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Time magazine has a cover story
this week on the Intelligent Design Movement, the schools, and
the Darwin debate, or non-debate in which the two major
propaganda machines, conservative Christians and the Big
Science orgs with the Ad Budgets to swing public opinion duke
it out. All others can comment in the Blogzone. It seems
futile to point out that neither side can produce any
conclusive discussion on the subject of evolution. The ID
people hopelessly muddle the issue with their religious
agenda, and the Darwinists simply repeat their tired formulas
about science. The reference to Eugenie Scott proves that the
NCSE had a say in this article. Phone calls were made for the
'right stuff'. So we get the boilerplate du jour. The
usual quotes from Dawkins appear, and a silly piece of quotese
about how natural selection can explain the eye is dished
in.
The Time article suffers the flaw of virtually all media
(and most scientific) discussions, the confusion of the fact
of evolution, and the theory (Darwin's theory of natural
selection). Sometimes this gets garbled in sundry versions,
one in that of the superintendent of schools quoted, 'the
theory is not a fact' (?) Still, since there is a
problem with Darwin's theory, why not say so? And why should
Intelligent Design be brought in just at the point of finding
problems with Darwin's theory? There are all sorts of
objections to Darwin's theory, scientific objections
especially. It is not true that there is a consensus on
Darwin's theory of natural selection. If they want to provide
equal time for different viewpoints, why not balance
monotheism with Buddhist objections to the theory. Madame
Blavatsky and the Theosophists were already joking about
Darwin's Baboon in the nineteenth century. Why not tell the
truth and list bibliographically the current works by
scientists who don't accept Darwinian selectionism? Failure to
do so has made the Bible Belt the default public critics of
the theory. You can't bungle the job of science worse than
that.
The article begins with Bush's attempt to join the fray,
and the question: Is "intelligent design" a real science? And
should it be taught in schools? This, it must be admitted, is
alarming. This statement shows that ID is reaching critical
mass and that PR experts like Bush can safely express such a
previously dangerous opinion.
That 'intelligent design' is not a real science is not hard
to demonstrate, but neither is Darwin's theory, so apparently
neither one should be taught in schools (biology classes, that
is). Both subjects have an excellent place in schools, or
universities, philosophy classes, as living instances of
efforts to bypass Kantian strictures on rational theology and
empiricism and its fallacies. The Darwin debate is perfect
specimen of the philosophic illusions pointed to by
Kant.
Or else we could say that Darwin's theory is science, but
really BAD SCIENCE, where the standard of proof is fudged, the
one essential rule for proper science flagrantly violated,
this fact being covered up by loudmouthing the opposition,
constant repetition of the basic speculative claim, quotations
from Dawkins, and red alert treatment of the dangerous moment
when a rival propaganda threatens to upset the apple cart.
People might suddenly realize that brainwashing the young in
school is the only way to maintain social dominance, so any
serious rivals with the Ad Budget here are--dangerous
indeed. Who will find the out of print books by scientists in
the stacks of large libraries whence the religious critics of
Darwin got their ammunition?
Intelligent Design can be called science simply because it
claims to explain the previously unexplained, but once again
it is BAD SCIENCE, because it obscures the issues of Darwin's
theory with speculative metaphysics. The issue is the problem
with natural selection, without the false innuendo that design
is the correct answer in response to that.
Unfortunately the same charge of speculative metaphysics,
once again, of Darwin's theory of natural selection which is a
bungled generalization of animal breeding experiments and/or
Malthusian demographics projected onto deep time, without the
proper evidence. These two sources of Darwin's theory have
been shown innumerable times to have mislead Darwin, step one.
Darwin completely missed the real significance of evolution,
and the way it occurs.
In general, no properly documented scientific evidence has
ever been offered that, for example, the key incidents in the
descent of man are due to natural selection. This stark fact
about the 'theory' is so stark that loudmouthing and the
ministrations of the NCSE are especially
important.
Modern science has a viable theory of microevolution armed
with the genetic theories of random mutation, and genetic
drift. These do not constitute a true theory of
evolution.
The scientific community is getting desperate, and as South
Korea seems to pull ahead on cloning they wish to use this as
a scare tactic to bash the pseudoscience of Intelligent
Design. But, once again, Darwin's theory is pseudoscience, so
pointing it out should improve American science, no?
Americans can take the lead in producing the first real
Postdarwinian science of evolution, and set a true standard of
science for the subject, even at the price of acknowledging
one's ignorance. The question of cloning technology has
nothing to do with Darwin's theory. In fact the technological
developments in biology proceed quite independently of any
claims for evolutionary theory. .
It is futile to blame religionists for this situation.
Biologists have brought this on themselves by their refusal to
look critically at evolutionary theories that are inadequate
to the job. Instead of introducing criticism from science,
they now get this job done by religious critics. All the
criticisms of the ID groups are from scientists themselves
originally. If you don't believe that look at the P. Johnson's
Darwin on Trial, which doesn't even mention ID. First
they studied the critical literature, then they devised their
strategy to exploit this for religious/conservative
purposes.
It is time for scientists to face up to the problems
with Darwinism. Darwin's theory of natural selection is
inadequate as science, and this has no implications
necessarily for Intelligent Design.
It is essential for the progress of science that these
problems be faced, and facing them does not require any
concessions to the metaphysics of Intelligent Design.
Article
When Bush joined the fray last week, the question grew
hotter: Is "intelligent design" a real science? And
should it be taught in schools?
Posted Sunday, Aug. 07, 2005
Sometime in the late fall, unless a federal court
intervenes, ninth-graders at the public high school in rural
Dover, Pa., will witness an unusual scene in biology class. The
superintendent of schools, Richard Nilsen, will enter the
classroom to read a three-paragraph statement mandated by the
local school board as a cautionary preamble to the study of
evolution. It reads, in part:
Because Darwin's theory is a theory, it is still being tested
as new evidence is discovered. The theory is not a fact. Gaps in
the theory exist for which there is no evidence ... Intelligent
design is an explanation of the origin of life that differs from
Darwin's view. The reference book Of Pandas and People is
available for students to see if they would like to explore this
view ... As is true with any theory, students are encouraged to
keep an open mind.
After that one-minute reading, the superintendent will
probably depart without any discussion, and a lesson in
evolutionary biology will begin.
That kind of scene, brief and benign though it might seem,
strikes horror into the hearts of scientists and science
teachers across the U.S., not to mention plenty of civil
libertarians. Darwin's venerable theory is widely regarded as
one of the best-supported ideas in science, the only explanation
for the diversity of life on Earth, grounded in decades of study
and objective evidence. But Dover's disclaimer on Darwin would
appear to get a passing grade from the man who considers himself
America's education President. In a question-and-answer session
with Texas newspaper reporters at the White House last week,
George W. Bush weighed in on the issue. He expressed support for
the idea of combining lessons in evolution with a discussion of
"intelligent design"--the proposition that some
aspects of living things are best explained by an intelligent
cause or agent, as opposed to natural selection. It is a subtler
way of finding God's fingerprints in nature than traditional
creationism. "Both sides ought to be properly taught,"
said the President, who appeared to choose his words with care,
"so people can understand what the debate is about ... I
think that part of education is to expose people to different
schools of thought."
On its surface, the President's position seems supremely
fair-minded: What could possibly be wrong with presenting more
than one point of view on a topic that divides so many
Americans? But to biologists, it smacks of faith-based science.
And that is provocative not only because it rekindles a turf
battle that goes all the way back to the Middle Ages but also
because it comes at a time when U.S. science is perceived as
being under fresh assault politically and competitively. Just
last week, developments ranging from flaws in the space program
to South Korea's rapid advances in the field of cloning were
cited as examples that the U.S. is losing its edge. Bush's
comments on intelligent design were the No. 1 topic for bloggers
for days afterward. "It sends a signal to other countries
because they're rushing to gain scientific and technological
leadership while we're getting distracted with a pseudoscience
issue," warned Gerry Wheeler, executive director of the
55,000-member National Science Teachers Association in
Arlington, Va. "If I were China, I'd be happy."
As far as many Americans are concerned, however, the
President was probably preaching to the choir. In a Harris poll
conducted in June, 55% of 1,000 adults surveyed said children
should be taught creationism and intelligent design along with
evolution in public schools. The same poll found that 54% did
not believe humans had developed from an earlier species--up
from 45% with that view in 1994--although other polls have not
detected this rise.
Around the U.S., the prevalence of such beliefs and the
growing organization and clout of the intelligent-design
movement are beginning to alter the way that most fundamental
tenets of biology are presented in public schools. New laws that
in some sense challenge the teaching of evolution are pending or
have been considered in 20 states, including such traditionally
liberal bastions as Michigan and New York. This week in Kansas,
a conservative-leaning state board of education is expected to
accept a draft of new science standards that emphasize the
theoretical nature of evolution and require students to learn
about "significant debates" about the theory. The
proposed rules, which won't be put to a final vote until fall,
would also alter the state's basic definition of science. While
current Kansas standards describe science as "the human
activity of seeking natural explanations for what we observe in
the world," the rewritten definition leaves the door open,
critics say, for the supernatural as well.
•A SUBTLER ASSAULT
Darwin's theory has been a hard sell to Americans ever
since it was unveiled nearly 150 years ago in The Origin of
Species. The intelligent-design movement is just the latest and
most sophisticated attempt to discredit the famous theory, which
many Americans believe leaves insufficient room for the
influence of God. Early efforts to thwart Darwin were pretty
crude. Tennessee famously banned the teaching of evolution and
convicted schoolteacher John Scopes of violating that ban in the
"monkey trial" of 1925. At the time, two other
states--Florida and Oklahoma--had laws that interfered with
teaching evolution. When such laws were struck down by a Supreme
Court decision in 1968, some states shifted gears and instead
required that "creation science" be taught alongside
evolution. Supreme Court rulings in 1982 and 1987 put an end to
that. Offering creationism in public schools, even as a side
dish to evolution, the high court held, violated the First
Amendment's separation of church and state.
But some anti-Darwinists seized upon Justice Antonin Scalia's
dissenting opinion in the 1987 case. Christian fundamentalists,
he wrote, "are quite entitled, as a secular matter, to have
whatever scientific evidence there may be against evolution
presented in their schools." That line of argument--an
emphasis on weaknesses and gaps in evolution--is at the heart of
the intelligent-design movement, which has as its motto
"Teach the controversy." "You have to hand it to
the creationists. They have evolved," jokes Eugenie Scott,
executive director of the National Center for Science Education
in Oakland, Calif., which monitors attacks on the teaching of
evolution.
•HOLES IN DARWIN?
As far as many Americans are concerned, however, the
President was probably preaching to the choir. In a Harris poll
conducted in June, 55% of 1,000 adults surveyed said children
should be taught creationism and intelligent design along with
evolution in public schools. The same poll found that 54% did
not believe humans had developed from an earlier species--up
from 45% with that view in 1994--although other polls have not
detected this rise.
Around the U.S., the prevalence of such beliefs and the
growing organization and clout of the intelligent-design
movement are beginning to alter the way that most fundamental
tenets of biology are presented in public schools. New laws that
in some sense challenge the teaching of evolution are pending or
have been considered in 20 states, including such traditionally
liberal bastions as Michigan and New York. This week in Kansas,
a conservative-leaning state board of education is expected to
accept a draft of new science standards that emphasize the
theoretical nature of evolution and require students to learn
about "significant debates" about the theory. The
proposed rules, which won't be put to a final vote until fall,
would also alter the state's basic definition of science. While
current Kansas standards describe science as "the human
activity of seeking natural explanations for what we observe in
the world," the rewritten definition leaves the door open,
critics say, for the supernatural as well.
Since the 1987 decision, a devoted band of mostly
religious Christians, including hundreds of scientists,
engineers, theologians and philosophers, has written papers and
books, contributed to symposiums on the perceived problems with
Darwin's theory. The headquarters for such thinking is the
Center for Science and Culture at a nonpartisan but generally
conservative think tank called the Discovery Institute, founded
in Seattle in 1990.
What exactly is their critique of Darwin? Much of it revolves
around the appealing idea that living things are simply too
exquisitely complex to have evolved by a combination of chance
mutations and natural selection. The dean of that school of
thought is Lehigh University biologist and Discovery Institute
senior fellow Michael Behe, author of the 1996 book Darwin's
Black Box, a seminal work on intelligent design. Behe's main
argument points to the fact that living organisms contain such
ingenious structures as the eye and systems like the mechanism
for clotting blood, which involves at least 20 interacting
proteins. He calls such phenomena "irreducibly
complex" because removing or altering any part invalidates
the whole. Behe claims they could not have arisen through the
gradual fits and starts of evolution, which, he says, "has
been oversold to the public." Although his writing is
couched in the language of science, Behe, a practicing Catholic
who home schools his nine children, believes the hand of the
designer is self-evident. "That's why most people
disbelieve Darwinian evolution," he says. "People go
out and look at the trees and say, 'Nah.'"
Other arguments in this new brand of anti-Darwinism focus on
missing pieces in the fossil record, particularly the Cambrian
period, when there was an explosion of novel species. Still
other advocates, including mathematician, philosopher and
theologian William Dembski, who is heading up a new center for
intelligent design at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, use
the mathematics of probability to try to show that chance
mutations and natural selection cannot account for nature's
complexity. In contrast to earlier opponents to Darwin, many
proponents of intelligent design accept some role for
evolution--heresy to some creationists. They are also careful
not to bring God into the discussion (another sore point for
hard-line creationists), preferring to keep primarily to the
language of science. This may also help them avoid the legal and
political pitfalls of teaching creationism.
The Discovery Institute and its scientists have been actively
involved in many of the recent skirmishes over evolution at
local school-board meetings and in state legislatures. In Ohio,
for instance, the institute sent representatives to the state
board of education meetings last year to push for science
standards that would support teaching critiques of evolution.
"All we're advocating for is that if a teacher wants to
bring up the scientific debate over design, they should be
allowed to do that," says institute spokesman John West. In
fact, Ohio modified its standards to say that evolution should
be critically analyzed, which West regards as a victory.
Statewide curriculum standards for science are a relatively
new target for Darwin doubters, one that has a broader impact
than local school-board decisions. In addition, by working at
the state level, intelligent-design advocates can largely avoid
dealing with unpolished local activists who make rash religious
statements that don't hold up in court. (Supporters of the
Darwin disclaimer in Dover, Pa., have publicly proclaimed the
country a Christian nation, a point cited in an American Civil
Liberties Union lawsuit.) It has been only since the late 1980s
and early '90s that most states have created science-curriculum
standards as part of a national movement to bring more
accountability to education. "Savvy creationists are
focusing their efforts on this relatively new arena," says
Glenn Branch of the National Center for Science Education.
"The decision-making bodies involved in approving state
science standards tend to be small, not particularly
knowledgeable and, above all, elected, so it's a good
opportunity for political pressure to be applied."
In Kansas, conservative members of the state school board,
like Connie Morris, who represents the sparsely populated
western half of Kansas, have repeatedly injected scientifically
abstruse, jargon-heavy documents from the Discovery Institute
into the debate about teaching evolution, making the discussion
tough for the average citizen to follow. "Personally, I
believe in the Genesis account of God's creation," says
Morris. "But as a policymaker looking at science standards,
I rely mostly on research and expert documentation."
Oddly enough, the President's remarks last week promoting
intelligent design made Morris and many other Darwin doubters
uncomfortable because they have a different timetable in mind.
"His support is appreciated, but I plan to move forward on
attempting to get criticism of Darwinian evolution in the
science standards, not intelligent design," says Morris.
Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum, a leading voice on the
religious right, seemed to be reading from the same script.
"What we should be teaching are the problems and holes in
the theory of evolution," he said in an interview with
National Public Radio a few days after Bush made his comments.
Santorum also said, "As far as intelligent design is
concerned, I really don't believe it has risen to the level of a
scientific theory at this point that we would want to teach it
alongside of evolution." The Senator tried to get a
teach-the-controversy addendum into the 2001 No Child Left
Behind bill.
Even scientists who believe in intelligent design do not feel
it is ready for prime time. Many would prefer to move forward
gradually, building their case, in order to avoid a backlash.
"It's premature for all kinds of reasons," says
oceanographer Edward Peltzer, a senior researcher at the
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California.
"The science is there, but the science textbooks are not.
The teachers have to be trained. Its time will come. But its
time is not now." The emphasis for now is on dissing
Darwinism, which opens the door to other explanations without
specifically invoking an intelligent creator. Many advocates of
intelligent design complain that Darwinism has become a kind of
faith in itself. "There's religion on both sides,"
insists David Keller, a chemistry professor at the University of
New Mexico, who taught a seminar on problems with evolution at
an anti-Darwin forum in Greenville, S.C., last week.
•BIOLOGISTS ASK, WHAT HOLES?
Many scientists have been reluctant to engage in a
debate with advocates of intelligent design because to do so
would legitimize the claim that there's a meaningful debate
about evolution. "I'm concerned about implying that there
is some sort of scientific argument going on. There's not,"
says noted British biologist Richard Dawkins, professor of the
public understanding of science at Oxford University, whose most
recent book about evolution is The Ancestor's Tale. He and other
scientists say advocates of intelligent design do not play by
the rules of science. They do not publish papers in
peer-reviewed journals, and their hypothesis cannot be tested by
research and the study of evidence. Indeed, Behe concedes,
"You can't prove intelligent design by an experiment."
Dawkins compares the idea of teaching intelligent-design theory
with teaching flat earthism-- perfectly fine in a history class
but not in science. He says, "If you give the idea that
there are two schools of thought within science--one that says
the earth is round and one that says the earth is flat--you are
misleading children."
But the strategy of disengagement may be backfiring on those
who care about teaching evolution. When scientists and science
teachers boycotted the discussion of biology standards at a
Kansas school-board meeting last May, they left the floor wide
open to critics of evolution, who won the day. "Are they
wilting young maids that can't stand the heat of a
hearing?" asks Washington attorney Edward Sisson, who was a
co-counsel for the 23 academics who testified on the anti-Darwin
side.
Scientists say it is, in fact, easy to gainsay the
intelligent-design folks. Take Behe's argument about complexity,
for example. "Evolution by natural selection is a brilliant
answer to the riddle of complexity because it is not a theory of
chance," explains Dawkins. "It is a theory of gradual,
incremental change over millions of years, which starts with
something very simple and works up along slow, gradual gradients
to greater complexity. Not only is it a brilliant solution to
the riddle of complexity; it is the only solution that has ever
been proposed." To attribute nature's complexity to an
intelligent designer merely removes the origin of complexity to
the unseen designer. "Who designs the designer?" asks
Dawkins.
As for gaps in the fossil record, Dawkins says, that is like
detectives complaining that they can't account for every minute
of a crime--a very ancient one--based on what they found at the
scene. "You have to make inferences from footprints and
other types of evidence." As it happens, he notes, there is
a huge amount of evidence of evolution not only in the fossil
record but also in the letters of the genetic code shared in
varying degrees by all species. "The pattern," says
Dawkins, "is precisely what you would expect if evolution
would happen." Dawkins insists that critics of Darwin are
wrong to say that evolution has become an article of faith among
scientists. He cites biologist J.B.S. Haldane who, when asked
what would disprove evolution, replied, fossil rabbits in the
Precambrian era, a period more than 540 million years ago, when
life on Earth seems to have consisted largely of bacteria, algae
and plankton. "Creationists are fond of saying that there
are very few fossils in the Precambrian, but why would there
be?" asks Dawkins. "However, if there was a single
hippo or rabbit in the Precambrian, that would completely blow
evolution out of the water. None have ever been found."
Mathematical arguments against evolution are equally
misguided, says Martin Nowak, a Harvard professor of mathematics
and evolutionary biology. "You cannot calculate the
probability that an eye came about," he says. "We
don't have the information to make this calculation."
Nowak, who describes himself as a person of faith, sees no
contradiction between Darwin's theory and belief in God.
"Science does not produce any evidence against God,"
he observes. "Science and religion ask different
questions."
•WHAT SHALL BE TAUGHT?
But for those who read Genesis literally and believe
that God created the world along with all creatures big and
small in just six days, there's no reconciling faith with
Darwinism. And polls indicate that approximately 45% of
Americans believe that. It's no wonder that almost one-third of
the 1,050 teachers who responded to a National Science Teachers
Association online survey in March said they had felt pressured
by parents and students to include lessons on intelligent
design, creationism or other nonscientific alternatives to
evolution in their science classes; 30% noted that they felt
pressured to omit evolution or evolution-related topics from
their curriculum.
But some science teachers voluntarily take alternative
theories to class. Eric Schweain has been teaching high school
biology in St. Louis, Mo., for a decade. Although he follows the
district's policy of teaching Darwin's theory, he also talks
about intelligent design, an idea he personally favors. "I
teach according to fossil evidence, though I make sure to tell
students that it's important to talk to family and friends and,
if you go to a church, talk to your clergy."
The standards movement in education has, overall,
strengthened the teaching of evolution, even as it has presented
a new target for anti-Darwinists. In 2000, 10 states had no
mention of evolution in their curriculum standards. Now only
Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi and Oklahoma--states with long
creationist traditions--make this omission. In June, Alaska's
state board of education was pressured by scientists, teachers
and concerned citizens to add evolution to science standards
that had avoided the topic. Other states, most notably Kansas
and New Mexico, have wobbled on whether to teach evolution,
deleting and then restoring it to state standards depending on
who was elected to the school board. The Kansas reinstatement
occurred after the state was given an F- in a 2000 report by the
Fordham Foundation, titled "Good Science, Bad Science:
Teaching Evolution in the States." Only 24 states earned an
A or B for teaching the topic well. Kansas' flunking grade was
based on the fact that, at the time, it had not only cut Darwin
from the curriculum but had also deleted all references to the
age of the earth and universe. Now evolution is back in the
Kansas curriculum, but a new, more conservative board is seeking
a teach-the-controversy requirement.
The new, presumably Constitution-proof way of providing
coverage for communities that wish to teach ideas like
intelligent design is to employ such earnest language as
"critical inquiry" (in New Mexico), "strengths
and weaknesses" of theories (Texas), and "critical
analysis" (Ohio). It's difficult to argue against such
benign language, but hard-core defenders of Darwin are wary.
"The intelligent-design people are trying to mislead people
into thinking that the reference to science as an ongoing
critical inquiry permits them to teach I.D. crap in the
schools," says David Thomas, president of New Mexicans for
Science and Reason. On the other hand, tinkering in that way
with the standards won't necessarily weaken instruction on
evolution. "Where you have strong science programs now,
they'll ignore the [state] standards," says Bill Wagnon, a
professor of history at Washburn University who represents
Topeka on the Kansas school board.
The new school year is certain to bring more battles over
teaching evolution, not only in Kansas and Pennsylvania but also
in the many states that are preparing new standards-based tests
in science. By raising the profile of intelligent design, the
President has doubtless emboldened those who differ with Darwin
and furthered one goal of that movement: he has taught all of us
the controversy. --With reporting by Melissa August/ Washington,
Jeremy Caplan/ New York, Jeff Chu and Constance E. Richards/
Greenville, Rita Healy/ Denver, Christopher Maag/ Cleveland, Bud
Norman/ Wichita, Adam Pitluk/ Dallas, Jeffrey Ressner/ Los
Angeles and Sean Scully/ Philadelphia
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