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The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism
First Things ^ | Phillip E. Johnson

Posted on 12/22/2001 7:04:34 PM PST by Exnihilo

The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism


Phillip E. Johnson


Copyright (c) 1997 First Things 77 (November 1997): 22-25.

In a retrospective essay on Carl Sagan in the January 9, 1997 New York Review of Books, Harvard Genetics Professor Richard Lewontin tells how he first met Sagan at a public debate in Arkansas in 1964. The two young scientists had been coaxed by senior colleagues to go to Little Rock to debate the affirmative side of the question: "RESOLVED, that the theory of evolution is as proved as is the fact that the earth goes around the sun." Their main opponent was a biology professor from a fundamentalist college, with a Ph.D. from the University of Texas in Zoology. Lewontin reports no details from the debate, except to say that "despite our absolutely compelling arguments, the audience unaccountably voted for the opposition."

Of course, Lewontin and Sagan attributed the vote to the audience’s prejudice in favor of creationism. The resolution was framed in such a way, however, that the affirmative side should have lost even if the jury had been composed of Ivy League philosophy professors. How could the theory of evolution even conceivably be "proved" to the same degree as "the fact that the earth goes around the sun"? The latter is an observable feature of present-day reality, whereas the former deals primarily with non-repeatable events of the very distant past. The appropriate comparison would be between the theory of evolution and the accepted theory of the origin of the solar system.

If "evolution" referred only to currently observable phenomena like domestic animal breeding or finch-beak variation, then winning the debate should have been no problem for Lewontin and Sagan even with a fundamentalist jury. The statement "We breed a great variety of dogs," which rests on direct observation, is much easier to prove than the statement that the earth goes around the sun, which requires sophisticated reasoning. Not even the strictest biblical literalists deny the bred varieties of dogs, the variation of finch beaks, and similar instances within types. The more controversial claims of large-scale evolution are what arouse skepticism. Scientists may think they have good reasons for believing that living organisms evolved naturally from nonliving chemicals, or that complex organs evolved by the accumulation of micromutations through natural selection, but having reasons is not the same as having proof. I have seen people, previously inclined to believe whatever "science says," become skeptical when they realize that the scientists actually do seem to think that variations in finch beaks or peppered moths, or the mere existence of fossils, proves all the vast claims of "evolution." It is as though the scientists, so confident in their answers, simply do not understand the question.

Carl Sagan described the theory of evolution in his final book as the doctrine that "human beings (and all the other species) have slowly evolved by natural processes from a succession of more ancient beings with no divine intervention needed along the way." It is the alleged absence of divine intervention throughout the history of life—the strict materialism of the orthodox theory—that explains why a great many people, only some of whom are biblical fundamentalists, think that Darwinian evolution (beyond the micro level) is basically materialistic philosophy disguised as scientific fact. Sagan himself worried about opinion polls showing that only about 10 percent of Americans believe in a strictly materialistic evolutionary process, and, as Lewontin’s anecdote concedes, some of the doubters have advanced degrees in the relevant sciences. Dissent as widespread as that must rest on something less easily remedied than mere ignorance of facts.

Lewontin eventually parted company with Sagan over how to explain why the theory of evolution seems so obviously true to mainstream scientists and so doubtful to much of the public. Sagan attributed the persistence of unbelief to ignorance and hucksterism and set out to cure the problem with popular books, magazine articles, and television programs promoting the virtues of mainstream science over its fringe rivals. Lewontin, a Marxist whose philosophical sophistication exceeds that of Sagan by several orders of magnitude, came to see the issue as essentially one of basic intellectual commitment rather than factual knowledge.

The reason for opposition to scientific accounts of our origins, according to Lewontin, is not that people are ignorant of facts, but that they have not learned to think from the right starting point. In his words, "The primary problem is not to provide the public with the knowledge of how far it is to the nearest star and what genes are made of. . . . Rather, the problem is to get them to reject irrational and supernatural explanations of the world, the demons that exist only in their imaginations, and to accept a social and intellectual apparatus, Science, as the only begetter of truth." What the public needs to learn is that, like it or not, "We exist as material beings in a material world, all of whose phenomena are the consequences of material relations among material entities." In a word, the public needs to accept materialism, which means that they must put God (whom Lewontin calls the "Supreme Extraterrestrial") in the trash can of history where such myths belong.

Although Lewontin wants the public to accept science as the only source of truth, he freely admits that mainstream science itself is not free of the hokum that Sagan so often found in fringe science. As examples he cites three influential scientists who are particularly successful at writing for the public: E. O. Wilson, Richard Dawkins, and Lewis Thomas,

each of whom has put unsubstantiated assertions or counterfactual claims at the very center of the stories they have retailed in the market. Wilson’s Sociobiology and On Human Nature rest on the surface of a quaking marsh of unsupported claims about the genetic determination of everything from altruism to xenophobia. Dawkins’ vulgarizations of Darwinism speak of nothing in evolution but an inexorable ascendancy of genes that are selectively superior, while the entire body of technical advance in experimental and theoretical evolutionary genetics of the last fifty years has moved in the direction of emphasizing nonselective forces in evolution. Thomas, in various essays, propagandized for the success of modern scientific medicine in eliminating death from disease, while the unchallenged statistical compilations on mortality show that in Europe and North America infectious diseases . . . had ceased to be major causes of mortality by the early decades of the twentieth century.

Lewontin laments that even scientists frequently cannot judge the reliability of scientific claims outside their fields of speciality, and have to take the word of recognized authorities on faith. "Who am I to believe about quantum physics if not Steven Weinberg, or about the solar system if not Carl Sagan? What worries me is that they may believe what Dawkins and Wilson tell them about evolution."

One major living scientific popularizer whom Lewontin does not trash is his Harvard colleague and political ally Stephen Jay Gould. Just to fill out the picture, however, it seems that admirers of Dawkins have as low an opinion of Gould as Lewontin has of Dawkins or Wilson. According to a 1994 essay in the New York Review of Books by John Maynard Smith, the dean of British neo-Darwinists, "the evolutionary biologists with whom I have discussed his [Gould’s] work tend to see him as a man whose ideas are so confused as to be hardly worth bothering with, but as one who should not be publicly criticized because he is at least on our side against the creationists. All this would not matter, were it not that he is giving non biologists a largely false picture of the state of evolutionary theory." Lewontin fears that non-biologists will fail to recognize that Dawkins is peddling pseudoscience; Maynard Smith fears exactly the same of Gould.

If eminent experts say that evolution according to Gould is too confused to be worth bothering about, and others equally eminent say that evolution according to Dawkins rests on unsubstantiated assertions and counterfactual claims, the public can hardly be blamed for suspecting that grand-scale evolution may rest on something less impressive than rock-solid, unimpeachable fact. Lewontin confirms this suspicion by explaining why "we" (i.e., the kind of people who read the New York Review) reject out of hand the view of those who think they see the hand of the Creator in the material world:

We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counterintuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door. The eminent Kant scholar Lewis Beck used to say that anyone who could believe in God could believe in anything. To appeal to an omnipotent deity is to allow that at any moment the regularities of nature may be ruptured, that miracles may happen.

That paragraph is the most insightful statement of what is at issue in the creation/evolution controversy that I have ever read from a senior figure in the scientific establishment. It explains neatly how the theory of evolution can seem so certain to scientific insiders, and so shaky to the outsiders. For scientific materialists the materialism comes first; the science comes thereafter. We might more accurately term them "materialists employing science." And if materialism is true, then some materialistic theory of evolution has to be true simply as a matter of logical deduction, regardless of the evidence. That theory will necessarily be at least roughly like neo-Darwinism, in that it will have to involve some combination of random changes and law-like processes capable of producing complicated organisms that (in Dawkins’ words) "give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose."

The prior commitment explains why evolutionary scientists are not disturbed when they learn that the fossil record does not provide examples of gradual macroevolutionary transformation, despite decades of determined effort by paleontologists to confirm neo-Darwinian presuppositions. That is also why biological chemists like Stanley Miller continue in confidence even when geochemists tell them that the early earth did not have the oxygen-free atmosphere essential for producing the chemicals required by the theory of the origin of life in a prebiotic soup. They reason that there had to be some source (comets?) capable of providing the needed molecules, because otherwise life would not have evolved. When evidence showed that the period available on the early earth for the evolution of life was extremely brief in comparison to the time previously posited for chemical evolution scenarios, Carl Sagan calmly concluded that the chemical evolution of life must be easier than we had supposed, because it happened so rapidly on the early earth.

That is also why neo-Darwinists like Richard Dawkins are not troubled by the Cambrian Explosion, where all the invertebrate animal groups appear suddenly and without identifiable ancestors. Whatever the fossil record may suggest, those Cambrian animals had to evolve by accepted neo-Darwinian means, which is to say by material processes requiring no intelligent guidance or supernatural input. Materialist philosophy demands no less. That is also why Niles Eldredge, surveying the absence of evidence for macroevolutionary transformations in the rich marine invertebrate fossil record, can observe that "evolution always seems to happen somewhere else," and then describe himself on the very next page as a "knee-jerk neo-Darwinist." Finally, that is why Darwinists do not take critics of materialist evolution seriously, but speculate instead about "hidden agendas" and resort immediately to ridicule. In their minds, to question materialism is to question reality. All these specific points are illustrations of what it means to say that "we" have an a priori commitment to materialism.

The scientific leadership cannot afford to disclose that commitment frankly to the public. Imagine what chance the affirmative side would have if the question for public debate were rephrased candidly as "RESOLVED, that everyone should adopt an a priori commitment to materialism." Everyone would see what many now sense dimly: that a methodological premise useful for limited purposes has been expanded to form a metaphysical absolute. Of course people who define science as the search for materialistic explanations will find it useful to assume that such explanations always exist. To suppose that a philosophical preference can validate a cherished scientific theory is to define "science" as a way of supporting prejudice. Yet that is exactly what the Darwinists seem to be doing, when their evidence is evaluated by critics who are willing to question materialism.

One of those critics, bearing impeccable scientific credentials, is Michael Behe, who argues that complex molecular systems (such as bacterial and protozoan flagella, immune systems, blood clotting, and cellular transport) are "irreducibly complex." This means that the systems incorporate elements that interact with each other in such complex ways that it is impossible to describe detailed, testable Darwinian mechanisms for their evolution. (My review of Behe’s Darwin’s Black Box appeared in FT, October 1996.) Never mind for now whether you think that Behe’s argument can prevail over sustained opposition from the materialists. The primary dispute is not over who is going to win, but about whether the argument can even get started. If we know a priori that materialism is true, then contrary evidence properly belongs under the rug, where it has always duly been swept.

For Lewontin, the public’s determined resistance to scientific materialism constitutes "a deep problem in democratic self-governance." Quoting Jesus’ words from the Gospel of John, he thinks that "the truth that makes us free" is not an accumulation of knowledge, but a metaphysical understanding (i.e., materialism) that sets us free from belief in supernatural entities like God. How is the scientific elite to persuade or bamboozle the public to accept the crucial starting point? Lewontin turns for guidance to the most prestigious of all opponents of democracy, Plato. In his dialogue the Gorgias, Plato reports a debate between the rationalist Socrates and three sophists or teachers of rhetoric. The debaters all agree that the public is incompetent to make reasoned decisions on justice and public policy. The question in dispute is whether the effective decision should be made by experts (Socrates) or by the manipulators of words (the sophists).

In familiar contemporary terms, the question might be stated as whether a court should appoint a panel of impartial authorities to decide whether the defendant’s product caused the plaintiff’s cancer, or whether the jury should be swayed by rival trial lawyers each touting their own experts. Much turns on whether we believe that the authorities are truly impartial, or whether they have interests of their own. When the National Academy of Sciences appoints a committee to advise the public on evolution, it consists of persons picked in part for their scientific outlook, which is to say their a priori acceptance of materialism. Members of such a panel know a lot of facts in their specific areas of research and have a lot to lose if the "fact of evolution" is exposed as a philosophical assumption. Should skeptics accept such persons as impartial fact-finders? Lewontin himself knows too much about cognitive elites to say anything so naive, and so in the end he gives up and concludes that "we" do not know how to get the public to the right starting point.

Lewontin is brilliantly insightful, but too crankily honest to be as good a manipulator as his Harvard colleague Stephen Jay Gould. Gould displays both his talent and his unscrupulousness in an essay in the March 1997 issue of Natural History, entitled "Nonoverlapping Magisteria" and subtitled "Science and religion are not in conflict, for their teachings occupy distinctly different domains." With a subtitle like that, you can be sure that Gould is out to reassure the public that evolution leads to no alarming conclusions. True to form, Gould insists that the only dissenters from evolution are "Protestant fundamentalists who believe that every word of the Bible must be literally true." Gould also insists that evolution (he never defines the word) is "both true and entirely compatible with Christian belief." Gould is familiar with nonliteralist opposition to evolutionary naturalism, but he blandly denies that any such phenomenon exists. He even quotes a letter written to the New York Times in answer to an op-ed essay by Michael Behe, without revealing the context. You can do things like that when you know that the media won’t call you to account.

The centerpiece of Gould’s essay is an analysis of the complete text of Pope John Paul’s statement of October 22, 1996 to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences endorsing evolution as "more than a hypothesis." He fails to quote the Pope’s crucial qualification that "theories of evolution which, in accordance with the philosophies inspiring them, consider the spirit as emerging from the forces of living matter or as a mere epiphenomenon of this matter, are incompatible with the truth about man." Of course, a theory based on materialism assumes by definition that there is no "spirit" active in this world that is independent of matter. Gould knows this perfectly well, and he also knows, just as Richard Lewontin does, that the evidence doesn’t support the claims for the creative power of natural selection made by writers such as Richard Dawkins. That is why the philosophy that really supports the theory has to be protected from critical scrutiny.

Gould’s essay is a tissue of half-truths aimed at putting the religious people to sleep, or luring them into a "dialogue" on terms set by the materialists. Thus Gould graciously allows religion to participate in discussions of morality or the meaning of life, because science does not claim authority over such questions of value, and because "Religion is too important to too many people for any dismissal or denigration of the comfort still sought by many folks from theology." Gould insists, however, that all such discussion must cede to science the power to determine the facts, and one of the facts is an evolutionary process that is every bit as materialistic and purposeless for Gould as it is for Lewontin or Dawkins. If religion wants to accept a dialogue on those terms, that’s fine with Gould—but don’t let those religious people think they get to make an independent judgment about the evidence that supposedly supports the "facts." And if the religious people are gullible enough to accept materialism as one of the facts, they won’t be capable of causing much trouble.

The debate about creation and evolution is not deadlocked. Propagandists like Gould try to give the impression that nothing has changed, but essays like Lewontin’s and books like Behe’s demonstrate that honest thinkers on both sides are near agreement on a redefinition of the conflict. Biblical literalism is not the issue. The issue is whether materialism and rationality are the same thing. Darwinism is based on an a priori commitment to materialism, not on a philosophically neutral assessment of the evidence. Separate the philosophy from the science, and the proud tower collapses. When the public understands this clearly, Lewontin’s Darwinism will start to move out of the science curriculum and into the department of intellectual history, where it can gather dust on the shelf next to Lewontin’s Marxism.


Phillip E. Johnson is Professor of Law at the University of California at Berkeley and author, most recently, of Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds (InterVarsity Press).


TOPICS: Editorial; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: crevolist
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Comment #61 Removed by Moderator

To: lexcorp
Wolf -> German Shepard -> yappy little lapdog -> St. Bernard. No genetic engineering, or even especially unntural breeding required, yet substantial morphological change, plus a change in species (wolf to dog). So far no speciation within dog, which is hardly surprising considering that inter-breed breedign is done all the time.

Micro Evolution. Aleration in existing structures to variations of those structures within the bounds of the pre-existing information for those structures. And this proves Macro Evolution...how? This hardly proves that humans started out as pond bacteria.

-The Hajman-
62 posted on 12/22/2001 9:26:30 PM PST by Hajman
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To: jlogajan
"One can reasonably deduce certain interpretations and STICK to that in the face of rather ridiculous claims to the contrary."

Not at the expense of sweeping inconsistencies under the rug, one can't. We do not know the answer to this question. As much as I do not like the creationist's desire to tell me what the creator has in mind, I also do not like the materialist's desire to explain away human consciousness (soul?) using his latest Lego set.
63 posted on 12/22/2001 9:26:33 PM PST by gjenkins
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To: jlogajan
You'll always demand absolute proof from science, and accept without any proof anything in the Bible.

If you could tell so much about me from the little you've read on FR, it's no wonder you think you can see "massive amounts of evidence" for whatever you have decided must be true. Let's examine some more evidence...

I have never seen what I would call "absolute proof" for conservation of momentum, but I believe in it. Nor have I ever seen "absolute proof" for the thermonuclear source of sunlight, but I don't dispute it--even with the missing neutrinos. In fact, we know that it is impossible to prove that any humanly comprehensible axiom system for arithmetic is logically consistent, but I believe that Peano's axioms are consistent. I even believe--since it also cannot be proven--that the Zermelo-Fraenkel axiomatization of Set Theory is consistent. I believe in the Axiom of Choice, even though it requires me to accept the Banach-Tarski paradox. On the other hand, since I believe in the consistency of ZF, I must also believe in the consistency of ZF plus the Axiom of Constructibility. I do believe in its consistency, but I don't believe it is true. How about you?

But as a good evolutionist, you are free to ignore any and all contradictory evidence and continue to spout your lies about me.

I'm quite happy to go by best available evidence. Religion just doesn't happen to measure up in that criteria.

But are you, or are you not, evaluating all the evidence (good, better, best) on the basis of an a priori assumption of materialism as Lewontin says? If so, it would only be expected that (theistic) religion would not fare well by your criteria.

More remarkable is your reluctance to admit your own religion (atheistic? materialistic?), and its unavoidable effect on your interpretation of evidence.

64 posted on 12/22/2001 9:27:51 PM PST by Kyrie
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To: Exnihilo
Lewontin and Sagan attributed the vote to the audience’s prejudice in favor of creationism

If I had been there I would have voted against whatever Sagan was defending. Sagan had a small view of mankind's potential. It's no way to live.

65 posted on 12/22/2001 9:28:29 PM PST by RightWhale
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To: lexcorp
I'll keep this in mind when I next hear someone babbling on about "breeds" of dogs such as the legendary Mastiff and the mythical Chihuahua. Such morphological changes, being completely undemonstrated, must therefore be a lie by Big Darwinism.

But of course dog breeding is unnatural selection. It is the product of the deliberate, intelligent design of dog breeders. It is of no assistance to Darwinism at all.

66 posted on 12/22/2001 9:31:31 PM PST by denydenydeny
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Comment #67 Removed by Moderator

Comment #68 Removed by Moderator

To: RightWhale
The evolution versus creation debate is so meaningless--> you are both right. Nothing could happen if evolution did not occur. On the other hand, evolutionary processes imply nothing about the existence or absence of God. My own view is that evolution IS God, the thoughtful changing of the universe to higher forms is God's thought process on display. How hard is this to figure out?
69 posted on 12/22/2001 9:36:34 PM PST by FastCoyote
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To: lexcorp
The point is that change can be spontaneous, and is obvious to see. the evolution of the eye, while remarkable, is not miraculous. A flatworms photosensitive eyespots are neither eyes nor entirely new structures. But they are a link.

They also already exist. Just about anything can be taken as an intermediate of two other things. It's not conclusive, though it makes for an interesting theory. Can an organism with no information or structure for such be observed to gain such through observable time? If no, then it remains a theory.

-The Hajman-
70 posted on 12/22/2001 9:39:44 PM PST by Hajman
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To: Exnihilo
Thanks for blasting some nastiness into smithereens. And you did it with style AND substance. You're right - Gould made up the new hoax - p.e. - because he saw how the old hoax was being exposed. It's great for you and the other truth-tellers to blast this hoax - 'cause there are "young skulls full of mush" who read these threads, and might be influenced by "psuedoscience spoken fluently." Didn't take you long, either. FReegards
71 posted on 12/22/2001 9:40:36 PM PST by 185JHP
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Comment #72 Removed by Moderator

To: FastCoyote
How hard is this to figure out?

What is hard to figure out is why the C/E debate is so important to some. I figure the universe was created and we are trying to figure out the way it works. Assuming evolution as one of the mechanisms helps organize things such as naming the animals. You see an animal and say that is an annelid, or that one is an arthropod. It's our job. Just doing our job.

73 posted on 12/22/2001 9:46:28 PM PST by RightWhale
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Comment #74 Removed by Moderator

To: lexcorp
It also makes for the only theory to fit the facts. nothing else out there coems [sic] close.

Doesn't do much good when the theory is lacking. Though, I don't mind if they admit it's theory. I can work with that. However, it's when they claim it proves Macro Evolution as fact that it goes beyond objectivity.

Yes. Random mutations have been observed to create entirely new structures... most of whom are not only essentially useless, but are "contra-survival." But when you are talking time spans of billions of years, even a one in a billion success is nonetheless a new structure. A photosensitive cell only needs to develop once in order for photosensitive cells to exist.

Then they're not observed. They're infered. Observed being the ability to see it with our own eyes (or instruments) as it's happening.

-The Hajman-
75 posted on 12/22/2001 9:55:00 PM PST by Hajman
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Comment #76 Removed by Moderator

To: jlogajan
Yes, even a lawyer can explain why evolution is wrong, that is why we know that any thinking person can refute the lies of an evolutionist.
77 posted on 12/22/2001 10:33:13 PM PST by RaceBannon
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To: RaceBannon
even a lawyer can explain why evolution is wrong

Only a lawyer would try to claim evolution is wrong. Lawyers get paid to say the darndest things.

78 posted on 12/22/2001 10:40:09 PM PST by jlogajan
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Comment #79 Removed by Moderator

To: Exnihilo
you can't explain faith with science... enough said.
80 posted on 12/22/2001 11:02:39 PM PST by mugwump62
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