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The ayatollah of atheism and Darwin’s altars
Catholic Educators Resource Center ^ | 5/27/08 | PAUL JOHNSON

Posted on 05/27/2006 3:14:09 PM PDT by Forgiven_Sinner

How long will Darwin continue to repose on his high but perilous pedestal? I am beginning to wonder.

Few people doubt the principles of evolution. The question at issue is: are all evolutionary advances achieved exclusively by the process of natural selection? That is the position of the Darwinian fundamentalists, and they cling to their absolutist position with all the unyielding certitude with which Southern Baptists assert the literal truth of the Book of Genesis, or Wahabi Muslims proclaim the need for a universal jihad against ‘the Great Satan’. At a revivalist meeting of Darwinians two or three years ago, I heard the chairman, the fiction-writer Ian McEwan, call out, ‘Yes, we do think God is an old man in the sky with a beard, and his name is Charles Darwin.’ I doubt if there is a historical precedent for this investment of so much intellectual and emotional capital, by so many well-educated and apparently rational people, in the work of a single scientist. And to anyone who has studied the history of science and noted the chances of any substantial body of teaching — based upon a particular hypothesis or set of observations — surviving the erosion of time and new research intact, it is inevitable that Darwinism, at least in its fundamentalist form, will come crashing down. The only question is: when?

The likelihood that Darwin’s eventual debacle will be sensational and brutal is increased by the arrogance of his acolytes, by their insistence on the unchallengeable truth of the theory of natural selection —which to them is not a hypothesis but a demonstrated fact, and its critics mere flat-earthers — and by their success in occupying the commanding heights in the university science departments and the scientific journals, denying a hearing to anyone who disagrees with them. I detect a ground-swell of discontent at this intellectual totalitarianism, so unscientific by its very nature. It is wrong that any debate, especially one on so momentous a subject as the origin of species, and the human race above all, should be arbitrarily declared to be closed, and the current orthodoxy set in granite for all time. Such a position is not tenable, and the evidence that it is crumbling is growing.

It is wrong that any debate, especially one on so momentous a subject as the origin of species, and the human race above all, should be arbitrarily declared to be closed, and the current orthodoxy set in granite for all time. Such a position is not tenable, and the evidence that it is crumbling is growing.

Much of the blame lies with Richard Dawkins, head of the Darwinian fundamentalists in this country, who has (it seems) indissolubly linked Darwin to the more extreme forms of atheism, and projected on to our senses a dismal world in which life has no purpose or meaning and a human being has no more significance than a piece of rock, being subject to the same blind processes of pitiless, unfeeling, unthinking nature. The sheer moral, emotional and intellectual emptiness of the universe as seen by the Darwinian bigots is enough to make mere humans (as opposed to scientific high priests), and especially young ones, despair, and wonder what is the point of going on with existence in a world which is hard enough to endure even without the Darwinian nightmare. I was intrigued to note, earlier this summer, in the pages of the Guardian, an indignant protest by one of Dawkins’s fellow atheists that he was bringing atheism into disrepute by his extremism, by the tendentious emotionalism of his language and by his abuse of religious belief. But he has his passionate defenders too, and occupies an overwhelmingly strong position in Oxford, not a university famous for its contribution to science to be sure, but one where personalities notorious for extreme opinions of a quasi-theological kind are much applauded, even canonised, as witness Pusey, Keble, Newman and Jowett. To ferocious undergraduate iconoclasts he is the ayatollah of atheism, and in consequence much wined and dined in smart London society. Recently he was chosen by the readers of Prospect, a monthly journal with some pretensions, as Britain’s leading ‘public intellectual’. It is true that such write-ins carry no authority and often strike a ludicrous note. A similar poll conducted by the BBC produced Karl Marx as ‘the greatest philosopher of all time’. All the same, there is no denying Dawkins’s celebrity: he is up there among the football managers and pop singers, alongside Posh and ‘Bob’ and the Swedish Casanova.

Meanwhile, however, opponents are busy. The Times Literary Supplement, in its issue of 29 July, carried a seven-column article by the equally celebrated philosopher Jerry Fodor of Rutgers University, which relentlessly demolished the concept of Evolutionary Psychology, one of the pillars of the imposing mansion of orthodoxy occupied by the Darwinians. Fodor is particularly scathing about Dawkins and his leading American lieutenant, Professor Steven Pinker, and the theory that, in the process of natural selection, genes selfishly spread themselves. Fodor’s discourse on motivation (or lack of it) in the evolutionary process is well worth reading, being a sensible and sensitive argument as opposed to the dogmatic assertions of the Darwinian cultists. It is, I think, a sign of the times that they are now being attacked from within the establishment.

At the same time, opponents of the dogma that natural selection is the sole force in evolution, who cannot get a hearing within that establishment, are not remaining silent. It is characteristic of the new debate that heterodoxy is finding other outlets. I recommend, for instance, a book by the learned anatomist Dr Antony Latham, The Naked Emperor: Darwinism Exposed, just out from Janus Publishing (105-107 Gloucester Place, London W1U 6BY). Much of the book is devoted to a chapter-by-chapter exposure of the errors and illogicalities of Dawkins’s best-known book, The Blind Watchmaker, and its highly emotional presentation of the case against design (and God). The indictment of Dawkins’s scientific scholarship is powerful, masterly and (I would say) unanswerable.

Another book which has come my way this summer, though it was published by Columbia in New York in 2003, is by Richard Bird of Northumbria University. It is called Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought. This is a formidable piece of work, showing that the way in which living things appear and evolve is altogether more complex and sophisticated than the reliance on natural selection presupposes. One of the points he raises, which to me as a historian is crucial, is the impossibility of fitting natural selection as the normative form of evolution into the time frame of the earth as an environment for life. Bird shows that Dawkins’s attempts to answer this objection are disingenuous and futile. One of the virtues of this book (as, indeed, of Dr Latham’s) is that it has told me a lot about evolution and design that I did not know, and which orthodox dogma conceals. So there is a virtue in the origins debate — the spread of knowledge — and I hope it continues until the altars of Dagon come crashing down.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Paul Johnson. "The ayatollah of atheism and Darwin’s altars." The Spectator (August 27, 2005).

This article is from Paul Johnson's "And another thing" column for The Spectator and is reprinted with permission of the author.

THE AUTHOR

Paul Johnson, celebrated journalist and historian, is the author most recently of George Washington: The Founding Father. Among his other widely acclaimed books are A History of the American People, Modern Times, A History of the Jews, Intellectuals, Art: A New History, and The Quest for God: Personal Pilgrimage. He also produces brief surveys that slip into the pocket, such as his popular The Renaissance and Napoleon. He is a frequent contributor to the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Spectator, and the Daily Telegraph. He lectures all over the world and lives in Notting Hill (London) and Somerset.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: bewareoffrluddites; catholicism; churchofdarwin; dawkins; evolution; goddooditamen; id; idjunkscience; intelligentdesign; johnson; pauljohnson; pavlovian; richarddawkins
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Comment #101 Removed by Moderator

To: Celtjew Libertarian; DesScorp
However, give the bad phrasing in the first survey and the bias in the latter, I suspect that slight more than half of all scientists in the U.S. believe in some sort of deity.

For the reasons you give, and from personal experience with many scientists over several decades, I agree with your conclusions.

102 posted on 05/28/2006 1:07:17 AM PDT by Ichneumon (Ignorance is curable, but the afflicted has to want to be cured.)
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To: DesScorp
Most Scientists are Atheists...but rather than truly live without a deity-belief system, they've substituted one god for another.

And what "god" would that be? Be specific. Helpful tip: Accepting the validity of something, or adopting a particular methodology, does not make it a "god" or "deity".

I know that to some people to whom religion and/or a deity is a big thing in their lives, it seems inconceivable that other people can find a way to get through the day without having some kind of "substitute religion", but that's not the case.

103 posted on 05/28/2006 1:14:44 AM PDT by Ichneumon (Ignorance is curable, but the afflicted has to want to be cured.)
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To: Celtjew Libertarian; thomaswest; AbsoluteAwesome
[[everyone who accepts that natural selection alone drives the evolutionary is a "Darwinian fundamentalist"]]

[By that definition, there's no such thing as a "Darwinian fundamentalist." I don't know of a single evolutionary biologist who denies that sexual selection and genetic drift play important roles.]

Poor analogy. Christians believe in the Torah, even if there is no mention of Christ in them.

It wasn't an analogy. It was a direct refutation to the definition AbsoluteAwesome gave.

Hell, by that definition, even *Darwin* wasn't a "Darwinian fundamentalist":

"As my conclusions have lately been much misrepresented, and it has been stated that I attribute the modification of species exclusively to natural selection, I may be permitted to remark that in the first edition of this work, and subsequently, I placed in a most conspicuous position—namely at the close of the Introduction—the following words: "I am convinced that natural selection has been the main but not the exclusive means of modification." This has been of no avail. Great is the power of steady misrepresentation."
-- Charles Darwin, 1872 edition of The Origin of Species

104 posted on 05/28/2006 1:26:25 AM PDT by Ichneumon (Ignorance is curable, but the afflicted has to want to be cured.)
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To: Tzimisce
"no prayers,

YOU MEAN LIKE MATHEMATICAL FORMULAS AND STUFF? "

Mathematical formulas are *prayers* now?

"no church establishments,

...YOU MEAN LIKE A SCIENCE LAB?"

Labs are *churches* now? Do you even care what words mean?

"no tax-exemption, no record of sex scandals, no pastors, preachers, or priests,

THERE ARE TONS OF ATHEIST PEDOPHILES. THERE ARE TONS OF ATHEIST TEACHERS. "

Anything to substantiate the *tons* of atheist pedophiles? Anything at all?

"no coming-of-age rituals like Bar Mitzvah or confirmation,

EVER HEARD OF SEX ED?"

Have you?

"no holidays, no banned books or statements about heresy and blasphemy,

...YOU MEAN LIKE 'THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES'? HOW ABOUT NOT BLINDLY ACCEPTING THE TEACHINGS OF THE BIG BANG?"

The Origin of Species has never been accepted uncritically by scientists. The Big Bang has not been *blindly* accepted; though both it and evolution (which are two very separate theories) have been blindly rejected.

"no public displays of prayer or piety,

...AGAIN SCIENTIFIC LAWS..."

You are redefining *prayer* to be something it most definitely is not. You are making science and the acceptance of scientific principles to be religious. This is bizarre.

"no holy book supposed to contain "All Truth',

...AGAIN ORIGIN OF SPECIES..."

No scientists has EVER said that the Origin of Species contains *all truth*. Not only has nobody ever said that, they have not implied it. Modern evolutionary theory has moved on past what Darwin wrote; the book was never accepted as the final word on evolution.

"no recited creed,

...THERE ARE TONS OF SCIENTIFIC CREEDS FROM THE HYPOCRATIC OATH THAT DOCTORS TAKE ON DOWN..."

This makes them atheists? And, if there are *tons* of scientific creeds, can you name any others?

"These are attributes of organized religion, priests and preachers with an agenda to keep being supported despite doing little productive.

THERE ARE TONS OF IVORY TOWERED SCIENTISTS LIVING ON GOVERNMENT GRANTS RIGHT NOW WHO DO NOTHING AND PUT ALL THEIR *FAITH* IN LOGIC AND REASON."

Is there something wrong with logic and reason?

I think I just hit on your main objection to science (it HAS been science you have been attacking, not atheism, BTW).
105 posted on 05/28/2006 4:47:52 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is grandeur in this view of life....")
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To: Coyoteman

How about Catholic tripe alert.


106 posted on 05/28/2006 4:51:08 AM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. Slay Pinch)
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To: Forgiven_Sinner

Paul Johnson is my favorite historian as well. I believe his stand is that we just don't know. I do not understand why we cannot just acept that, because no one DOES know.

Another excellent "Johnson" to read is Philip. He is a lawyer who argues against Darwinism based on the known facts. He makes about the best arguments I've read.


107 posted on 05/28/2006 4:53:33 AM PDT by 13Sisters76
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To: Coyoteman

Awwww- gee, thanks Dad. I so appreciate folks like you lookin' out for the rest of us...


108 posted on 05/28/2006 4:55:16 AM PDT by 13Sisters76
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Comment #109 Removed by Moderator

To: 13Sisters76
"I have had this argument before- there is not one single fact which supports Darwinian evolution."

Nonsense. There is a commandment against that sort of thing.

"Even the scientists know this, and so, present other arguments for its support."

Unsupportable prevarication.

"Like adaptation which is reversible, and so, NOT an argument."

Why is a reversible adaptation a problem?

"There are also those, like me, who accept the idea that we just don't know."

And so your ignorance should be everybody's?

"SHOULD it happen that evolution IS proved it will make no difference to me. I don't need its proof or DIS-proof to define my faith."

In other words, you could care less about the evidence. Again, why should your willful ignorance be forced on everybody?

"But folks like you DO need it to be true. You need to validate your LACK of faith in this way."

Most people who accept evolution in the USA are Christians.

"Your own opinion of yourself, your moral superiority, your "wisdom" and your snooty self-serving, ego stroking sense of self-worth leans on evolution as your most important post."

No, but it does depend on how well I use my reasoning ability to understand the world. I would be ashamed to willfully ignore what the evidence shows. Rejecting evolution would be doing just that.
110 posted on 05/28/2006 5:22:07 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is grandeur in this view of life....")
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To: DesScorp

Neither link supports your numbers.


111 posted on 05/28/2006 6:22:17 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Tzimisce; longshadow; PatrickHenry

Your identification of communists with scientists is typical of the slander flung by the religious on this forum. It is of the same nature as claiming that Islamic terrorists are identical to Christians because both believe the same Creation story.


112 posted on 05/28/2006 6:25:44 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

I would predict that at least one Creationist will endorse the Communist=Scientist claim made here.


113 posted on 05/28/2006 6:29:02 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: 13Sisters76

You exemplify my comment. I was hoping for better but not expecting it.


114 posted on 05/28/2006 6:37:33 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; PatrickHenry

It must be "Delusional Dial-up Day" at the Outpatient Clinic; I haven't seen this many crackpot posts in the same thread since G3k, f-dot, and Splifford the ASCII Bat were the Holy Trinity of anti-Evo posters here on FR.


115 posted on 05/28/2006 7:03:05 AM PDT by longshadow (FReeper #405, entering his ninth year of ignoring nitwits, nutcases, and recycled newbies)
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To: Doctor Stochastic; longshadow
Your identification of communists with scientists is typical of the slander flung by the religious on this forum.

Why get worked up over it? Ben Franklin was a scientist, and some of the anti-science people around here would accuse him of being a commie too. Retardation is a terrible misfortune; and when I see examples of it around here, I do the polite thing and ignore it.

116 posted on 05/28/2006 7:03:42 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (Unresponsive to trolls, lunatics, fanatics, retards, scolds, & incurable ignoramuses.)
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To: thomaswest
You may know the book, The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross.

I have a nice first edition copy.

117 posted on 05/28/2006 7:36:37 AM PDT by Coyoteman (Stupidity is the only universal capital crime; the sentence is death--Heinlein)
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To: bert
How about Catholic tripe alert.

How about not.

My comments were about an extremely biased writing style.

118 posted on 05/28/2006 7:42:40 AM PDT by Coyoteman (Stupidity is the only universal capital crime; the sentence is death--Heinlein)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Note the Creationists trying to denigrate people by calling them religious. Projection?

Your interpretation of the article isn't warranted by its substance. Paul Johnson is a Catholic--- he is not a fundmentalist. Catholicism buys into Biblical inerrancy, not literalism. Literalism was used by the Manichaeans as a strawman interpretation of scripture to make it easier to attack; Augustine decided it as a strawman when he became a Christian.

Surely you've seen or met an actual Christian fundamentalist before. Ask them what their opinion is of Catholicism. At the least they will assure that the two are different.

What Paul Johnson calls "Darwinian Fundamentalism" can be encapsulated by Daniel Dennett's description of Darwinism-- which Dawkins wholly agrees with--- as an acid that eats through everything but itself, thus superceding every other belief-- the very definition of fundamentalism:

Little did I realize that in a few years I would encounter an idea -- Darwin's idea -- bearing an unmistakable likeness to universal acid: it eats through just about every traditional concept, and leaves in its wake a revolutionized world-view, with most of the old landmarks still recognizable, but transformed in fundamental ways.

Darwin's idea had been born as an answer to questions in biology, but it threatened to leak out, offering answers -- welcome or not -- to question in cosmology (going in one direction) and psychology (going in the other direction). If redesign could be a mindless, algorithmic process of evolution, why couldn't that whole process itself be the product of evolution, and so forth, all the way down? And if mindless evolution could account for the breathtakingly clever artifacts of the biosphere, how could the products of our own "real" minds be exempt from an evolutionary explanation? Darwin's idea thus also threatened to spread all the way up, dissolving the illusion of our own authorship, our own divine spark of creativity and understanding.

Johnson is in no way criticizing this interpretaion of Darwinism becuase it resembles religion as such--- he is criticizing a specific sort of Darwinism to a specific sort of religion.

Come on. Is Jerry Fodor, whom he quotes, supposed to be a fundamentalist or somehow narrow minded as well? Paul Johnson is a great writer and thinker--- anyone who's read his historical work, even if they take issue with what he's written here, must admit this. And in fact the main point he is making here is a very moderate one-- that Dawkins must be a Darwinian "fundmentalist" to think that Darwin's theory, if true, holds the power Dennett attributes to it and thus outright disproves God's existence, as Dawkins holds it does. His secondary point is that some books he considers thoughtful and well written have appeared, criticizing Dawkins and also making some criticisms of Darwin's theory of natural selection, much as respected scientists and thinkers such as Lynn Margulis and Stephen Wolfram have. Again, a rather moderate point. I assume you've never read Paul Johnson. His book Birth of the Modern which describes the influence of new technologies such as steam power, is one among many of his classic works.

I must also say I also don't think it's correct of you to say as you do in post 28 that Darwin's theory as it then stood somehwo fit the later discovery DNA or even Mendel's laws of inheritance. As I'm sure you know, William Bateson, who insisted on the truth of the rediscovered Mendelian laws in the face of opposition in the Neo-Darwinian biometric community and Sir Ronald Fisher, who by helping to resolve the controversy helped create the neo-Darwinian synthesis, a synthesis that had been required precisely because Darwin had not predicted anything like Mendel's laws and his theory, as he had originally stated it, was not consistent with them.

119 posted on 05/28/2006 8:01:29 AM PDT by mjolnir ("All great change in America begins at the dinner table.")
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Coyoteman; mjolnir

Sorry about that-- the above was meant to reply to Coyoteman. But, just to reiterate, if neither of you have read Paul Johnson's books before, I suggest you give them a try. I'm sure you would find much in his book of essays, "Intellectuals" to agree with-- it is epecially good on the harm that Rousseau did-- and he in no way criticzes him for his pre-Darwinian theory that man was descended from apes!:)


120 posted on 05/28/2006 8:31:13 AM PDT by mjolnir ("All great change in America begins at the dinner table.")
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