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Scientists in the Kansas intelligent design hearings make their case public
AP ^ | 5/9/05 | John Hanna

Posted on 05/09/2005 11:35:25 PM PDT by Crackingham

While Kansas State Board of Education members spent three days soaking up from critics of evolution about how the theory should be taught in public schools, many scientists refused to participate in the board's public hearings. But evolution's defenders were hardly silent last week, nor are they likely to be Thursday, when the hearings are set to conclude. They have offered public rebuttals after each day's testimony. Their tactics led the intelligent design advocates -- hoping to expose Kansas students to more criticism of evolution -- to accuse them of ducking the debate over the theory. But Kansas scientists who defend evolution said the hearings were rigged against the theory. They also said they don't see the need to cram their arguments into a few days of testimony, like out-of-state witnesses called by intelligent design advocates.

"They're in, they do their schtick, and they're out," said Keith Miller, a Kansas State University geologist. "I'm going to be here, and I'm not going to be quiet. We'll have the rest of our lives to make our points."

The scientists' boycott, led by the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Kansas Citizens for Science, frustrated board members who viewed their hearings as an educational forum.

"I am profoundly disappointed that they've chosen to present their case in the shadows," said board member Connie Morris, of St. Francis. "I would have enjoyed hearing what they have to say in a professional, ethical manner."

Intelligent design advocates challenge evolutionary theory that natural chemical processes can create life, that all life on Earth had a common origin and that man and apes had a common ancestor. Intelligent design says some features of the natural world are best explained by an intelligent cause because they are well ordered and complex. The science groups' leaders said Morris and the other two members of the board subcommittee presiding at the hearings already have decided to support language backed by intelligent design advocates. All three are part of a conservative board majority receptive to criticism of evolution. The entire board plans to consider changes this summer in standards that determine how students will be tested statewide in science.

Alan Leshner, AAAS chief executive officer, dismissed the hearings as "political theater."

"There is no cause for debate, so why are they having them?" he said. "They're trying to imply that evolution is a controversial concept in science, and that's absolutely not true."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Kansas
KEYWORDS: crevolist; science
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To: mlc9852
What are you people so afraid of?

Good question. I will be glad to discuss it at some length if you care to.

First of all I will concede that zealots on both sides tend to make extreme statements. There are militant atheists in the evolution side, and there are creationists who use this fact to tar all evolutionists as Marxists, Nazis, atheists, etc.

Second I will acknowledge that there are well educated people who doubt evolution for various reasons. Some doubt the fact of common descent, and some accept common descent but deny that natural selection is sufficient to explain anything more than small adaptations.

Here is what I'm afraid of: the attempt by those outside the mainstream of science to change what science is and what science does.

Evolution is just the latest of a long procession of bogeymen that have been attacked in the name of religion. At the time Vesuvius erupted and destroyed Pompeii, such events were considered to be caused by the wrath of God, or gods as the case may be. The same for earthquakes, disease, storms, etc. It has only been in recent centuries that many people have come to believe these are natural phenomena. I would hesitate to say that even now a majority of people believe all disasters are natural phenomena.

Science has a history going back several centuries of fighting against the assumption that ordinary events require supernatural explanations.

Somewhere around 1700, Christianity adopted the idea that the order in nature was a sign of God's design. Science then became the study of God's design. This worked well until geology and paleontology began unearthing evidence of an earth much older and complex than what was described in Genesis.

First there were fossil remains of creatures never seen. The idea took hold that these bones were the remains of a God directed evolution. It was noticed that fossils associated with lower strata were smaller and less complex than those in higher strata. It was decided that these represented earlier creations, before God created man. The word evolution was first attached to this directed sequence of creation. the term applied to this idea was Natural Theology, the title of a famous book by the Rev. Paley, published in 1802. In this book, Paley outlined the complete argument for intelligent design, including many of the terms, such as irreducible complexity.

There really wasn't much of a philosophical difference between science an religion until science began to explain life as a natural process. It is true that some religious people have always objected to an earth much older than thousands of years, but most people consider the age of the earth a matter of biblical interpretation rather than an article of faith.

As long as science restricted itself to admiring the intricate structure of the cosmos, or the mathematical workings of inorganic chemistry, things were cool. But when biologists rejected vitalism, the notion that life involved something other than chemistry, things began to heat up.

I believe there are areas that cannot easily be reconciled. For one thing, science is the way of acquiring knowledge about the world. It has, in its very core, the assumption that worldly things obey regular laws that can be analyzed and discovered. Science does not distinguish between organic and inorganic. It does not hold any beliefs, even its own, as sacred. If the testimony of witnesses contradicts what can be established by instruments, the witnesses are discarded.

You ask what I am afraid of. I am afraid that the early faith in the essential compatibility of religion and science is being abandoned because science cannot support the opinions and interpretations of some believers. The problem is not with science, which has the same assumptions it had in 1802, a belief in the orderly workings of nature. The problem is with people who do not accept where belief in order leads. they wish to go back to a time when all things were products of a whimsical God, and divine intervention was an everyday occurrence. they wish to make intervention the primary assumption.

But science, makes the opposite assumption.

201 posted on 05/10/2005 9:14:48 AM PDT by js1138 (e unum pluribus)
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To: donh
Careful. I think AmishDude was mugged by a roaming pack of ravenous biologists. There's a lot of anger, and seeing as your post only included two digits, you're really opening yourself up to attack. ;)

Just kidding around AmishDude!!! 8485743823847.3984
202 posted on 05/10/2005 9:15:15 AM PDT by crail (Better lives have been lost on the gallows than have ever been enshrined in the halls of palaces.)
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To: chronic_loser

You make a very good point, but you need to take it a step further. Science, as a whole, does work around the politics and personal egos of the scientists in question. A simple example is to look at the scientific peer reviewed journals. There are a lot of heated, but politely written, exchanges. Over time adn across disciplines, such attitudes are diluted. One generation of scientists leads to another that have different opinions. If Rutherford were still around, nuclear power may not have been acheived because he was a prominent, politically connected scietist who firmly believed that the nucleus of an atom was fixed - it could never be split. Younger scientists took up the challenge and proved otherwise and we have nuclear energy and weapons as a result.


203 posted on 05/10/2005 9:15:25 AM PDT by doc30 (Democrats are to morals what and Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
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To: AmishDude
Trendy pseudo-scientific ad hoc garbage. They're desperately trying to mathematically model biological phenomena, most often with little success.

Gosh another area where you demonstrate abject ignorance. Somehow that does not surprise me.

It means biology is a soft science that should not be taken seriously. If you don't understand mathematics than whatever you understand is only at the level of theology anyway.

Thanks for demonstrating that you have shit for brains as well as a maladjusted personality.

204 posted on 05/10/2005 9:15:53 AM PDT by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: Blzbba
Actually, I don't care what theories they wish to include. Again, high school students are taught very little of evolution. And no one is suggesting that colleges change their curriculum in science or anything else. And we saw what happened when the city in Texas discussed having an ELECTIVE religion class. Seems there's just a big fear of religion these days. Considering our religious heritage, I find it strange.
205 posted on 05/10/2005 9:16:52 AM PDT by mlc9852
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To: Dimensio
It makes one feel soooo ecumenical.
206 posted on 05/10/2005 9:17:16 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Dimensio
Oddly, so few creationists hold this standard to any other scientific theory, even though the same caveat that it cannot be "proved beyond any doubt" applies to all of them.

Evolution is only the start - even some non-religous people don't like it because it hurts their pride. They don't want to be told that they are related to apes.

If evolution falls, paleontology will be next. The concept of animals existing before humans contradicts the bible.

Next will be geology - the world can't really be 6 billion years old.

Next will be astronomy - those stars can't really be that far away because the universe isn't that old.

And on it goes...

207 posted on 05/10/2005 9:17:53 AM PDT by JeffAtlanta
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To: mlc9852
mk9852: Until scientists come up with something they all agree on regarding species, what difference does it make?

Balrog666: Until believers come up with something they all agree on regarding religion, what difference does it make?

mk9852:It doesn't make any difference. That is my point. And truth is truth. What we do with truth is up to us.

!?! You believe Catholic=Baptist=Unitarian=Judiasm (Orthodox=Conservative=Reform)=Islam=Taoism=Hinduism=Shintoism=Sikhism=Jainism=Zoroastrianism=Scientology?

208 posted on 05/10/2005 9:18:08 AM PDT by Gumlegs
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To: donh
Biological mathematics is very well established, heavy into discrete disciplines, linear algebra and calculus, and has an enviable, well-established predictive track record.

It's ad hoc, it's not serious mathematics.

Are you under the impression that pure math hasn't got it's byways and alleys where we deal with failures, natural limits of analysis, and groping around in the dark, unaided by provably formal demonstrations?

Not in pure mathematics. It is not the same as an experimental science. Axiom, definition, theorem -- if it's proven, it's right. No muss, no fuss.

209 posted on 05/10/2005 9:18:44 AM PDT by AmishDude (Join the AmishDude fan club: "Very well put, AD. As usual." -- Howlin; "ROFL!" -- Dan from Michigan)
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To: crail

Exactly...

IMO the conservative movement has been hijacked by theocrats. I think to some degree that has been corrected here in Canada.

When I see posts suggesting that 'no conservative would support evolution' or 'a real christian has to be conservative' etc...
I have to wonder. :o(


210 posted on 05/10/2005 9:19:07 AM PDT by Tungenchek
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To: JeffAtlanta
Next will be astronomy - those stars can't really be that far away because the universe isn't that old.

Astronomy or physics, take your pick. Variable speed of light, and variable speed of nuclear decay would do the trick too.
211 posted on 05/10/2005 9:19:37 AM PDT by crail (Better lives have been lost on the gallows than have ever been enshrined in the halls of palaces.)
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To: Tungenchek
I am not sure that ALL the creationists are being blatantly dishonest. I suspect some are simply not capable of critical thought, and are accustomed to thinking passion equals logic etc.

Possibly true. The "thinking passion equals logic" idea is also quite prevalent in politics and the media.

212 posted on 05/10/2005 9:19:59 AM PDT by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: Tungenchek
I am not sure that ALL the creationists are being blatantly dishonest. I suspect some are simply not capable of critical thought, and are accustomed to thinking passion equals logic etc.

The problem is that there are a good number of creationists who are patently dishonest to the point of outright lying (such as out-of-context or even fabricated quotes) and then lying further when the original lie is exposed that it creates the impression that creationism itself is founded in dishonesty. What's worse, they are rarely called to task by their fellow creationists, and many of their fellow creationists will go out of their way to defend their comrades who are being "attacked" with shameless "name-calling" because apparently it's wrong for us to call someone a liar when they tell lies. Even if the real liars are in the minority, they're still present in a significant enough proportion (as opposed to the liars who might appear on any other contentious discussion here on FR) that it creates such an impression.
213 posted on 05/10/2005 9:20:15 AM PDT by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: mlc9852
Do you really believe that without the conservatice evangelical Christian vote that George Bush would now be our president?

Do you really believe that without any group of voters that Bush would be now be president? Every group is trying to lay claim to "putting Bush over the top". Hispanics, security moms, south park republicans, etc.

Evanglicals have been shown to have voted in the same numbers as in previous elections.

214 posted on 05/10/2005 9:20:48 AM PDT by JeffAtlanta
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To: Thoro
The blatant dishonesty, misrepresentation and misunderstanding of some of the creationists has been embarassing. Having faith is fine. Criticizing a theory is more than welcome in the scientific community; it's actually a staple of the scientific process. There's just one little catch; you had better know what it is that you are talking about in order to have your contribution taken seriously.

Very well put. It is very similar to the celebrities who spout off about politics. Like the "shut up and sing."

215 posted on 05/10/2005 9:20:50 AM PDT by doc30 (Democrats are to morals what and Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
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To: balrog666

Wow. I've never read a post that so well-defines irony.


216 posted on 05/10/2005 9:21:25 AM PDT by AmishDude (Join the AmishDude fan club: "Very well put, AD. As usual." -- Howlin; "ROFL!" -- Dan from Michigan)
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To: Dimensio
I keep hearing this [the fossil record refutes ID], but I can't buy it. It's no trouble at all to simply say "the designer made it that way for reasons we don't understand."

I should have begun that post by saying: "To the rational mind, one which does not believe that the fossil record is a gigantic hoax, perpetrated by a long-running conspiracy of thousands of scientists over several generations, or that it exists but was fabricated by the gods to perplex us and test our faith ..."

217 posted on 05/10/2005 9:22:24 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (<-- Click on my name. The List-O-Links for evolution threads is at my freeper homepage.)
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To: js1138

I would think any true Christian would not be afraid that science would discover something contrary to God. I welcome investigations into why things are and how they work. To me it just proves God knows way more than we do. For those Christians who are afraid, I would say they need to pray for faith. On the other hand, I believe some scientists (atheists) enjoy trying to prove God was not responsible for anything in the universe and that we are all here by random chance. Humans are spiritual beings and to deny that is to deny their humanity. Both religion and science should work at seeking truth, wherever it takes them.


218 posted on 05/10/2005 9:23:14 AM PDT by mlc9852
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To: wallcrawlr
Cancer kills people...believing that the world was created does not kill.

Unless you are Geordono Bruno, or a member of any of several early heretical faiths and the the believers are the Catholic Church.

219 posted on 05/10/2005 9:24:39 AM PDT by donh
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To: Dimensio

Kinda like scientists with the global warming scare?


220 posted on 05/10/2005 9:26:16 AM PDT by mlc9852
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