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Can biology do better than faith?
New Scientist ^ | November 2, 2005 | Edward O. Wilson

Posted on 11/05/2005 6:34:38 AM PST by billorites

Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published 150 years ago, but evolution by natural selection is still under attack from those wedded to a human-centred or theistic world view. Edward O. Wilson, who was raised a creationist, ponders why this should be, and whether science and religion can ever be reconciled

IT IS surpassingly strange that half of Americans recently polled (2004) not only do not believe in evolution by natural selection but do not believe in evolution at all. Americans are certainly capable of belief, and with rock-like conviction if it originates in religious dogma. In evidence is the 60 per cent that accept the prophecies of the Bible's Book of Revelation as truth, and in yet more evidence is the weight that faith-based positions hold in political life. Most of the religious right opposes the teaching of evolution in public schools, either by an outright ban on the subject or, at the least, by insisting that it be treated as "only a theory" rather than a "fact".

Yet biologists are unanimous in concluding that evolution is a fact. The evidence they and thousands of others have adduced over 150 years falls together in intricate and interlocking detail. The multitudinous examples range from the small changes in DNA sequences observed as they occur in real time to finely graded sequences within larger evolutionary changes in the fossil record. Further, on the basis of comparably strong evidence, natural selection grows ever stronger as the prevailing explanation of evolution.

Many who accept the fact of evolution cannot, however, on religious grounds, accept the operation of blind chance and the absence of divine purpose implicit in natural selection. They support the alternative explanation of intelligent design. The reasoning they offer is not based on evidence but on the lack of it. The formulation of intelligent design is a default argument advanced in support of a non sequitur. It is in essence the following: there are some phenomena that have not yet been explained and that (most importantly) the critics personally cannot imagine being explained; therefore there must be a supernatural designer at work. The designer is seldom specified, but in the canon of intelligent design it is most certainly not Satan and his angels, nor any god or gods conspicuously different from those accepted in the believer's faith.

Flipping the scientific argument upside down, the intelligent designers join the strict creationists (who insist that no evolution ever occurred) by arguing that scientists resist the supernatural theory because it is counter to their own personal secular beliefs. This may have a kernel of truth; everybody suffers from some amount of bias. But in this case bias is easily overcome. The critics forget how the reward system in science works. Any researcher who can prove the existence of intelligent design within the accepted framework of science will make history and achieve eternal fame. They will prove at last that science and religious dogma are compatible. Even a combined Nobel prize and Templeton prize (the latter designed to encourage the search for just such harmony) would fall short as proper recognition. Every scientist would like to accomplish such a epoch-making advance. But no one has even come close, because unfortunately there is no evidence, no theory and no criteria for proof that even marginally might pass for science.

In all of the history of science, only one other disparity of comparable magnitude to evolution has occurred between a scientific event and the impact it has had on the public mind. This was the discovery by Copernicus that Earth, and therefore humanity, is not the centre of the universe, and the universe is not a closed spherical bubble. Copernicus delayed publication of his master work On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres until the year of his death (1543). For his extension of the idea, Bruno was burned at the stake, and for its documentation Galileo was shown the instruments of torture and remained under house arrest for the remainder of his life.

Today we live in a less barbaric age, but an otherwise comparable disjunction between science and religion still roils the public mind. Why does such intense and pervasive resistance to evolution continue 150 years after the publication of On The Origin of Species, and in the teeth of the overwhelming accumulated evidence favouring it? The answer is simply that the Darwinian revolution, even more than the Copernican revolution, challenges the prehistoric and still-regnant self-image of humanity. Evolution by natural selection, to be as concise as possible, has changed everything.

In the more than slightly schizophrenic circumstances of the present era, global culture is divided into three opposing images of the human condition. The dominant one, exemplified by the creation myths of the Abrahamic monotheistic religions - Judaism, Christianity and Islam - sees humanity as a creation of God. He brought us into being and He guides us still as father, judge and friend. We interpret His will from sacred scriptures and the wisdom of ecclesiastical authorities.

The second world view is that of political behaviourism. Still beloved by the now rapidly fading Marxist-Leninist states, it says that the brain is largely a blank state devoid of any inborn inscription beyond reflexes and primitive bodily urges. As a consequence, the mind originates almost wholly as a product of learning, and it is the product of a culture that itself evolves by historical contingency. Because there is no biologically based "human nature", people can be moulded to the best possible political and economic system, namely communism. In practical politics, this belief has been repeatedly tested and, after economic collapses and tens of millions of deaths in a dozen dysfunctional states, is generally deemed a failure.

Both of these world views, God-centred religion and atheistic communism, are opposed by a third and in some ways more radical world view, scientific humanism. Still held by only a tiny minority of the world's population, it considers humanity to be a biological species that evolved over millions of years in a biological world, acquiring unprecedented intelligence yet still guided by complex inherited emotions and biased channels of learning. Human nature exists, and it was self-assembled. Having arisen by evolution during the far simpler conditions in which humanity lived during more than 99 per cent of its existence, it forms the behavioural part of what, in The Descent of Man, Darwin called "the indelible stamp of [our] lowly origin".

So, will science and religion find common ground, or at least agree to divide the fundamentals into mutually exclusive domains? A great many well-meaning scholars believe that such rapprochement is both possible and desirable. A few disagree, and I am one of them. I think Darwin would have held to the same position. The battle line is, as it has ever been, in biology. The inexorable growth of this science continues to widen, not to close, the tectonic gap between science and faithbased religion.

Rapprochement may be neither possible nor desirable. There is something deep in religious belief that divides people and amplifies societal conflict. The toxic mix of religion and tribalism has become so dangerous as to justify taking seriously the alternative view, that humanism based on science is the effective antidote, the light and the way at last placed before us.

Religions continue both to render their special services and to exact their heavy costs. Can scientific humanism do as well or better, at a lower cost? Surely that ranks as one of the great unanswered questions of philosophy. It is the noble yet troubling legacy that Charles Darwin left us.

Edward O. Wilson is a professor of entomology at Harvard University. He has written 20 books and received many awards, including two Pulitzer prizes and the 1976 National Medal of Science. This is an extract of the afterword to From So Simple a Beginning: Darwin's four great books, published next week by W.W. Norton.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biology; faith; homosexualagenda; queerstudies; science
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To: Sir Francis Dashwood

Thanks for bringing me here - just sneaking onto FR for a minute, will be back later tonight!


81 posted on 11/05/2005 2:50:30 PM PST by little jeremiah
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To: b_sharp
[Evolution is a observed fact. Evolutionary Theory is what explains how and why evolution occurs.]Apparently this can not be stated too many times. Perhaps PH should have this on his ping notification.

What do you think of this?

EvolutionPing
A pro-evolution science list with over 310 names.
See the list's explanation at my freeper homepage.
Then FReepmail to be added or dropped.
See what's new in The List-O-Links.
If you're new, please read this: But it's "JUST a THEORY".

82 posted on 11/05/2005 2:50:57 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Reality is a harsh mistress. No rationality, no mercy)
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To: Just mythoughts

"IF your (man's) ancient theory discounts that the Heavenly Father formed fully grown adult human beings, more than two then that is discounting/denying the CREATOR. I will not assert that evolutionists deny a "god", as there are two gods and most don't know the difference. "

So when you said that evolutionists deny the Creator you were just making it up then? Because most don't, no matter what you may choose to think. And there are two Gods? Really?


83 posted on 11/05/2005 4:19:35 PM PST by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: Thatcherite
"What is it with the creationist obsession with homosexuality? Why is homosexuality gratuitously dragged into crevo debates by the creationists so often?"

I don't know that most creationists bring up homosexuality in these debates, but there are definitely a few who seem to have a fixation on gay sex. Very telling if you ask me. If the discussion was about interest rates homosexuality would still be brought in to the discussion with these few.
84 posted on 11/05/2005 4:25:27 PM PST by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: b_sharp
Another version:

EvolutionPing
A pro-evolution science list with over 310 names.
See the list's explanation, then FReepmail to be added or dropped.
Check out what's new in The List-O-Links.
For newbies: But it's "just a theory" and How to argue against a scientific theory.

85 posted on 11/05/2005 4:26:22 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Reality is a harsh mistress. No rationality, no mercy)
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To: PatrickHenry

More than satisfactory


86 posted on 11/05/2005 5:57:40 PM PST by b_sharp (Please visit, read, and understand PatrickHenry's List-O-Links.)
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To: js1138
In the bad old days of East Germany, they build an underground gymnasium and dormitory for their Olympic athletes to live in and train for the Mexico Olympics.

But isn't that going the wrong way?

87 posted on 11/05/2005 6:05:09 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: PatrickHenry
Comes of spending too much time on one's knees.
88 posted on 11/05/2005 6:06:02 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman; Just mythoughts
And there are two Gods? Really?

Only two? Don't forget archangels, angels, seraphim, and cherubim [which are traditionally depicted to suspiciously resemble Eros/Cupid]. Polytheism isn't dead. It doesn't even have the flu.

89 posted on 11/05/2005 6:11:52 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: PatrickHenry

I like the previous one better. Creationists will not take advice on how to argue, but they have no excuse to make claims about the theory/fact state if you direct them to the information.


90 posted on 11/05/2005 6:16:28 PM PST by b_sharp (Please visit, read, and understand PatrickHenry's List-O-Links.)
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To: VadeRetro

And Powers and Thrones and all the myriad of demons who whisper into the ears of the possessed.


91 posted on 11/05/2005 6:26:20 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: billorites
Rapprochement may be neither possible nor desirable.

It's sad to see a scholar display such ignorance like this. The fact is, the ONLY place in the Western where religion and evolution are at war. There are plenty of very religious countries where there is no conflict, and a rapprochment was acheived long ago: Greece, Poland, and Italy come readily to mind.

92 posted on 11/05/2005 6:30:14 PM PST by curiosity (Cronyism is not conservative)
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To: b_sharp
I like the previous one better. Creationists will not take advice on how to argue, but they have no excuse to make claims about the theory/fact state if you direct them to the information.

Well, I've already saved the later one. I can always remove the extra link. As for creationist excuses, have no fear. That commodity is in abundant supply.

93 posted on 11/05/2005 6:30:42 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Reality is a harsh mistress. No rationality, no mercy)
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To: VadeRetro
Biology is better at what biology does.

Well put. This article is garbage, as if often the case when a scientist attempts to delve into philosophy.

94 posted on 11/05/2005 6:31:59 PM PST by curiosity (Cronyism is not conservative)
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To: billorites
Woops. I made a typo. I meant say that the US is the only place in the western world where there is widespread conflict between religious people and evolution.
95 posted on 11/05/2005 6:33:29 PM PST by curiosity (Cronyism is not conservative)
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To: curiosity
I meant say that the US is the only place in the western world where there is widespread conflict between religious people and evolution.

In the Islamic world, there is virtually no science. Hence, no conflict. How wonderful!

96 posted on 11/05/2005 6:35:35 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Reality is a harsh mistress. No rationality, no mercy)
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To: jwalsh07; airborn503
In fact, communism is the exact opposite of tribalism. It seeks to erase all national distinctions.

When scientists attempt to comment on philsophy or the humanities, they spout nonsense. This guy is no exception, though his critique of intelligent design is spot on.

97 posted on 11/05/2005 6:38:27 PM PST by curiosity (Cronyism is not conservative)
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To: PatrickHenry

LOL! Good one.


98 posted on 11/05/2005 6:48:05 PM PST by curiosity (Cronyism is not conservative)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
... all the myriad of demons who whisper into the ears of the possessed.

"There is only one demon."

---- Old priest (Max Von Sydow) to young priest

99 posted on 11/05/2005 6:52:12 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: billorites
Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published 150 years ago, but evolution by natural selection is still under attack from those wedded to a human-centred or theistic world view.

A question from the back of the class. Under "natural selection", just who is doing the selecting?

100 posted on 11/05/2005 6:53:21 PM PST by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all.)
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