present in the Cambrian explosion.

Also, the animal explosion caught people's attention when the Chinese confirmed they found a genus now called Yunnanzoon that was present in the very beginning. This genus is considered a chordate, and the phylum Chordata includes fish, mammals and man. An evolutionist would say the ancestor of humans was present then. Looked at more objectively, you could say the most complex animal group, the chordates, were represented at the beginning, and they did not go through a slow gradual evolution to become a chordate.


RI: In the December 1995 issue of Time magazine in the article "When Life Exploded" the writer implied that there was nothing to get worked up about the theory of evolution was not in any danger.


Chien: The scientists come out and say, "Oh yes, we've heard this before and it's very similar to the Burgess Shale," and so forth, but the Burgess Shale story was not told for many years. The Burgess Shale was first found by Charles Walcott in 1909 why was the story not reported to the public until the late 1980's?

At the very beginning I thought it was a problem for them; they couldn't figure out what was going on because they found something that bears no resemblance to the present animal groups and phyla. Walcott originally tried to shoe orn those groups into existing ones, but [his attempt] was never satisfactory.

It was puzzling for a while because they refused to see that in the beginning there could be more complexity than we have now. What they are seeing are phyla that do not exist now that's more than 50 phyla compared to the 38 we have now. (Actually the number 50 was first quoted as over 100 for a while, but then the consensus became 50-plus.) But the point is, they saw something they didn't know what to do with; that's the scientifically honest position they're placed in. Later on, as they began to understand things are not the same as Darwinian expectations, they started shutting up.


RI: Now that the information is coming out, what are they saying?


Chien: We really don't have much of an explanation yet, although there are a few biological and environmental theories that have been kicked around. Stephen Gould was quoted by Phil Johnson [in Darwin on Trial] as saying that things like [the Cambrian explosion] are the trade secret of paleontology, and not many people know about it. And that includes Gould's own crusade for punctuated equilibrium as well.

I know of some people who teach evolution but do not mention Stephen Jay Gould or punctuated equilibrium. They know about it, but they are of the old school and can't accept it. So there's a lot of politics involved in this, even among themselves.


RI: Does the drift of evidence in the Cambrian Explosion lean toward speeded-up evolution?


Chien: There are two major camps on this explosion business. One is the good old Darwinian explanation that we simply haven't found the intermediates. For those who tend to think that way, they say the Cambrian period was just the best time to preserve a lot of fossils, and they refer to it as a "fossil explosion." They hope that by looking more they might find some evidence of evolution, or they simply say (like Gould), "Well, we'll never find it. Fossils are hard to form in the first place." This is called "artifact theory."

But a lot of younger scientists are turning to new ideas. The first idea put out was the oxygen theory. They say that maybe in Cambrian times the oxygen level in the atmosphere and in the oceans suddenly arose to a critical level which could support larger-sized animals. That theory is pretty much shut down because there should be geological evidence for a sudden increase in oxygen.

There are other theories, too, like that of Berkeley professor James Valentine. He is now working on something new that relates to Jonathan Wells' work. (Wells is the Berkeley biologist who spoke at the Mere Creation conference.) In developmental biology the study of embryo development there's been a big discovery of something called Hox genes. They are regulatory genes, and they turn on and off sequences the development of the eye and so on.

Valentine infers that primitive organisms accumulated enough Hox genes to suddenly make a different body plan. So he's trying to correlate Cambrian explosion with the development or accumulation of Hox genes. But I think there are many theoretical difficulties he's facing.

John Wells has the idea that Hox genes won't do it. He claims that Hox genes are only switches. You can put the switch on different systems and it just turns on and off you're not getting new information out of Hox genes.


RI: So when they ask you about it, what do you say?


Chien: Well, it depends who is asking. In scientific dialogue I think I can be very honest with whatever present findings we have. We can all discuss objective data, but pretty soon we find out that whatever conclusion each draws is far from what the evidence says. In other words, I think every theory is still more belief than scientific fact. I wouldn't use scientific findings as evidence to support Biblical creation. All science does is begin to tell us what happened 540 million years ago, and we have just little bits and pieces. However, I think we can use the evidence to strongly show that Darwinian gradual evolution did not happen.

In terms of creation I think we still need to figure out what we mean by natural processes, and we need to ask ourselves if all natural processes have an author or creator behind them. Creation itself is a concept about design involvement, and all these fossils are just the physical evidence that is left over; it still has no direct application to a single creator and how He worked.

But when I read Genesis chapter one, the fifth day seems to read very much like the fossil record we see now because it talks about all the creatures teeming in the oceans. Now, to me that sounds like the Cambrian explosionin a very short period of time, [the animals] are all there.


RI: Where do we, as Christians, go from here with respect to the fossil record?


Chien: I think the Christian community should get into this and do more study on it. I remember meeting a linguist, and he told me that Christians pretty much dominate the field of linguistics because of their interest in translating the Bible. In the same way I would like to see Christians get into paleontology and take an interest in doing good science I think that's at least one way to reverse the church's withdrawal from science. Personally, I have an urge to popularize these ideas because although scientists are beginning to talk about the Cambrian explosion, and while a few people in the inner circle know about it, the general public isn't aware of it.

In fact, I have now in my hands a Chinese book on the Cambrian explosion that I would like to have translated into English and published in the United States. It's mainly a picture book there are about two hundred color photographs and some line drawings showing all the different animals from the Chinese Cambrian site. I believe Christians can publish such books in a context that has little to do with religion this is the truth, and the truth will speak for itself.

In fact, [the Chinese scientists and I] were planning to work together further on algae from the Cambrian period. They have collected thousands and thousands of fossils, and they have a lot of fossil algae that nobody is working on.


RI: What were the circumstances which led you to become a Christian?


Chien: It began in high school; my parents sent me to a Christian school in Hong Kongonly because the school has a very good educational reputation. After six years of studying the Bible, I finally accepted the Lord just before graduating from high school.

It was a struggle for many years before that. I thought I wanted to be a scientist, but I didn't want to be a superstitious person. But I was really attracted to Jesus Christ His life and His teaching. In many respects I thought His teaching was deeper than much of the Chinese moral teaching. So in some ways I was converted in my heart, but I refused to become a Christian.

I tried to imitate Christians and I understood what salvation was all about, but I didn't accept it until the final senior trip our class made. We went to the highest mountains in the Hong Kong area, and we had no other place to stay than in a Buddhist monastery. That [experience] gave me a good contrast to compare the religious effort of the Buddhists, which I admired, with Christianity. When I looked at nature, which I was deeply in love with, I suddenly realized that I had to worship the Creator of nature. So during a prayer meeting I came face-to-face with the Lord, and there was no way I could avoid Him any more. So I confessed my sins and accepted Him as Lord and Savior. That was one of the greatest spiritual experiences of my life.


Leadership U.
copyright (c) 1995-1999 Leadership U. All rights reserved.


Cont'd
 

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
The Real Issue
Explosion of Life

A scientist reveals details of the Cambrian explosion,
a biological puzzle that confounds the Darwinists

Cont'd


RI: Did you ever have any Christian professors come along side you in your higher education?


Chien: No. I struggled for a long time, and I really needed some guidance there. I tried to read every book available to me on science and Christianity, but they were not very helpful. That's another reason I would like to work on more books in that area.


RI: Do you intend to go back to Chengjiang, the Chinese Cambrian site?


Chien: I would very much like to do that. Somehow I would like to get more involved in fossil work. Although I have lectured so many years in my own area of marine biology and pollution, I think I would like to concentrate on this aspect. This was an opportunity presented to me which nobody else has.


RI: Perhaps you could add "paleontologist" to your credentials.


Chien: Not really; that's not my purpose. I am more interested in working on the popular level. I know of less than a handful of Christian paleontologists, and I always like to establish dialogue with them. In one sense, biologists, geologists, and paleontologists are put in a pretty difficult position: we are in the middle between the Christians and the atheistic scientists we're really between a rock and a hard place. That's a big battle for the church to look at. Whenever I speak to young people, I encourage them to become scientists.


RI: Do you think perhaps young Christians are going into these areas, but many of them lose their faith?


Chien: Yes, either that or they get so discouraged that they opt out. When I was in grad school and expressed my doubts about Darwinism, my friends would tell me that I was either ignorant or crazy; they probably thought the "Chinese guy" was not very well educated. They would try to convince me on "scientific" grounds, but I would just say, "Well, it just doesn't seem to be very convincing to me."


Leadership U.
copyright (c) 1995-1999 Leadership U. All rights reserved.
This site is part of the Telling the Truth Project.
 
Upvote 0

D. Scarlatti

Well-Known Member
Jun 3, 2002
1,581
88
Earth
✟2,620.00
Faith
Atheist
Originally pasted by gunnysgt:

RI: Perhaps you could add "paleontologist" to your credentials.

Chien: Not really; that's not my purpose. I am more interested in working on the popular level.

Oh, isn't this Paul Chien the "Chinese paleontologist" referred to in another one of gunnysgt's remarkable cut 'n' paste jobs?

I suppose factual coherence is a bit too much to ask as a criterion for "terrific posts" around here.

(By the way gunnysgt, we already linked to this goofy interview in one of your other hit 'n' run extravaganzas, so this is old news. Get with the program, dad.)
 
Upvote 0

euphoric

He hates these cans!!
Jun 22, 2002
480
5
49
Visit site
✟23,271.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by gunnysgt
A scientist reveals details of the Cambrian explosion,
a biological puzzle that confounds the Darwinists

This crap isn't even interesting as humor anymore.  Gunny, if you have a working understanding of the Cambrian Explosion, why don't you regale us with your theories about it.  Otherwise, stop posting the thoughts (though not particularly coherent ones) of other people in a lame effort to insert your uninformed opinion into discussions regarding things you don't understand.  Good grief.

-brett
 
Upvote 0
Originally posted by gunnysgt
The Real Issue
Explosion of Life

A scientist reveals details of the Cambrian explosion,
a biological puzzle that confounds the Darwinists


The Real Issue
Dr. Paul Chien was born in China and graduated from university in Hong Kong where he earned degrees in chemistry and botany. He completed his doctorate at the University of California, Irvine, and his post-doc at Cal Tech in marine biology. Presently he is the chairman of the biology department at the University of San Francisco.



Dr.. Paul Chien, chairman of the biology department at the University of San Francisco, recently accepted a unique invitation to travel to China to study fossils of the Cambrian era. What Chien found at the Chengjiang site, and what he has since learned about the Cambrian fauna, has changed the focus of his career. Today, Chien concentrates on further exploring and promoting the mysteries of the Cambrian explosion of life. Subsequently, Chien possesses the largest collection of Chinese Cambrian fossils in North America.

Chien attended Mere Creation, a conference last November sponsored by Christian Leadership, which was featured in the previous Real Issue. The following is an interview with Paul Chien.

RI: Dr. Chien, what is your interest in the evolution/creation debate?


Chien: Even before I became a Christian, I had doubts about evolution. During my college years I was really interested in finding answers, but I got very little help. For a while I lost interest because I thought, one way or the other, it wasn't very important. But since I started teaching, many people ask me about that. In fact, I often speak at churches and youth groups and conferences, and I have been forced back to that question; it's pretty much my hobby now.


RI: Until recently, you have focused on the effects of pollution on marine organisms. How then did you come to study the Cambrian "explosion of Life"?


Chien: In studying marine organisms, and mainly the invertebrate groups, I have a clear vision of the distinct characteristics of each phyla. The theory of evolution never [seemed to] apply well in my field of marine invertebrates. When the news broke concerning [the discovery of] an explosion of animal life, it really excited me because that [had been] my position for many years. Also, Phil Johnson's chapter on fossils [Darwin on Trial, Intervarsity Press, 1991] really ignited my interest in that area.

When an opportunity came up to talk with Chinese paleontologists and to visit them and the original site of fossil discovery, it became something I had to do. So last March I organized an international group to make a visit there.


RI: So is the Chengjiang site a primary site for the Cambrian explosion?


Chien: Yes, it's the site of the first marine animal found in the early Cambrian times we don't count micro-organisms as animals.


RI: Are there other places in the world where you find the same organisms?


Chien: In some ways there are similarities between the China site and the other famous site, the Burgess Shale fauna in Canada. But it turns out that the China site is much older, and the preservation of the specimens is much, much finer. Even nerves, internal organs and other details can be seen that are not present in fossils in any other place.


RI: And I suppose many of these are probably soft-tissue marine-type animals?


Chien: Yes, including jellyfish-like organisms. They can even see water ducts in the jellyfish. They are all marine. That part of western China was under a shallow sea at the time.


RI: As you became more interested in this and discovered more about it, did you find it really was an "explosion of life"?


Chien: Yes. A simple way of putting it is that currently we have about 38 phyla of different groups of animals, but the total number of phyla discovered during that period of time (including those in China, Canada, and elsewhere) adds up to over 50 phyla. That means [there are] more phyla in the very, very beginning, where we found the first fossils [of animal life], than exist now.

Stephen J. Gould, [a Harvard University evolutionary biologist], has referred to this as the reverse cone of diversity. The theory of evolution implies that things get more and more complex and get more and more diverse from one single origin. But the whole thing turns out to be reversed we have more diverse groups in the very beginning, and in fact more and more of them die off over time, and we have less and less now.


RI: What information is the public hearing or not hearing about the Cambrian explosion?


Chien: The general impression people get is that we began with micro-organisms, then came lowly animals that don't amount to much, and then came the birds, mammals and man. Scientists were looking at a very small branch of the whole animal kingdom, and they saw more complexity and advanced features in that group. But it turns out that this concept does not apply to the entire spectrum of animals or to the appearance or creation of different groups. Take all the different body plans of roundworms, flatworms, coral, jellyfish and whateverall those appeared at the very first instant.

Most textbooks will show a live tree of evolution with the groups evolving through a long period of time. If you take that tree and chop off 99 percent of it, [what is left] is closer to reality; it's the true beginning of every group of animals, all represented at the very beginning.

Since the Cambrian period, we have only die-off and no new groups coming about, ever. There's only one little exception cited the group known as bryozoans, which are found in the fossil record a little later. However, most people think we just haven't found it yet; that group was probably also present in the Cambrian explosion.

Also, the animal explosion caught people's attention when the Chinese confirmed they found a genus now called Yunnanzoon that was present in the very beginning. This genus is considered a chordate, and the phylum Chordata includes fish, mammals and man. An evolutionist would say the ancestor of humans was present then. Looked at more objectively, you could say the most complex animal group, the chordates, were represented at the beginning, and they did not go through a slow gradual evolution to become a chordate.


RI: In the December 1995 issue of Time magazine in the article "When Life Exploded" the writer implied that there was nothing to get worked up about the theory of evolution was not in any danger.


Chien: The scientists come out and say, "Oh yes, we've heard this before and it's very similar to the Burgess Shale," and so forth, but the Burgess Shale story was not told for many years. The Burgess Shale was first found by Charles Walcott in 1909 why was the story not reported to the public until the late 1980's?

At the very beginning I thought it was a problem for them; they couldn't figure out what was going on because they found something that bears no resemblance to the present animal groups and phyla. Walcott originally tried to shoe orn those groups into existing ones, but [his attempt] was never satisfactory.

It was puzzling for a while because they refused to see that in the beginning there could be more complexity than we have now. What they are seeing are phyla that do not exist now that's more than 50 phyla compared to the 38 we have now. (Actually the number 50 was first quoted as over 100 for a while, but then the consensus became 50-plus.) But the point is, they saw something they didn't know what to do with; that's the scientifically honest position they're placed in. Later on, as they began to understand things are not the same as Darwinian expectations, they started shutting up.


RI: Now that the information is coming out, what are they saying?


Chien: We really don't have much of an explanation yet, although there are a few biological and environmental theories that have been kicked around. Stephen Gould was quoted by Phil Johnson [in Darwin on Trial] as saying that things like [the Cambrian explosion] are the trade secret of paleontology, and not many people know about it. And that includes Gould's own crusade for punctuated equilibrium as well.

I know of some people who teach evolution but do not mention Stephen Jay Gould or punctuated equilibrium. They know about it, but they are of the old school and can't accept it. So there's a lot of politics involved in this, even among themselves.


RI: Does the drift of evidence in the Cambrian Explosion lean toward speeded-up evolution?


Chien: There are two major camps on this explosion business. One is the good old Darwinian explanation that we simply haven't found the intermediates. For those who tend to think that way, they say the Cambrian period was just the best time to preserve a lot of fossils, and they refer to it as a "fossil explosion." They hope that by looking more they might find some evidence of evolution, or they simply say (like Gould), "Well, we'll never find it. Fossils are hard to form in the first place." This is called "artifact theory."

But a lot of younger scientists are turning to new ideas. The first idea put out was the oxygen theory. They say that maybe in Cambrian times the oxygen level in the atmosphere and in the oceans suddenly arose to a critical level which could support larger-sized animals. That theory is pretty much shut down because there should be geological evidence for a sudden increase in oxygen.

There are other theories, too, like that of Berkeley professor James Valentine. He is now working on something new that relates to Jonathan Wells' work. (Wells is the Berkeley biologist who spoke at the Mere Creation conference.) In developmental biology the study of embryo development there's been a big discovery of something called Hox genes. They are regulatory genes, and they turn on and off sequences the development of the eye and so on.

Valentine infers that primitive organisms accumulated enough Hox genes to suddenly make a different body plan. So he's trying to correlate Cambrian explosion with the development or accumulation of Hox genes. But I think there are many theoretical difficulties he's facing.

John Wells has the idea that Hox genes won't do it. He claims that Hox genes are only switches. You can put the switch on different systems and it just turns on and off you're not getting new information out of Hox genes.


RI: So when they ask you about it, what do you say?


Chien: Well, it depends who is asking. In scientific dialogue I think I can be very honest with whatever present findings we have. We can all discuss objective data, but pretty soon we find out that whatever conclusion each draws is far from what the evidence says. In other words, I think every theory is still more belief than scientific fact. I wouldn't use scientific findings as evidence to support Biblical creation. All science does is begin to tell us what happened 540 million years ago, and we have just little bits and pieces. However, I think we can use the evidence to strongly show that Darwinian gradual evolution did not happen.

In terms of creation I think we still need to figure out what we mean by natural processes, and we need to ask ourselves if all natural processes have an author or creator behind them. Creation itself is a concept about design involvement, and all these fossils are just the physical evidence that is left over; it still has no direct application to a single creator and how He worked.

But when I read Genesis chapter one, the fifth day seems to read very much like the fossil record we see now because it talks about all the creatures teeming in the oceans. Now, to me that sounds like the Cambrian explosionin a very short period of time, [the animals] are all there.


RI: Where do we, as Christians, go from here with respect to the fossil record?


Chien: I think the Christian community should get into this and do more study on it. I remember meeting a linguist, and he told me that Christians pretty much dominate the field of linguistics because of their interest in translating the Bible. In the same way I would like to see Christians get into paleontology and take an interest in doing good science I think that's at least one way to reverse the church's withdrawal from science. Personally, I have an urge to popularize these ideas because although scientists are beginning to talk about the Cambrian explosion, and while a few people in the inner circle know about it, the general public isn't aware of it.

In fact, I have now in my hands a Chinese book on the Cambrian explosion that I would like to have translated into English and published in the United States. It's mainly a picture book there are about two hundred color photographs and some line drawings showing all the different animals from the Chinese Cambrian site. I believe Christians can publish such books in a context that has little to do with religion this is the truth, and the truth will speak for itself.

In fact, [the Chinese scientists and I] were planning to work together further on algae from the Cambrian period. They have collected thousands and thousands of fossils, and they have a lot of fossil algae that nobody is working on.


RI: What were the circumstances which led you to become a Christian?


Chien: It began in high school; my parents sent me to a Christian school in Hong Kongonly because the school has a very good educational reputation. After six years of studying the Bible, I finally accepted the Lord just before graduating from high school.

It was a struggle for many years before that. I thought I wanted to be a scientist, but I didn't want to be a superstitious person. But I was really attracted to Jesus Christ His life and His teaching. In many respects I thought His teaching was deeper than much of the Chinese moral teaching. So in some ways I was converted in my heart, but I refused to become a Christian.

I tried to imitate Christians and I understood what salvation was all about, but I didn't accept it until the final senior trip our class made. We went to the highest mountains in the Hong Kong area, and we had no other place to stay than in a Buddhist monastery. That [experience] gave me a good contrast to compare the religious effort of the Buddhists, which I admired, with Christianity. When I looked at nature, which I was deeply in love with, I suddenly realized that I had to worship the Creator of nature. So during a prayer meeting I came face-to-face with the Lord, and there was no way I could avoid Him any more. So I confessed my sins and accepted Him as Lord and Savior. That was one of the greatest spiritual experiences of my life.




Your point being exactly what?

 
 
Upvote 0

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Originally posted by euphoric


This crap isn't even interesting as humor anymore.  Gunny, if you have a working understanding of the Cambrian Explosion, why don't you regale us with your theories about it.
-brett

This thread is to generate discussion concerning Science, Creation and Evolution. It is proper to utilize a more learned individual's perceptions and opinions to generate dicussion.

I am not a scientist. I am a Christian. Dr. Paul Chien is a Christian. I find his comments regarding creation and evolution very interesting. Yes, I understand that if one professes Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, to many professing atheists that one is perceived to be somewhat ignorant on a myriad of subject matters.

It is proper for me as a Christian to comment on any and all threads due to:

Christian Forums was established as a free, non-profit and non-denominational online
Christian community to unite Christians of every denomination together as one body


GySgt James
 
Upvote 0
Originally posted by gunnysgt


Point being is that professing atheists were refuting the fact that Paul Chien was a real person.

GySgt James

What does someone being a "professing atheist" have to do with this mistake? Futhermore, the claim wasn't that Paul Chien wasn't a real person, but rather the anonymous "Chinese Paleontologist" wasn't real. However, that claim is in fact right, since, although Johnson was probably refering to Paul Chien, Dr. Chien is not a paleontologist. Thus Johnson's Chinese paleontologist doesn't exist.
 
Upvote 0

D. Scarlatti

Well-Known Member
Jun 3, 2002
1,581
88
Earth
✟2,620.00
Faith
Atheist
Originally pasted by gunnysgt

Dr. Paul Chien, chairman of the biology department at the University of San Francisco ...

copyright (c) 1995-1999 Leadership U. All rights reserved.
This site is part of the Telling the Truth Project.

______________________________________________


University of San Francisco, Biology Department Chair 1998-2001: Deneb Karentz (as of June 16, 2001).

(Deneb Karentz is currently on leave with the National Science Foundation.)

University of San Francisco, Biology Department Chair 2001-Present: John Sullivan (as of August 20, 2002).

Some representative papers featuring PK CHIEN (from The University of San Francisco's Environmental Physiology and Metal Toxicology Laboratory home page):

Chen, T., Furst, A., Chien, P.K. (1994). The effects of cadmium and iron catalase activities in Tubifex. J. American College of Toxicology. 13, 112-120.

Fan, H.Y., Tjon-Kon-Sang, R., Furst, A., Chien, P.K. (In Print). Zinc, but not copper protects against cadmium toxicity in the earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris: The pathway involves metallothionein.

Fung, C., Chien, P.K., Furst, A. (In Print). The induction of metallothionein by arsenic and selenium in the common earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris.

Furst, A., Chien, Y., and Chien, P.K., (1993). Worms as a substitute for rodents in toxicology: acute toxicity of three nickel compounds. Toxicol. Methods. 3, 19-23

Li, W., Chien, P.K., and Furst, A. (1994). Evalutation of three antidotes on arsenic toxicity in the common earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris. J. Appl. Toxicol. 14, 181-183.

A couple more:

Lin, L., M. A. Rice, and P.K. Chien. 1992. The effects of copper, cadmium and zinc on particle filtration and uptake of glycine in the pacific oyster. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 103C:181-187.

Duan Chang-Qun, Gan Xue-Chun, J. Wang and P.K. Chien (1998) Relocation of Civilization Centers in Ancient China: Environmental Factors. Ambio: A Journal of Human Environment.

From Chien's bio at usfca.edu:

"Prof. Chien is interested in the physiology and ecology of inter-tidal organisms. His research has involved the transport of amino acids and metal ions across cell membranes and the detoxification mechanisms of metal ions."

And once more, with feeling:

RI: Perhaps you could add "paleontologist" to your credentials.

Chien: Not really; that's not my purpose. I am more interested in working on the popular level.

No doubt, a respected scientist. However, Professor Chien's expertise in the area he is pontificating upon is, by his own admission, completely lacking.

Or is this how Leadership U's "Telling The Truth Project" operates?
 
Upvote 0

euphoric

He hates these cans!!
Jun 22, 2002
480
5
49
Visit site
✟23,271.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by gunnysgt
Yes, I understand that if one professes Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, to many professing atheists that one is perceived to be somewhat ignorant on a myriad of subject matters.

And you aren't helping improve that image by posting obscenely long articles by people whose credentials, by their own admission, don't qualify them in the area they are pontificating about.  Hence my assertion that you don't understand the topics your trying to generate discussion about.  How about participating in the discussions you're trying so hard to generate? 

On a discussion board it is perfectly reasonable for us non-scientists to engage in discussions on scientific topics.  The problem with what you're doing is that you don't seem to have enough knowledge of the subject matter of the articles you're cutting and pasting to know the quality of the arguments made in them.  It has been pointed out to you repeadtedly that this guy is not a palientologist.  Since another article you cut and pasted identified him as such, you have a responsibility to either acknowledge that the orginal article was in error or explain why referring to Dr. Chien as a palientologist is not a gross exaggeration of his credentials.

How about participating in this discussion on a meaningful level for a change.  In your opinion, how does the "Cambrian Explosion" work in harmony with established evolutionary models?  In what ways does it contradict them?  How might the rarity of fossil formation affect the amount of available information on the phyla that Dr. Chien points to in his interview?  How does Punctuated Equilibrium differ from other models of evolution?  Does evidence that certain evolutionary branches may have evolved relatively rapidly falsify evolutionary theory?  If you say yes, how so?

-brett
 
Upvote 0

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Originally posted by euphoric

And you aren't helping improve that image by posting obscenely long articles
-brett


Christian Forums was established as a free, non-profit and non-denominational online
Christian community to unite Christians of every denomination together as one body; this being so as a Christian I am obdeient to my Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ and His Word that commands me to defend the Gospel of Jesus Christ in any and all manner regardless of those that state I am not posting properly according to their satisifaction.

This is a Christian Website/Forum with Christian Administrators and I as a Christian am required to respect their judgement calls regarding any and all postings. I am not required to post according to any one other than Christians that are are in Leadership postions on this Christian Website and Forum.


GySgt James
 
Upvote 0

euphoric

He hates these cans!!
Jun 22, 2002
480
5
49
Visit site
✟23,271.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by gunnysgt



Christian Forums was established as a free, non-profit and non-denominational online...
GySgt James

Yes, you repost the mission statement about every third post, I was hoping that you could at least participate in the discussion beyond posting long articles you don't seem to be interested in comprehending.

So that would be a no on participating in the discussion?

-brett
 
Upvote 0

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Originally posted by gunnysgt
As a Christian I am obdeient to my Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ and His Word that commands me to defend the Gospel of Jesus Christ in any and all manner regardless of those that state I am not posting properly according to their satisifaction.
GySgt James
[/B]
 
Upvote 0

Gunny

Remnant
Site Supporter
May 18, 2002
6,133
105
United States of America
✟80,762.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Originally posted by s0uljah
Man, the venom that comes out of these atheists, when confronted with scientists that disagree with them, is amazing.

Yes, it is.


EPH 6:12 For our wrestling is not against flesh and blood, but against the principalities, against the powers, against the world-rulers of this darkness, against the spiritual `hosts' of wickedness in the heavenly `places'.

EPH 6:13 Wherefore take up the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and, having done all, to stand.

ASV 1901

GySgt James
 
Upvote 0
I would also like to point out that in the thread that lead to this one. It was evolutionist, LFOD, who pointed out that Paul Chien existed. I don't think LFOD is a Christian. Without this evil darwinist atheist (?), Gunny would have never know that Dr. Chien existed and thus not able to start this thread to attack "prefessing atheists" for claiming he didn't.
 
Upvote 0

euphoric

He hates these cans!!
Jun 22, 2002
480
5
49
Visit site
✟23,271.00
Faith
Atheist
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
Originally posted by s0uljah
Man, the venom that comes out of these atheists, when confronted with scientists that disagree with them, is amazing.

What venom?  I have no venomous feelings whatsoever towards Dr. Chien.  I think he's out of his expertise and I haven't seen any arguments from him that sufficiently support his claims, but I have no ill will towards the man.

-brett
 
Upvote 0