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Has Darwin Become Dogma?
To The Source ^ | Nov. 10, 2004 | Dr. Benjamin Wiker

Posted on 11/11/2004 3:44:08 AM PST by Lindykim

Has Darwin Become Dogma?  

500 years ago science revolted against theological dogma as the source of all knowledge. Today it is science that is trying to assume the mantle of the sole arbiter of truth. On magazine covers such as this month's National Geographic and in legal battles across the country, the scientific community has become absolute in its belief that evolution will answer all of the questions regarding our beginnings. They have become so dogmatic that anyone who questions this belief is considered a heretic who should be ridiculed into silence.   

November 11, 2004   

Dear Concerned Citizen, by Dr. Benjamin Wiker  

Nearly a century and a half has passed since the publication of Charles Darwins Origin of Species. Evolution has been taught as an undeniable fact in high school textbooks for well over a half century. Why all of the sudden do we find the cover of the November 2004 issue of National Geographic emblazoned with the question, "Was Darwin Wrong?" It's that like asking "Was Copernicus Wrong?"

So, what's up? When we turn to the first page of the article, we find the same question again, this time written across the gray feathered breast of a domestically bred Jacobin pigeon, the outlandish plumage of which reminds one of the costumes of the late Liberace. Flip to the next page and we find our answer, a resounding 'NO' printed in a font a third of the page high. But if the answer is such a large and definitive NO, why would the venerable National Geographic entertain (even rhetorically) the apparently foolish question 'Was Darwin wrong?"

If you read the article, you'll wonder what all the shouting is about. The author David Quammen paints a calm picture of an established science unburdened by serious criticism. The only critics, so we are told, are 'fundamentalist Christians','ultraorthodox Jews', and 'Islamic creationists', all of whom view evolution as a threat to their scientifically uninformed theology. Obviously, they aren't the ones ruffling National Geographics feathers.

Who else arouses the great NO? As it turns out, 'Other' people too, not just scriptural literalists, remain unpersuaded about evolution. According to a Gallup poll, no less than 45 percent of responding U.S. adults agreed that God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so.

"Why are there so many antievolutionists?' they ask impatiently. Why indeed? Unfortunately, you won't find the real answer in the article, which merely offers a fluff and flash, unambiguous public relations presentation of evolution.

The real answer is this. To the question 'Was Darwin Wrong?' the proper answer is not a clamorous 'NO' but a well-informed 'Yes and No'. While there are merits to his theory, there are also serious problems, serious scientific problems.

Listen to these words: 'despite the power of molecular genetics to reveal the hereditary essences of organisms, the large-scale aspects of evolution remain unexplained, including the origin of species. So Darwin's assumption that the tree of life is a consequence of the gradual accumulation of small hereditary differences appears to be without significant support." Are these the words of a 'fundamentalist Christian', 'ultraorthodox Jew', or an 'Islamic creationist'? No, they are the words of Dr. Brian Goodwin, professor of biology, one of a growing number of scientists who find that the powers of natural selection are woefully insufficient to perform the amazing feats promised in the title of Darwins great work of producing new species.

But that was the great promise of Darwin. Small variations among individuals are 'selected' by nature because they make the individual more 'fit' to survive. Those more 'fit' characteristics are passed on to the offspring. Add enough little changes up over time, and the species becomes gradually transformed. Given enough time, evolution will have produced an entirely new species.

So it was that Darwin assumed that little changes in character and appearance (microevolution) would eventually yield, through natural selection, enormous changes (macroevolution). From a single living cell, given millions upon millions upon millions of years, the entire diversity of all living things could be produced.

That was the grand promise of Darwins theory. And Darwin wasn't wrong about microevolution. But the case for macroevolution is far from closed. In fact, biologist Mae-Wan Ho and mathematician Peter Saunders contend that, "All the signs are that evolution theory is in crisis, and that a change is on the way." Darwins theory is in crisis, they argue, because it has failed to explain the one thing that made its promise so grand; how new species arise.

I quote the words of Brian Goodwin, Mae-Wan Ho, and Peter Saunders because they represent the growing number of scientific dissenters from orthodox Darwinism (or more accurately, neo-Darwinism). National Geographic makes no mention of them. That would make the quick and confident 'No' into a rather sheepish "well, sort of".

They also purposely avoid mentioning the growing Intelligent Design movement, a group of scientists, philosophers, and mathematicians who have very serious doubts about many other aspects of Darwins theory. One suspects reading between the lines that the real reason that National Geographic suddenly 'doth protest too much' against doubters of Darwinism, is that the Intelligent Design (ID) movement has done so much to bring the scientific and philosophical problems with evolutionary theory into the public spotlight. They cannot draw attention to the ID movement, however, or people might become more informed about the difficulties that beset Darwinism. So, we return to the question, 'Was Darwin Wrong?" National Geographic says "NO". But readers who aren't satisfied with such simple answers should read the following books.

Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis

Michael Behe, Darwins Black Box

Brian Goodwin, How the Leopard Changed Its Spots

John Angus Campbell and Stephen Meyer, Darwinism, Design, and Public Education

William Dembski, Uncommon Dissent: Intellectuals Who Find Darwinism Unconvincing

Mae-Wan Ho and Peter Saunders, Beyond Neo-Darwinism

Edward Larson, Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America's Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion

Benjamin Wiker, Moral Darwinism Scientific Difficulties with Darwinism

The origin of life: Darwin conjectured that all life was descended from a single, simple form. But where did the first living thing come from? In a now famous private letter to Joseph Hooker, Darwin offered a conjecture: if (and oh! what a big if!) we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, etc., that a proteine [sic] compound was chemically formed ready to undergo still more complex changes, then we could explain the origin of life as a lucky chemical reaction. Against this hope, origin of life researchers have fallen on hard times. While there were some initial victories in the laboratory, generating small amounts of pre-biological molecules, scientists are unable to generate anything more biologically interesting unless they artificially rig their experiments in ways that contradict the actual conditions of early Earth.

The problem is so acute that many origin of life scientists have given up, and are now turning their efforts to trying to discover ways that complex, life-seeding molecules may have been delivered from space. Alas, the problems facing such efforts are just as severe.

The fossil record: According to Darwin, evolution had to occur very slowly, through slight changes not by leaps and bounds. Unfortunately, the fossil record does not support such gradual transformation. Instead, species seem to appear quite suddenly, fully formed, stay the same for millions of years, and then just as suddenly disappear. The most significant problem for Darwinism is the Cambrian explosion, where quite suddenly, about 550,000,000 years ago, all the major phyla of the animal kingdom appear in the fossil record.

The Truth About Inherit the Wind "Of course, such a simple choice between bigotry and enlightenment is central to the contemporary liberal vision of which Inherit the Wind is a typical expression. But while it stands nominally for tolerance, latitude, and freedom of thought, the play is full of the self- righteous certainty that it deplores in the fundamentalist camp. Some critics have detected the play's sanctimonious tone-"bigotry in reverse," as Andrew Sarris called it-even while appreciating its dramatic quality and well-written leading roles. The play reveals a great deal about a mentality that demands open-mindedness and excoriates dogmatism, only to advance its own certainties more insistently-that promotes tolerance and intellectual integrity but stoops to vilifying the opposition, falsifying reality, and distorting history in the service of its agenda.

In fact, a more historically accurate dramatization of the Scopes Trial than Inherit the Wind might have been far richer and more interesting-and might also have given its audiences a genuine dramatic tragedy to watch. It would not have sent its audience home full of moral superiority and happy thoughts about the march of progress. The truth is not that Bryan was wrong about the dangers of the philosophical materialism that Darwinism presupposes but that he was right, not that he was a once great man disfigured by fear of the future but that he was one of the few to see where a future devoid of the transcendent would lead. The antievolutionist crusade to control what is taught in the schools may not have been the answer, and Bryan's own approach may have been too narrow. But the real tragedy lies in the losing fight that he and others like him waged against a modernity increasingly deprived of spiritual foundations." Carol Inannone First Things

The Debate Rages On Although nearly 100 years have passed since the infamous Scopes Monkey Trial, the debate rages on. In Grantsburg, Wisconsin a firestorm of critique was leveled against the school board this month for revising its science curriculum to include more than one model/theory of origin in the districts science curriculum. Current Wisconsin state law mandates that evolution be taught but the school board viewed the law as too restrictive.

Similar skirmishes are being fought around the country. Ever since the Scopes Trial, the ACLU has been an active player, bringing lawsuits against any group who questions the Darwin dogma in school curriculum. After a group of parents in Cobb County Georgia complained about the exclusive presentation of evolution as the sole theory of origin in three biology textbooks in 2002, stickers were placed in the science texts intended to remind students to keep an open mind. Now the ACLU is representing another group of parents in a lawsuit against that school district claiming that the stickers promote the teaching of creationism and discriminate against particular religions.

The Dover Area School Board in Pennsylvania recently voted to include the theory of 'intelligent design' and other alternative theories to evolution in their science curriculum. Similar action was taken by the Ohio board of education this spring when they narrowly approved a similar plan. Critics charge it risks a return to teaching creationism.

To say that evolution has not answered all the scientific questions regarding our origins does not suggest you have to teach creationism in schools as a scientific theory. What should be taught is an honest assessment of what science does and does not know regarding our beginnings. The questions regarding our origins are too big for science alone to answer. People of faith should not allow themselves to be relegated to an anti-science position for questioning Darwin. Questioning the validity of theories is what science is supposed to do.

 Benjamin Wiker Benjamin Wiker holds a Ph.D. in Theological Ethics from Vanderbilt University, and has taught at Marquette University, St. Mary's University (MN), and Thomas Aquinas College (CA). He is now a Lecturer in Theology and Science at Franciscan University of Steubenville (OH), and a full-time, free-lance writer. Dr. Wiker writes regularly for a variety of journals, including Catholic World Report, New Oxford Review, Crisis Magazine, and First Things, and is a regular columnist for the National Catholic Register. Dr. Wiker just released a new book called Architects of the Culture of Death (Ignatius). His first book, Moral Darwinism: How We Became Hedonists, was released in the spring of 2002 (InterVarsity Press). He is writing another book on Intelligent Design for InterVarsity Press called The Meaning-full Universe.

Send your letter to the editor to feedback@tothesource.org. © Copyright 2004 - tothesource


TOPICS: Philosophy
KEYWORDS: crevolist; darwin
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1 posted on 11/11/2004 3:44:08 AM PST by Lindykim
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To: Lindykim
500 years ago science revolted against theological dogma as the source of all knowledge. Today it is science that is trying to assume the mantle of the sole arbiter of truth. On magazine covers such as this month's National Geographic and in legal battles across the country, the scientific community has become absolute in its belief that evolution will answer all of the questions regarding our beginnings.

Evolution answers many questions about the continuousness, "progress" and changes of life forms through time, but nothing about the "beginnings". There should be no arguement.

Case closed.

2 posted on 11/11/2004 3:56:30 AM PST by beyond the sea (ab9usa4uandme)
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To: Lindykim

Hopefully the liberal birth rate will continue to plummet. That should prove some kind of Darwinism.


3 posted on 11/11/2004 3:57:52 AM PST by tkathy (There will be no world peace until all thuggocracies are gone from the earth.)
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To: VadeRetro; jennyp; Junior; longshadow; RadioAstronomer; Physicist; LogicWings; Doctor Stochastic; ..
Evolution Ping! This list is for the evolution side of evolution threads, and maybe other science topics like cosmology.
See the list's description in my freeper homepage. Then FReepmail me to be added or dropped.
4 posted on 11/11/2004 4:07:12 AM PST by PatrickHenry (Hic amor, haec patria est.)
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To: Lindykim
Natural selection to explain interspecies variation has indeed become dogma.

If it were a theory, it should be debatable and testable.

Cellular evolution is demonstrable by simple high school experiments. Intraspecies variation from environmental pressure (the finches) is likewise trivial to demonstrate.

Interspecies mutational change driven by environment, OTOH, lacks both a biologically plausible mechanism AND physical evidence that it has ever happened.

This, of course, does not falsify it. But it DOES make its enthronement as dogma unscientific.

5 posted on 11/11/2004 4:16:27 AM PST by Jim Noble (FR Iraq policy debate begins 11/3/04. Pass the word.)
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To: Lindykim

Was Darwin wrong? No.

Was Darwin incomplete? Yes.

Does science deprive man of spirituality? No.

Intelligent Design = magic

Does a belief in magic = spirituality? No.

C'mon. Believing the magic hypothesis answers nothing and certainly doesn't make you right, religious, or scientific.


6 posted on 11/11/2004 4:30:39 AM PST by helmetmaker
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To: Jim Noble
One big point of discussion would be the theoretical equation sum(micro changes) = macro change, the essence of Darwin's leap of faith.

Mathematically, you can see he was essentially claiming without proof a "calculus" of biology, where as in calculus you add up infinitesimally small increments to achieve a total, as in geometry.

But where Darwin went wrong was in glossing over the fact that he never even thought about the stability of the alleged intermediate forms between species. If a member of a species has some genetic mutation to take it far enough away from the complex interplay of chemical, structural, and all other factors which make it a viable species in the first place, it becomes LESS stable regarding further survival. But the entire edifice of Darwinism assumes without proof that, no you're wrong, genetic mutations are MORE stable.

Examination of all available scientific evidence indicates which belief system is more provably true.

7 posted on 11/11/2004 4:48:59 AM PST by wildandcrazyrussian
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To: helmetmaker

Considering the giant leap of 'faith' made by you when you jumped from "is Darwin incomplete" to "ID equals magic", it's apparent at least for yourself, that your third claim is....... accurate.


8 posted on 11/11/2004 4:54:32 AM PST by Lindykim
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To: Lindykim

Well science is right... And only literalists (and contrarily to what is said Orthodox Jews aren't literalists) believe it is wrong...

The funny thing is that the literalists that think that Genesis is true don't understand symbols...

So the answer is, the evolution theory is as true as Newton's laws of gravity and as true as any scientific theory is...


9 posted on 11/11/2004 5:02:52 AM PST by Pitiricus
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To: beyond the sea

Another thousand post thread is born.


10 posted on 11/11/2004 5:06:04 AM PST by The Iguana
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To: helmetmaker
(1) If intelligent design is magic, then every appliance in your house is a magical talisman.

(2) If Darwinism can't be tested experimentally and must be taken on faith, how is that different from magic?

11 posted on 11/11/2004 5:11:28 AM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake

Last I saw, no one has ever been recorded/observed making a species.


12 posted on 11/11/2004 5:17:07 AM PST by stacytec
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To: Pitiricus
If "the evolution theory is as true as Newton's laws of gravity" - and I assume you have ignorantly mistaken Newton's laws of motion for "laws of gravity" - then, like Newton's laws of motion, it should be replicable by experiment.

However, evolution is not replicable by experiment, and so it remains a theory.

Additionally, it seems that you are unaware that a text can be, at one and the same time, literally true and theologically symbolic.

13 posted on 11/11/2004 5:19:18 AM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: stacytec
What a fascinating point.

I haven't seen or recorded anyone building my car, so I guess it must have just evolved, you know, like mysteriously from a bicycle or something.

14 posted on 11/11/2004 5:21:38 AM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake

Actually, if you knew what you are talking about
1) Newton's theory has been refuted in part by Eisntein's theory of Gravity

2) there have been observations of evolution.

In some cases the experiments are too long and too costly or just impossible to devise.

This is true about evolution, and about astronomy and any number of sciences...

Doesn't make it less scientific, only more difficult!

As to the Bible, you better take it as symbolic, not as scientifically correct... Because it isn't!


15 posted on 11/11/2004 5:21:55 AM PST by Pitiricus
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To: Pitiricus

And what is your scientific training?


16 posted on 11/11/2004 5:25:16 AM PST by Sloth ("Rather is TV's real-life Ted Baxter, without Baxter's quiet dignity." -- Ann Coulter)
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To: Lindykim

Bump


17 posted on 11/11/2004 5:26:13 AM PST by A. Pole (Milosevic: "When they start beheading your people then you will know what this is all about !")
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To: Lindykim
More creationist drivel. The folks who write this stuff simply do NOT understand what science is and how it works.

"Intelligent design" is not, and will never be, science. The minute you assume a designer, you move outside the boundaries of science into metaphysics (or, as another poster put it----"magic").

And no, Virginia, believing that evolution happened and that intelligent design is bullshit does NOT deprive the scientist of spirituality.

18 posted on 11/11/2004 5:32:14 AM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel)
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To: Pitiricus
1) Newton's theory has been refuted in part by Eisntein's theory of Gravity

Simply untrue. Einstein's research demonstrated that Newton's laws of motion break down at the quantum level.

Newton, of course, did not make any claim that his laws held subatomically - the notion of "refutation" is anachronistic.

there have been observations of evolution.

There have been observations of slight variations within species. There has never been an observation of the mutation of an entirely new species from another. The science of genetics is well-proven and replicable by experiment and accounts perfectly for such small variations that have been observed.

That's all.

In some cases the experiments are too long and too costly or just impossible to devise.

Would it be impossible or too long or too costly to breed an entirely new species of say, fruitfly, out of the old? I doubt it. I've personally been involved in genetic observation of several hundred generations of fruitfly over a period of months.

If evolution was replicable, it would have been replicated in the laboratory long ago.

As to the Bible, you better take it as symbolic, not as scientifically correct... Because it isn't!

So you claim.

If you argue that the Bible does not discuss physical phenomenon in the jargon of 21st century science you are trivially correct.

If you argue that the Bible does not accurately record historical fact in the vernacular of the ancient Jewish people, you are painfully mistaken.

19 posted on 11/11/2004 5:33:45 AM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: Wonder Warthog
The minute you assume a designer, you move outside the boundaries of science into metaphysics

I know several archaeologists who would laugh at such a silly assertion.

I'll point out that much evolutionist theory is based on the assumption that curiously chipped pieces of flint demonstrate the design activity of the ancestors of humans.

20 posted on 11/11/2004 5:35:47 AM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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