This month, evangelist Ray Comfort is giving away more than 100,000 copies of a special edition of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species to students, which includes an introduction by Comfort and excludes several key chapters of the original work. On Dan Gilgoff’s blog God & Country, Comfort and Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education debate his project. Comfort begins:

When we give away On the Origin of Species to university students, I want every one of them to make sure they don’t stop at the Introduction. I want them to thoroughly read On the Origin of Species. When I read the book, I was very impressed with the brilliance of Charles Darwin. If he was alive today, I am sure that he would quickly rise to the top of Disney’s imagineers or earn big bucks as a Hollywood screenwriter for science-fiction movies.

To which Scott responds:

Unfortunately, it will be hard to thoroughly read the version that Comfort will be distributing on college campuses in November. The copy his publisher sent me is missing no fewer than four crucial chapters, as well as Darwin’s introduction. Two of the omitted chapters, Chapters 11 and 12, showcase biogeography, some of Darwin’s strongest evidence for evolution. Which is a better explanation for the distribution of plants and animals around the planet: common ancestry or special creation? Which better explains why island species are more similar to species on the mainland closest to them, rather than to more distant species that share a similar environment? The answer clearly is common ancestry. Today, scientists continue to develop the science of biogeography, confirming, refining, and extending Darwin’s conclusions.

The debate continues this week at God & Country.