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It's God or Darwin
National Review Online ^ | 12/21/'05 | David Klinghoffer

Posted on 12/21/2005 2:06:09 PM PST by Zionist Conspirator

Competing Designs

Tuesday's ruling by a federal judge in Pennsylvania, disparaging intelligent design as a religion-based and therefore false science, raises an important question: If ID is bogus because many of its theorists have religious beliefs to which the controversial critique of Darwinism lends support, then what should we say about Darwinism itself? After all, many proponents of Darwinian evolution have philosophical beliefs to which Darwin lends support.

"We conclude that the religious nature of Intelligent Design would be readily apparent to an objective observer, adult or child," wrote Judge John E. Jones III in his decision, Kitzmiller v. Dover, which rules that criticizing Darwin's theory in biology class is unconstitutional. Is it really true that only Darwinism, in contrast to ID, represents a disinterested search for the truth, unmotivated by ideology?

Judge Jones was especially impressed by the testimony of philosophy professor Barbara Forrest of Southeastern Louisiana University, author of Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design. Professor Forrest has definite beliefs about religion, evident from the fact that she serves on the board of directors of the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association, which is "an affiliate of American Atheists, and [a] member of the Atheist Alliance International," according to the group's website. Of course, she's entitled to believe what she likes, but it's worth noting.

Religion and Smallpox
Other leading Darwinian advocates not only reject religion but profess disgust for it and frankly admit a wish to see it suppressed. Lately I've been collecting published thoughts on religion from pro-Darwin partisans. Professional scholars, they have remarkable things to say especially about Christianity. Let these disinterested seekers of the truth speak for themselves.

My favorite is Tufts University's Daniel C. Dennett. In his highly regarded Darwin's Dangerous Idea, he tells why it might be necessary to confine conservative Christians in zoos. It's because Bible-believing Baptists, in particular, may tolerate "the deliberate misinforming of children about the natural world." In other words, they may doubt Darwin. This cannot stand! "Safety demands that religion be put in cages," explains Dennett, "when absolutely necessary....The message is clear: those who will not accommodate, who will not temper, who insist on keeping only the purest and wildest strains of their heritage alive, we will be obliged, reluctantly, to cage or disarm, and we will do our best to disable the memes they fight for."

In an essay, "Is Science a Religion?", Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins is frank enough. Perhaps the leading figure on the Darwin side, he forthrightly states that "faith is one of the world's great evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate." He equates God with an "imaginary friend" and baptism with child abuse. In his book The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design, Dawkins observed that Darwin "made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist."

There is Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg, of the University of Texas, who defended Darwinism before the Texas State Board of Education in 2003. In accepting an award from the Freedom From Religion Foundation,Weinberg didn't hide his own feelings about how science must deliver the fatal blow to religious faith: "I personally feel that the teaching of modern science is corrosive of religious belief, and I'm all for that! One of the things that in fact has driven me in my life, is the feeling that this is one of the great social functions of science — to free people from superstition." When Weinberg's idea of science triumphs, then "this progression of priests and ministers and rabbis and ulamas and imams and bonzes and bodhisattvas will come to an end, [and] we'll see no more of them. I hope that this is something to which science can contribute and if it is, then I think it may be the most important contribution that we can make."

There is University of Minnesota biologist P. Z. Myers, a prominent combatant in the Darwin wars being fought in an archipelago of websites. He links his own site (recently plugged in the prestigious journal Nature) to a "humorous" web film depicting Jesus' flagellation and crucifixion, a speeded-up version of Mel Gibson's Passion, to the accompaniment of the Benny Hill theme music "Yakety Sax," complete with cartoonish sound effects. "Never let it be said that I lack a sense of reverence or an appreciation of Christian mythology," commented this teacher at a state university. In another blog posting, Myers daydreamed about having a time machine that would allow him to go back and eliminate the Biblical patriarch Abraham. Some might argue for using the machine to assassinate other notorious figures of history, but not Myers: "I wouldn't do anything as trivial as using it to take out Hitler."

Then there is the Darwinist chairman of the religious studies department at the University of Kansas, Paul Mirecki. He emerged from obscurity recently when his startlingly crude A HREF="anti-Christian writings came to light. Mirecki's bright idea had been to teach a course about "mythologies," including intelligent design. Things got interesting when it came out that he followed up his announcement by crowing in an e-mail to a list-serve: "The fundies [Christian fundamentalists] want [ID] taught in a science class, but this will be a nice slap in their big fat face by teaching it as a religious studies class under the category 'mythology.'"

Mirecki had previously posted a list-serve message responding to somebody's joke about Pope John Paul II being "a corpse in a funny hat wearing a dress." Mirecki wrote back, "I love it! I refer to him as J2P2 (John Paul II), like the Star Wars robot R2D2."

Administration officials at KU confirmed that the e-mails had come from Mirecki, who also wrote: "I had my first Catholic 'holy communion' when I was a kid in Chicago, and when I took the bread-wafer the first time, it stuck to the roof of my mouth, and as I was secretly trying to pry it off with my tongue as I was walking back to my pew with white clothes and with my hands folded, all I could think was that it was Jesus' skin, and I started to puke, but I sucked it in and drank my own puke. That's a big part of the Catholic experience."

Prudently, the university canceled Mirecki's proposed "mythologies" class and ousted him as department chairman.

I've already reported on NRO about the views expressed by Darwinist staff scientists at the Smithsonian Institution. The nation's museum was roiled last year when the editor of a Smithsonian-affiliated biology journal published a peer-reviewed article favoring intelligent design. His fellow staffers composed emails venting their fury. One e-mailer, figuring the editor must be an ID advocate and therefore (obviously!) a fundamentalist Christian (he is neither), allowed that, "Scientists have been perfectly willing to let these people alone in their churches." Another museum scientist noted how, after "spending 4.5 years in the Bible Belt," he knew all about Christians. He reminisced about the "fun we had" when "my son refused to say the Pledge of Allegiance because of the 'under dog' [meaning 'under God'] part."

God and Darwin
Admittedly, there are those in the Darwin community who argue that Darwinism is compatible with religion. Judge Jones himself, in the Kitzmiller decision, writes that

many of the leading proponents of ID make a bedrock assumption which is utterly false. Their presupposition is that evolutionary theory is antithetical to a belief in the existence of a supreme being and to religion in general. Repeatedly in this trial, plaintiffs' scientific experts testified that the theory of evolution represents good science, is overwhelmingly accepted by the scientific community, and that it in no way conflicts with, nor does it deny, the existence of a divine creator.

Some advocates go further, seeing Darwin as a friend to faith. When I was in New York recently I spent an enjoyable hour at the new Darwin show at the American Museum of Natural History. In the last few yards of exhibit space, before you hit the inevitable gift shop, the museum addresses intelligent design. There's a short film with scientists talking about Darwin and religion, seeking to show that Darwinism actually has religion's best interests in mind. Francis Collins, head of the Human Genome project and a self-identified Christian, says that ID can "potentially [do] great harm to people's faiths." How so? Says Collins: by "putting God in the gaps" — by discovering God's creative powers at the junctures in life's history that science can't so far explain. When science at last finds mechanistic explanations for every presumed miracle, where will that leave God?

Never mind that his view, in which God can be assumed not to operate in the natural world, makes Collins a funny kind of Christian.

Never mind, also, that he inaccurately characterizes ID. The argument for design, whatever merit it may possess, is based on positive evidence, hallmarks of a designer's work. For example, the sudden infusion of genetic information 530 million years, when most of today's animal body plans appeared in the earth's ancient seas.

It should be clear by now that Darwinism makes an unlikely defender of religion's best interests. On the contrary, the ranks of the Darwinistas are replete with opponents of religion.

Does this delegitimize Darwinism as science? Obviously not — no more than ID is delegitimized by the fact that many Christians, Jews, and Muslims are attracted to its interpretation of nature's evidence. Of course, some avowed agnostics also doubt Darwin (e.g. evolutionary biologist Stanley Salthe, molecular biologist Michael Denton, and mathematician David Berlinski who says his only religious principle is "to have a good time all the time"). But there is irony in the way the media generally follow Barbara Forrest's line in portraying ID as a "Trojan Horse" for theism. It would be equally accurate to call Darwin a trojan horse for atheism.

In fact, both Darwin and design have metaphysical implications and are expressions of a certain kind of faith. ID theorists are not willing to submit to the assumption that material stuff is the only reality. Darwinism takes the opposite view, materialism, which assumes there can never be a supernatural reality.

In this it only follows Charles Darwin, who wrote the Origin of Species as an exercise in seeking to explain how life could have got to be the way it is without recourse to divine creative activity. In a pious mode intended to disarm critics, he concluded his book by writing of "laws impressed on matter by the Creator." However readers immediately saw the barely concealed point of the work: to demonstrate there was no need for "laws impressed on matter" by a Creator.

In short, with apologies to Judge Jones, there is no coherent reconciliation between God and Darwin. Attempts to show how we can have both faith in a spiritual reality (religion) and faith in pure materialism (Darwin) always end up vacuuming the essential meaning out of either God or Darwin.

And this, I think, is why some Darwin advocates dislike religion. It's why they fight it with such passion: Because negating religion is the reason behind their belief system. To their credit, they recognize a truth that others prefer not to see. That is: One may choose Darwin or one may choose God.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: aclu; activistcourts; antichristian; atheism; atheismandstate; atheists; christianbashing; christianity; christians; creation; creationism; darwinfundies; design; doublestandard; dover; evolution; freedomfromreligion; freedomofreligion; id; judicialtyranny; liberalbigots; mockingjesus; moralabsolutes; origins; pc; politicalcorrectness; politicallycorrect; religion; religiousintolerance; science; taxdollarsatwork; thenogodgod; youpayforthis
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To: marron
Thank you, dear marron, for your kind words!
141 posted on 12/23/2005 11:47:39 AM PST by betty boop (Dominus illuminatio mea.)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman
No coersion other than *Join or burn in Hell!*.

Being given a choice is not coercion, CG. There's no point in getting angry at mom for basic advice "Don't touch the hot stove." Or shaking your fist at the stove, as in "Stovedammit."

But this is silly, comparing God to stoves. A stove don't love.

It should comes as a rite of passage for everyone nowadays to realize that self-determination and autonomy is limited. In your view we are "coerced" into life, and we are "coerced" into death. If that is the case, Christianity should be embraced, in that it offers "coercion" into eternal life.

142 posted on 12/23/2005 11:48:00 AM PST by cornelis
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To: 21stCenturyFreeThinker
Evolution doesn't address how the laws of nature got the way they are. Maybe God did it or maybe he didn't. Evolution doesn't say.

Don't confuse the Creationists with facts. It just gets their jihadist blood stirred up.

143 posted on 12/23/2005 11:55:57 AM PST by RogueIsland
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To: betty boop
There are different levels of morality. There is morality that is imposed by force, there is morality that rises from fear, there is morality that rises from reason and experience, and there is morality that rises out of love.

All different, all have their place, but the last two flow from the inside out. And of the last two, even a morality rooted in reason and experience is insufficient, except as that reason and experience are informed and guided by love.

This kind of morality is voluntary, it is freely chosen, it is a mark of character. No one can impose it.

How does any of this relate to civil and criminal law? In a civil society, laws are inevitably made by humans in order to govern themselves, to prevent collisions between free people, and to set the rules for solving collisions when they occur.

If those rules are rooted in morality and in reason, they are generally respected; where they are not, they must be imposed by force. Separating law from reason and morality only guarantees that people will lose respect for law.

A corollary to this is that people whose morality flows from the inside out need fewer laws, and less force behind those laws. Freedom rests upon self-government, and the ability to govern oneself is in the end, moral.

Laws that people impose on themselves "democratically" will inevitably reflect the attitudes of the people there. When people generally agree that Sunday should be set aside, you will have "blue laws". When over time attitudes change, and Sunday's religious significance becomes less important, "blue laws" fade away into history.

When you're talking to someone who resents the influence of morality in law, its always helpful to define which laws are so troublesome. In the end, in a free society, laws will always reflect the personality and character of the people who made them. So divorce might be difficult in Ireland and easy in Sweden; killing sick people might be difficult in Italy and easy in Holland. Since laws always reflect the moral attitudes of the people that make those laws and live under those laws, it is inevitable that they will differ from place to place and people to people.

That this is so is not a limitation of freedom, but an expression of it.

144 posted on 12/23/2005 12:03:33 PM PST by marron
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To: marron; betty boop; hosepipe
There are different levels of morality. There is morality that is imposed by force, there is morality that rises from fear, there is morality that rises from reason and experience, and there is morality that rises out of love. All different, all have their place

Great observations. I'll add four distinct "places." I'd call them orientations.

(a) self - ego (as 1. reason, 2. will, 3. desire)
(b) society - polis / nomos (as 1. consent 2. authority 3. law)
(d) nature - physis
(e) God - theos
Kant's mistake was to make reason transcend even God. He "lost the imago Dei" as our friend Voegelin describes.

I think bb mentioned (a)-(e) on a thread recently.

145 posted on 12/23/2005 12:59:11 PM PST by cornelis
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To: Antoninus

Ain't it funny how the Darwinian fundamentalist crowd is now the equivalent of a religion which jealously guards what it considers the "truth" and ridicules those who question even the least bit of it.

______________________

This is the heart of the matter. Darwinian scientists are the only ones who adamently refuse to acknowledge the ligitimacy of a universe that includes God. they want to banish Him to a place outside existence.
The idea that some aspects of nature could be designed by one or another form of intelligence is anathema to these zealots. They demand that intelligence has no place in the order of things on the one hand yet they insist upon their own intelligence as necessary to understand reality. These are remarakable blockheads.
It is most amazing that the anti ID crowd has painted themselves into an impossible corner. They require atheism as the a priori principle of their discipline. They fundamentally will not allow any possibility that God-consciousness can pervade science. For them, spirituality is outside the realm of science. They have drawn the circle so tight and tiny that there is no room to maneuver. They are left with a world view that includes only their negative, truncated, myopic and completely worthless viewpoint.
I would rather have the leisure and pleasure of studying God and His creation from a scientific perspective. These wacko reactionaries who oppose all manner of God talk are missing the best part of scientific investigation, the unrestricted study of the workings of the world.


146 posted on 12/23/2005 3:04:03 PM PST by Louis Foxwell (Here come I, gravitas in tow.)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

Objectivity, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.


147 posted on 12/23/2005 4:06:19 PM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: Zionist Conspirator

bump


148 posted on 12/23/2005 4:13:19 PM PST by VOA
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To: xzins

"Objectivity, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder."

Only to a relativist.


149 posted on 12/23/2005 4:15:34 PM PST by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: betty boop; CarolinaGuitarman; marron; xzins
[ Does CG think these men are so abysmally stupid that they don't know that? ]

Evidently.. Says more about CG than all his/her posts.
On the other hand, many stupid things have been done in the name of christ..
What escapes CG is they were probably not christians..
Putting rocks in a an muffin pan(church) don't make them muffins..

150 posted on 12/23/2005 6:25:44 PM PST by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole..)
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To: xzins

Let me also suggest that if "older morality withers" in the light of a mechanistic universe, that there is no morality that can take its place,

_______________-
Absolutely correct. Morality is the product of the wisdom of the ages. It does not come full blown out of the mouth or mind of some unique thinker. It can only be replaced with something less, nothing more.


151 posted on 12/23/2005 8:51:56 PM PST by Louis Foxwell (Here come I, gravitas in tow.)
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To: little jeremiah
Thanks for the ping jeremiah

Your posts carry the weight of truth in megatons worth.

About evo, the moral of story, and nonsensical crap en masse.

Its peer reviewed, its been around for 150 years!!

Wolf
152 posted on 12/24/2005 12:21:48 AM PST by RunningWolf (Vet US Army Air Cav 1975)
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To: RunningWolf; scripter

In one of the books on evolution/holes in Darwinism I've real lately (I think it's "Darwin's Black Box"), the author (Behe, if that's the one; or maybe it's "Darwin on Trial" by Phillip Johnson) states that the true-blue evo fundies will be dying off one by one, and the scientists taking their place will be more open minded and willing to look at the truth of the TOE. And its miserably frail/nonexistant underpinnings.

BTW, have you ever looked at Scripter's profile page? He's got a ton of info on evolution. I've only glanced at it, I should study it. Here it is:

http://www.freerepublic.com/~scripter/


153 posted on 12/24/2005 7:43:48 AM PST by little jeremiah
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

Haha, you're funny! And who is the all knowing judge of this absolute vision of reality that us God believers don't agree with?

Could it be your august self, and your august self alone?

So would this make you - ahem - Godlike - in your knowledge of objective reality that others don't see?


154 posted on 12/24/2005 7:47:40 AM PST by little jeremiah
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To: little jeremiah

Merry Christmas!


155 posted on 12/24/2005 8:50:51 AM PST by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

Merry Christmas to you too!


156 posted on 12/24/2005 9:33:33 AM PST by little jeremiah
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To: Zionist Conspirator
If ID is bogus because many of its theorists have religious beliefs to which the controversial critique of Darwinism lends support, then what should we say about Darwinism itself?

Faulty premise, probably because the author wanted a nice easy strawman to knock over. ID isn't bogus because it bolsters religious beliefs. It's bogus because it's nothing but a trojan horse for said beliefs. All of the so-called science behind it is wrong.

It is largely a grab bag of unconnected attacks on evolution. That's not very enlightening, especially when all of the attacks are based on bad reasoning, bad evidence, or both.

ID promises only that we will NEVER understand some things without invoking the actions of an invisible but all-powerful designer at unspecified times in some unknown number of acts of creation, which amounts to saying we will never understand them at all.

ID is not an explanation. It is an attack on non-ID explanations. All it will ever teach us is that we don't know as much as we thought we did so we should all just give up and start praying.

And people say it isn't science!

157 posted on 12/24/2005 9:42:55 AM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: Zionist Conspirator
The "ID" people are Theistic evolutionists.

Almost never, except for Behe and Dembski.

I'll never understand what anti-ID Theistic evolutionists and pro-ID Theistic evolutionists are arguing about. Never.

They're arguing about whether evolution happens. There's a lot of evidence for evolution being the origin of species.

158 posted on 12/24/2005 9:45:31 AM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: Zionist Conspirator
In his highly regarded Darwin's Dangerous Idea, he tells why it might be necessary to confine conservative Christians in zoos.

This is just a damned lie, and Klinghoffer, if he has a conscience, should be ashamed of it.

I love how all these sanctimonious pro-religion types are the first to resort to libel.

159 posted on 12/25/2005 9:54:24 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: betty boop
Second-class status of Catholic women? Whatta bunch of claptrap -- all of it!!!

How many female priests are there?

160 posted on 12/25/2005 9:58:13 AM PST by Right Wing Professor (Liberals have hijacked science for long enough. Now it's our turn -- Tom Bethell)
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