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Intelligent designers down on Dover
The York Dispatch ^ | 9/20/2005 | CHRISTINA KAUFFMAN

Posted on 09/22/2005 6:53:07 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor

Theory's largest national supporter won't back district

The Dover Area School District and its board will likely walk into a First Amendment court battle next week without the backing of the nation's largest supporter of intelligent design.

The Discovery Institute, a Seattle-based nonprofit that describes itself as a "nonpartisan policy and research organization," recently issued a policy position against Dover in its upcoming court case.

John West, associate director of Discovery's Center for Science & Culture, calls the Dover policy "misguided" and "likely to be politically divisive and hinder a fair and open discussion of the merits of intelligent design."

Eleven parents filed a federal suit last December, about two months after the school board voted to include a statement about intelligent design in its ninth-grade biology classes.

Intelligent design says living things are so complicated they had to have been created by a higher being, that life is too complex to have developed through evolution as described by biologist Charles Darwin.

The parents, along with Americans United for the Separation of Church and State and the American Civil Liberties Union, said the board had religious motives for putting the policy in place.

The non-jury trial is expected to start in Harrisburg Sept. 26.

No surprise: The school board's attorney, Richard Thompson, said he isn't surprised the Discovery Institute has distanced itself from the school board's stance.

"I think it's a tactical decision they make on their own," said Thompson, top attorney with Michigan-based Thomas More Law Center, a law firm that specializes in cases related to the religious freedom of Christians.

Though the Discovery Institute promotes the teaching of intelligent design, it has been critical of school boards that have implemented intelligent design policies, Thompson said.

Discovery Institute's Web site offers school board members a link to a video titled "How to Teach the Controversy Legally," referring to the organization's opinion that there is a controversy over the validity of the theory of evolution.

The video doesn't specifically mention teaching intelligent design.

But Discovery Institute is the leading organization touting intelligent design research and supporting the scientists and scholars who want to investigate it.

Dover is the only school district that Discovery has publicly spoken out against. West said that's because they mandated the policy. Discovery Institute supports teaching intelligent design, but not requiring it through a school board policy.

He said there are few proponents of intelligent design who support the stand Dover's board has taken because the district has required the reading of a statement that mentions intelligent design and directs students to an intelligent design textbook.

"They really did it on their own and that's unfortunate," West said.

The "bad policy" has given the ACLU a reason to try to "put a gag order" on intelligent design in its entirety, he said.

Discovery also spoke out against Pennsylvania legislators who wanted to give school boards the option of mandating the teaching of intelligent design alongside evolution.

Avoiding politics: Teaching intelligent design is not unconstitutional, but the institute doesn't support the Dover school board's stand because it doesn't want intelligent design to become a political issue, said Casey Luskin, program officer in the Public Policy and Legal Affairs department at the Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture.

He said the Discovery Institute is "not trying to hinder their case in court," but the organization wants intelligent design to be debated by the scientific community, not school boards.

Lawyer: Won't hinder case: Thompson said the Discovery Institute's noninvolvement in the trial won't hinder Dover's case because "the judge is going to look at the policy ... not who is in favor of it on the outside."

But the institute has been a hindrance to the school district's attempts to find "scientific" witnesses to testify about intelligent design, Thompson said.

Though Discovery representatives said they have never been in support of Dover's policy, Thompson said the organization's unwillingness to get involved in the trial became evident after it insisted that some of its fellows -- who were lined up to testify -- have their own legal representation, instead of the Thomas More Center, which bills itself as "The Sword and Shield for People of Faith."

Some of the Discovery Institute's intelligent design supporters backed out of testifying, even after Thompson told them they could have their own legal representation if they wanted, Thompson said.

"It was very disappointing" that the institute would prevent its members from testifying, Thompson said.

But he still found some willing Discovery fellows to testify that intelligent design is not a religious movement: Michael Behe from Lehigh University and Scott Minnich from the University of Idaho.

West said Discovery fellow Charles Thaxton is also slated to testify.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: allcrevoallthetime; anothercrevothread; crevolist; crevorepublic; enoughalready; evolution; itsgettingold; makeitstop
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To: Vive ut Vivas
Let me get this straight. You think the statement "We ought not to call undecidable statements true, we ought to call them undecidable" lacks meaning?

Yes, because we don't call undecidable statements true.

381 posted on 09/24/2005 8:47:47 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: Vive ut Vivas
Nonsense. It's perfectly reasonable to inquire about the "truth" of either the parallel postulate or the Continuum Hypothesis, provided we're clear about what we mean.

Red herring.

382 posted on 09/24/2005 8:48:52 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
Whose senses and which ones?

Those of whoever wishes to assert the "truth" in question. (And a "sense" is just a way of collecting data.)
383 posted on 09/24/2005 8:51:42 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
Those of whoever wishes to assert the "truth" in question.

So you limit truth to the asserter. No thanks.

384 posted on 09/24/2005 8:53:58 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
So you limit truth to the asserter. No thanks.

My whole point is that there is no justification for asserting that something is true without some type of evidence. If the "asserter" has no evidence whatsoever, then the "asserter" has no right to assert truth.
385 posted on 09/24/2005 8:57:23 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
If the "asserter" has no evidence whatsoever, then the "asserter" has no right to assert truth.

You seem to be making a try at it. How does a person who has never seen(blind) sense the truth about statements involving "blue"?

386 posted on 09/24/2005 8:59:33 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
How does a person who has never seen(blind) sense the truth about statements involving "blue"?

They rely on the evidence they have. If they're blind, that won't include visual data.
387 posted on 09/24/2005 9:03:02 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
They rely on the evidence they have. If they're blind, that won't include visual data.

How do they know the "truth" of that evidence in relation to "blue"?

388 posted on 09/24/2005 9:04:53 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
How do they know the "truth" of that evidence in relation to "blue"?

"Truth" merely means "that which the evidence indicates". If somebody tells a blind person that an object is blue, then that is evidence.
389 posted on 09/24/2005 9:12:17 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
"Truth" merely means "that which the evidence indicates". If somebody tells a blind person that an object is blue, then that is evidence.

You can't be serious!? I have a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.

390 posted on 09/24/2005 9:17:10 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
I have reason to be skeptical. Perhaps the blind person does too, in which case he should seek out more data.
391 posted on 09/24/2005 9:19:11 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
I have reason to be skeptical. Perhaps the blind person does too, in which case he should seek out more data.

Why? The evidence is always going to point to something and that something is (what you say) the "truth".

392 posted on 09/24/2005 9:24:32 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC

If all the evidence points to something, that's pretty good reason for believing whatever it is.


393 posted on 09/24/2005 9:26:09 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
If all the evidence points to something, that's pretty good reason for believing whatever it is.

The first piece of evidence is "all" at the beginning. Why go on? And if the necessary condition is "all", why stop?

All of the evidence pointed to Galveston getting clobbered. It didn't.

394 posted on 09/24/2005 9:36:26 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
The first piece of evidence is "all" at the beginning. Why go on?

Because you might have difficulty explaining things. For example, if someone tells a blind person that an object is blue, and later the blind person hears another person refer to the object as red, then the initial assumption that the object is blue fails to explain why the second person said it was red.

And if the necessary condition is "all", why stop?

You'll notice that science hasn't stopped yet.

All of the evidence pointed to Galveston getting clobbered. It didn't.

Obviously you have evidence that it didn't.
395 posted on 09/24/2005 9:44:27 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
For example, if someone tells a blind person that an object is blue, and later the blind person hears another person refer to the object as red, then the initial assumption that the object is blue fails to explain why the second person said it was red.

It wasn't an assumption. It was the "truth" by your definition. In any case, what color is the thing? We have evidence. And by your definition the "truth".

396 posted on 09/24/2005 9:51:51 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
It wasn't an assumption. It was the "truth" by your definition.

That's a distinction that you're making and I am not.

In any case, what color is the thing? We have evidence.

Not enough to resolve the apparent contradiction.
397 posted on 09/24/2005 9:54:04 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
That's a distinction that you're making and I am not.

Here is your definition.

"Truth" merely means "that which the evidence indicates".

Now you wish to equate "assumption" and "truth"(you deny the distinction).

398 posted on 09/24/2005 10:03:49 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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To: AndrewC
Now you wish to equate "assumption" and "truth"(you deny the distinction).

Right. The question of "what is true" is simply the question of "what should we assume given the evidence".
399 posted on 09/24/2005 10:07:10 PM PDT by Vive ut Vivas
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To: Vive ut Vivas
Right. The question of "what is true" is simply the question of "what should we assume given the evidence".

Great! Truth is, what is, for whomever. Truth is, you are goofy.

400 posted on 09/24/2005 10:12:52 PM PDT by AndrewC (Darwinian logic -- It is just-so if it is just-so)
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