Walter M. Fitch, a pioneer in the study of molecular evolution, has written this cogent overview of why creationism fails with respect to all the fundamentals of scientific inquiry. He explains the basics of logic and rhetoric at the heart of scientific thinking, shows what a logical syllogism is, and tells how one can detect that an argument is logically fallacious, and therefore invalid, or even duplicitous. Fitch takes his readers through the arguments used by creationists to question the science of evolution. He clearly delineates the fallacies in logic that characterize creationist thinking, and explores the basic statistics that creationists tend to ignore, including elementary genetics, the age of the Earth, and fossil dating. His book gives readers the tools they need for detecting and disassembling the ideas most frequently repeated by creationists.
Walter M. Fitch(19292011) was Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of California, Irvine. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, member of the Human Genome Organization, and the author of more than 200 publications in molecular evolution. His previous books areTempo and Mode in Evolution: Genetics and Paleontology Fifty Years after SimpsonandVariation and Evolution in Plants and Microorganisms: Toward a New Synthesis Fifty Years after Stebbins.
Foreword by Francisco J. Ayala
1. Logic, Logical Fallacies, and Rhetoric
2. The Basics
3. Some Simple Math and Statistics
4. Young-Earth Creationism
Epilogue: The Literal Meaning of Genesis
Acknowledgments
Glossary
Annotated Reference List
This thoughtful book is a sophisticated baloney detector for digesting the offal that creationists try to pass off as steak. The late Walter Fitch demonstrates that the logic and language of science depart from the delusions of creationism.--Tim M. Berra, author of /i/Charles Darwin: Tlă+