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Another Darwin-Doubter Criminalized

(There are apparently major oversights in my following entry, but I will not strike or revise it yet. Mainly because the comments I am receiving have been very constructive, and I want to give them serious attention before taking action. In the mean time, I encourage anyone reading this entry to also read the comments. I have posted all, but I have a request: As you comment, please give some references for your position, so all may benefit. No misinformation was intended on my part, and I am glad to see the effectiveness of blog peer review at work.)

"If there were any real evidence contrary to evolution, we
would find it in the scientific research journals, right?" Consider the
following article which may not see the printed page next month. It is entitled
"Mitochondria, the Missing Link Between Body and Soul: Proteomic Prospective
Evidence," and passed review for Proteomics, "a well-regarded molecular-biology
publication," according to the
Chronicle of Higher Education
. At least it was well-regarded until this
slipped through the filter. Editors made a horrible mistake: They allowed an
article to slip through that contains a few phrases like "single common
fingerprint initiated by a mighty creator." (Please note that the word "creator"
is lower case.) If you go to the blogs which slam the article, the authors, the
journal, and the editors, and there are many, you will find a variety of
objections, to include grammar (the authors are dealing in a second language),
but make no mistake about the real objection- -the one that led to all the
search for other problems. Take for instance,
Pharyngula
, a blog which leads into its attack of the editors by saying
plagiarism get past them. It gives one sentence as an example of this flaw, but
then dedicates most of the article to restating and discussing whole paragraphs
that leak words like "wisdom" into the discussion of mitochondrial
workings. This particular blog sees no logical connection between the
description of the ubiquitous mitochondria and the possibility of a creator, but
buys whole heartedly the theory that this source of power for the cell holds its
place as the result of having been swallowed by a more primitive cell form in
the primordial sea. According to that
theory
, there once was a cell form that had no mitochondria, but upon
swallowing one (prokaryotic
bacteria are basically free-floating mitochondria), it became a new more
advanced form of cell, which has reproduced with mitochondria ever since. No
incredulity is wasted on the fact that the cell form without mitochondria has
never been found
in fossil or living form, and that no one can even explain
how such a cell could survive without the
oxygen-processing provided by mitochondria
.

But I digress. The real issue is the dual no-no of
suggesting that evolution cannot explain everything and that the only logical
alternative to that there might be a designer. This is brought home as the real issue
in Pharyngula by its closing reference to
Revista
, a journal that made the mistake of publishing authors who suggest
intelligent design might have merit and thereby lost status. Forget the hype
over plagiarism and grammar. The Chronicle of Higher Education’s "Daily Report" for Feb 7,
2008 introduced its link to the article in question by saying, "’Proteomics’ has made
available online a paper on mitochondria that includes language in opposition to
the theory of evolution." That is the real crime.

7 Responses to “Another Darwin-Doubter Criminalized”

  1. Mike O'Risal says:

    You state that no cells without mitochondria have ever been found… but that’s absolutely not true. In fact, the phylum Microsporidia is made up of amitochondrial single-celled organisms. This isn’t even new information; the Microsporidia have been known for quite some time. You might also want to have a look at the trichomonads, cells without mitochondria, having hydrogenosomes instead.

  2. Adam Ricketson says:

    I have information regarding two of your points:

    1) Many non-native English speakers publish in English-language journals. Sometimes their writing is hard to comprehend, but this article is the worst sample that I’ve ever seen.

    2) “Oxygen-processing” by mitochondria is not essential to life. Many organisms (eukaryotic and prokaryotic) live in anaerobic or micro-aerobic environments. Some eukaryotic species have mitochondrial-like organelles that do not process oxygen, and in the laboratory, we frequently recover mutants that have defective mitochondria. They don’t thrive, but they do survive.

    Finally, the problem with this paper isn’t that they appealed to a “creator”, it’s that they made an extraordinary claim with absolutely no attempt to back it up. They hinted at this new hypothesis in the introduction, but only once sentence in their 23-page paper was dedicated to describing this new theory.

    I hope that helps clarify things.

    Sincerely,
    Adam Ricketson

  3. Jay Clayton says:

    “One sentence” plagiarized? Try a large part of the paper, cut-and-pasted. I would hope you would not want to willfully lie here.

  4. Ura Hack says:

    This is very sad. The author here has been notified that almost the entire article by Warda and Han was plagiarized. Warda and Han are now apologizing for scientific fraud and are retracting it.

  5. Wes says:

    Large portions of the paper are plagiarized. You can see a comparison here:

    http://udel.edu/~mcdonald/wandahan.pdf

    A sentence or two would be excusable as a possible goof, but there’s much too much plagiarism in that paper to simply brush it aside.

    Also, many of the citations in the paper misrepresent the cited material:

    http://larsjuhljensen.wordpress.com/2008/02/10/commentary-neither-buried-nor-treasure/

    As for the “creator” thing, the problem with the claims is that they don’t follow logically at all from the information discussed in the paper. The authors make claims about “mighty creator” and “organized wisdom” but don’t provide anything to support those claims.

  6. Jay Clayton says:

    Let me thank you for an open mind, blogger.

  7. Jay Clayton says:

    The paper has been officially retracted, for plagiarism.

    Let me repeat I appreicate this blogger ultimately unhiding the critical comments. This blogger seems to have interest in the subject of the blog’s title- truth-in-advertising, as it were.

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