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ON
SCIENCE AND FEAR
Opponents
of "intelligent design" are naturally quite cock-a-hoop
about their victory in the Dover, PA school board case.
The board had proposed to have a short statement read in classes
on evolution, saying that evolution was a theory rather than an
established fact, and that students should be aware that there is
an alternative theory, which asserted that certain steps in the
development of species were too complex to have occured purely by
accident or chance, but implied instead the existence of an intelligent
design.
Just who or what the "intelligent design" was, the theory
leaves open. But one obvious possibility is God, and that has roused
the defenders of purely random evolution to protest that religion
is being smuggled into a class that ought to be confined strictly
to "science" -- that is to say, to exclusively materialistic,
non-religious explanations of reality.
They therefore hauled the school board into court, and the judge
turned out to be entirely on the side of the evolutionists. He not
only agreed that the offending statement and all other references
to intelligent design must be banned from classes on evolution,
but threw in a series of gratuitous slaps at the school board, which
was defeated in a subsequent election and replaced by one favored
by the evolutionists.
So all's quiet in Dover, PA. But one can't help being a little surprised
at the sheer savagery of the evolutionists' attack on intelligent
design, which has been duplicated in every other forum where the
subject has been discussed.
What's all the fuss about? One thinks of scientists as calm, intelligent
people, perhaps wearing white smocks, who take on questions to which
we don't know the answers, think about them carefully, and test
various explanations experimentally until they come up with one
that solves the problem.
One would suppose they might actually welcome such an intriguing
new theory as intelligent design, and get a kick out of assessing
its merits. If proved true, that would (presumably) represent progress.
If it didn't -- well, in due course it would die of disregard.
But that hasn't been the reaction of the evolutionists to intelligent
design at all. They have all but bitten themselves in two trying
to drive it straight out of the realm of discussion.
If anybody wants to talk about it, let them do so in classes of
religion (which are not permitted in the schools). But not even
a short statement about it can be permitted in a "scientific"
class.
It is phony, it is false, it "isn't scientific" -- meaning
it violates the rule (laid down by whom, by the way?) that only
purely materialistic explanations are permitted in science classes.
They complain that the proponents of intelligent design never publish
articles in "peer-reviewed" scientific journals -- and
then excoriate any journal that dares publish such an article.
They will, if necessary, as in Dover, haul their rivals into court
and try to drive them out of the classroom by force of law.
It seems quite obvious that there is something more than a scientific
dispute going on here. The evolutionists are not acting like scientists
confronting an interesting new theory. They are acting, to be frank
about it, as if they are scared out of their wits -- as if this
particular theory threatens to do fatal damage to their whole concept
of the cosmos. And in fact, it does.
As long as "science" is by definition confined strictly
to materialistic interpretations of reality, intelligent design,
or any other theory that leaves open the slighest possibility that
the universe may contain something more, represents a danger that
many scientists (not all) are simply unwilling to confront.
They have spent their lives constructing a concept of reality that
satisfies them, and is simplicity itself. There is no God; the universe
had no beginning, but has existed forever; it was never "designed"
by any kind of "intelligent being" -- it is merely the
result of an infinite series of accidents, of which human beings
are just the latest.
I encourage the proponents of intelligent design to be of good cheer.
Any explanation of the universe as silly as the one above will collapse,
sooner or later, like the Soviet Union, and for the same reason.
It is too far out of accord with observable reality. And its defenders
are already on the run.
---- By William Rusher, via. The Sower, Vol. 51, No. 2, March/April,
2006.
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