Harvard to Investigate Origins of Life

<p>From AP this morning:</p>

<p><a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050815/ap_on_sc/harvard_evolution%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050815/ap_on_sc/harvard_evolution&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Here is the text:</p>

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<p>Mon Aug 15, 9:03 AM ET</p>

<p>Harvard University is joining the long-running debate over the theory of evolution by launching a research project to study how life began.</p>

<p>The team of researchers will receive $1 million in funding annually from Harvard over the next few years. The project begins with an admission that some mysteries about life's origins cannot be explained.</p>

<p>"My expectation is that we will be able to reduce this to a very simple series of logical events that could have taken place with no divine intervention," said David R. Liu, a professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Harvard.</p>

<p>The "Origins of Life in the Universe Initiative" is still in its early stages, scientists told the Boston Sunday Globe. Harvard has told the research team to make plans for adding faculty members and a collection of multimillion-dollar facilities.</p>

<p>Evolution is a fundamental scientific theory that species evolved over millions of years. It has been standard in most public school science texts for decades but recently re-emerged in the spotlight as communities and some states debated whether school children should also be taught about creationism or intelligent design.</p>

<p>The theory of intelligent design says life on earth is too complex to have developed through evolution, implying that a higher power must have had a hand in creation.</p>

<p>Harvard has not been seen as a leader in origins of life research, but the university's vast resources could change that perception.</p>

<p>"It is quite gratifying to see Harvard is going for a solution to a problem that will be remembered 100 years from now," said Steven Benner, a University of Florida scientist who is one of the world's top chemists in origins-of-life research.

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<p>We over here on the Left Coast know that it isn't necessary to investigate the origin of life to disprove intelligent design, because we know it's BS.</p>

<p>Unfortunately, there are more people between the two coasts who believe otherwise. I believe evolutionists are a minority in America actually.</p>

<p>Zephyr,</p>

<p>Though I suspect that you are correct it has not been disproven. Regardless, investigations into the oigins of life could enable us to become the intelligent designers. </p>

<p>I'll let Byerly do the latin on this. ;-)</p>

<p>Veritas !!</p>

<p>"We over here on the Left Coast know that it isn't necessary to investigate the origin of life to disprove intelligent design, because we know it's BS."</p>

<p>Wow. That seems a little rude to like the 90%+ people in the nation who do believe in it.</p>

<p>"That seems a little rude to like the 90%+ people in the nation who do believe in it."</p>

<p>i'd be shocked if 10% of americans have heard of and can articulate the basic tenets of intelligent design.</p>

<p>"i'd be shocked if 10% of americans have heard of and can articulate the basic tenets of intelligent design."</p>

<p>I'd be shocked if 5% of Americans could articulate evolution any better than "evolution says humans came from monkeys".</p>

<p>I'd be shocked if 5% of Americans could carry on an intelligent argument about the origin of life.</p>

<p>Id be shocked if any thread on CC didnt turn into an argument.</p>