Why Intelligent Design Will Win

2funny2c

Mouseketeer
Joined
Nov 3, 2005
Messages
131
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=10570

by Nancy Pearcey
Posted Nov 30, 2005
To hear some conservatives talk, there is no room for proponents of intelligent design (ID) in the "big tent." In recent months commentators such as John Derbyshire in National Review and George Will and Charles Krauthammer in the Washington Post have inveighed against ID. Warning that "the conservative coalition" is coming unglued, Will all but called on "the storm-tossed and rudderless Republican Party" to repudiate the ID movement.

Conservatives who hope to be on the winning side, however, may want to put their money on ID, even if they harbor a few reservations at present. Here's why. For starters, the affirmation of design is good for science. Like all knowledge, science is a pattern-seeking project. The human mind inherently seeks intelligible order. Thus the conviction that such an order exists to be found is a crucial assumption. No scientists are going to find their work diminished because they ground it in the search for an inbuilt design in nature.

Indeed, as sociologist Rodney Stark argues in To the Glory of God, modern science could have arisen only in a culture convinced that the universe is the creation of a rational mind--and is thus intelligible to our rational minds. This explains why science arose historically in medieval Europe, a period when western civilization was saturated with Christianity. Steve Fuller, a sociologist of science, offers this as one reason he testified for ID in the recent court case in Dover, Pa. "The idea that religion provided intellectual sustenance for science," he explained on a recent blog, is "obviously borne out by history."


By contrast, Darwinist theory claims that the design in nature is not real but only apparent, a product of blind, mechanical forces. As arch-Darwinian Richard Dawkins said in a recent Salon interview, evolution produces "the illusion of design." The implication for science, as Richard Rorty elaborates so clearly, is that truth is not "out there" to be discovered but is merely a social construction. Such postmodernist notions threaten to undercut the scientific enterprise.

The second reason ID will win is that, contrary to the way it is often portrayed, it does not thrive on "gaps" in science but rather on the growth of science. The argument from design first became popular during the scientific revolution, which revealed that nature is more intelligible than anyone had hitherto imagined. And the current resurgence of ID was spawned by the revolution in biochemistry, which revealed the complex engineering and information processing that goes on within the cell.

We now know that the cell bristles with molecular machinery far more complicated than anything devised by mere humans. Each cell is akin to a miniature factory town, humming with power plants and automated factories, connected by criss-crossing transport rails and directed by a headquarters (the nucleus) housing a library of coded blueprints. The more we learn about life, the less plausible is any evolutionary theory that relies on blind, undirected, piece-by-piece change.

Third, ID will win because it incorporates the insights of the high-tech world of information theory. The revolution in biochemistry revealed that the core of living things is a code, language, information (DNA). The origin of life has now been recast as the origin of complex biological information. This explains why laboratory experiments to create life have failed—because they work from the bottom up, by assembling the right materials. But life is not fundamentally about matter; it’s about information.

In today's preferred analogy, the DNA molecule is the hardware, while the information stored and transmitted is the software. "Trying to make life by mixing chemicals in a test tube," writes astrophysicist Paul Davies, "is like soldering switches and wires in an attempt to produce Windows 98. It won't work because it addresses the problem at the wrong conceptual level.” The paramount role of information strongly suggests that mind preceded matter.

Fourth, ID will win because it recovers the unity of truth. Edward Purcell in The Crisis of Democratic Theory: Scientific Naturalism and the Problem of Value explains how Darwinism led to a naturalistic worldview--one in which the natural sciences were elevated to the only form of objective knowledge while "theological dogmas and philosophical absolutes were at worst totally fraudulent and at best merely symbolic of deep human aspirations." In other words, Darwinism lent scientific support to the fact/value dichotomy, where religion and morality are dismissed as merely subjective and private, or even outright false.

As a result, ID appeals to a broad range of people concerned about overcoming the fact/value split--especially relevant during the Christmas season, when the ACLU and assorted secularists try to impose their gospel of privatized religion onto the rest of the country. As Richard John Neuhaus wrote recently in First Things, not just conservative Protestants but also "Catholics and everyone else have an enormous stake in defending the unity of truth." BBC's Washington correspondent Justin Webb recently asked why American social conservatives "are spending more energy fighting Charles Darwin than cutting taxes," but the reason is clear: At stake is not just a scientific theory but a divided concept of truth that reduces religion and morality to the level of myth.

As though to prove the point, at Kansas University the chairman of the religious studies department, Paul Mirecki, announced a new course subtitled "Intelligent Design, Creationisms, and other Religious Mythologies." Mirecki posted a note on a student atheists website bragging that he was "doing my part to [tick] off the religious right," giving them a "slap in their big fat face by teaching [ID] . . . under the category 'mythology.'" (Mirecki has since apologized.)

Which suggests the final reason ID will win--because it accords with the ideals of a free and open society. In our pluralistic age, schools should train students in critical thinking to prepare them to engage respectfully and intelligently with a wide range of worldviews, both religious and secular. Yet under current rules, public schools may present evidence for scientific theories that imply a strictly materialistic or secular worldview, while they are not allowed to present evidence for scientific theories that imply a non-materialistic or religious worldview (though the latter may be mocked and ridiculed, as the KU course proves).

The public cannot help but notice that many ID proponents are well educated and credentialed. Yet, as attorney Doug Kern writes in Tech Central Station, "the pro-Darwin crowd insists on the same phooey-to-the-****oisie shtick that was tiresome in Mencken's day." It has grown even more tiresome in our own day.
 
here's the piece by Krathammer for those interested. emphasis is mine

Because every few years this country, in its infinite tolerance, insists on hearing yet another appeal of the Scopes monkey trial, I feel obliged to point out what would otherwise be superfluous: that the two greatest scientists in the history of our species were Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, and they were both religious.

Newton's religion was traditional. He was a staunch believer in Christianity and a member of the Church of England. Einstein's was a more diffuse belief in a deity who set the rules for everything that occurs in the universe.

Neither saw science as an enemy of religion. On the contrary. "He believed he was doing God's work," James Gleick wrote in his recent biography of Newton. Einstein saw his entire vocation -- understanding the workings of the universe -- as an attempt to understand the mind of God.

Not a crude and willful God who pushes and pulls and does things according to whim. Newton was trying to supplant the view that first believed the sun's motion around the earth was the work of Apollo and his chariot, and later believed it was a complicated system of cycles and epicycles, one tacked upon the other every time some wobble in the orbit of a planet was found. Newton's God was not at all so crude. The laws of his universe were so simple, so elegant, so economical and therefore so beautiful that they could only be divine.

Which brings us to Dover, Pa., Pat Robertson, the Kansas State Board of Education, and a fight over evolution that is so anachronistic and retrograde as to be a national embarrassment.

Dover distinguished itself this Election Day by throwing out all eight members of its school board who tried to impose "intelligent design" -- today's tarted-up version of creationism -- on the biology curriculum. Pat Robertson then called the wrath of God down upon the good people of Dover for voting "God out of your city." Meanwhile, in Kansas, the school board did a reverse Dover, mandating the teaching of skepticism about evolution and forcing intelligent design into the statewide biology curriculum.

Let's be clear. Intelligent design may be interesting as theology, but as science it is a fraud. It is a self-enclosed, tautological "theory" whose only holding is that when there are gaps in some area of scientific knowledge -- in this case, evolution -- they are to be filled by God. It is a "theory" that admits that evolution and natural selection explain such things as the development of drug resistance in bacteria and other such evolutionary changes within species but also says that every once in a while God steps into this world of constant and accumulating change and says, "I think I'll make me a lemur today." A "theory" that violates the most basic requirement of anything pretending to be science -- that it be empirically disprovable. How does one empirically disprove the proposition that God was behind the lemur, or evolution -- or behind the motion of the tides or the "strong force" that holds the atom together?

In order to justify the farce that intelligent design is science, Kansas had to corrupt the very definition of science, dropping the phrase " natural explanations for what we observe in the world around us," thus unmistakably implying -- by fiat of definition, no less -- that the supernatural is an integral part of science. This is an insult both to religion and science.

The school board thinks it is indicting evolution by branding it an "unguided process" with no "discernible direction or goal." This is as ridiculous as indicting Newtonian mechanics for positing an "unguided process" by which Earth is pulled around the sun every year without discernible purpose. What is chemistry if not an "unguided process" of molecular interactions without "purpose"? Or are we to teach children that God is behind every hydrogen atom in electrolysis?

He may be, of course. But that discussion is the province of religion, not science. The relentless attempt to confuse the two by teaching warmed-over creationism as science can only bring ridicule to religion, gratuitously discrediting a great human endeavor and our deepest source of wisdom precisely about those questions -- arguably, the most important questions in life -- that lie beyond the material.

How ridiculous to make evolution the enemy of God. What could be more elegant, more simple, more brilliant, more economical, more creative, indeed more divine than a planet with millions of life forms, distinct and yet interactive, all ultimately derived from accumulated variations in a single double-stranded molecule, pliable and fecund enough to give us mollusks and mice, Newton and Einstein? Even if it did give us the Kansas State Board of Education, too.
 
Interesting - just subscribing!
 

2funny2c said:
Careful. If you disagree with me, I will ask to have this thread closed also like you had the last thread closed down.

The last thread was closed by the OP (the only non-mod who has the authority to close it). Cardaway wasn't the OP.

Mike, just a guess, but I don't think 2funny cares much about what the Catholic church thinks about it.
 
Bob Slydell said:
The last thread was closed by the OP (the only non-mod who has the authority to close it). Cardaway wasn't the OP.

Mike, just a guess, but I don't think 2funny cares much about what the Catholic church thinks about it.

But Alex said he closed down the thread at the request of the original poster of the thread.

As far as the Catholic Church is concerned, they have so many non-biblical and extra-biblical practices going on that their opinion on ID lacks any shred of credibility.
 
Bob Slydell said:
The last thread was closed by the OP (the only non-mod who has the authority to close it). Cardaway wasn't the OP.

Mike, just a guess, but I don't think 2funny cares much about what the Catholic church thinks about it.

Actually I was Steve. I wasn't interested in another round of hokie/2funny2c telling others that he is the only credible bible scholar, so I asked for it to be closed.

As for this thread, I think it's quite interesting that THE largest and most poweful church thinks ID is bunk.
 
Oops, sorry, I mixed up the AIDS thread with Kristy's abortion thread.

Oh, and I agree that the Vatican's stance is interesting (especially being Catholic). :)
 
2funny2c said:
Careful. If you disagree with me, I will ask to have this thread closed also like you had the last thread closed down.

Why can't he disagree if he wants to? Just because he disagrees with all of your posts?
 
Sigh.... I just don't see why the two can't coexist in their own proper places. In other words, evolution in school where theories belong and ID in churches where religion belongs.
 
2funny2c said:
As far as the Catholic Church is concerned, they have so many non-biblical and extra-biblical practices going on that their opinion on ID lacks any shred of credibility.

Way to ostracize yourself from millions and millions of people! :rotfl:
 
Bob Slydell said:
Oops, sorry, I mixed up the AIDS thread with Kristy's abortion thread.

Oh, and I agree that the Vatican's stance is interesting (especially being Catholic). :)

I thought the Catholic church's stance on the priests that were molesting children was interesting also. How did that work out for them?

I also found the previous Pope's stance that Hell was not an actual place but a state of mind also interesting.

I also fiind that Catholics believe that Mary was always a virgin even though the Bible talks about Jesus having siblings was interesting.

Then there is the Catholic church's latest stance on homosexual priests. Now that is very interesting.

I agree Bob, there are many "interesting" things about the Catholic church.
 
2funny2c said:
I thought the Catholic church's stance on the priests that were molesting children was interesting also. How did that work out for them?

I also found the previous Pope's stance that Hell was not an actual place but a state of mind also interesting.

I also fiind that Catholics believe that Mary was always a virgin even though the Bible talks about Jesus having siblings was interesting.

Then there is the Catholic church's latest stance on homosexual priests. Now that is very interesting.

I agree Bob, there are many "interesting" things about the Catholic church.

Was there a purpose to this post? :confused3 :confused3
 
cardaway said:
Actually I was Steve. I wasn't interested in another round of hokie/2funny2c telling others that he is the only credible bible scholar, so I asked for it to be closed.

But yet you wander yourself over to a thread that I started making more baseless accusations.

Both Hokie and I have told you we are not the same person. More hit and run techniques. YABP.
 
Planogirl said:
Sigh.... I just don't see why the two can't coexist in their own proper places. In other words, evolution in school where theories belong and ID in churches where religion belongs.

ITA. Our founding fathers created separation of church and state for a reason. I find it interesting that all the encroachment attempts to chip away at this have come from the Christians. They say all they want is a non-secular God's laws and values acknowledged in schools and government, but it seems to me that if the Jews, Muslims, or some other religious sects wanted more of a say in all this, such as selections from the Koran in public buildings right next to the ten commandments, the Christian reaction would be less than welcoming. Just an observation on my part.
 
Has the pot not been stirred lately? It must be time.
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom