Posted on 02/14/2007 2:07:15 PM PST by Tim Long
There is scant reporting on the anti-religious zeal with which many atheists promote Darwinism.
February 12 used to be known in classrooms across the nation as Abraham Lincolns birthday. But over the last decade, an increasing number of schools and community groups have decided to celebrate the birthday of the father of evolution instead.
The movement to establish February 12 as Darwin Day seems to be spreading, promoted by a evangelistic non-profit group with its own website (www.darwinday.org) and an ambitious agenda to create a global celebration in 2009, the bicentennial of Darwins birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of The Origins of Species.
Darwin Day celebrations provide an eye-opening glimpse into the world of grassroots Darwinian fundamentalism, an alternate reality where atheism is the conventional wisdom and where traditional religious believers are viewed with suspicion if not paranoia.
Promoters of Darwin Day deny that their activities are anti-religious, but their denial is hard to square with reality.
According to the Darwin Day website, the movements inspiration was an event sponsored by the Stanford Humanists and the Humanist Community in 1995. Since then the honor roll of groups sponsoring Darwin Day events has been top-heavy with organizations bearing such names as the Long Island Secular Humanists, the Atheists and Agnostics of Wisconsin, the Gay and Lesbian Atheists and Humanists, the Humanists of Idaho, the Southeast Michigan Chapter of Freedom from Religion Foundation, and the San Francisco Atheists. The last group puts on an annual festival called Evolutionpalooza featuring a Darwin impersonator and an evolution game show (Evolutionary!).
Given such sponsors, it should be no surprise that Darwin Day events often explicitly attack religion. At a high school in New York a few years ago, students wore shirts emblazoned with messages proclaiming that no religious dogmas [were] keeping them from believing what they want to believe, while in California a group named Students for Science and Skepticism hosted a lecture at the University of California, Irvine, on the topic Darwins Greatest Discovery: Design without a Designer. This year in Boston there is an event on Biological Arguments Against the Existence of God.
A musical group calling itself Scientific Gospel Productions, meanwhile, mocks gospel music by holding annual Darwin Day concerts featuring such songs as Aint Gonna Be No Judgment Day, the Virgin of Spumoni (satirizing the Virgin Mary), and my favorite, Randomness Is Good Enough for Me, the lyrics of which proclaim: Randomness is good enough for me./ If theres no design it means Im free./ You can pray to go to heaven./ Im gonna try to roll a seven./ Randomness is good enough for me. The same groups website offers for sale a CD titled Hallelujah! Evolution!
The original honorary president of Darwin Day was biologist Richard Dawkins, author most recently of The God Delusion. Dawkins is best known for such pearls of wisdom as faith is one of the worlds great evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate, and Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.
The Darwin Day groups current advisory board includes not only Dawkins but Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education (an original signer of the Humanist Manifesto III), philosopher Daniel Dennett (who praises Darwinism as the universal acid that eats away traditional religion and morality), and Scientific American columnist Michael Shermer (an atheist who writes that Science Is My Savior because it helped free him from the stultifying dogma of a 2,000-year-old religion).
Perhaps in an effort to revise the image of Darwin Day as merely a holiday for atheists, last year a professor from Wisconsin urged churches to celebrate Evolution Sunday on or near Darwin Day. But the fact that some liberal churches have now been enlisted to spread the Darwinist gospel cannot cover up the anti-religious fervor that pervades the Darwinist subculture.
Darwin Day celebrations are fascinating because they expose a side of the controversy over evolution in America that is rarely covered by the mainstream media. Although journalists routinely write about the presumed religious motives of anyone critical of unguided evolution, they almost never discuss the anti-religious mindset that motivates many of evolutions staunchest defenders.
On the few occasions when the anti-religious agenda of someone like Dawkins is even raised, it is usually downplayed as unrepresentative of most Darwinists.
What Darwin Day shows, however, is just how ordinary the anti-religious views expressed by Dawkins are among grassroots Darwinists. Far from being on the fringe, Dawkins views form the ideological core of mainstream Darwinism.
Not that this should come as a shock. According to a 1998 survey of members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), nearly 95 percent of NAS biologists are atheists or agnostics. A look at the major critics of the theory of intelligent design reveals similar views. Barbara Forrest, co-author of the anti-intelligent design harangue Creationisms Trojan Horse, is a long-time activist and board member with a group calling itself the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association, although she fails to disclose that fact in her book, and reporters studiously avoid asking her about her own religious beliefs.
The anti-religious outlook of many of Darwins chief boosters exposes the hypocrisy in current discussions over Darwins theory. The usual complaint raised against scientists who are skeptical of Darwins theory is that many of them (like the vast majority of Americans) happen to believe in God. It is insinuated that this fact somehow undermines the validity of their scientific views. Yet, at the same time, defenders of Darwinism insist that their own rejection of religion is irrelevant to the validity of their scientific viewsand most reporters seem to agree.
Of course, in an important sense these defenders of Darwinism are right. Just because leading Darwinists are avowed atheists or agnostics does not mean that their scientific beliefs about evolution are wrong. Scientific propositions should be debated based on their evidence, not on the metaphysical beliefs of those who espouse them.
But if Darwinists have the right to be debated based on evidence, not motives, then scientists who are supportive of alternatives to Darwins theory such as intelligent design should have the right to expect the same treatment.
If Darwin Day helps expose the blatant double standard about religious motives operating in the current evolution debate, then its evangelistic boosters will have performed an invaluable public servicehowever unintentionally.
John G. West is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and author of Darwins Conservatives: The Misguided Quest.
Or.... they share a common designer.
Your mind doesn't recognize sarcasm when it sees it either.
I recognize the comments of a loser. Yours are such.
BTW "A and not A", is something you did, "claimed" sarcasm nothwithstanding.
Creationists are such nice people.
"Nice" comment.
Another of yours follows.
When conservatives chase away people who are scientifically literate, do you think there will be enough creationists left to win a vote?
It's also a bit hard to understand how people who believe that God is capable of anything and everything cannot accept the fact that he could have designed and implemented the process of evolution. Why do creationists insist on limiting the power and wisdom of God?
"Any religion is defined by the collection plate, for that's the place where the divine presence is especially thick and concentrated. No plate - no religion, not even a primitive one"
Right. Evo Dogma at its finest.
It was the atheism at its finest, not an evo dogma. My standard rejoinder to all the biblers is "not a cent".
Great point. It's true of environmentalism as well. Note the well funded enviro groups, and the promise of billion dollar CO2 trading organizations. Now they've tapped into the education funding spigot, and are feeding nicely.
Meanwhile look at some of the native American religious ideas, that are promoted only to the extent they can sell trinkets outside reservations.
Follow the money. Good point.
Interesting response. The creation "story" came from....Jews.
"My standard rejoinder to all the biblers is "not a cent""
God doesn't want your money, nor does money constitute faith or religion.
Did you get burned when you were younger? You seem bitter.
"Now they've tapped into the education funding spigot, and are feeding nicely."
True of Darwinism as well.
Here is where we differ. Have you ever met Jews who agree on what the Torah says? No, you'll never be able to do that. For us, for me, the teaching of the Torah are a mystery to be unraveled. They are not literal as your tribe like to make them out to be.
No, thank you! That is not science. It is pure assumption."
OK, here is another assumption for you (cute little guy, too). Let me know if you want more.
Site: Buxton Limeworks, Taung, South Africa (1)
Discovered By: M. de Bruyn, 1924 (1)
Estimated Age of Fossil: 2.3 mya * determined by Faunal & geomorphological data (1, 4, 5)
Species Name: Australopithecus africanus (1, 3, 7, 8)
Gender: Unknown (1)
Cranial Capacity: 405 (440 as adult) cc (1, 3)
Information: First early hominid fossil found in Africa (7, 8)
Interpretation:
See original source for notes:
http://www.mos.org/evolution/fossils/fossilview.php?fid=27
As you have reading comprehension difficulties, I will try it again, but slower: religion is centered about the collection plate, for where would be the clergy without it? Not for nothing a clergyman was defined as a person bettering his temporary affairs by managing the others' spiritual ones. Thus the high concentration of the divine presence on and around the collection plates. The ones needing are the absolutely human, not supernatural, beings operating those plates of all kinds, and not a penny are they getting from me. More, I'd like to see the charitable tax deduction abolished, so that they'd not get anything out of me even indirectly, through IRS.
"temporary" ought to have been "temporal".
Your statement is unintentionally funny, and hits the mark...how did you know I was a Cherokee/Powhatan mix?
I but I see where you are coming from...
But even the Christian "tribe" in and of itself is not as monolithic as it may seem; I know I am not introducing you to any new concepts here (Catholic vs Protestant or even Unitarain vs Southern Baptist)
My point is that the statement of "your creation story" isn't in fact "our" (as in Christian) story originally. Even if Jews disagree today, the origin of the story is the same (meaning from the Torah).
Just whose money is being taxed, yours, the government's, or the taxpayer getting a deduction?
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