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Discovery Institute's “Wedge Document” How Darwinist Paranoia Fueled an Urban Legend
Evolution News ^ | 10/07/05 | Staff

Posted on 10/07/2005 7:48:04 PM PDT by Heartlander

Discovery Institute's “Wedge Document”: How Darwinist Paranoia Fueled an Urban Legend

In 1999 someone posted on the internet an early fundraising proposal for Discovery Institute’s Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture. Dubbed the “Wedge Document,” this proposal soon took on a life of its own, popping up in all sorts of places and eventually spawning what can only be called a giant urban legend. Among true-believers on the Darwinist fringe the document came to be viewed as evidence for a secret conspiracy to fuse religion with science and impose a theocracy. These claims were so outlandish that for a long time we simply ignored them. But because some credulous Darwinists seem willing to believe almost anything, we decided we should set the record straight.

1. The Background

2. The Rise of an Urban Legend

3. What the Document Actually Says

Following are the document’s major points, which we still are happy to affirm:

  1. “The proposition that human beings are created in the image of God is one of the bedrock principles on which Western civilization is built. Its influence can be detected in most, if not all, of the West’s greatest achievements, including representative democracy, human rights, free enterprise, and progress in the arts and sciences.” As a historical matter, this statement happens to be true. The idea that humans are created in the image of God has had powerful positive cultural consequences. Only a member of a group with a name like the “New Orleans Secular Humanist Association” could find anything objectionable here. (By the way, isn’t it strange that a group supposedly promoting “theocracy” would praise “representative democracy” and “human rights”?)
  2. “Yet a little over a century ago, this cardinal idea came under wholesale attack by intellectuals drawing on the discoveries of modern science. Debunking the traditional conceptions of both God and man, thinkers such as Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, and Sigmund Freud portrayed humans not as moral and spiritual beings, but as animals or machines who inhabited a universe ruled by purely impersonal forces and whose behavior and very throughts were dictated by the unbending forces of biology, chemistry, and environment.” This statement highlights one of the animating concerns of Discovery Institute as a public policy think tank. Leading nineteenth century intellectuals tried to hijack science to promote their own anti-religious agenda. This attempt to enlist science to support an anti-religious agenda continues to this day with Darwinists like Oxford’s Richard Dawkins, who boldly insists that Darwinism supports atheism. We continue to think that such claims are an abuse of genuine science, and that this abuse of real science has led to pernicious social consequences (such as the eugenics crusade pushed by Darwinist biologists early in the twentieth century).
  3. "Discovery Institute’s Center... seeks nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies.” It wants to “reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it with a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions." We admit it: We want to end the abuse of science by Darwinists like Richard Dawkins and E.O. Wilson who try to use science to debunk religion, and we want to provide support for scientists and philosophers who think that real science is actually “consonant with… theistic convictions.” Please note, however: “Consonant with” means “in harmony with.” It does not mean “same as.” Recent developments in physics, cosmology, biochemistry, and related sciences may lead to a new harmony between science and religion. But that doesn’t mean we think religion and science are the same thing. We don’t.
  4. “Without solid scholarship, research and argument, the project would be just another attempt to indoctrinate instead of persuade.” It is precisely because we are interested in encouraging intellectual exploration that the “Wedge Document” identified the “essential” component of its program as the support of scholarly “research, writing and publication.” The document makes clear that the primary goal of Discovery Institute’s program in this area is to support scholars so they can engage in research and publication Scholarship comes first. Accordingly, by far the largest program in the Center’s budget has been the awarding of research fellowships to biologists, philosophers of science, and other scholars to engage in research and writing.
  5. “The best and truest research can languish unread and unused unless it is properly publicized.” It’s shocking but true—Discovery Institute actually promised to publicize the work of its scholars in the broader culture! What’s more, it wanted to engage Darwinists in academic debates at colleges and universities! We are happy to say that we still believe in vigorous and open discussion of our ideas, and we still do whatever we can to publicize the work of those we support. So much for the “secret” part of our supposed “conspiracy.”

A final thought: Don’t Darwinists have better ways to spend their time than inventing absurd conspiracy theories about their opponents? The longer Darwinists persist in spinning such urban legends, the more likely it is that fair-minded people will begin to question whether Darwinists know what they are talking about.

Read the Wedge document for yourself, along with a more detailed point by point response and clarification of falacious allegations.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: crevolist; discoveryinstitute; science; urbanlegend
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To: malakhi; betty boop; Alamo-Girl
Supernatural causes are the realm of philosophy or theology, not science

You know the limitations of such a broad generalizations as well as I do, so I won't get into it.

ANYTHING that is true and real is a viable subject for science.

181 posted on 10/11/2005 6:28:53 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: betty boop
And as long as the pupils understand that the Theory of Evolution is a theory, not a fact, not a law...

Just curious: do you personally agree with Behe and Denton that common descent is well established as a historical fact? Behe says he takes it for granted.

182 posted on 10/11/2005 6:29:23 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: xzins
ANYTHING that is true and real is a viable subject for science.

Anything that is an observable phenomenon can be a subject for science. Nothing that can be observed directly or indirectly is supernatural.

183 posted on 10/11/2005 6:31:49 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: betty boop
There's no claim of magic, merely randomness.

Plus we tend to find under experimental conditions what we expect to find.

No, we don't. If we did, we wouldn't have to run the experiments.

184 posted on 10/11/2005 6:32:19 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: js1138; Alamo-Girl; betty boop

You don't know whether the supernatural can be observed or not. All you know is that you and most people haven't observed it.

"Observable." Based on what era?

I don't suppose we've learned anything from microscopes and telescopes. Therefore, prior to their advent, there was nothing to know in the worlds they opened up. Or can we assume that those worlds didn't exist until those devices were created?

Right???


185 posted on 10/11/2005 6:42:55 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: xzins

My use of the present tense was not an accident.


186 posted on 10/11/2005 6:48:14 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: xzins
malakhi wrote:
Supernatural causes are the realm of philosophy or theology, not science.

To which you replied:
ANYTHING that is true and real is a viable subject for science.

Back off, man! I'm a scientist!


187 posted on 10/11/2005 6:50:08 AM PDT by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi.)
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To: js1138; betty boop; Alamo-Girl

Tense makes no sense. (And certainly no difference.)

Why try to find a way to observe if "science" says the unobservable doesn't exist?


188 posted on 10/11/2005 6:56:42 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: Right Wing Professor
Since when has he been Greek Orthodox?

It's something I had read. If wrong, I'll stand corrected.

189 posted on 10/11/2005 6:57:33 AM PDT by Tribune7
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To: Liberal Classic

Nice ghost.

And just in time for Halloween :>)


190 posted on 10/11/2005 6:57:59 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: js1138
It's really odd, considering how important Behe is to the ID movement, that so few people on these threads realize that the takes common descent for granted. You'd think that would be important.

You would think :-)

191 posted on 10/11/2005 6:58:48 AM PDT by Tribune7
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To: xzins
ANYTHING that is true and real is a viable subject for science.

Please feel free to explain how science can proceed to investigate supernatural causes.

192 posted on 10/11/2005 7:07:12 AM PDT by malakhi
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To: betty boop
that the Theory of Evolution is a theory, not a fact, not a law

I'm surprised, bb. I thought you'd been on these threads long enough to know what "theory", "fact" and "law" mean in the context of science. Between this, and your backhanded swipe at the fossil record in your #109, I'm beginning to wonder.

193 posted on 10/11/2005 7:11:59 AM PDT by malakhi
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To: xzins

Science makes no such claim. Science would say that science cannot study anything that cannot be directly or indirectly observed.


194 posted on 10/11/2005 7:18:25 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Alamo-Girl; xzins; js1138
There's no claim of magic, merely randomness.

Doc, as Alamo-Girl has pointed out on numerous occasions (and I do agree with her observation), randomness may be apparent rather than actual. Knowledge of the system in which it occurs would be necessary in order to tell which.

195 posted on 10/11/2005 7:19:46 AM PDT by betty boop (Nature loves to hide. -- Heraclitus)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Alamo-Girl
No, we don't. If we did, we wouldn't have to run the experiments.

This seems to me not to be true. We run the experiment to validate (falsify) our expectation (hypothesis).

196 posted on 10/11/2005 7:22:23 AM PDT by betty boop (Nature loves to hide. -- Heraclitus)
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To: malakhi
I'm surprised, bb. I thought you'd been on these threads long enough to know what "theory", "fact" and "law" mean in the context of science. Between this, and your backhanded swipe at the fossil record in your #109, I'm beginning to wonder.

Two points, malakhi:

(1) I know the difference between theory, fact, and law. A middle school pupil, however, can ordinarily be expected to be in need of being taught how to discriminate each of these terms.

(2) My "back-handed swipe" at the fossil record goes to the people who have thought to "augment it" by illegitimate means. It is a fact that there have been some people like this. It is also a fact that hoaxes have been exposed. It is a "swipe" to simply mention such things, when they are true?

197 posted on 10/11/2005 7:31:12 AM PDT by betty boop (Nature loves to hide. -- Heraclitus)
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To: betty boop; xzins; RogueIsland
Thank you both, betty boop and xzins, for all of your pings to this very engaging discussion!!!

I'm coming in late and don't yet have any sweeping replies but I would like very much to address the sidebar with RogueIsland.

I certainly agree that students must be taught evolution. It is the most comprehensive biological theory we have at this point. It is not however complete and that fact ought to be made clearly because students have a tendency to believe that what they are hearing is a "done deal".

Neither Darwin nor the biologists since have effectively answered a number of crucial questions such as:

What is life v non-life/death in nature?

We know that rocks and rabbits are made of the same particles and fields, but when breaking down rocks and rabbits into their components, what is it that is removed such that a rabbit becomes non-life?

What is the origin of information (successful communication) in biological systems?

When we put 100 army ants on a flat surface they walk in a circle until they die of exhaustion, but if we collect a million of them they will form colonies, conduct raids, keep a geometry and calendar and constant temperature in the nest. What is the mechanism of such swarm intelligence?

We can teach a flatworm to respond to a light/punishment stimulus and then chop it into two parts, but the part which had no brain will regenerate into a flatworm that remembers the exercise. What is the mechanism of regenerated intelligence?

In experiments it has been shown that motile cells individually make choices of direction and that amoebas remember lessons of indigestible ink. What is the mechanism of cellular intelligence?

Why do the component cells of an organism organize around function and further, why does the component molecular machinery of an organism cooperate to the survival of the “whole”?

What determines autonomy in biological systems (swarms, flatworms, organisms, etc.)? Are we looking at an evolution of one, a fecundity principle, a life principle?

Is intelligence in biological life the result of successful communication by external agent or is a phenomenon?

And if it is a phenomenon is it an emergent property of self-organizing complexity or is it fractal?

Can intelligence cause anything to happen or is it merely an epiphenomenon?

What is the guide to the system whereby order in biological systems arises out of the physical chaos of the universe as we see in quantum fields and the CMB?

The answers to such questions (information, autonomy, semiosis, complexity, intelligence) are beyond the reach of biology as an autonomous science as betty boop has observed.

“Matter in all its motions” cannot address questions which are more intrinsically mathematical – whether information theoretics, dimensionality or other geometric physics, or the “unreasonable effectiveness of math” vis-à-vis physics. Indeed, physics does not yet have an explanation for matter itself: ordinary matter (potentially Higgs field/boson or supersymmetry), dark matter (high gravity regions such as black holes) or dark energy (potentially negative, interdimensional gravity causing acceleration of the universe).

The golden key is that the void in which "all that there is" began (regardless of physical cosmology) - has no space, no time, no energy, no matter, no mathematical structures, no logic, no physical laws, no physical constants.

Again, there is no physical causuality in the void.

Physico-chemical investigations cannot begin to approach such issues.

Thus the students should understand there is exciting work to be done in science and math - and that doesn’t even consider the overarching theological and philosophical questions as to why the universe exists at all or why it exists this way rather than some other way.

198 posted on 10/11/2005 7:33:42 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: malakhi; betty boop; Alamo-Girl

That is the issue, isn't it? "Because we cannot study it, that means it doesn't exist" is not a logical statement.

There are study tools all the way from hard to soft.

In the area of soft research, I remember a few years back I ran across some British research. One of the questions was something like, "Have you ever experienced or been influenced by what many would refer to as divine or supernatural intervention."

There was a very large positive response to the question that cut across religious/non-religious lines.

I used it in a paper, so I've probably got it out in a file cabinet someplace.

The effort is finding a way to study such a phenomenon...not simply throwing up our hands and declaring it impossible.


199 posted on 10/11/2005 7:36:12 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: js1138; Alamo-Girl; xzins
Just curious: do you personally agree with Behe and Denton that common descent is well established as a historical fact? Behe says he takes it for granted.

I hardly think it can have been established as a "historical fact," js1138. Historiography is a production of contemporaneous observers. Common descent might be true, or it might be false. I really don't know, and don't sweat it either way in any case.

200 posted on 10/11/2005 7:37:07 AM PDT by betty boop (Nature loves to hide. -- Heraclitus)
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