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Darwin's Pyrrhic victory
WorldNetDaily ^ | December 28, 2005 | Patrick J. Buchanan

Posted on 12/31/2005 12:41:23 PM PST by streetpreacher

Darwin's Pyrrhic victory
 

Posted: December 28, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern

 

By Patrick J. Buchanan
 


© 2005 Creators Syndicate Inc.

 

"Intelligent Design Derailed," exulted the headline.

"By now, the Christian conservatives who once dominated the school board in Dover, Pa., ought to rue their recklessness in forcing biology classes to hear about 'intelligent design' as an alternative to the theory of evolution," declared the New York Times, which added its own caning to the Christians who dared challenge the revealed truths of Darwinian scripture.

Noting that U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III is a Bush appointee, the Washington Post called his decision "a scathing opinion that criticized local school board members for lying under oath and for their 'breathtaking inanity' in trying to inject religion into science classes."

But is it really game, set, match, Darwin?

Have these fellows forgotten that John Scopes, the teacher in that 1925 "Monkey Trial," lost in court, and was convicted of violating Tennessee law against the teaching of evolution and fined $100? Yet Darwin went on to conquer public education, and American Civil Liberties Union atheists went on to purge Christianity and the Bible from our public schools.

The Dover defeat notwithstanding, the pendulum is clearly swinging back. Darwinism is on the defensive. For, as Tom Bethell, author of "The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science," reminds us, there is no better way to make kids curious about "intelligent design" than to have some Neanderthal forbid its being mentioned in biology class.

In ideological politics, winning by losing is textbook stuff. The Goldwater defeat of 1964, which a triumphant left said would bury the right forever, turned out to be liberalism's last hurrah. Like Marxism and Freudianism, Darwinism appears destined for the graveyard of discredited ideas, no matter the breathtaking inanity of the trial judge. In his opinion, Judge Jones the Third declared:

 

The overwhelming evidence is that [intelligent design] is a religious view, a mere re-labeling of creationism and not a scientific theory ... It is an extension of the fundamentalists' view that one must either accept the literal interpretation of Genesis or else believe in the godless system of evolution.

 

But if intelligent design is creationism or fundamentalism in drag, how does Judge Jones explain how that greatest of ancient thinkers, Aristotle, who died 300 years before Christ, concluded that the physical universe points directly to an unmoved First Mover?

As Aristotle wrote in his "Physics": "Since everything that is in motion must be moved by something, let us suppose there is a thing in motion which was moved by something else in motion, and that by something else, and so on. But this series cannot go on to infinity, so there must be some First Mover."

A man of science and reason, Aristotle used his observations of the physical universe to reach conclusions about how it came about. Where is the evidence he channeled the Torah and creation story of Genesis before positing his theory about a prime mover?

Darwinism is in trouble today for the reason creationism was in trouble 80 years ago. It makes claims that are beyond the capacity of science to prove.

Darwinism claims, for example, that matter evolved from non-matter – i.e., something from nothing – that life evolved from non-life; that, through natural selection, rudimentary forms evolved into more complex forms; and that men are descended from animals or apes.

Now, all of this is unproven theory. And as the Darwinists have never been able to create matter out of non-matter or life out of non-life, or extract from the fossil record the "missing links" between species, what they are asking is that we accept it all on faith. And the response they are getting in the classroom and public forum is: "Prove it," and, "Where is your evidence?"

And while Darwinism suggests our physical universe and its operations happened by chance and accident, intelligent design seems to comport more with what men can observe and reason to.

If, for example, we are all atop the Grand Canyon being told by a tour guide that nature, in the form of a surging river over eons of time, carved out the canyon, we might all nod in agreement. But if we ask how "Kilroy was here!" got painted on the opposite wall of the canyon, and the tour guide says the river did it, we would all howl.

A retreating glacier may have created the mountain, but the glacier didn't build the cabin on top of it. Reason tells us the cabin came about through intelligent design.

Darwinism is headed for the compost pile of discarded ideas because it cannot back up its claims. It must be taken on faith. It contains dogmas men may believe, but cannot stand the burden of proof, the acid of attack or the demands of science.

Where science says, "No miracles allowed," Darwinism asks us to believe in miracles.

 

 




TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: buchanobots; crevolist; darkages; darwininaction; darwinism; evolution; intelligentdesign; jesusfreaks; leftsidebellcurve; reasonovermyth; snakehandlers
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To: blackfarm

ping


161 posted on 01/01/2006 2:13:32 AM PST by Bellflower (A new day is Coming!)
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To: The_Reader_David
This phenomenon (of extending the Darwinian paradigm--also represented by 'evolutionary psychology' with its usually untestable just-so stories) is the reason why the word 'Darwinist' has a useful meaning as distinct from 'evolutionary biologist'.

Hmmmm. I dislike unwarranted extensions of terms beyond their usual meanings; particularly when such extensions are attempts at a fallacious 'refutations' of the original proposition - that species evolve from other species by mutation and natural selection.

By the way, have you any familiarity with the actual scientific literature on evolutionary psychology, as opposed to its presentation in the popular media?

162 posted on 01/01/2006 4:19:07 AM PST by Right Wing Professor (Liberals have hijacked science for long enough. Now it's our turn -- Tom Bethell)
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To: metmom
While the US has no offical religion, Christianity in it's various forms is practised virtually everywhere in this country. Since the majority of the citizenship is Christian there should be no problem if the schools reflect that in the public school system.

And people wonder why Jews tend to vote liberal and Democratic.

163 posted on 01/01/2006 4:22:29 AM PST by Right Wing Professor (Liberals have hijacked science for long enough. Now it's our turn -- Tom Bethell)
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To: Right Wing Professor
And people wonder why Jews tend to vote liberal and Democratic.

Do you have evidence that the ones who do aren't liberal when it comes to nearly all other issues besides religion in schools?

164 posted on 01/01/2006 7:36:59 AM PST by inquest (If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
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To: metmom
Unfortunately, science won't accept any evidence for the supernatural because it claims that it only deals with the natural...

Science has methods for dealing with fraud and mistaken perceptions. As evidenced every time a creationist brings up Piltdown Man and other frauds and hoaxes.

And yes, any line of evidence that stands up to scrutiny is by definition natural, even the spooky stuff in quantum theory.

165 posted on 01/01/2006 7:43:35 AM PST by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: RunningWolf
The 'peer review' of the nation gave Pat Buchanan more votes than any evo galoot on these threads will ever get.

0.4 percent of the national vote, the only time he ever won a party's nomination. Well, if he hadn't been on the Palm Beach County ballot, Gore might have taken Flori-duh.

166 posted on 01/01/2006 7:45:25 AM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: VadeRetro

Don't know. There's always the dems in North Florida that were instructed by their party leaders to vote on every page.


167 posted on 01/01/2006 7:52:39 AM PST by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: Just mythoughts
"That is the apparent intent to make the audacious claim that most evolutionists in this nation are Christians. . . . Evolution is anti-Christ . . . ."

So those who accept the theory of evolution as the best current explanation for biological development and diversification cannot be Christians. Period. And, of course, the consequence of this is (and must be) condemnation and an eternity in hell. One follows the other as a matter of course.

"While I am not the judge of anyone soul status . . . "

Oh, come on. That's precisely what you believe yourself to be. Why are you denying it after explicitly casting judgment? (Could it be because that little bit of blatant hypocrisy is necessary to preserve your own self-image as a Christian?)

"I can plainly read what Christ said and what path He established. Evolution is anti-Christ and some of those practitioners of evolution know darn well what they are selling."

Please provide the pertinent "plain" statement by Jesus that the theory of evolution is both wrong and evil (as it must be if it is "anti-Christ").

168 posted on 01/01/2006 8:19:33 AM PST by atlaw
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To: js1138
Must be very frustrating to have constituents as reliable as a wind-up doll but no smarter.
169 posted on 01/01/2006 8:20:26 AM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: atlaw
"So those who accept the theory of evolution as the best current explanation for biological development and diversification cannot be Christians. Period. And, of course, the consequence of this is (and must be) condemnation and an eternity in hell. One follows the other as a matter of course."

Is this what the Bible declares? Now playing this offended I am being picked upon game is done. Christ was not and cannot ever be considered the result of a hot brewing cesspool called the primordial bowl of soup. That ideology removes from HIM the stature of Him being the only ONE through which life eternal is given.

Now if you had read, you would not need to ask about an eternity in 'hell', as that is a fable of man. What is said about hell is that the "SOUL" is destroyed from within and there is NOT going to be anyone who will not WILLINGLY make that decision.

So please take your unfounded accusation and be happy in your evolutionary world. I do not care what YOU believe, that is a FREE choice YOU get to make.

However, when a Christian nation from its inception turns its collective back upon the Heavenly Father by denying Him access to the public square, and setting themselves up as the supreme wall builders then be prepared to deal with the results.

You teach little children they are descent from animals then expect them to act like animals.
170 posted on 01/01/2006 8:32:10 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: Just mythoughts
And yet you say, "I am not the judge of anyones soul." Remarkable.

"Christ was not and cannot ever be considered the result of a hot brewing cesspool called the primordial bowl of soup."

Well gee, no kidding. The whole point is that Jesus is the Son of God, His birth was miraculous, and His presence and works were outside the realm of natural explanation. That's the miracle side of the Christian equation, and the very thing that mandates faith. How you ever concluded that Christians who accept the theory of evolution also reject the miraculousness of Jesus Christ and his gift to man is beyond me.

Also, just as a side note, the theory of evolution says nothing about either abiogenesis or "primordial bowls of soup," so your statement is a logical non sequitur in more ways than one.

"Is this what the Bible declares?

Well that's odd. That was my question to you. Which you rather patently avoided, I might add.

Since you (not surprisingly) presume yourself a Biblical scholar and seer, and also presume that I must be a non-Christian in need of both a Biblical education and a lecture on the meaning of "hell", why don't you enlighten me with the precise words of Jesus declaring the theory of evolution both wrong and evil? Perhaps you could save the soul of a heathen, instead of condemning it.

171 posted on 01/01/2006 8:59:44 AM PST by atlaw
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To: Coyoteman
I always wanted to see in the index of a textbook: Circular reasoning. See "Reasoning, Circular" Reasoning, Circular. See "Circular reasoning"

LOL!

172 posted on 01/01/2006 9:00:13 AM PST by BagelFace (BOOGABOOGABOOGA!!!)
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To: Fester Chugabrew
Not exactly. It is an example of starting out with an assumption. Also, inductive and deductive reasoning tend to be that way.

Speaking in tongues again, eh? Circular reasoning, tautologies, whatever. The believe gives rise to the assumption that proves the belief. Perhaps I should have said "a classic case of liberalism."

173 posted on 01/01/2006 9:06:03 AM PST by BagelFace (BOOGABOOGABOOGA!!!)
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To: Fester Chugabrew

One of the reasons the ultra-left supports teaching evolution...and ONLY evolution...in the public schools is that it fits their political agenda. A godless world where life just sort of happened to come into existence, and then just "evolved" of its own accord into the many lifeforms we see today, including humans, is similar to Marxism. Life is seen as purposeless, godless, and constantly evolving to a higher state. That higher state, of course, is seen as leftism. It's inherent in their use of the word "progressive" to describe their politics. They're more "evolved" than we conservatives are.

This isn't to say that Darwinian theory doesn't include aspects the left dislikes. The left despises natural selection, which is the aspect of Darwinism that is most likely correct. Natural selection produces what the left hates most: natural inequality.

So if the left has some problems with Darwin over the issue of natural selection, why are they so adamant that ONLY Darwinian theory be taught to the kiddies?

Here's the answer:

Remember the old "Fairness Doctrine"? It required broadcast media to give equal time to opposing views. This generally stifled OVERT political activism by the media. If Walter Cronkite had endorsed the Democrats or some liberal cause OVERTLY, CBS would have had to give equal time to opposing views, something they didn't want to do. But leftism prevailed in the media by being covert. CBS never officially endorsed the Democrats, but they biased their coverage by their choice of which stories to cover (GOP scandal gets big coverage, Dem scandal gets none) or by the tilt of the news story (if feminists object to a textbook then it's a story about fighting evil "sexism", while if parents dislike a textbook it's a story about "censorship").

By following this template, the liberal media pushed the leftist agenda for decades. They're still doing it, as we see with their grandiose coverage of the so-called Plame CIA leak and their non-coverage of Sandy Berger's archives theft. But with the Fairness Doctrine now gone, conservatives have been able to fight back with alternative media (talk radio, FOX News), and we've also been helped by the internet.

The entire public school system is geared toward denying that natural selection occurs. It's a system based on equality, not excellence. It's also militantly secularist. As occurred with the Fairness Doctrine, the entire public education system is designed to further the left's agenda. The left knows full well that the implications of Darwinism which they dislike will be downplayed or even denied. Can you imagine what would happen to a high school science teacher who delved heavily into the ramifications of natural selection, in terms of equality and inequality? In terms of individual, group, or gender differences? He'd be fired.

So the left knows that their problems with Darwinian theory (natural selection) will be downplayed and overriden by every other aspect of public school education. The Darwinian aspects they like (randomness, godlessness, "progress") will be reinforced by the rest of the school curriculum.

Like the Fairness Doctrine, the current evolution regime in the schools doesn't allow for overtness. It simply establishes a template in which leftism & secularism are taken as a given while conservatism & the existence of God are "outside the mainstream". It's a system they're quite happy with.


174 posted on 01/01/2006 9:11:37 AM PST by puroresu (Conservatism is an observation; Liberalism is an ideology)
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To: shuckmaster
Do you (and Pat) believe that the old testament didn't exist before Christianity?

Hardly, but Aristotle was a pagan, not a Jew.

175 posted on 01/01/2006 9:21:35 AM PST by SeƱor Zorro ("The ability to speak does not make you intelligent"--Qui-Gon Jinn)
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To: inquest

You obviously misread what I wrote and might want to go read it again.


176 posted on 01/01/2006 9:23:45 AM PST by SuzyQue
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To: puroresu
Wow. I had no idea that biologists are required to be ultra-leftists and Marxists. And I had no idea they were involved in such an elaborate conspiracy. Is there some secret class they take in the basement of the biology building to get themselves indoctrinated?

"A godless world where life just sort of happened to come into existence, and then just "evolved" of its own accord into the many lifeforms we see today . . ."

"Life is seen as purposeless, godless . . ."

"The Darwinian aspects they like (randomness, godlessness . . ."

So if one accepts the theory of evolution (which, btw, says nothing about how life commenced) as the best current, scientific explanation for biological development and diversification, one necessarily rejects God?

177 posted on 01/01/2006 9:32:45 AM PST by atlaw
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To: Right Wing Professor
Regarding familiarity with evolutionary psychology beyond pop presentations: only what shows up in my wife's American Psychologists.

You will notice I had the qualifying adverb 'usually'. I have been impressed by the occasional (usually very clever) proposals for testable predictions coming from evo-psych quarters that I've seen.

178 posted on 01/01/2006 10:14:51 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: SuzyQue
You obviously misread what I wrote

You mean you didn't write that evolution was not a tool to get atheism into schools?

It's interesting you should complain about me misreading you when you clearly did the same thing in reverse back at #124 (most likely deliberately).

179 posted on 01/01/2006 10:37:34 AM PST by inquest (If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
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To: metmom
science won't accept any evidence for the supernatural because it claims that it only deals with the natural, therefore; anything that is discovered is automatically presumed to be natural in origin. So science as defined by scientists today precludes any chance of evidence for a creator.

Your definition for "supernatural" is correct. But you are assuming that if there was a "creator", then he/she/it was supernatural.

Whatever your preferred definition of "God" is, if there were evidence for Him, then it would bring that God into the natural world.

That some faithful people claim that God desires to remain unmeasured, and unseen, in the realm of the supernatural is merely evidence in my eyes that they know God does not exist and do not wish to face that fact. I believe they live in a fantasy world, and they like it that way.

It takes a lot of guts to admit that when one dies, that's it, the lights go out. I wish I could lie to myself and believe that I would spend eternity in heaven. It would make life a bunch nicer. But I find it impossible to lie to myself.

180 posted on 01/01/2006 10:40:30 AM PST by narby (Hillary! The Wicked Witch of the Left)
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