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'Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics': Supernatural Selection
The New York Times ^ | 14 April 2002 | JIM HOLT

Posted on 04/14/2002 12:31:25 AM PDT by sourcery

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April 14, 2002

'Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics': Supernatural Selection

By JIM HOLT

INTELLIGENT DESIGN CREATIONISM AND ITS CRITICS
Philosophical, Theological, and Scientific Perspectives.

Edited by Robert T. Pennock.
Illustrated. 805 pp. Cambridge, Mass.: A Bradford Book/The MIT Press. Cloth, $110. Paper, $45.



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In the last decade or so, creationism has grown sophisticated. Oh, the old-fashioned creationists are still around, especially in the Bible Belt. They're the ones who believe that the earth is only a few thousand years old, that God created it and all its inhabitants in six days and that fossils are a product of Noah's flood. In the early 1990's, however, a new breed of creationists appeared. These ''neo-creos,'' as they have been called, are no Dogpatch hayseeds. They have Ph.D.'s and occupy positions at some of the better universities. The case they make against Darwinism does not rest on the authority of Scripture; rather, it proceeds from premises that are scientific and philosophical, invoking esoteric ideas in molecular biology, information theory and the logic of hypothesis testing.

When the neo-creos go public -- as they did recently in a hearing before the Ohio Board of Education, which they were petitioning for equal time in the classroom with Darwinism -- they do not stake any obviously foolish claims. They concede that the earth is billions of years old, and that some evolution may have taken place once the basic biochemical structures were brought into being. What they deny is that the standard Darwinian theory, or any other ''naturalistic'' theory that confines itself to mindless, mechanical causes operating gradually over time, suffices to explain the whole of life. The biological world, they contend, is rife with evidence of intelligent design -- evidence that points with near certainty to the intervention of an Intelligent Designer.

''Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics'' is a great fat collection of essays, some three dozen in all, that examine this thesis from every imaginable angle. Its editor, the philosopher Robert T. Pennock, has himself written a book opposing the neo-creos (''Tower of Babel,'' 1999), and he admits that his selection here is stacked against them by about two to one. Yet most of the major proponents of intelligent design are represented: Phillip E. Johnson, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and the father of the movement; the biochemist Michael J. Behe; the mathematician William A. Dembski; and the philosopher of logic Alvin Plantinga. They are given the chance not only to present their reasoning but also to defend it against their more prominent Darwinian critics, including the biologists Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Dawkins and the philosophers of science Philip Kitcher and Michael Ruse. The debate ranges freely over genetics, theology, the history of science and the theory of knowledge. The rhetoric is spirited, if sometimes barely civil, and the to-and-fro of ideas can be impressive.

Before we get to the scientific arguments of the neo-creos, a word should be said about their motivation. Just what do they have against Darwinism? Unlike the old-fashioned creationists, they are not especially worried about evolution conflicting with a literal reading of Genesis. Then why can't they join with the mainstream religions, which have made their peace with Darwinism? In 1996, for example, Pope John Paul II said that the theory of evolution had been ''proved true'' and asserted its consistency with Roman Catholic doctrine. Stephen Jay Gould, though agnostic himself, salutes the wisdom of this papal pronouncement, arguing that science and religion are ''nonoverlapping magisteria.'' But the neo-creos aren't buying this. They think that belief in Darwinism and belief in God are fundamentally incompatible. Here, ironically, they are in agreement with their more radical Darwinian opponents. Both extremes concur that evolution is, in the words of Phillip Johnson, ''a purposeless and undirected process that produced mankind accidentally'' and, as such, must be at odds with the idea of a purposeful Creator.

The neo-creos are right to think that evolution is not religiously neutral. If nothing else, it undercuts what has traditionally been the most powerful argument for God's existence, the ''argument from design.'' No longer is the God hypothesis required to explain the intricate complexity of the living world. Christian intellectuals who accept Darwinism insist that evolution still leaves ample scope for a Creator-God, one who got the universe rolling in just the right way so that, by sheer chemistry and physics, beings like us would inevitably appear without further supernatural meddling. Ernan McMullin, a philosopher of science at Notre Dame who also happens to be a Catholic priest, argues that the resources of God's original creation ''were sufficient for the generation of the successive orders of complexity that make up our world.'' (Another contributor wonders whether the creationist idea of divine action hasn't been ''unduly affected by the 'special effects' industry.'') But this deistic notion of God holds little appeal for the neo-creos. They remain vexed that, as Richard Dawkins pointedly observes, ''Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.''

To regain the advantage for religion, the neo-creos have devised a two-part strategy. First, they try to establish their intelligent-design theory as the only alternative to Darwinism for explaining life. (The content of intelligent design is deliberately left vague: it can mean either creation by the designing agent or purposefully ''guided'' evolution.) Then they proceed negatively, deploying various arguments to show that Darwinian mechanisms could not possibly do the trick. The logic of this strategy is impeccable: Either Darwinism or intelligent design. Not Darwinism. Therefore, intelligent design. Armed with that conclusion, they hope to pry scientifically minded people away from a purely secular worldview.

AT the moment, there is no serious scientific rival to Darwinism. Indeed, if the explanation for the origin and complexity of life must be sought in physical mechanisms, then an evolutionary theory of some sort would seem to be inevitable. But why, the neo-creos ask, should other sorts of explanations -- those positing intelligent causes, supernatural interventions -- be ruled out by fiat? To do so betrays a commitment to ''metaphysical naturalism,'' the doctrine that nature is a system of material causes and effects sealed off from outside influences; and that, they say, is a matter of faith, not proof. But the Darwinians have a devastating retort to the charge of metaphysical naturalism: nothing succeeds like success. As Michael Ruse points out, modern science's refusal to cry miracle when faced with explanatory difficulties has yielded ''fantastic dividends.'' Letting divine causes fill in wherever naturalistic ones are hard to find is not only bad theology -- it leaves you worshiping a ''God of the gaps'' -- but it is also a science-stopper.

Besides, the evidence for Darwinism looks awfully strong. Yes, there are internal disagreements over the mechanisms and tempo of evolution. But the core thesis that all living things have a common ancestry, long supported by the pattern of structural similarities among them and by the fossil record, has received stunning new confirmation from molecular genetics. Johnson does his lawyerly best to cast doubt on the evidence for common ancestry. However, the more tough-minded of the neo-creos are willing to accept the historical claim that organisms evolved from one another. They even acknowledge a role for the standard Darwinian mechanism (natural selection operating on random variation) in the process. To make good on the second part of their strategy, the Not Darwinism part, they instead try to show that for deeper reasons Darwinism is bound to fall short of telling the whole story. They have three main arguments, all of which seem clever at first blush.

Continued
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TOPICS: Philosophy
KEYWORDS: creationism; crevolist; evolution
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To: jennyp
Don't bother me. I'm yelling back at the screen!

LOL!

221 posted on 04/15/2002 6:08:27 PM PDT by Gumlegs
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 200 | View Replies]

To: jennyp
Cloaked & lurking ...

222 posted on 04/15/2002 6:23:29 PM PDT by PatrickHenry
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To: BMCDA
Mein Deutsch is nicht gut genüg! I'd like to read the English sometime.
223 posted on 04/15/2002 7:11:57 PM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: jennyp
There's a slight problem with the senescence model and that is that past reproductive years, mortality drops off as age increases.
224 posted on 04/15/2002 8:01:20 PM PDT by Nebullis
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To: jennyp
Dank für das komplette und lesbare website. Offensichtlich sollte jeder auf FreeRepublic es lesen.

Machen sie oberkorper frei! (I used that on german women when I was there.)

225 posted on 04/15/2002 8:08:55 PM PDT by Gladwin
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To: Jeff Gordon
Occum's Razor doesn't hold a candle to the Kobiachi Maru. (Just kidding....humor.)
226 posted on 04/15/2002 8:59:48 PM PDT by xzins
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To: Jeff Gordon
That'a Occam's Razor from Willam of Occam (or Ockham). He liked it so much, he bought the company.

Actually it shaves slowly but it shaves exceedling close.

227 posted on 04/15/2002 9:12:23 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: RobbyS
Most people seem not to have risen to the level of Aristotelean physics.
228 posted on 04/15/2002 9:14:51 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: jennyp;VadeRetro;Nebullis;PatrickHenry
It's quite comprehensive indeed but unfortunately it's completely in German and I don't know if the author has any plans to translate it to English.
I found this site some time ago while doing a search on evolution, Popper and Chalmers. I was quite surprised that there was a German website dealing with Creationism since I was convinced that this was only an issue in America (and to some lesser degree in Australia). Most Europeans don't even know that there is such a controversy over this topic in the US, so I was even more baffled when I found a French (or was it Belgian?) website dealing with Creationism (but somehow I lost the bookmark, merde!).
229 posted on 04/15/2002 9:32:20 PM PDT by BMCDA
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To: VadeRetro
Mein Deutsch is nicht gut genüg!

Ja aber babelfishdeutscher ist viel besser :-)

230 posted on 04/15/2002 9:36:12 PM PDT by jennyp
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To: Nebullis
There's a slight problem with the senescence model and that is that past reproductive years, mortality drops off as age increases.

Really? It holds across many species? How exactly do you define "mortality" in this case?

231 posted on 04/15/2002 9:37:52 PM PDT by jennyp
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To: BMCDA
It looks like a great site. A cursory glance revealed some good topics, canalization, developmental constraints...

Bedankt, hoor!

232 posted on 04/15/2002 9:45:24 PM PDT by Nebullis
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To: jennyp
How exactly do you define "mortality" in this case?

That's a good question. Mortality rates level off at older ages. The speed slows down. Mutations accumulate over a lifetime, but, apparently the expectation of mortality based on rates of deleterious effects, both from mutations and from active genes causing rapid senescence, slow down at some point far beyond reproductive age.

233 posted on 04/15/2002 9:50:49 PM PDT by Nebullis
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To: Nebullis
Niets te danken ;-D
234 posted on 04/15/2002 10:26:09 PM PDT by BMCDA
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Most people seem not to have risen to the level of Aristotelean physics. Including many "scientists"?
235 posted on 04/15/2002 11:15:36 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: BMCDA
merde!). Watch your language: this is a family thread! :-)
236 posted on 04/15/2002 11:19:04 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: F16Fighter
If you care to check out this particular book, which also delves into the scientific, spiritual and historical dynamics of UFOs, Ghosts, Drugs (coincidently), critiques of Christian sects and their ties to the "occult", and other goodies, the book is called 'Occult Invasion'.

You actually have me interested and I may get it. The drugs/religion connection is well known though. That's how a lot of people "saw god."

For example, I read recently that researchers found that the Oracle of Delphi, which in a religious context gave out supernatural advice, worked on gas. There was a fault line running right under the temple that was releasing Ethylene gas, which caused the trances and delirium in the priestesses.

I suppose there's a rather mundane explanation such as this for most religious phenomena.

237 posted on 04/16/2002 1:12:23 AM PDT by Quila
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To: Junior
I've been waiting for Fiat jokes.

"Fix It Again Tony"

238 posted on 04/16/2002 1:13:21 AM PDT by Quila
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To: xzins
Intelligent design is not creationism. Such is only a tie that's made by those who have an anti-intelligent design agenda.

You keep telling yourself that, but many of us have been watching the progression. It seems largely influenced by the fact that they can't force obvious religious doctrine into public schools (creationism), so the new tact is to wrap a scientific cloak around it to get it in.

In either case, the main point is to displace science (evolution) in the science classes with religion (creationism) by other than competition on an equal scientific level.

239 posted on 04/16/2002 1:17:03 AM PDT by Quila
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To: F16Fighter
Interesting take on Hunt by Aufill, who certainly has his dander up about Hunt's inferences that Catholics surrender "devotions, novenas, feasts", and I suppose the incense, candles, and Marial and saint worship as well and does in fact tie in all the evidence.

I'm even more interested. I've always known that much of Christianity, and especially Catholicism, is taken from local pagan practices (in the Catholic's case, it was just plain good marketing). Hunt lays it out pretty well?

240 posted on 04/16/2002 1:20:07 AM PDT by Quila
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