How to Speak Bee

How to Speak Bee

From Creation Moments on Oneplace.com by Ian T. Taylor & Mark W. Cadwallader

June 5, 2026 · 2 min

About this episode

This episode discusses the complex communication methods of bees and argues against the evolutionary explanation of language.

One might expect that the ape would turn out to be the best animal communicator. But evolution's expectations about language and a link between man and apes, proves to be wrong.The bee has the most complex and detailed functional language among the animals. Let's say that a bee has located a particularly good source of nectar and returns to the hive to tell its friends where it is. Our bee dances a figure eight, with the cross points at the center of the eight giving the direction of the nectar in relation to the sun. As the bee dances on the wall of the honeycomb, the position of the sun is always down. If the bee moves up the comb wall at 17 degrees to the left of vertical, it means the honey is 17 degrees to the left of the sun. This communication even works on cloudy days, since bees can see the ultraviolet light that penetrates the clouds. Distance is communicated by the speed of the dance.Neither man's languages, nor the bees' language evolved -- they were given by God. Why else would the bee indicate direction relative to the sun in the same way that human beings do? That the bee is the best communicator in the animal world, and not the apes, helps to show that language…

People in this episode

Hosts: Ian T. Taylor, Mark W. Cadwallader

Topics covered

  • animal communication
  • language evolution
  • bees
  • Christianity
  • creationism

Keywords

  • bee communication
  • nectar
  • dance language
  • evolution
  • creationism

Mentioned in this episode

Books & works: Psalm 26:6-7

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