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Tough Assignment: Teaching Evolution To Fundamentalists
Ft. Wayne Journal Gazette ^ | 03 December 2004 | SHARON BEGLEY

Posted on 12/18/2004 5:56:30 PM PST by PatrickHenry

Professional danger comes in many flavors, and while Richard Colling doesn't jump into forest fires or test experimental jets for a living, he does do the academic's equivalent: He teaches biology and evolution at a fundamentalist Christian college.

At Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Ill., he says, "as soon as you mention evolution in anything louder than a whisper, you have people who aren't very happy." And within the larger conservative-Christian community, he adds, "I've been called some interesting names."

But those experiences haven't stopped Prof. Colling -- who received a Ph.D. in microbiology, chairs the biology department at Olivet Nazarene and is himself a devout conservative Christian -- from coming out swinging. In his new book, "Random Designer," he writes: "It pains me to suggest that my religious brothers are telling falsehoods" when they say evolutionary theory is "in crisis" and claim that there is widespread skepticism about it among scientists. "Such statements are blatantly untrue," he argues; "evolution has stood the test of time and considerable scrutiny."

His is hardly the standard scientific defense of Darwin, however. His central claim is that both the origin of life from a primordial goo of nonliving chemicals, and the evolution of species according to the processes of random mutation and natural selection, are "fully compatible with the available scientific evidence and also contemporary religious beliefs." In addition, as he bluntly told me, "denying science makes us [Conservative Christians] look stupid."

Prof. Colling is one of a small number of conservative Christian scholars who are trying to convince biblical literalists that Darwin's theory of evolution is no more the work of the devil than is Newton's theory of gravity. They haven't picked an easy time to enter the fray. Evolution is under assault from Georgia to Pennsylvania and from Kansas to Wisconsin, with schools ordering science teachers to raise questions about its validity and, in some cases, teach "intelligent design," which asserts that only a supernatural tinkerer could have produced such coups as the human eye. According to a Gallup poll released last month, only one-third of Americans regard Darwin's theory of evolution as well supported by empirical evidence; 45% believe God created humans in their present form 10,000 years ago.

Usually, the defense of evolution comes from scientists and those trying to maintain the separation of church and state. But Prof. Colling has another motivation. "People should not feel they have to deny reality in order to experience their faith," he says. He therefore offers a rendering of evolution fully compatible with faith, including his own. The Church of the Nazarene, which runs his university, "believes in the biblical account of creation," explains its manual. "We oppose a godless interpretation of the evolutionary hypothesis."

It's a small opening, but Prof. Colling took it. He finds a place for God in evolution by positing a "random designer" who harnesses the laws of nature he created. "What the designer designed is the random-design process," or Darwinian evolution, Prof. Colling says. "God devised these natural laws, and uses evolution to accomplish his goals." God is not in there with a divine screwdriver and spare parts every time a new species or a wondrous biological structure appears.

Unlike those who see evolution as an assault on faith, Prof. Colling finds it strengthens his own. "A God who can harness the laws of randomness and chaos, and create beauty and wonder and all of these marvelous structures, is a lot more creative than fundamentalists give him credit for," he told me. Creating the laws of physics and chemistry that, over the eons, coaxed life from nonliving molecules is something he finds just as awe inspiring as the idea that God instantly and supernaturally created life from nonlife.

Prof. Colling reserves some of his sharpest barbs for intelligent design, the idea that the intricate structures and processes in the living world -- from exquisitely engineered flagella that propel bacteria to the marvels of the human immune system -- can't be the work of random chance and natural selection. Intelligent-design advocates look at these sophisticated components of living things, can't imagine how evolution could have produced them, and conclude that only God could have.

That makes Prof. Colling see red. "When Christians insert God into the gaps that science cannot explain -- in this case how wondrous structures and forms of life came to be -- they set themselves up for failure and even ridicule," he told me. "Soon -- and it's already happening with the flagellum -- science is going to come along and explain" how a seemingly miraculous bit of biological engineering in fact could have evolved by Darwinian mechanisms. And that will leave intelligent design backed into an ever-shrinking corner.

It won't be easy to persuade conservative Christians of this; at least half of them believe that the six-day creation story of Genesis is the literal truth. But Prof. Colling intends to try.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: christianschools; christianstudents; colling; crevolist; darwin; evolution; heresy; intelligentdesign; nazarene; religionofevolution; richardcolling; scienceeducation
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To: stremba

"There is no scientific theory of souls. How would you measure souls? How would you detect their presence? If you can provide me with a "Soul-meter" then I will gladly do some experimental work and derive a theory of souls. Until then, souls will have to remain in the realm of theology and philosophy and stay out of science."

Spoken like a 'god'!


341 posted on 12/20/2004 7:54:17 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: Just mythoughts

Sorry, you are evidently here to play games. I'm not. Either
back up your garbage claim or stand silent as the liar you are. Simple. If you need to use ad-hominem, you surrender the point. That's logic. Don't like it, tough.


342 posted on 12/20/2004 7:54:36 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: jude24; RadioAstronomer
How the heck would the law of Conservation of Momentum have to say about the Big Bang?

I wondered the same thing, until our non-physics-inclined friend "clarified" with a reference to "spin". It's a reference to conservation of angular momentum, and it's one of those arguments generally promoted by folks who never took Physics 101 back in college:

The moons of several planets in our galaxy here spin counter to the direction of the planets. If, as your big bang theory posits, a whole bunch of nothing was spinning and condensed down to a speck in the nothing, then exploded. The nothing that exploded into everything would preserve angular momentum in all that exploded from it. This is a falsifiable law. Planetary bodies are not the only things subject to this law, galaxies, stars and so on are all subject to said law. Galaxies, however, do not all spin the same direction either.

I've seen this one before, and the flaws should be immediately obvious. First, conservation of angular momentum refers to the total angular momentum of the entire system - in no way does it mean that all the exploded bits have to spin in "the same direction" as the original unexploded thing. You can certainly have rotation in the opposite direction, so long as the total angular momentum is the same afterwards as it was before - a tiny smidgeon of thought will probably suggest many ways in which you can have a system with, say, 10 bodies spinning in all sorts of directions that has the same total angular momentum as a 10-body system where all spin in the same direction.

The next major problem is that nobody has bothered to explain why the angular momentum of the "pre-Big Bang" universe is a meaningful concept, or how we would measure it if it were - indeed, we should probably begin by turning "pre-Big Bang" into a meaningful concept itself. How things "spin" when spacetime doesn't exist I don't know, which doesn't suggest to me that it is a meaningful concept, but there you go. I suppose you could go out and measure the angular momentum of every object in the universe, total it all up, and arrive at a total angular momentum for the whole system in order to arrive at some conclusion about total angular momentum in the past, but obviously I'm not going to wait by the phone for the results of that calculation ;)

343 posted on 12/20/2004 7:55:33 AM PST by general_re ("What's plausible to you is unimportant." - D'man)
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To: Havoc

So if evolution is not falsifiable, how can you argue that the evidence has shown it to be false?


344 posted on 12/20/2004 7:59:07 AM PST by stremba
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To: Junior

You stated earlier it the soul was "considered a hypothesis".


"Because it cannot be a theory until it is tested."

BEEP! That is not my problem you E's better hurry up your evolution process and testing equipment!

You do not believe Scripture...

"Beep. Circle takes the square. I do not believe in some peoples' interpretations of Scripture, however. I also do not consider Scripture to be a filter through which to perceive reality. The Almighty gave me a brain; I don't turn it off simply because of a few tens of thousands of words in some text."

"The Almighty gave me a brain", where is that WRITTEN, WHERE is your evidence for an Almighty?


345 posted on 12/20/2004 7:59:10 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: Junior
" that is what Scripture implied;"

Scripture implies no such thing. In fact, Scripture refers to the earth as round. For Example, Isaiah 40:22.

JM
346 posted on 12/20/2004 8:00:15 AM PST by JohnnyM
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To: jude24

I'd think the introduction of The Pill, and the ready availability of automobiles had more to do with the slackening of morals in the 60s than any other causes.


347 posted on 12/20/2004 8:00:39 AM PST by Junior (FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC)
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To: jude24

The date on the Hebrew text of the OT sounds right. What's the point?


348 posted on 12/20/2004 8:00:49 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: balrog666

Nice to have you as a referee to tell us when we're wrong, why, etc. I have no rock to crawl under; am I to join you under yours then? Or are we to expect you're here to stir up trouble as you blaze in waving your lip to say nothing?


349 posted on 12/20/2004 8:02:09 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: JohnnyM
The four corners of the Earth; the Earth is supported on pillars; the heavens are stretched over the Earth like a tent; Jesus taken to a high mountain and shown all the kingdoms of the world (only possible if the world was flat). All these were used by the Church to deny the concept of a spherical Earth. It wasn't until the evidence became overwhelming that the Church recanted its position.

We see the same thing happening with the biological sciences today.

See also The Flat-Earth Bible.

350 posted on 12/20/2004 8:06:55 AM PST by Junior (FABRICATI DIEM, PVNC)
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To: general_re; jude24

An interesting discussion. :-)

http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/apr2002/1017882364.As.r.html


351 posted on 12/20/2004 8:09:29 AM PST by RadioAstronomer
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To: jude24
The decline in American society can be traced to other factors just as easily.

Oh, I wouldn't debate that. Causal relationships don't need to be complex. In this case I don't believe it is. It's simple. It's like deciding to steal for the first time. The first time doesn't make one a master thief. And getting caught doesn't presuppose an end to the crime spree. The degeneration of societal norms of morality is arguably a staged affair that traces back through a number of steps and causalities. I just see this factor as the crack in the damn that blew. When you look at the data, the incidents start their climb at the same time evolution made it to the classroom and started calling God a liar, mom and dad a liar and all of mom and dad's church friends liars because 'we have the evidence'. Doesn't take kids too long to realize that if the creation story is being sold as a lie, the rest of that book ain't worth a plug nickel and what we decide to do doesn't matter in the scheme of things. Kids don't just make that leap overnight en masse without something culturally defining the excuse.

352 posted on 12/20/2004 8:11:29 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: Havoc
Once you kicked God out of school, you kicked the ten commandments out too. With that went the foundations of morality in this country. premarital sex, babies out of wedlock, abortions, etc exploded from that point and have taken us to the abyss.

All those terrible things really started happening around the time we sent men to the moon. Coincidence? Think about it!

353 posted on 12/20/2004 8:14:09 AM PST by PatrickHenry (The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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To: Just mythoughts
Peter speaks specifically to the meaning of the word "day". IIPeter 3 starts off with the statement...

From this, may we conclude that christians have been creating excuses to explain away the obvious impossibillities of genesis since the days when the disiples were still around?

354 posted on 12/20/2004 8:14:33 AM PST by shuckmaster
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To: WildTurkey
How do you know the are the original texts?

The texts have been entrusted to the same class within the Hebrew culture for thousands of years. As far back as you care to look - checking against every other known copy, you'll find the text consistant. That's not a tough act to follow, it's near impossible considering these folks did it by hand in an unforgiving form on scrollpaper that you just don't get out the white out and correct for errors. How do I know? Simple, the text and it's history speaks for itself. I've gone the extra step and actually bothered reading it and testing God on much of it - panned out well for me. I chose to believe my experiences. Just too many things you can't chalk up to random chance. May be hard for you to understand as you chalk up everything to random chance on evolution with far greater odds than anything I'm aware of against it. But there you have it. My faith is in God, yours is in chance and "millions of years". We both have a religion. The difference is, I don't feel I should have to pay taxes to teach yours in schools while mine is restricted in public - the height of tolerance as it were. If religion has no place in the classroom, evolution don't belong there. It ain't science.

355 posted on 12/20/2004 8:19:45 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: PatrickHenry
All those terrible things really started happening around the time we sent men to the moon. Coincidence? Think about it!

No, the data doesn't track that way. That's 5 years after the spike begins. Care to try something else?

356 posted on 12/20/2004 8:21:21 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: PatrickHenry; Havoc
All those terrible things really started happening around the time we sent men to the moon. Coincidence? Think about it!

We didn't really go to the moon. As we know about all the 'facts', it was either

a) It was a conspiracy by the evolutionists.
b) It was part of God's conspiracy to place anti-young earth data amoung us to keep us confused.

357 posted on 12/20/2004 8:22:31 AM PST by WildTurkey
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To: shuckmaster
From this, may we conclude that christians have been creating excuses to explain away the obvious impossibillities of genesis since the days when the disiples were still around?

No, from this we can conclude that the commentor on what Peter was talking about didn't bother to read it, much less read it for context. He read far enough to find something that looked like what he wanted and it bit him. The disciples didn't have anything to cover for.

358 posted on 12/20/2004 8:23:45 AM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: Havoc

Galileo was persecuted and tried for the heresy of believing that the sun was the center of the universe rather than the earth. Nothing was mentioned about the sperical shape of the earth. Erastothanes actually measured the circumference of the earth a couple of centuries before Christ. Hard to do if he believed that the earth was flat. Throughout most of the time thereafter, it was generally accepted that the earth was round.


359 posted on 12/20/2004 8:24:28 AM PST by stremba
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To: Junior

thanks for sharing


360 posted on 12/20/2004 8:24:57 AM PST by FBD (Report illegals and their employers at: http://www.reportillegals.com/)
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