4 • 993 Ratings
🗓️ 11 July 2023
⏱️ 28 minutes
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0:00.0 | I. D. the Future, a podcast about evolution and intelligent design. |
0:18.3 | Welcome to I. Future. I'm Eric Anderson and we're here live in Denton, Texas for the conference on engineering and living systems. I'm sitting down today with Casey Luskin, Associate Director of Discovery Institute Center for Science and Culture. |
0:27.0 | Casey is a lawyer and also has a PhD in geology, so an interesting mix and I know you've done biology studies as well Casey |
0:34.2 | Casey was a presenter at our conference and we'd like to talk to him a little bit about his work today |
0:40.1 | Welcome Casey great to be on with you Eric. |
0:43.0 | So Casey you talked a little bit about three models in the fossil record. |
0:48.1 | What are those three models that you're sharing? |
0:50.1 | Yeah, so my talk was titled Patterns from the History of Life, Abrupt, Appearance, and Stasis. |
0:55.4 | And the first part of the talk basically looked at various models of how we understand and interpret the fossil record. |
1:02.0 | And of course, the first model is the most famous one |
1:04.8 | that everybody has seen in textbooks or PBS Nova documentaries. |
1:08.6 | It's the gradual Darwinian model, |
1:11.3 | descent with modification model of the fossil record where basically you have |
1:15.8 | organisms very gradually changing over time from one form into another species morph very slowly you have sort of these these species that will |
1:25.1 | very very slowly over long periods of time through many intermediate stages |
1:29.2 | many transitional forms and phases will morph from one body plan into another. |
1:36.0 | And of course if this model is true then it's supposed to leave lots of transitional forms because the change happens slowly, |
1:43.4 | plenty of time to fossilize many of these intermediate stages |
1:47.1 | between various types of organisms |
1:49.6 | and various morphological states. |
1:51.9 | So that's the classical Darwinian view of the fossil record. |
1:55.1 | But of course as the story goes, Darwin predicted that we should find these |
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