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"Intelligent Design": Stealth War on Science
Revolutionary Worker ^ | November 6, 2005

Posted on 11/01/2005 6:27:26 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe

A president who consults religious lunatics about who should be on the Supreme Court... Judges who want prayer in school and the "ten commandments" in the courtroom… Born-Again fanatics who bomb abortion clinics… bible thumpers who condemn homosexuality as "sin"... and all the other Christian fascists who want a U.S. theocracy….

This is the force behind the assault on evolution going on right now in a courtroom in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Last year, the Dover city school board instituted a policy that requires high school biology teachers to read a statement to students that says Darwin's theory of evolution is "not a fact" and then notes that intelligent design offers an alternative theory for the origin and evolution of life--namely, that life in all of its complexity could not have arisen without the help of an "intelligent hand." Some teachers refused to read the statement, citing the Pennsylvania teacher code of ethics, which says, "I will never knowingly present false information to a student." Eleven parents who brought this case to court contend that the directive amounted to an attempt to inject religion into the curriculum in violation of the First Amendment. Their case has been joined by the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

The school board is being defended pro bono by the Thomas More Law Center, a Christian law firm in Ann Arbor, Mich. The case is being heard without a jury in Harrisburg by U.S. District Judge John Jones III, whom George W. Bush appointed to the bench in 2002.

In 1987, the Supreme Court ruled that public schools could not teach the biblical account of creation instead of evolution, because doing so would violate the constitutional ban on establishment of an official religion. Since then Intelligent Design has been promoted by Christian fundamentalists as the way to get the Bible and creationism into the schools.

"This clever tactical repackaging of creationism does not merit consideration," Witold Walczak, legal director of the Pennsylvania American Civil Liberties Union and a lawyer for the parents, told U.S. District Judge John E. Jones in opening arguments. "Intelligent design admits that it is not science unless science is redefined to include the supernatural." This is, he added, "a 21st-century version of creationism."

This is the first time a federal court has been asked to rule on the question of whether Intelligent Design is religion or science. Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, which opposes challenges to the standard model of teaching evolution in the schools, said the Pennsylvania case "is probably the most important legal situation of creation and evolution in the last 18 years," and that "it will have quite a significant impact on what happens in American public school education."

Proponents of Intelligent Design don’t say in the courtroom that they want to replace science with religion. But their strategy papers, speeches, and discussions with each other make it clear this is their agenda.

Intelligent Design (ID) is basically a re-packaged version of creationism--the view that the world can be explained, not by science, but by a strict, literal reading of the Bible. ID doesn’t bring up ridiculous biblical claims like the earth is only a few thousand years old or that the world was created in seven days. Instead it claims to be scientific--it acknowledges the complexity and diversity of life, but then says this all comes from some "intelligent" force. ID advocates don’t always openly argue this "intelligent force" is GOD--they even say it could be some alien from outer space! But Christian fundamentalists are the driving force behind the whole Intelligent Design movement and it’s clear… these people aren’t praying every night to little green men from another planet.

Phillip Johnson, considered the father and guiding light behind Intelligent Design, is the architect of the "wedge strategy" which focuses on attacking evolution and promoting intelligent design to ultimately, as Johnson says, "affirm the reality of God." Johnson has made it clear that the whole point of "shifting the debate from creationism vs. evolution to the existence of God vs. the non-existence of God" is to get people "introduced to the truth of the Bible," then "the question of sin" and finally "introduced to Jesus."

Intelligent Design and its theocratic program has been openly endorsed by George W. Bush. Earlier this year W stated that Intelligent Design should be taught in the schools. When he was governor of Texas, Bush said students should be exposed to both creationism and evolution. And he has made the incredibly unscientific, untrue statement that "the jury is still out" on evolution.

For the Christian fascists, the fight around evolution and teaching Intelligent Design is part of a whole agenda that encompasses reconfiguring all kinds of cultural, social, and political "norms" in society. This is a movement that is fueled by a religious vision which varies among its members but is predicated on the shared conviction that the United States is in need of drastic changes--which can only be accomplished by instituting religion as its cultural foundation.

The Christian fascists really do want--and are working for--a society where everything is run according to the Bible. They have been working for decades to infiltrate school boards to be in a position to mandate things like school prayer. Now, in the schools, they might not be able to impose a literal reading of the Bible’s explanation for how the universe was created. But Intelligent Design, thinly disguised as some kind of "science," is getting a lot more than just a foot in the door.

The strategy for promoting intelligent design includes an aggressive and systematic agenda of promoting the whole religious worldview that is the basis for ID. And this assault on evolution is linked up with other questions in how society should be run.

Marc Looy of the creationist group Answers in Genesis has said that evolution being taught in the schools,

"creates a sense of purposelessness and hopelessness, which I think leads to things like pain, murder, and suicide."

Ken Cumming, dean of the Institute for Creation Research's (ICR) graduate school, who believes the earth is only thousands of years old, attacked a PBS special seven-part series on evolution, suggesting that the series had "much in common" with the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks against the United States. He said,

"[W]hile the public now understands from President Bush that 'we're at war' with religious fanatics around the world, they don't have a clue that America is being attacked from within through its public schools by a militant religious movement called Darwinists...."

After the 1999 school shooting in Littleton, Colorado, Tom DeLay, Christian fascist representative from Texas, gave a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives, blaming the incident in part on the teaching of evolution. He said,

"Our school systems teach the children that they are nothing but glorified apes who are evolutionized out of some primordial soup of mud."

The ID movement attacks the very notion of science itself and the philosophical concept of materialism--the very idea that there is a material world that human beings can examine, learn about, and change.

Johnson says in his "The Wedge Strategy" paper,

"The social consequences of materialism have been devastating…we are convinced that in order to defeat materialism, we must cut it off at its source. Design theory promises to reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist world view, and to replace it with a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions."

Dr. Eugenie C. Scott, the Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education, points out:

"Evolution is a concept that applies to all sciences, from astronomy to chemistry to geology to biology to anthropology. Attacking evolution means attacking much of what we know of the natural world, that we have amassed through the application of scientific principles and methods. Second, creationist attacks on evolution are attacks on science itself, because the creationist approach does violence to how we conduct science: science as a way of knowing."

The Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture (another Christian think tank) says that it "seeks nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies."

Teaching Intelligent Design in the schools is part of a whole Christian Fascist movement in the United States that has power and prominence in the government, from the Bush regime on down. And if anyone isn’t clear about what "cultural legacies" the Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture wants to overthrow--take a look at the larger Christian fascist agenda that the intelligent design movement is part of: asserting patriarchy in the home, condemning homosexuality, taking away the right to abortion, banning sex education, enforcing the death penalty with the biblical vengeance of an "eye for an eye," and launching a war because "God told me [Bush] to invade Iraq."


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aclu; crevolist; evolution; theocracy
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To: betty boop

Is it really so difficult for you?


141 posted on 11/02/2005 6:28:13 PM PST by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: betty boop

It is not correct to say that "Evolution is predicated on an hypothesis that change occurs from less complicated to more complicated...."


If the premise is wrong, the logical structure is useless.

I will guess that you, as do many, believe that evolution is supposed to be some kind of ladder. It isn't.


142 posted on 11/02/2005 6:46:31 PM PST by From many - one.
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To: From many - one.
If the premise is wrong, the logical structure is useless. I will guess that you, as do many, believe that evolution is supposed to be some kind of ladder. It isn't.

She knows better. I can only suppose that a misguided sense of solidarity with the Dover perjurers overrides all.

143 posted on 11/02/2005 7:04:27 PM PST by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: js1138
Why do you embarrass yourself posting such juvenile errors?

I predict a shower of accolades from the isoignorami.

144 posted on 11/02/2005 7:10:16 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: js1138
What class of organism is overwhelmingly the most successful by any objective standard -- numerous, adaptive, indestructible?

Beetles? More complex than humans, half again as many appendages.

145 posted on 11/02/2005 7:16:23 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Amos the Prophet
Evolution is predicated on an hypothesis that change occurs from less complicated to more complicated

Good points and good questions. Thanks for thinking.

There is no "fitness," as Darwin called it, without conditions and elements that make biological motion take place toward increasing order, rather than decreasing order.

That independent machines survive in order to be present at the moment of crucial evolution is certainly not hocus pocus.

146 posted on 11/02/2005 7:23:38 PM PST by cornelis (Fecisti nos ad te.)
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To: js1138

Science is older than 150 years, and it's not stuck in 17th century radical empiricism.


147 posted on 11/02/2005 7:27:24 PM PST by cornelis (Fecisti nos ad te.)
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To: occamsrapier
in fact evolution makes no claims about orders of complexity

If it doesn't, sonny, it better get strapping.

148 posted on 11/02/2005 7:35:03 PM PST by cornelis (Fecisti nos ad te.)
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To: occamsrapier

As I said, pearls before swine. You disregard everything I have said by berating me, belittling my statements and generally being completely obnoxious. Nothing you have said by way of criticism is relevent or meaningful.
Your outrageous, irrational and reactionary diatribes have proven that science can only move forward by completely demolishing the priests who safegaurd its hollowed sanctum. I eagerly anticipate the battle.


149 posted on 11/02/2005 8:20:26 PM PST by Louis Foxwell (THIS IS WAR AND I MEAN TO WIN IT.)
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To: Amos the Prophet
Evolution is predicated on an hypothesis that change occurs from less complicated to more complicated.

In actuality, entropy, or disorderedness, must always increase. The problem with your view is that it is limited to half of the system, earth. If the simple leads to the complex, then something else must become more random, and so it does with the highly exergonic reactions of the sun, which transmits this energy to earth. The total system includes the sun, and the total system is that of increasing disorder.

It is through this increasing disorder that one part if the system, the earth, is allowed to even express forms of increasing order - allowing "random change" in the first place. It is survival of the fittest that dictates what stays and what goes during these random "ups and downs" of orderness. This random change occurs all the time and organisms, through self-interest, have evolved extensive systems to counter entropy and continue their own organization at the expense of another. On a smaller scale, biochemically, we breakdown other molecules to ensure ours remain intact, now and in future generations.

ID is an illegitimate excuse to explain the undiscovered (which, in this case, already can be answered); your greatest folly in supporting ID is assuming the undiscovered is indeterminable and running to your "god" to fill in the blanks. Scientists don't want your religious "fillers", we'll discover it eventually if it hasn't been explained already.
150 posted on 11/02/2005 10:52:45 PM PST by Roots (www.GOPatUCR.com - College Republicans at the University of California, Riverside)
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To: balrog666

Something like that, mebbe.

One of the nice things about the practice of science at its best is that it is safer to be wrong there than in any other field I know of. (think about Ehrlch's 606 or Edison's filament).

One of the nastiest things about fundamentalism (any brand) is that it's extremely dangerous to be wrong.
Some so-called Biblical literalists are malevolent, but some seem to be terrified.


151 posted on 11/03/2005 2:16:54 AM PST by From many - one.
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To: Cicero
Nothing like a good Communist rant.

They must read the crevo threads on FR.

152 posted on 11/03/2005 2:23:02 AM PST by Rightwing Conspiratr1 (Lock-n-load!)
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To: jec1ny
I am all for private religious schools.

I am too. I believe athiests have the right to set up their own schools.

153 posted on 11/03/2005 2:30:07 AM PST by Rightwing Conspiratr1 (Lock-n-load!)
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To: js1138
I know you find this hard to believe, but people really are not all the same, and you are quite wrong about this.

Yes I get the distinct impression on all the crevo threads here that the evolutionists believe themselves to be more highly evolved and more intelligent than creationists. In that regard they follow upon the same footsteps as Darwinian theology's ugly children, Nazism and Communism.

154 posted on 11/03/2005 2:43:14 AM PST by Rightwing Conspiratr1 (Lock-n-load!)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; js1138

Can I play?

My candidate would be class insecta. I'm confident about numerous and adaptive, less so about indestructible. Aphids seem awfully squishy, mosquitoes get eaten at an alarming rate by bats and dragonflies.



155 posted on 11/03/2005 2:45:28 AM PST by From many - one.
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To: cornelis

Would you care to define "biological motion"?


156 posted on 11/03/2005 2:47:32 AM PST by From many - one.
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To: cornelis

Sorry, there's no need for evolution to re-define itself to better accomodate lay misconceptions.


157 posted on 11/03/2005 2:49:52 AM PST by From many - one.
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To: From many - one.; Doctor Stochastic
Bacteria is the most numerous form of life in terms of any number of measures: raw numbers of individuals, numbers of species, genetic range between different species, ubiquity in differing environments, and even, perhaps, biomass (the argument here relies on the empirically somewhat shaky speculation that bacteria prosper throughout at least the outer crust of the earth, fed by geothermal rather than solar energy—an argument needed to get their biomass over that of plant life, which otherwise easily dominates due to the weight of the worlds forests).

In terms of numbers, bacteria are by far the most numerous of organisms on Earth. They also make up most of the living biomass on Earth. Unfortunately, I'm unaware of any actual estimate of the number of bacterial cells on Earth. In fact, we don't even have a very good estimate of the number of different species of bacteria. What we do know is that there are over 1000 species of bacteria living inside of us, with 300 species of bacteria in a person's mouth alone, and that we have 10 times as many bacterial cells as blood cells in our bodies.

158 posted on 11/03/2005 4:28:41 AM PST by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: cornelis
Good points and good questions. Thanks for thinking.

I notice a high correlation between criticism of evolution and ignorance of its basic principles. When a critic starts an argument by saying Evolution is predicated on an hypothesis that the moon is made of green cheese, nothing worthwhile is likely to follow.

159 posted on 11/03/2005 4:35:39 AM PST by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: js1138
I don't think they form a class, though. See:

Prokaryotic Phylogeny - Taxonomic Ranking
http://www.bacterialphylogeny.com/taxonomic_ranks.htm

Or were you using "class" more colloquially?
160 posted on 11/03/2005 4:41:38 AM PST by From many - one.
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