- Contents
- How to search for quotes
- Evolution of the Quote Mine Project / What's New
- Quote Mine Project introduction
- Introduction for second collection on Darwin
- Introduction for third collection on Gould and Eldredge
- Introduction for fourth collection
Derek Ager
Edmund J. Ambrose
Merle d'Aubigne
Jerry Adler
Francisco Ayala
Larry Azar
Stefan Bengtson
L. C. Birch
Peter J. Bowler
Aart. Brouwer
Frank M. Carpenter
E.J.H. Corner
Jerry A. Coyne
Joel L. Cracraft
- Difficult to find fossils intermediate in morphology and stratigraphic position -- Cracraft
- Deep dark secrets of paleontology -- Cracraft
Sir Francis Crick
Mark Czarnecki
Charles Robert Darwin
- We cannot prove a single species has changed -- Darwin
- Rightfully reject my whole theory -- Darwin
- My theory would absolutely break down -- Darwin
- That fact would be fatal to the theory of descent -- Darwin
- Darwin conscious that his work was speculation beyond bounds of true science -- Darwin
- Darwin admits his book is too hypothetical and authors persuade themselves of own dogma -- Darwin
- Darwin admits facts can be shown against all points he made in Origin of Species -- Darwin
- Darwin admits that the fossil record presents valid arguments against his theory -- Darwin
- Darwin staggered by the grave difficulties in his theory -- Darwin
- Darwin admits that innumerable transitional fossils called for by his theory are not found -- Darwin
- Darwin admits that he cannot prove any species has changed due to Natural Selection -- Darwin
- Evolution of the eye is absurd -- Darwin
- Follow those impulses and instincts which are the strongest or which seem best -- Darwin
- Abominable mystery -- Darwin
- The most obvious and serious objection against the theory -- Darwin
- Devoted myself to a fantasy -- Darwin
- Civilized races of man will almost certainly exterminate, and replace, the savage races - Darwin
- Civilized Caucasian races will eliminate the lower races - Darwin
Richard Dawkins
Betsy Dexter Dyer
Sir John Eccles
Paul R. Ehrlich
Niles Eldredge (often mispelled "Niles Eldridge")
- Sudden diversification of multi-cellular life -- Eldredge
- Taxa appear suddenly -- Eldredge
- Paleontologists say fossils support gradualism knowing that it does not -- Eldredge
- Trends are after the fact render of evolutionary history -- Eldredge
- Taxa appear suddenly and without intermediates -- Eldredge
- Members of a biota remain stable -- Eldredge
- Paleontologists have been searching in vain -- Eldredge
- Gaps can not be easily explained by poor fossil record -- Eldredge
- Absence of gradual intermediate transitional forms -- Eldredge
- We date rocks by their fossils and can't then talk about evolutionary patterns in the record - Eldredge
- Evolution never seems to happen - Eldredge
- Fossil record flatly fails to substantiate finely-graded change -- Eldredge and Tattersall
- Paleontologists knew it but preferred to ignore it -- Eldredge and Tattersall
- No empirical evidence for sustained trends -- Gould and Eldredge
- Smooth intermediates are impossible to construct; mosaics like Archaeopteryx do not count - Gould and Eldredge
Douglas H. Erwin
Albert Fleischmann
Peter L. Forey
Douglas J. Futuyma
- Fossil record has disappointingly few gradual series -- Futuyma
- Major groups appear suddenly -- Futuyma
William Henry "Bill" Gates III
Henry Gee
- New fossils forced into prexisting stories -- Gee
- The very idea of the missing link, always shaky, is now completely untenable -- Gee
Stephen Jay Gould
- Multicellular animals appear with a bang -- Gould
- Fossils caused Darwin more grief than joy -- Gould
- Nothing much happens to most species -- Gould
- Non-change was tacitly acknowledged -- Gould
- Fossil record has precious little intermediate forms -- Gould
- Paleontologists paid enormous price for Darwin's argument -- Gould
- Paleontologists have long known about stasis and abrupt appearance -- Gould
- Inability to construct functional intermediates -- Gould
- The notion of species as 'natural kinds' fits splendidly with creationist tenets - Gould
- The extreme rarity of transitional forms persist as the trade secret of paleontology - Gould
- Three coexisting lineages of hominids refute evolutionary ladder - Gould
- We cannot trace any fossil ape to any living species; just when our lineage began is where no fossil evidence exists - Gould
- Hominid fossils are mere fragments and scraps and only a basis for speculation and storytelling - Gould
- An error in a program generating evolutionary trees debunked an African source for humans - Gould
- Failure to find a clear 'vector of progress' in life's history is most puzzling fact of fossil record - Gould
- The fossil record with its abrupt transitions offers no support for gradual change - Gould
- I can envision observations and experiments that would disprove any evolutionary theory - Gould
- The Discovery Institute Quote Mines Stephen Jay Gould
- Smooth intermediates are impossible to construct; mosaics like Archaeopteryx do not count - Gould and Eldredge
- No empirical evidence for sustained trends -- Gould and Eldredge
- Little evidence for phyletic gradualism -- Gould, Luria, and Singer
The Guardian Weekly
Roger Haines, Jr.
Francis Hitching
Kenneth J. Hsü
David Jablonski
Glenn L. Jepsen
Judge John Edward Jones III
Robert Jostrow
Sir Arthur Keith
- Unproved and unprovable -- Keith
- The law of Christ is incompatible with the law of evolution -- Keith
Tom S. Kemp
Gerald A. Kerkut
David B. Kitts
- Fossils do not prove that evolution occurs -- Kitts
- Evolution requires intermediate forms and paleontology does not provide -- Kitts
- Danger of circularity is still present - Kitts
H. J. Lipson
Salvador Edward Luria
L. Harrison Matthews
Ernst Mayr
- Contradiction of Darwin's gradualism and paleontology -- Mayr
- Links missing where we most want them -- Jepsen, Mayr, and Simpson
John F. McDonald
Chris McGowan
Robert A. Millikan
Louis T. More
George T. Neville
Norman D. Newell
- Groups abruptly appear and disappear -- Newell
- Ladder of evolution is not borne out by evidence -- Newell
John R. Norman
Robert Allan Obar
J.E. O'Rourke
H. Allen Orr
Colin Patterson
C.R.C. Paul
- Well-documented lineages don't withstand scrutiny -- Paul
- Fossil record more complete than generally accepted -- Paul
Sir Karl Popper
R.H. Rastall
David M. Raup
- An uneven or jerky fossil record -- Raup
- Higher categories are a mystery and appear abruptly without transitional forms - Raup and Stanley
Boyce Rensberger
Robert E. Ricklefs
Mark Ridley
Alfred Sherwood Romer
Harry Rubin
Jeffrey H. Schwartz
George Gaylord Simpson
- Every paleontologist knows taxa appear suddenly -- Simpson
- Links missing where we most want them -- Jepsen, Mayr, and Simpson
Sam Singer
Peter J. Smith
Wolfgang Smith
Barbra J. Stahl
- No known fish directly ancestral to land vertebrates -- Stahl
- How feathers arose initially from reptilian scales defies analysis -- Stahl
Steven M. Stanley
- Species overlap in time -- Stanley
- Higher categories are a mystery and appear abruptly without transitional forms - Raup and Stanley
- No examples of phyletic evolution found in fossil record - Stanley
Ian Tattersall
- Fossil record flatly fails to substantiate finely-graded change -- Eldredge and Tattersall
- Paleontologists knew it but preferred to ignore it -- Eldredge and Tattersall
S. C. Todd
Harold C. Urey
James W. Valentine
- Transitionals between taxa are unknown; neither gradualism nor punctuated equilibrium explain changes in body plans - Valentine and Erwin
- No phylum level designs since Cambrian -- Valentine and Jablonski
- Difficult to establish phylogeny -- Ayala and Valentine
George Wald
- Spontaneous generation arising to evolution is scientifically impossible --Wald
- Spontaneous generation is impossible but believed -- Wald
D.M.S. Watson
Robert Wesson
Errol White
Adam S. Wilkins
Peter G. Williamson
D.S. Woodroof
Sewall G. Wright
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