- "The evolutionary divergence of a single species into two has never been directly observed in nature, primarily because speciation can take a longtime to occur." -- Irwin, Bensch, and Price, "Speciation in a Ring," Nature, 2001.
- "Genetics might be adequate for explaining microevolution, but micro-evolutionary changes in gene frequency were not seen as able to turn a reptile into a mammal or to convert a fish into an amphibian. Microevolution looks at adaptations that concern only the survival of the fittest, not the arrival of the fittest. As Goodwin (1995) points out, 'the origin of species — Darwin's problem — remains unsolved.' " "Resynthesizing Evolutionary and Developmental Biology," Gilbert, Opitz and Raft, 1996.
- "All the three major textbook examples for alleged gradual species-to-species transitions have been debunked by more modern mainstream research." -- Paleontologist Günter Bechly (link).
- "'Nature makes no leap,' meaning that evolution took place slowly and gradually. This was Darwin's core belief. And yet that is not how the fossil record works. The fossil record shows more 'leaps' than not in species.” -- “Lamarck's Revenge” by paleontologist Peter Ward , page 43.
- "The first eye, the first wing, the first placenta. How they emerge. Explaining these is the foundational motivation of evolutionary biology. And yet, we still do not have a good answer. This classic idea of gradual change, one happy accident at a time, has so far fallen flat.” -- Biologist Armin Moczek.
- "It is now evident that genes play only a minor role in evolution....We now know that the gene-centered Modern Synthesis was quite wrong (see especially Shapiro 2011, 2022; Noble 2012, 2013; Noble and Noble 2023; Corning 2018, 2020). Over the past few decades there has been a growing body of contradictory evidence." -- Scientist Peter A. Corning, "Cooperative genes in smart systems: Toward an inclusive new synthesis in evolution" (link).
- "In the literal sense of the word, no doubt, natural selection is a false term." -- Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species,1869 Edition, page 92.
- "I suppose 'natural selection' was a bad term ; but to change it now, I think, would make confusion worse confounded." -- Charles Darwin, a letter to Charles Lyell dated June 6, 1860.
- "There is no actual selection carried out by natural ‘selection’. Nature – in this case the different rates of survival – is simply a passive filter." -- Biologist Denis Noble, "The Illusions of the Modern Synthesis."
Header 1
Our future, our universe, and other weighty topics
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Scientist Flubs and Flops, #3
Sunday, April 27, 2025
More Old Newspaper Accounts of Telepathy or Clairvoyance
In the 1908 newspaper account below, we read of a case that seems to be evidence of telepathy. A grandmother reported to others that she seemed to hear her granddaughter crying for help 300 miles away, at about the same time her granddaughter drowned. The article also mentions a sighting of a vision of Mrs. Wilmot, reported to have been seen by her husband (on a ship) when Mrs. Wilmot was far away. His roommate said he saw the same thing. The husband soon later learned that Mrs. Wilmot had a dream of visiting him on the ship, about when the vision was seen. Click on the image to read the text more clearly.
You can read the entire newspaper article here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92051126/1908-10-04/ed-1/seq-22/
The biologist Rupert Sheldrake has compiled evidence that dogs may have telepathy or clairvoyance. He authored a book entitled "Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home." He reports a recurrent effect of dogs who seem to stay near the door or a window in the minutes preceding the return of their owners to a home. You can read here a chapter he wrote on this topic and related topics. Here is an excerpt about formal tests Sheldrake did with Pam Smart's dog Jaytee, tests suggesting some telepathy or clairvoyance in the dog:
Here is the following paragraph from the same paper:
The aftermath (discussed on page 353 of the paper) seemed to be a case example of deception by skeptics of the paranormal. One skeptic testing the same dog produced evidence strongly supporting the dog ESP idea, but used deceptive data exclusion tricks to try to portray his positive result as a negative result. Another skeptic claimed to have experimental results discrediting the experimental results produced in the tests involving the dog Jaytee. The claim was very suspicious from the beginning, because you can never discredit a result suggesting ESP by some other experimental result in which ESP is not observed (just as you never discredit reports of meteorites falling into fields by showing that some fields do not get meteorite falls). Sheldrake kept pressing the skeptic to produce the claimed experimental results on this topic, but the skeptic never produced the results. It seems the skeptic was simply lying about having contradictory experimental results.
Sheldrake would not be surprised by the 1950's news account below. We read of a cat that made sounds the owners had never heard before, at the very time when the sons of the owners were in danger from a forest fire. (Click on the image to read it better.)
The newspaper account below is one of many that appeared in the press regarding the team of Joseph Mercedes and Nellie Stantone. The two had a theater act in which Stantone would be blindfolded on a stage, sitting next to a piano. Far away Mercedes would ask audience members to select a random piece to be performed, with the request being only whispered. Innumerable times Mercedes played the requested piece of music. The team seemed to have been successfully tested by parapsychology researchers. See for example the article in the top left of the page here. The article is from 1914.
You can read the story here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038615/1914-06-21/ed-1/seq-51/
Using the link below, you can see many different newspaper articles on this couple:
Below is a 1923 account of the psychic Rafael Schermann:
You can read the full account here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038485/1923-11-04/ed-1/seq-3/#We read this in the account above:
"One shows Schermann a piece of paper with a few lines written on it. The paper may he turned upside down — it makes no difference. Schermann does not examine it as the ordinary graphologist would —he merely glances at it for one or two seconds. On the strength of this glance he will tell you what the writer looks like, what diseases he had as a child, what color his wife’s hair is and how many children he has. He ran tell you where, under what condition the lines were written. Once he said to me about a sample writing: 'This was written by a chronic drunkard in prison.' So it was. Again, by way of experiment, 1 wrote a few lines while sitting in the bathtub. Schermann said: This was written in a bath tub."
Below is another article about the same person, written by a professor of psychiatry and neurology who tested him:
You can read the full article here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1923-11-05/ed-1/seq-10/
Another newspaper article on the same mind marvel can be read here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1923-11-26/ed-1/seq-26/
The account below tells an astonishing tale of extrasensory perception or conceivably a willful out-of-body experience:
Thursday, April 24, 2025
For Insight on Why Gradualism Does Not Work, Ponder the Building of a Stone House
Biologists teach the doctrine of gradualism, the idea that every species appeared because of very many tiny random changes that gradually took place over long periods of time. There are several very large reasons why gradualism is not a credible general theory of biological origins. One of the biggest is that gradualism fails to explain why any useless early stage would appear in a population of organisms.
Darwinists have told many a tall tale to try to account for such things, such as suggesting that maybe wings grew out of wing stumps that were used to catch insects. Such tales are typically unbelievable. Two of the attempts that Darwin made to suggest such stories are now believed to be erroneous (biologists now reject his "maybe mammals come from marsupials" explanation for the incipient stages of mammary glands, and also reject his "lungs come from swim bladders" explanation for the incipient stages of lungs).
- Some type of eye.
- An optic nerve leading from the eye to the brain.
- Extremely complicated proteins used to capture light, such as rhodopsin.
- Very complex brain changes needed to allow for a vision effect that is useful for an organism.

Sunday, April 20, 2025
Old Newspaper Accounts of Clairvoyance or Telepathy
"The distinguished Parisian Professor of Medicine, Rostan, gave at the time his corroborative testimony to the existence of this power in the article ' Magnetisme,' in the ' Dictionnaire de Medecine,' wherein he remarked : 'There are few facts better demonstrated than clairvoyance' ....Innumerable instances are recorded of the possession of the faculty of clairvoyance by persons in the normal state, in sleep [hypnotism], and in some abnormal conditions of the system. " -- Edwin Lee, MD, "Animal Magnetism and Magnetic Lucid Somnambulism" page 103 and page 133.
Although very abundantly reported in books and journals such as The Zoist (as you can read about in my set of 14 posts here), reports of clairvoyance are rather hard-to-find in old newspapers. But some accounts can be found. For example, the following account appeared in 1905:
"MUSICAL CLAIRVOYANCE PUZZLES PARIS PEOPLE.
Paris is very much concerned at present over a new phenomenon, which is called, for lack of a better name, musical mediumship, says Public Opinion. In the same way that a few years ago the attention of French scientists was largely occupied with thought transference, now many investigators in the French capital are carefully following the experiments which are being conducted with the musical mediums. In the last number of the Journal des Debats. M. Henri de Parvllle carefully goes over the whole ground, and the facts presented are well worth considering. M. de Parvllle first takes up the case of a subject by the name of Aubert. 'This man, although he had but a rudimentary knowledge of music, performs on the piano, in a semi-hypnotic state, compositions which recall the musical style of Moxart, Chopin, Beethoven, Schubert and others. A second and far more remarkable case, however, is that of Mlle. Nydia. This woman, in a hypnotic state and with her eyes carefully bandaged, is able to play on the piano any piece of music which may be given her. Thus at a sitting recently held at the Theater de la Monnaie, in Brussels, Mlle. Nydia was led to M. Slyvayn Dupuy, chief of the orchestra of the theater, who gave her a piece of music composed by himself, which had never been published. M. Dupuy saw that the bandage had been tightly placed over the girl’s eyes. Mlle. Nydia then sat down, held the paper in her hands for a few moments, and then, to the great astonishment of everyone, played the piece without hesitation.
Two physicians examined the young woman, and found her to be in a real hypnotic state and absolutely insensible to the exterior world. There were then placed over her eyes a succession of bandages, alternating black and white, and she was led to the piano. One of the spectators offered a new opera, which was placed on the piano. The hypnotizer looked at his subject, and immediately the girl played the piece with the greatest cleverness. Another spectator, who had just arrived from New Zealand, offered a piece of music which had never been performed in Europe. Mlle. Nydia, however, executed it at once, and she played with the same skill a piece which had just been composed by M. G. Germain. At public request she played a piece of Paderewski, which was unknown to her, and, finally, a lady wrote the title of a piece of music on a slip of paper, put it into an envelope, which was afterward sealed, and gave it to the girl. She placed it on her forehead for a moment, and the next instant was playing Beethoven’s ‘Clair du Lune’ sonata."
The writer is presumably referring to Debussy's "Clair de Lune," misidentifying the composer. You can read the account here:
The terms "artificial somnambulism" and "mesmerism" were used for hypnosis before the word "hypnosis" became popular. An 1891 newspaper article states this: "The testimony in favor of subjects in this artificial somnambulism being able—some of them—to see what is going on at a distance, to read sealed letters, and to hear a conversation taking place several miles away, seems to be so conclusive that many distinguished scholars, physicians and philosophers are firm believers in clairvoyance and clairaudience."
Below is the first part of a news article from 1931:
Below is the remainder of the story:
In the newspaper account below, we read of a Mr. Tyndall who is able to perform a "carriage test" of mind-reading or clairvoyance:
"Alexander J. Mclver Tyndall, the mind-reader, yesterday morning performed the carriage feat in the same manner in which it was performed by the late Mr. Bishop. On Saturday afternoon W. A. Spalding and W. O. Miller, two members of the committee appointed to superintend the experiment, hid a small silver match-safe in an oyster-stall of the Broadway market. Yesterday morning at 11 o'clock the committee, including Messrs. Spalding, Bennett, Miller, Dr. Bryant and two others, repaired to the Hollenbeck hotel. For a preliminary sample of Mr. Tyndall's peculiar power, a knife was hid in a crack of the brick wall surrounding the court back of the hotel, and the mind-reader, taking Mr. Spalding's hand, found the article without difficulty, although he bad been most carefully blindfolded. The committee, together with Mr. Tyndall, then descended to the street, where a carriage was in waiting. The mind-reader had again been securely blindfolded, and with Mr. Spalding mounted the driver's seat, while the rest of the committee occupied the body of the vehicle. Spalding placed his hand on Tyndall's forehead, concentrated his thoughts upon the article which had been hidden in the market, and the drive began. Tyndall had taken the reins and the whip, and as soon as he had thoroughly established communication between himself and his subject, he struck the horse a sharp blow and started down Spring Street at a sharp trot. At Fourth street be got off his course and turned down to Main at a gallop. Narrowly missing the curb at the corner, he turned down Main, and, with the horse still on the jump and the occupants of the carriage extremely nervous, he drove up Fifth Street to Broadway, down Broadway to Sixth, up Sixth to Hill, and down Hill street around old St. Vincent's college to the rear of the market. A door had been left open to admit the party. The mind-reader stopped the team, and, almost dragging Mr. Spalding by the hand, rushed by three or four doors, entered the one that was open, ran up to an ice-box, reached to the top of it behind a lot of rubbish, and placed his hand on a pasteboard box, which he lifted down. The match-box had been hidden in this box. The whole length of time occupied from the departure from the Hollenbeck until the finding of the hidden article was less than twenty minutes."
You can read the full story here:
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84025968/1892-02-01/ed-1/seq-2/
Similar to the case above are the equally dramatic cases of Eliza Hamilton and Mrs. Croad, discussed in my post here, and the cases of Frederica Hauffe and Adele Magnot discussed in my post here. The denialism or evidence-ignoring under which male science professors refuse to mention or study cases of clairvoyance and mediumship so well documented in females (with other cases such as here, here and here) is a lamentable example of lingering sexism in the patriarchy of academia, where the most empirically groundless theories of male professors often get 1000 times more attention than the most well-documented and philosophically relevant effects related to female psychics or mediums.
Speaking of females who act as if they have psychic abilities, the Internet is currently abuzz about the recent interview you can see here, in which two twins (Brigitte and Paula Powers) describe their mother's encounter with a thief. It seems that for most of the three-minute interview, the twins seem to speak in sync, with one twin saying exactly what the other twin says at the exact time the other twin says it, as they both describe something they recently saw.
Thursday, April 17, 2025
Astrobiologists Play "Keep Torturing the Data Until It Confesses"
In 2023 Nikku Madhusudhan and four other scientists created quite a stir. They authored a paper entitled "Carbon-bearing Molecules in a Possible Hycean Atmosphere." Researching a planet called K2-18 b revolving around another star, the paper claimed to have found "potential signs of dimethyl sulfide (DMS), which has been predicted to be an observable biomarker in Hycean worlds." The term "Hycean worlds" refers to planets in other solar systems that may be entirely covered by an ocean. The term "biomarker" refers to something that may be a sign of life. A very simple compound, dimethyl sulfide is not any type of building block of life. But on Earth dimethyl sulfide is sometimes produced by life.
But there were some reasons why the attempt to insinuate a biomarker was very dubious. One reason was that the claims about "potential signs of dimethyl sulfide" was a kind of "reading tea leaves" affair, in which scientists were analyzing the faintest of faint signals, rather like someone squinting at something on the horizon miles away. That type of observation offers plenty of opportunity to see what you want to see, by interpreting marginal hard-to-interpret just-barely-detectable data in some way that fits your cherished desires, rather than a hundred other ways.
Then there is the fact that when scientists do observations like this, they are picking up signals from many different chemical sources, with the signals being all mixed up. It's a recipe for false alarms, rather like someone in a very crowded high school cafeteria trying to listen to what someone at a different cafeteria table far away is saying.
Then there is the fact that the paper failed to detect any water at this planet. The paper stated this:
"We do not find significant contributions due to H2O or NH3, but find 95% upper limits of -3.21 for log(XH2O) and -4.46 for log(XNH3 ) in the no-offset case. These upper limits are also consistent with those from the other retrieval cases, as shown in Table 2. The non-detections of both molecules are important considering their strong spectral features and detectability expected in the 0.9- 5.2 µm range (Madhusudhan et al. 2021; Constantinou & Madhusudhan 2022). The non-detection of H2O is at odds with its previous inference using the HST WFC3 spectrum in the 1.1-1.7 µm range (Tsiaras et al. 2019; Benneke et al. 2019a; Madhusudhan et al. 2020)."
It is generally agreed that water is absolutely necessary for any form of life of life to exist. The apparent non-presence of water at K2-18 b is a reason for thinking that life does not exist there.
Despite the paper's failure to detect water, and its weak mention of a mere mention of "potential signs of dimethyl sulfide," the world's "give us an inch and we'll take a mile" science news press began publishing a flood of misleading stories falsely claiming that some promising sign of life had been found. An example was this story on www.yahoo.com, which very badly misinformed us by stating this:
"The ability of a planet to support life depends on its temperature, the presence of carbon and probably liquid water. Observations from JWST seem to suggest that that K2-18b ticks all those boxes."
No, the scientific paper said that water was not detected on K2-18b, even though a sensitive test was made that should have detected traces as low as 1 part in a billion.
After the "sugar rush" of this flood of misleading stories, other scientists got busy examining the data on the distant planet K2-18 b, to see whether there was any decent evidence for dimethyl sulfide. In 2024 scientists produced a paper arguing that K2-18 b was not a "Hycaean" planet covered by an ocean, but instead a gas planet like Neptune with no ocean. The paper was "JWST Observations of K2-18b Can Be Explained by a Gas-rich Mini-Neptune with No Habitable Surface" authored by Nicholas F. Wogan and others.
Then in early 2025 there was published the paper "A Comprehensive Reanalysis of K2-18 b's JWST NIRISS+NIRSpec Transmission Spectrum." It reanalyzed the data on K2-18 b and says "we find no statistically significant or reliable evidence for CO2 or DMS [dimethyl sulfide]." The paper had 16 authors, as compared to only five authors of Madhusudhan's paper. The 16 authors had found that Madhusudhan's claims about dimethyl sulfide at K2-18 b were unfounded.
But now Madhusudhan is back with a new paper, trying to persuade us that dimethyl sulfide exists on K2-18 b. It is a paper entitled "New Constraints on DMS and DMDS in the Atmosphere of K2-18 b from JWST MIRI." He has some new observations, but only a scanty affair. It's a mere six hours of observations done with the James Webb Space Telescope, on April 26, 2025. Madhusudhan and his small team has put this data through some very arbitrary and gigantically convoluted analysis pipeline, one that was probably selected to maximize the chance of being able to claim that dimethyl sulfide exists on K2-18 b. The raw data gathered is shown below (Figure 1 from the paper). Ignore the red line, which is not part of the raw data.
Data like this does nothing to naturally suggest the existence of dimethyl sulfide. The James Webb Space Telescope has nothing like a "dimethyl sulfide detector" comparable to a carbon monoxide detector in a home. But it is possible for a scientist eagerly hoping to claim some evidence of dimethyl sulfide to arbitrarily analyze such data, to try and gin up something that can be claimed as evidence of dimethyl sulfide.
At least seven long paragraphs of the paper discuss the incredibly elaborate rigmarole that is going on in Madhusudhan's analysis pathway. It would be way, way too charitable to describe this analysis pathway as a Rube Goldberg machine. It would be more accurate to say that the analysis pathway is some incredibly weird analytic contraption that makes the crazy-looking machines of Rube Goldberg look simple and straightforward in comparison. Below is a paragraph giving us only one eighth of the "keep torturing the data until it confesses" craziness that was going on:
"We use the 1-D spectra time series to construct a white light curve (between 4.8-10 µm). We exclude the first 250 integrations, where the systematic trend is most extreme. We identify outliers on the white light curve, ± 2.5-σ from a rolling median, and replace the 1-D spectra corresponding to these outliers with linearly interpolated spectra from adjacent integrations. We scale the error bars on the light curve points such that the average error bar equals the observed standard deviation of the scatter in the out-of-transit residuals. We use emcee (Foreman-Mackey et al. 2013) to perform a Markov Chain Monte Carlo parameter estimation of the white light curve, fitting for a transit model with quadratic limb-darkening generated by pylightcurve (Tsiaras et al. 2016) multiplied by a systematic trend consisting of an exponential term and a linear term (as in section 2.1). In the white light curve, we fit for Rp/R∗, mid-transit time, a/R∗, i, quadratic limb-darkening coefficients and four parameters for the trend. Uniform priors are used except for a/R∗ and i, where we apply Gaussian priors based on values in Madhusudhan et al. (2023b) and use the Kipping parameterisation (Kipping 2013) for limb-darkening priors. We fix the period to 32.940045 days (Benneke et al. 2019a), the argument of periastron to 90o and the eccentricity to 0. The white light curve parameter estimates are given in Table 1."
There are seven other paragraphs describing machinations and manipulations as bizarre and complex as these. It seems that at no point in these eight paragraphs do the authors give any justification for the weird convoluted spaghetti-code manipulations and transmogrifications that are occurring. There is nothing natural or straightforward about anything that is occurring. Something comparable would be occurring if you took a photo of a pine tree, and passed it through many different arbitrarily selected photo filters, to finally end up with a photo looking like a sexy woman, without ever justifying your use of any of those filters.
Finally the authors create some "model" that is basically a collection of guesses about 20 chemicals that might be in the atmosphere of this planet K2-18 b. Of course, their "model" includes their cherished gas dimethyl sulfide, because trying to gin up some evidence for that is the point of all these weird labors. Near the end of the paper, the authors triumphally announce that their model fits their pipeline-adjusted data.
This is pretty much just a big pile of baloney. No actual detection of dimethyl sulfide has occurred. The analysis pipeline is "keep torturing the data until it confesses" nonsense. There is no basis for any confidence in an analysis pipeline so convoluted and artificial. We can conclude with 99% confidence that the described analysis pathway is untrustworthy.
- Nothing reliable has been done in this paper to show any likelihood of the existence of dimethyl sulfide on this planet K2-18 b.
- Nothing reliable has been done in this paper to show any likelihood of the existence of any biomarker on this planet K2-18 b.
- No observations have ever been done to show a likelihood that water exists on this planet K2-18 b.
- In all likelihood (as suggested by the paper of Wogan) the planet K2-18 b is a gas planet like Neptune, with neither an ocean nor a land surface, a type of planet that should be incapable of supporting life. Not just Wogan's paper but also this 2025 paper make this conclusion, with the paper stating, "Our results, therefore, render the mini-Neptune scenario the most likely interpretation for K2-18 b, given current observational constraints."
This text consists of many different sentences, overlaid on top of each other. Imagine trying to extract a particular word from such a mess. That's pretty much impossible. It's a similar deal for an astronomer getting spectroscopic data from another planet, because what such a person gets is signals from many different elements and compounds and chemicals, arriving all at once. Unless you are very lucky, there is almost no way to reliably extract which part is a signal from which chemical, compound or element. But with a mess like an astronomer gets in such a situation (or a mess like the one shown above), there are unlimited opportunities to see what you are fervently hoping to see. All that can be truthfully said about such a mess is something like this: "The data is too noisy for me to say much of anything reliable about it."