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Kitzmiller v. Dover: Day 10, PM: Michael Behe |
 | | I'm not going to read this, I'm just going to point out that you can observe that he's using a lot of precise numbers about the energy of light by the sun, and it turns out he's using that to do calculations, and in the calculations he is deducing the properties of the ether. |
 | | Nonetheless, it turns out that those drawings were incorrect, and a number of years ago in the late 1990's the journal Science ran a story about a study that had been done to try to reproduce Haeckel's, results, and it turns out they could not be reproduced. |
 | | Yes, an excellent example is again the bacterial flagellum, which uses a large number of parts in order to function, and again if you remove the components, if you remove the propeller, if you remove the hook region, if you remove the drive shaft or any multiple parts of the flagellum, it does not work. |
| www.talkorigins.org /faqs/dover/day10pm.html (9034 words) |
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