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Tough Assignment: Teaching Evolution To Fundamentalists
Ft. Wayne Journal Gazette ^ | 03 December 2004 | SHARON BEGLEY

Posted on 12/18/2004 5:56:30 PM PST by PatrickHenry

Professional danger comes in many flavors, and while Richard Colling doesn't jump into forest fires or test experimental jets for a living, he does do the academic's equivalent: He teaches biology and evolution at a fundamentalist Christian college.

At Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Ill., he says, "as soon as you mention evolution in anything louder than a whisper, you have people who aren't very happy." And within the larger conservative-Christian community, he adds, "I've been called some interesting names."

But those experiences haven't stopped Prof. Colling -- who received a Ph.D. in microbiology, chairs the biology department at Olivet Nazarene and is himself a devout conservative Christian -- from coming out swinging. In his new book, "Random Designer," he writes: "It pains me to suggest that my religious brothers are telling falsehoods" when they say evolutionary theory is "in crisis" and claim that there is widespread skepticism about it among scientists. "Such statements are blatantly untrue," he argues; "evolution has stood the test of time and considerable scrutiny."

His is hardly the standard scientific defense of Darwin, however. His central claim is that both the origin of life from a primordial goo of nonliving chemicals, and the evolution of species according to the processes of random mutation and natural selection, are "fully compatible with the available scientific evidence and also contemporary religious beliefs." In addition, as he bluntly told me, "denying science makes us [Conservative Christians] look stupid."

Prof. Colling is one of a small number of conservative Christian scholars who are trying to convince biblical literalists that Darwin's theory of evolution is no more the work of the devil than is Newton's theory of gravity. They haven't picked an easy time to enter the fray. Evolution is under assault from Georgia to Pennsylvania and from Kansas to Wisconsin, with schools ordering science teachers to raise questions about its validity and, in some cases, teach "intelligent design," which asserts that only a supernatural tinkerer could have produced such coups as the human eye. According to a Gallup poll released last month, only one-third of Americans regard Darwin's theory of evolution as well supported by empirical evidence; 45% believe God created humans in their present form 10,000 years ago.

Usually, the defense of evolution comes from scientists and those trying to maintain the separation of church and state. But Prof. Colling has another motivation. "People should not feel they have to deny reality in order to experience their faith," he says. He therefore offers a rendering of evolution fully compatible with faith, including his own. The Church of the Nazarene, which runs his university, "believes in the biblical account of creation," explains its manual. "We oppose a godless interpretation of the evolutionary hypothesis."

It's a small opening, but Prof. Colling took it. He finds a place for God in evolution by positing a "random designer" who harnesses the laws of nature he created. "What the designer designed is the random-design process," or Darwinian evolution, Prof. Colling says. "God devised these natural laws, and uses evolution to accomplish his goals." God is not in there with a divine screwdriver and spare parts every time a new species or a wondrous biological structure appears.

Unlike those who see evolution as an assault on faith, Prof. Colling finds it strengthens his own. "A God who can harness the laws of randomness and chaos, and create beauty and wonder and all of these marvelous structures, is a lot more creative than fundamentalists give him credit for," he told me. Creating the laws of physics and chemistry that, over the eons, coaxed life from nonliving molecules is something he finds just as awe inspiring as the idea that God instantly and supernaturally created life from nonlife.

Prof. Colling reserves some of his sharpest barbs for intelligent design, the idea that the intricate structures and processes in the living world -- from exquisitely engineered flagella that propel bacteria to the marvels of the human immune system -- can't be the work of random chance and natural selection. Intelligent-design advocates look at these sophisticated components of living things, can't imagine how evolution could have produced them, and conclude that only God could have.

That makes Prof. Colling see red. "When Christians insert God into the gaps that science cannot explain -- in this case how wondrous structures and forms of life came to be -- they set themselves up for failure and even ridicule," he told me. "Soon -- and it's already happening with the flagellum -- science is going to come along and explain" how a seemingly miraculous bit of biological engineering in fact could have evolved by Darwinian mechanisms. And that will leave intelligent design backed into an ever-shrinking corner.

It won't be easy to persuade conservative Christians of this; at least half of them believe that the six-day creation story of Genesis is the literal truth. But Prof. Colling intends to try.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: christianschools; christianstudents; colling; crevolist; darwin; evolution; heresy; intelligentdesign; nazarene; religionofevolution; richardcolling; scienceeducation
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To: WildTurkey
However, Young earth creationists are completely intolerant of any evolution being discussed.

Let's correct your statement.

While some young earth creationists are completely intolerant of any evolution being discussed, most are intolerant of evolution being discussed to the exclusion of any other view.

And I will add, from what I see in the media, it is far more the case that evolutionist are the ones intolerant of any other discussion.

581 posted on 12/20/2004 2:45:26 PM PST by BJungNan (Did you call your congressmen to tell them to stop funding the ACLU? 202 224 3121)
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To: Havoc
Not too hard. Galileo was, The wright brothers were, Ben Franklin was, Edison was, etc.

They all built upon the scientific base formed by their predecessors and peers unlike YEC's which find all science to be false.

582 posted on 12/20/2004 2:45:54 PM PST by WildTurkey
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To: Wallace T.

None of the above.


583 posted on 12/20/2004 2:46:20 PM PST by balrog666 (The invisible and the nonexistent look very much alike.)
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To: Dataman
Excellent points, all.

Since those "excellent points" were directed towards me, I have to concur. Anyone interested in the state of the art in creationist thought should look no further than post #568.

584 posted on 12/20/2004 2:46:33 PM PST by js1138 (D*mn, I Missed!)
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To: js1138; Havoc; Dataman; Wallace T.
The applications of chaos theory are infinite; seemingly random systems produce patterns of spooky understandable irregularity. From the Mandelbrot set to turbulence to feedback and strange attractors; chaos appears to be everywhere. Breakthroughs have been made in the past in the area chaos theory, and, in order to achieve any more colossal accomplishments in the future, they must continue to be made. Understanding chaos is understanding life as we know it.

However, if we do discover a complete theory, it should in time be understandable in broad principle by everyone, not just a few scientists. Then we shall all, philosophers, scientists, and just ordinary people, be able to take part in the discussion of the question of why it is that we and the universe exist. -Stephen Hawking

Even pesky little creationists

585 posted on 12/20/2004 2:47:27 PM PST by D Edmund Joaquin (Karenga says Kwanzaa is an "oppositional alternative" to Christianity - which he calls "spookism")
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To: Dataman

Spooky!


586 posted on 12/20/2004 2:49:01 PM PST by D Edmund Joaquin (Karenga says Kwanzaa is an "oppositional alternative" to Christianity - which he calls "spookism")
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To: js1138

You forgot one in your list. How the heck does a redwood tree get water from the ground to its limbs nearly 300 feet up? The theory of evolution explains so very, very little.


587 posted on 12/20/2004 2:49:06 PM PST by BJungNan (Did you call your congressmen to tell them to stop funding the ACLU? 202 224 3121)
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To: BJungNan
...to the exclusion of any other view.

What other views are there that merit inclusion in a science class?

588 posted on 12/20/2004 2:49:47 PM PST by js1138 (D*mn, I Missed!)
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To: js1138
How old is the earth, and in what way is the scientific estimate "not scientific"?

Asked and answered a number of times on this thread.

Where did the water for the global flood come from and where did it go, and how are the scientific calculations on this subject "not scientific"?

The historic event as related in the Bible states that there was a Canopy above the atmosphere - possibly ice but water at the very least in one form or another as it references the waters above the heavens and the heavens are the sky or atmosphere. The Bible also tells of a cache' of water stored beneath the crust which broke open. After the flood, scripture says the see floor sunk in places and mountains were raised up. Afterward, only 3% of landmass was liveable, roughly which is the way it remains today. I find nothing in the story that isn't supportable in the fossil record.

With a canopy, ultraviolet light would be filtered. Oxygen levels were likely higher which is spoken to in samples of atmosphere captured in air bubbles in amber - showing upward of 35% oxygen. As far as I know, evolution can't account for this. Things are supposed to be getting better, not worse - which begs the question of why one finds such things as 60 foot cat tails (the plant) in the fossil record. They cannot and do not get that big on their own now; but, interestingly, saturating plants with an oxygen rich environment of 32%+ oxygen makes plants grow really big. It is also found that the affects of this on humans increases response of the body's defenses. Canopies are not unknown to the other planets, and I'd imagine if Mars follows suit with Earth, the place to find water there is below the crust. A way to test it here is to test water supplies beneath mountains for their saline level and compare it to modern oceanic levels. It's been done and the saline content is much higher under mountains and in underground stores found elsewhere - which should be no surprise to you if you have bothered to listen to any of your major opponents.

What exactly is a species, and how is science wrong in defining species?

Did science care what anyone else thought about this when they defined them originally. No. The reason you ask is to try and make a case that while Science's notion of it is flawed, nobody else has tried redefining it which isn't true. It is rejected on the basis that every creationist has a different answer. Which isn't entirely true. But to answer it directly, a species is a group of animals that under normal circumstances can interbreed. Example - dogs would include anything from Siberian Huskies to coyotes, wolves etc. Science has different defined species for different types of dogs if I'm not mistaken, yet they are all dogs and can interbreed. Cats cannot breed with dogs and are thusly a different species and always have been since they were created. Not difficult to understand. We just draw the boundaries in obvious places.

What is the biological barrier preventing variation from becoming speciation, and exactly how does this barrier function?

It's generally called DNA and RNA and the full system which governs cell reproduction. The system has multiple redundant backup systems to maintain integrity within a body and while mutations may exist within a creature, you don't observe individual mutations being passed on generationally to effect the population as a whole in any manner, to say nothing of a beneficial one. The barrier you seek you've already found and known about for some time. It's just inconvenient to dwell upon.

Does selection occur ever? Has it been observed? If so, where does the information come from that makes selection work?

Sure selection occurs. That's life - period. And absent morality, selection takes on some pretty grim forms. That doesn't do anything for your theory; so, I'm not real sure why you bother asking it when you know it doesn't.

How does the growth of a fertilized egg occur within the confines of the Second Law of Thermodynamics?

The system has the capacity to put energy to use for the purposes of building itself up within the defined limits provided by DNA/RNA. Beyond that, it is fully subject to the law in that it proceeds toward an end - devolving and decaying over time till it's dust. It fulfills the expectation of the law by resorting to disorder ie dying at the end of a hopefully productive life. And I would again note that adding energy to a system is useless unless that system expects that energy and can put it to use. Absent that, the energy is destructive, not constructive.

589 posted on 12/20/2004 2:50:00 PM PST by Havoc (Reagan was right and so was McKinley. Down with free trade.)
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To: js1138
Do you imagine that evolution exibits a direction,

Umm, does it go back and recreate the ones that didn't make it? Don't think so

590 posted on 12/20/2004 2:51:24 PM PST by D Edmund Joaquin (Karenga says Kwanzaa is an "oppositional alternative" to Christianity - which he calls "spookism")
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To: D Edmund Joaquin

"However, if we do discover a complete theory, it should in time be understandable in broad principle by everyone, not just a few scientists. Then we shall all, philosophers, scientists, and just ordinary people, be able to take part in the discussion of the question of why it is that we and the universe exist. -Stephen Hawking "

How do you expect a populace that cannot read, write or add beyond two digits be able to understand complex systems. Looks like we are headed back to the dark ages being led by the YEC's.


591 posted on 12/20/2004 2:51:47 PM PST by WildTurkey
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To: Dimensio

"Is this your way of saying that you were lying when you claimed to have a test for the 'soul'?"

I was told that using Scripture was not allowed, why would you of all people care about the 'soul' anyway?

The test has been given every time Scripture is given, guess what you either can't read or you failed.


592 posted on 12/20/2004 2:52:09 PM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: BJungNan

What specifically about redwoods needs explaining?


593 posted on 12/20/2004 2:52:37 PM PST by js1138 (D*mn, I Missed!)
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To: D Edmund Joaquin
Umm, does it go back and recreate the ones that didn't make it?

Not the individuals, but the functions that died with the individuals -- yes.

594 posted on 12/20/2004 2:54:40 PM PST by js1138 (D*mn, I Missed!)
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To: js1138; Havoc
Since those "excellent points" were directed towards me, I have to concur.

Well, I admire your heady response. Let me try and understand it:

You acknowledge the points Havoc made so that makes them invalid? I think that is the standard response to Aquinas.

Or is it that the questions are old and you don't want to respond? Old unanswered objections are just as valid as new unanswered objections.

You do realize, don't you, that most of the objections to evolution are raised by scientists? How many years did self-correcting science take to acknowledge Nebraska Man? Piltdown? Haekel's embryos? Peppered Moths? Evolution of the horse? Maybe science isn't self-correcting untile the principal catches the lies.

595 posted on 12/20/2004 2:54:53 PM PST by Dataman
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To: js1138
If the evolutionary process is guided and determined by selection, as you state, then there is a clear implication that there is a guiding hand, rather than a blind watchmaker or no watchmaker at all. Guidance and determination imply an actor. If there are observable "laws" in nature that guide the evolutionary process, there is implied a lawgiver. Without guidance, one is left with random chance, the concept that, given a very large number of monkeys, chained to a very large number of computers, one of the monkeys will at some point type the Shakespearian play, King Lear. The trouble is that, in view of the time limits imposed by the Big Bang theory, the odds against random chance eventuating in the universe and species that we know today are insuperable.

As for evolution being an "historical fact," by no means is it an "historical fact" on the order of Lee surrendering to Grant in 1865 or the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

596 posted on 12/20/2004 2:55:00 PM PST by Wallace T.
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To: WildTurkey
How do you expect a populace that cannot read, write or add beyond two digits be able to understand complex systems

Good point. Probably why they acept evolution as truth

597 posted on 12/20/2004 2:55:13 PM PST by D Edmund Joaquin (Karenga says Kwanzaa is an "oppositional alternative" to Christianity - which he calls "spookism")
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To: D Edmund Joaquin
How do you expect a populace that cannot read, write or add beyond two digits be able to understand complex systems

Good point. Probably why they acept evolution as truth

"According to a Gallup poll released last month, only one-third of Americans regard Darwin's theory of evolution as well supported by empirical evidence; 45% believe God created humans in their present form 10,000 years ago."

598 posted on 12/20/2004 2:57:14 PM PST by WildTurkey
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To: balrog666

Then what is option five, six, etc.?


599 posted on 12/20/2004 2:57:51 PM PST by Wallace T.
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To: js1138
the functions that died with the individuals -- yes.

Sooooo.......then....which came first, the function or the species? Gotta tellya, sounds like Genesis

600 posted on 12/20/2004 2:57:56 PM PST by D Edmund Joaquin (Karenga says Kwanzaa is an "oppositional alternative" to Christianity - which he calls "spookism")
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