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and truth be told, most of them don’t even understand what a scientific theory is.
To put it bluntly, evolution is a theory in the same sense that Einstein’s General Relativity
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  • 00:03

    “Hello Sir, do you have five minutes to talk about evolution?”

  • 00:12

    “Yeah…”

  • 00:13

    “Basically, I follow the imperfect teachings of Charles Darwin, and the vast accumulation

  • 00:16

    of evidence since his day, and I have a wonderful message for you.”

  • 00:20

    “…” “The universe WASN’T created with you in mind (isn’t that amazing?);

  • 00:26

    there’s NO objective evidence to indicate that you’re going to see your deceased loved

  • 00:31

    ones; and when you die you die… your consciousness ends forever (isn’t that amazing!).”

  • 00:36

    “Did you just say that universe wasn’t created with me in mind?”

  • 00:42

    “Yes!”

  • 00:43

    “Such arrogance!”

  • 00:45

    *Sigh*…

  • 00:47

    “Truth is harder to sell that fiction, folks.”

  • 00:51

    A few days ago two lovely Jehovah’s witnesses knocked on my door and preached the bible,

  • 00:55

    and I, being the dude I am, invited them in for tea, cake, and a jolly good conversation.

  • 01:01

    Long story short, I conveyed why exactly I believe that the existence of evil is incompatible

  • 01:05

    with an omnipotent and omnibenevolent god, and they conveyed why exactly they reject

  • 01:09

    evolution… because to them, if evolution is wrong, then Jehovah must be right (even

  • 01:15

    though this is a rather obvious Black & White fallacy).

  • 01:18

    Anyhow, one of them described himself as an “ex-evolutionist” (which is a claim that

  • 01:22

    a lot of creationists make), but when I asked him to explain what evolution is, he couldn’t.

  • 01:27

    He said “It’s the belief that random chance, all by itself, produced all forms of life”,

  • 01:32

    and then went on to say “It’s the belief that lighting struck a puddle and then BANG…

  • 01:37

    life came to be.”

  • 01:38

    Now this is the problem with creationists… they DON’T understand evolution by natural

  • 01:43

    selection, and one of the primary reasons for this is that they’re victims of propaganda;

  • 01:49

    their sources of knowledge are creationist websites, which deliberately misrepresent

  • 01:53

    evolution in order to make it easier to attack.

  • 01:55

    Hence, when pressed, the “ex-evolutionist” insisted that I visit JW.org for “the facts”

  • 02:02

    on evolution.

  • 02:03

    Well, I’ve done just that, and…

  • 02:07

    (“If I only had a brain”)… this is Jehovah’s Evolution – Debunked.

  • 02:21

    If you visit JW.org (“Just […] don’t […] do it!”), you’ll likely notice that

  • 02:27

    it prominently features many of its Watchtower brochures and booklets, and the one I was

  • 02:31

    directed to is titled “Was Life Created?”

  • 02:34

    It contains many chapters, such as “Who designed it first” (because, you know, loaded

  • 02:39

    questions are fun), but the chapter I’m going to focus on is titled “Evolution – Myths

  • 02:44

    and Facts”.

  • 02:45

    It opens with a quote from Richard Dawkins – that being “Evolution is as much a fact

  • 02:51

    as the heat of the sun”, and I want to open by explaining why exactly Richard is correct

  • 02:56

    (as, if I’m honest, this is a convenient way to refresh everyone, including myself,

  • 03:00

    of all the key-terms).

  • 03:01

    Evolution simply means “Biological change over generations”, and a fact (in science)

  • 03:07

    means “An objective and verifiable observation”, and so since it’s objectively the case that

  • 03:13

    organisms biologically change over generations, evolution is therefore a fact – it’s as

  • 03:17

    much a fact, as Richard said, as the heat of the sun.

  • 03:21

    The scientific theory as to WHY this change happens is of course natural selection, but

  • 03:26

    Jehovah’s Witnesses (and creationists in general) confuse and conflate these terms,

  • 03:30

    and truth be told, most of them don’t even understand what a scientific theory is.

  • 03:36

    To put it bluntly, evolution is a theory in the same sense that Einstein’s General Relativity

  • 03:40

    is a theory (which is to say that in everyday colloquial language, it’s a fact, but scientifically

  • 03:46

    speaking, it’s a theory).

  • 03:48

    Anyhow, there’s a lot to get through here, and so I’m going to fast-forward to the

  • 03:52

    alleged “myths.”

  • 03:53

    “In reality, though, the teaching of evolution rests on three myths.

  • 03:58

    Consider the following.

  • 03:59

    Myth 1.

  • 04:01

    Mutations provide the raw materials needed to create new species.

  • 04:05

    The teaching of macroevolution is built on the claim that mutations—random changes

  • 04:11

    in the genetic code of plants and animals—can produce not only new species but also entirely

  • 04:17

    new families of plants and animals.”

  • 04:20

    So first off, evolution DOESN’T rest on the proposition that GENETIC MUTATIONS can

  • 04:24

    produce new species (again, evolution is just the observation that organisms change over

  • 04:29

    generations, and that’s it).

  • 04:32

    Secondly, the theory of natural selection ALSO doesn't rest on this proposition… random

  • 04:37

    mutations play a vital part, of course, but what causes speciation is natural selection;

  • 04:42

    the organisms with mutations best suited to their environment have a greater chance of

  • 04:46

    surviving to reproductive age, and hence their genes (and mutations) have a greater chance

  • 04:51

    of making it into the next generation.

  • 04:54

    Or to put it metaphorically, genetic mutation is the fuel to the fire, but natural selection

  • 04:59

    is the engine.

  • 05:00

    “But do mutations really produce entirely new species?

  • 05:04

    What has a century of study in the field of genetic research revealed? […] the data

  • 05:09

    now gathered from some 100 years of mutation research in general and 70 years of mutation

  • 05:15

    breeding in particular enable scientists to draw conclusions regarding the ability of

  • 05:20

    mutations to produce new species.

  • 05:23

    After examining the evidence, [Wolf-Ekkehard] Lönnig concluded: “Mutations cannot transform

  • 05:29

    an original species [of plant or animal] into an entirely new one.

  • 05:34

    This conclusion agrees with all the experiences and results of mutation research of the 20th

  • 05:39

    century taken together as well as with the laws of probability.”

  • 05:43

    So, can mutations cause one species to evolve into a completely new kind of creature?

  • 05:49

    The evidence answers no!”

  • 05:52

    So first off, Wolf has been discredited, and most of his publications are in NON-scientific

  • 05:58

    journals, and so quoting him as if he’s the be all and end all of evolution is barely

  • 06:02

    an Appeal to Authority Fallacy.

  • 06:04

    Secondly, and more importantly, notice that the Watchtower’s conclusion didn’t address

  • 06:09

    the supposed myth – that being “Mutations provide the raw materials needed to create

  • 06:15

    new species”, instead, it concluded by saying “Can mutations cause one species to evolve

  • 06:21

    into a completely new kind of creature?

  • 06:23

    The evidence answers no!”

  • 06:26

    Indeed, the evidence suggests that mutations ALONE won’t cause speciation, but here’s

  • 06:32

    the thing… no one asserts as much!

  • 06:35

    However, as for mutations providing raw materials to create new species, this is not only overwhelmingly

  • 06:40

    supported by the evidence, it’s a scientific fact.

  • 06:44

    When organisms reproduce, the offspring receives a copy of its parent’s DNA, and sometimes

  • 06:49

    the copy isn’t perfect (it’s mutated) – and these mutations can be beneficial,

  • 06:53

    detrimental, or neutral, but in any case, they ARE the “raw materials” needed for

  • 06:58

    natural selection to create new species.

  • 07:00

    Hence, and to say it again, mutations are the fuel to the engine of natural selection.

  • 07:07

    With that, let’s move onto myth 2: “Myth 2.

  • 07:11

    Natural selection led to the creation of new species.

  • 07:14

    Darwin believed that what he called natural selection would favour those life-forms best

  • 07:19

    suited to the environment, whereas less suitable life-forms would eventually die off.

  • 07:25

    Modern evolutionists teach that as species spread and became isolated, natural selection

  • 07:30

    chose the ones with gene mutations that made them capable of surviving in their new environment

  • 07:35

    […] What proof do evolutionists provide to support the claim that natural selection

  • 07:40

    chooses beneficial mutations to produce new species?

  • 07:43

    A brochure published in 1999 by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in the United States

  • 07:51

    refers to “the 13 species of finches--" You know, I’m going to do you favour and

  • 07:55

    skip The Watchtower’s misrepresentation of the NAS, by simply straight-up presenting

  • 07:59

    an example of speciation by natural selection.

  • 08:02

    The Greenish Warbler is a “kind” of bird that evidently first emerged in the Southern

  • 08:07

    Himalayas, but over generations expanded east and west around the mountains, slowly adapting

  • 08:13

    (or evolving) to their new environments.

  • 08:15

    Eventually, many generations later, both started inhabiting the lands north of the mountains,

  • 08:21

    but curiously, they couldn’t successfully reproduce.

  • 08:24

    They were, and still are, by definition, different species.

  • 08:28

    But here’s the thing, they’re not necessarily different “kinds”, because the word “kind”

  • 08:33

    is ambiguous!

  • 08:34

    It’s arbitrary!

  • 08:36

    We say, for example, that Sheep and Goats are different kinds, but guess what?

  • 08:40

    They can successfully interbreed and produce fertile offspring, and so while we refer to

  • 08:45

    them as different “kinds”, they’re technically the same species.

  • 08:48

    For what it’s worth, if you want a more in-depth debunk of the term “kind” then

  • 08:52

    please check out my now quite dated video, titled Macroevolution Cannot Occur – Debunked.

  • 08:58

    “So, does natural selection really create entirely new species?

  • 09:03

    Decades ago, evolutionary biologist George Christopher Williams began questioning whether

  • 09:09

    natural selection had such power.

  • 09:12

    In 1999, evolutionary theorist Jeffrey H. Schwartz wrote that natural selection may

  • 09:18

    be helping species adapt to the changing demands of existence, but it is not creating anything

  • 09:24

    new.”

  • 09:25

    Now, I found this quote from Jeffrey to be quite peculiar (given that he definitely accepts

  • 09:30

    evolution by natural selection), and so I did some research, and as it turns out, he’s

  • 09:35

    actually replied DIRECTLY to this quote by saying "This reference is taken out of context

  • 09:40

    from my book Sudden Origins”, and hence, the Watchtower is guilty of quote mining.

  • 09:46

    And as for them referencing George (“Evolutionary biologist George Christopher Williams began

  • 09:51

    questioning whether natural selection had such power”), they’ve done so simply to

  • 09:55

    seem more credible.

  • 09:57

    The fact of the matter is that George also accepted speciation via natural selection,

  • 10:02

    and once wrote “Darwin based his theory on generalizations that were strictly empirical.

  • 10:07

    You can go out and see that organisms do vary, that variations are inherited, and that every

  • 10:12

    organism is capable of increasing its numbers in sufficiently favourable circumstances.”

  • 10:17

    This quote mining from The Watchtower is pretty damn despicable.

  • 10:22

    “Myth 3.

  • 10:24

    The fossil record documents macroevolutionary changes.

  • 10:28

    The previously mentioned NAS brochure leaves the reader with the impression that the fossils

  • 10:33

    found by scientists more than adequately document macroevolution.

  • 10:37

    It declares: “So many intermediate forms have been discovered between fish and amphibians,

  • 10:44

    between amphibians and reptiles, between reptiles and mammals, and along the primate lines of

  • 10:49

    descent that it often is difficult to identify categorically when the transition occurs from

  • 10:55

    one to another particular species.”

  • 10:58

    “The facts.

  • 11:00

    The confident statement made by the NAS brochure is quite surprising.

  • 11:05

    Why?

  • 11:06

    Niles Eldredge, a staunch evolutionist, states that the fossil record shows, not that there

  • 11:12

    is a gradual accumulation of change, but that for long periods of time, “little or no

  • 11:17

    evolutionary change accumulates in most species.”

  • 11:21

    So, you probably won’t be surprised to hear that likewise to the previous references to

  • 11:25

    evolutionary biologists, this is yet another act of quote mining… but do you know what?

  • 11:30

    It’s one the most egregious I’ve ever seen.

  • 11:33

    Niles, along with Stephen Jay Gould, is responsible for the theory of punctuated equilbrium, which,

  • 11:38

    put simply, proposes that evolution occurs primarily through short bursts of intense

  • 11:44

    speciation, followed by lengthy periods of stasis or equilibrium – and what’s happened

  • 11:48

    here is that the Watchtower has taken a quote of Niles saying as much, stripped it of its

  • 11:53

    context, and presented it as if he’s saying something that he really isn’t!

  • 11:57

    Honestly, this level of deception is insane.

  • 12:01

    “To date, scientists worldwide have unearthed and cataloged some 200 million large fossils

  • 12:08

    and billions of small fossils.

  • 12:10

    Many researchers agree that this vast and detailed record shows that all the major groups

  • 12:16

    of animals appeared suddenly and remained virtually unchanged, with many species disappearing

  • 12:22

    as suddenly as they arrived.”

  • 12:24

    Now this simply isn’t true…

  • 12:26

    I mean, it’s not even a misrepresentation, it’s just made up!

  • 12:30

    It’s propaganda!

  • 12:31

    And that’s probably why The Watchtower offers no references (“Many researchers agree”)…

  • 12:36

    the truth is that we have countless examples of transitional fossils, which date exactly

  • 12:40

    to what we’d expect them to; from Archaeopteryx to Pakicetus, to Pezosiren to Tiktaalik, it’s

  • 12:46

    all there, despite the lies of the Watchertower.

  • 12:50

    Take Tiktaalik, for example - it's a perfect transitional form between water and land vertebrates!

  • 12:55

    It has scales and gills like water vertebrates, but strong limb-like fins and a flexible neck

  • 13:00

    like land vertebrates – what more could you ask for?

  • 13:03

    “If you are to accept the teaching of macroevolution as true, you must believe that agnostic or

  • 13:10

    atheistic scientists will not let their personal beliefs influence their interpretations of

  • 13:15

    scientific findings.

  • 13:17

    You must believe that mutations and natural selection produced all complex life-forms,

  • 13:22

    despite a century of research that shows that mutations have not transformed even one properly

  • 13:27

    defined species into something entirely new.

  • 13:31

    You must believe that all creatures gradually evolved from a common ancestor, despite a

  • 13:35

    fossil record that strongly indicates that the major kinds of plants and animals appeared

  • 13:40

    abruptly and did not evolve into other kinds, even over aeons of time.

  • 13:45

    Does that type of belief sound as though it is based on facts or on myths?

  • 13:51

    Really, belief in evolution is an act of “faith.”

  • 13:56

    *Sigh*…

  • 13:57

    If you DON’T accept “macroevolution”, than you must believe that the vast majority

  • 14:01

    of the scientific community are participating in the grandest conspiracy of all time; that

  • 14:07

    ordinary people, like you and me, from every field of science, and from every country in

  • 14:12

    the world, have, over two centuries, somehow conjured and maintained a perfect conspiracy…

  • 14:18

    because… because!

  • 14:19

    Either this, or you’ve got all of your information from a creationist website, and thus have

  • 14:25

    a strawman conception of evolution, and probably science in as a whole.

  • 14:30

    Look, if you REALLY care about what’s true, then please consider stepping outside of your

  • 14:34

    cult and digesting actual scientific literature… when I want proof of god, I don’t go to

  • 14:40

    atheists, I go to theists.

  • 14:42

    If you want proof of evolution, don’t go to creationists, go to evolutionary biologists.

  • 14:48

    Anyhow, before concluding, I want share a wonderful segment of one of Lloyd Cedars’

  • 14:52

    / Evan’s videos (who, once upon a time, was a Jehovah’s Witness himself): “All

  • 14:58

    things considered, you might be wondering why anyone would become a Jehovah's Witness

  • 15:03

    - you might even be thinking that you have to be stupid to get involved with the group,

  • 15:08

    but it really isn't that simple.

  • 15:10

    Many Witnesses are indoctrinated from when they are small children, and those who join

  • 15:14

    as adults often do so because they're emotionally vulnerable, and need the sense of community

  • 15:20

    and absolute certainty that Witness beliefs offer.

  • 15:24

    Bottom line - if you happen to know a Jehovah's Witness, please be kind to them and don't

  • 15:29

    assume you can snap them out of their beliefs easily.

  • 15:33

    Witnesses tend to be extremely emotionally invested in what they believe, and easing

  • 15:38

    them towards the exit requires an abundance of kindness, patience and understanding.”

  • 15:44

    I’ll leave a link to Lloyd’s full video on screen in a just a second, and so if you

  • 15:48

    like what you’ve just seen, please go checkout his channel, and while you’re there, say

  • 15:51

    a little hello from me.

  • 15:53

    Anyhow, I’m Stephen Woodford, and as always, thank you kindly for the view, and an extra

  • 15:58

    special thank you to my wonderful patrons and those of you who’ve donated via PayPal.

  • 16:03

    Until next time my fellow apes, until next time!

All

The example sentences of BLUNTLY in videos (12 in total of 12)

of preposition or subordinating conjunction civil adjective liberty noun, singular or mass the determiner trampling verb, gerund or present participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction majorities noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner rights noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction minorities noun, plural to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun more adverb, comparative bluntly adverb
to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun bluntly adverb , evolution noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner theory noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner same adjective sense noun, singular or mass that determiner einstein proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular general proper noun, singular relativity proper noun, singular
the determiner officer proper noun, singular said verb, past tense to to me personal pronoun bluntly adverb that determiner cruise noun, singular or mass ships noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present designed verb, past participle and coordinating conjunction run verb, base form for preposition or subordinating conjunction short adjective - term noun, singular or mass
look verb, base form at preposition or subordinating conjunction what wh-pronoun the determiner americans proper noun, singular are verb, non-3rd person singular present doing verb, gerund or present participle and coordinating conjunction say verb, non-3rd person singular present , well adverb , we personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present more adjective, comparative clever noun, singular or mass , to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun bluntly adverb .
was verb, past tense all determiner negative adjective trust verb, base form me personal pronoun he personal pronoun did verb, past tense n't adverb take verb, base form it personal pronoun well adverb the determiner funny adjective thing noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present tom noun, singular or mass believed verb, past participle very adverb bluntly adverb that preposition or subordinating conjunction
haechan proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present another determiner idol noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun bluntly adverb shared verb, past tense his possessive pronoun opinions noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction sasaengs proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction asked verb, past tense them personal pronoun to to
well adverb , to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun bluntly adverb , walter proper noun, singular fell verb, past tense out preposition or subordinating conjunction of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner right adjective vagina noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner right adjective time noun, singular or mass ; he personal pronoun inherited verb, past tense
the determiner matriarch noun, singular or mass tells verb, 3rd person singular present her possessive pronoun bluntly adverb that preposition or subordinating conjunction 48 cardinal number tribes proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present people noun, plural to to deal verb, base form with preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner situation noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction
right proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun bluntly adverb sometimes adverb parents noun, plural do verb, non-3rd person singular present love noun, singular or mass one cardinal number child noun, singular or mass more adjective, comparative than preposition or subordinating conjunction another determiner this determiner actually adverb happens verb, 3rd person singular present all predeterminer the determiner time noun, singular or mass
to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun a determiner little adverb more adverb, comparative bluntly adverb , did verb, past tense you personal pronoun , you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present , pee noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction poop noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction there adverb ?
put verb, base form bluntly adverb it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner art noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction acting verb, gerund or present participle normal adjective and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun 'm verb, non-3rd person singular present still adverb getting verb, gerund or present participle better adjective, comparative at preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun
to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun bluntly adverb , you personal pronoun can modal eat verb, base form as adverb many adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun want verb, non-3rd person singular present and coordinating conjunction never adverb die verb, base form .

Use "bluntly" in a sentence | "bluntly" example sentences

How to use "bluntly" in a sentence?

  • I'm not afraid to be bluntly honest in my songs, even if it means I'm discovering things about myself that I'd rather not.
    -Amos Lee-
  • To put it bluntly, I seem to have a whole superstructure with no foundation. But I'm working on the foundation.
    -Marilyn Monroe-
  • The majority of casino players leave too much to chance when playing in a casino. To put it bluntly, they don't have a clue as to how to play.
    -Henry Tamburin-
  • Let me tell you quite bluntly that this king business has given me personally nothing but headaches.
    -Mohammed Reza Pahlavi-
  • Nature, it appears, has been rather more bountiful to Paul's body and purse than to his intellect; above the ears, speaking bluntly, the boy is strictly tapioca.
    -S. J. Perelman-
  • To put it bluntly, research shows that we can’t multitask. We are biologically incapable of processing attention-rich inputs simultaneously.
    -John Medina-
  • Mr. President, putting it bluntly, wouldn't we just be continuing a bloodbath that already exists in Cambodia if we voted the 222 million in aid?
    -Gerald R. Ford-
  • To put it rather bluntly, I am not the type who wants to go back to the land; I am the type who wants to go back to the hotel.
    -Fran Lebowitz-

Definition and meaning of BLUNTLY

What does "bluntly mean?"

/ˈbləntlē/

adverb
Directly; without trying to hide the painful facts.