  
Christianity Today, May 22, 2000
We're Not in Kansas Anymore
Why secular scientists and media can't admit that Darwinism
might be wrong.
By Nancy Pearcey
Anna Harvey, a bright, straight-A sophomore
in Lawrence, Kansas, raised her hand in biology class one day in early 1999.
"Mr. Roth, when are we going to learn about creationism?"
Stan Roth exploded. "When are you going to stop believing
that crap your parents teach you?" Anna was stunned, and within five months
Roth was removed from the classroom. Some say the irascible high-school teacher
was about to be fired anyway; others wonder if it was mere coincidence that,
three months after he was forced to retire, the Kansas Board of Education voted
6–4 to de-emphasize the speculative aspects of evolution--a move that sparked
a national debate.
Other states reacted swiftly. In Kentucky, education officials
replaced the word evolution, which had been added to the guidelines for
the first time last spring, with an earlier locution: change over time.
The New Mexico Board of Education went the other way, revoking 1996 standards
requiring teachers to "present the evidence for and against" evolution,
and reverting to a one-sided presentation. Oklahoma’s State Textbook Committee
inserted a disclaimer into science books stating that evolution is controversial
(identical to a disclaimer in Alabama textbooks)--a decision later struck down
by the attorney general. Kanawha County, West Virginia, voted down a resolution
permitting teachers to present "theories for and against the theories of
evolution." Similar brushfires continue burning in other states. Small
wonder that the Associated Press voted the Kansas controversy the top story
of 1999.
Oddly, similar controversies had erupted in several other places
not long before--California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Oregon,
and Washington. Yet these rarely appeared in the national media. Why was Kansas
different? Why did scathing editorials appear in big-city newspapers across
the country, and even overseas? Why did national organizations like the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) target Kansas?
The answer is that the debate has escalated to new levels on
both sides, and Kansas was a microcosm of those counterforces at work. A closer
examination of the Kansas controversy gives a good picture of the debate as
it stands today.
Hubbub in the Heartland
Consider, for example, the way events began. Overheated headlines
suggest it all started when Bible-thumping creationists tried to "foist
[their] own religious beliefs on the secular educational system of an entire
state" (to quote syndicated columnist Lars–Erik Nelson). But in fact, the
initiative came from the other side.
Events began in 1995, when the National Academy of Sciences
(NAS) issued national standards calling for "dramatic changes" in
the way public schools teach science. The Kansas Commissioner of Education and
the Board of Education appointed a committee to bring state guidelines into
conformity with the standards, as many other states had already done. The new
guidelines greatly increased classroom coverage of evolution, even elevating
it from a theory to a "Unifying Concept" of science (along with such
things as "measurement" and "evidence").
That was too much for some members of the state board of education.
They were willing to increase the teaching of microevolution--testable, observable
variations caused by adaptation, natural selection, and genetic drift. But macroevolution--the
"particles-to-people" variety--they regarded as speculative. The board
voted to remove macroevolution from state tests, giving local school districts
the freedom to set their own standards for teaching the subject.
In short, the board did not forbid the teaching of anything.
On the contrary, it actually increased coverage of topics related to evolution,
though it did not go as far as the scientific establishment wished. For that
minor act of intellectual independence, board members were castigated mercilessly.
A Washington Post article called them "pinheads," certain to
be "eliminated through natural selection." In the London Evening
Standard, A. N. Wilson fumed about the "stupidity and insularity"
of America’s heartland. Science published a letter proposing that universities
refuse to accept credits from Kansas high school biology courses. John Rennie,
editor in chief of Scientific American, urged college admissions officials
to "make it clear that . . . the qualifications of any students applying
from that state in the future will have to be considered very carefully."
In other words, punish parents by excluding their children.
Three national groups (the AAAS, the NAS, and the National Science
Teachers Association) revoked permission to use copyright materials, forcing
the board to tinker with the standards’ wording to avoid copyright infringements.
On the cultural front, the Missouri Repertory Theater in Kansas City swiftly
revised its schedule to run Inherit the Wind, the famous play that continues
to shape the way most Americans view the creation-evolution controversy.
Revolution by Design
But this time, reality did not follow the script. To be sure,
initial resistance came from young-earth creationists. (This movement has been
much maligned, even by fellow Christians; yet it has helped preserve a large
pocket of resistance to naturalistic evolution.) Followup, however, came largely
from proponents of intelligent design (ID) a newer movement that is making surprisingly
deep inroads into mainstream culture.
The unofficial spokesman for ID is Phillip E. Johnson, a Berkeley
law professor who converted to Christianity in his late 30s, then turned his
sharp lawyer’s eyes on the theory of evolution. Spotting what he saw as logical
errors in the case for Darwinism, Johnson penned several influential books,
including Darwin on Trial and Reason in the Balance. (His latest
book, The Wedge of Truth, is due out in July.) Johnson’s penetrating
critiques were the first to win a respectful hearing in academia, and he now
advises a group of scientists who are developing the case for design, many of
them at the Discovery Institute’s Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture
(CRSC) in Seattle. After the Kansas decision, CRSC scholars appeared widely
in mainstream media: Johnson in The Wall Street Journal; director Steve
Meyer on NPR; program director Jay Richards in The Washington Post; and
fellows Michael Behe in The New York Times and Jonathan Wells on PBS.
Indeed, the growing success of the intelligent-design movement
is almost certainly what provoked the over-the-top reactions to Kansas in the
first place. Top university presses are publishing books on ID, notably William
Dembski’s The Design Inference by Cambridge University Press (1998) and
Paul Nelson’s forthcoming On Common Descent through the University of
Chicago Press. Baylor University’s Michael Polanyi Center, founded by Dembski,
held a conference last month on naturalism in science that attracted nationally
known scientists such as Alan Guth, John Searle, and Nobel Prize-winner Steven
Weinberg. These scientists’ willingness even to address such questions, alongside
design proponents such as Alvin Plantinga and William Lane Craig, gives enormous
credibility to the ID movement.
Why is ID so successful? The answer is partly that ID functions
as an umbrella uniting various strategies for relating faith and science. In
the past, Christians tended to splinter into small, often antagonistic groups,
such as theistic evolutionists, progressive creationists, old-earth creationists,
young-earth creationists, and flood geologists. "On this issue the Christian
world was playing defense," Johnson explains. "We were saying, ‘What
can we defend? How much do we have to give up?’ "
The drawback in playing defense is that you have to protect
each outpost to ensure that the enemy doesn’t get past a single one. Hence Christians
argued vociferously about the details of fossils, mutations, radiometric dating,
and the early chapters of Genesis.
By contrast, Johnson says, ID is about playing offense: "We’re
leaving the fortress and heading behind the lines to blow up the other side’s
headquarters, its ammunition store." As the dust settles, even the questions
Christians are trying to answer may take on entirely new forms.
What is the other side’s "ammunition store"?
It’s the definition of science itself, Johnson says. Science is typically defined
as objective investigation (discovering and testing facts)--the means for making
faster airplanes and better medicines.
But there’s another definition held implicitly in the scientific
establishment, and it is tantamount to the philosophy of materialism or naturalism.
This is the idea that science may legitimately employ only natural causes in
explaining everything we observe.
The way this definition of science operates is to outlaw any
questioning of naturalistic evolution. Darwinists don’t ask whether life
evolved from a sea of chemicals; they only ask how it evolved. They don’t
ask whether complex life forms evolved from simpler forms; they only
ask how it happened. The presupposition is that natural forces alone
must (and therefore can) account for the development of all life on earth; the
only task left is to work out the details.
Harvard biologist Richard Lewontin gave the game away in a revealing
article in The New York Review of Books (January 9, 1997). While expressing
skepticism about the "unsubstantiated just-so stories" often labeled
science, Lewontin nevertheless accepts the standard story of evolution. Why?
Because, he writes, "we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism."
This commitment is not itself based on science, Lewontin admits. Indeed, just
the opposite: Scientists accept materialism first, and then are "forced"
to define science in such a way that it cranks out strictly materialistic theories.
(In his words, "we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes
to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material
explanations.") Finally, Lewontin insists that this "materialism is
absolute, for we cannot allow a divine foot in the door." As Nelson comments,
"Design is ruled out not because it has been shown to be false but because
science itself has been defined as applied materialistic philosophy."
One goal of the ID movement is to drive a wedge between the
two operative definitions of science. The Kansas board made its own contribution
to the "wedge strategy" when it changed the standards’ definition
of science from an activity that seeks "natural explanations"
to one that seeks "logical explanations." The idea is that science
should be open to any rational, testable theory, and not be limited to naturalistic
theories. Design theorists hope to press the case against Darwinism until scientists
are forced to decide which is the real definition of science: Will they
follow the evidence wherever it leads, or will they insist on naturalistic theories
regardless of the evidence?
Holes in the Theory
Of course, the scientific establishment insists there is
no evidence against Darwinism. But the truth is that the central assumption
of Darwinism--that minor changes accumulate to create major changes between
organisms--has been disputed for decades. It has long been known that minor
variations, like the differences between dog breeds, do not add up in any consistent
direction. And if they’re not going anywhere in the first place, they won’t
lead to major evolutionary innovations, no matter how vast the allotted time.
Take an example that impressed Darwin: the variation in beak
size among finches on the Galapagos Islands. A recent study found that during
a drought, the larger birds survived better and thus the average beak size increased
slightly. Evolution in action? Not exactly. When the rains came back, beak sizes
returned to normal. All that researchers discovered was a cyclical variation
that allows finches to survive under changing conditions. They found no evidence
of novel structures arising. Yet in a serious distortion of the evidence, a
1998 NAS booklet (Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science)
describes the increase in beak size without mentioning the return to normal
size.
It then encourages teachers to speculate what would happen in
200 years if the increase continued indefinitely--whether "a new species
of finch might arise." As Johnson comments in The Wall Street Journal
(August 16, 1999), "When our leading scientists have to resort to the sort
of distortion that would land a stock promoter in jail, you know they are in
trouble."
The problems with Darwinism are so well known that, as long
ago as 1980, the news had even hit the popular press: Newsweek reported
on a macroevolution conference at Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History,
where paleontologists announced that the fossil record fails to confirm the
gradual, continuous change Darwin predicted. Instead, the overall pattern in
the rocks--what Harvard’s Stephen Jay Gould has called "the trade secret
of paleontology"--consists of sudden appearances of new life forms, with
no transitional forms leading to them, followed by long periods of stability.
As a result, today biologists are searching for some unknown,
new mechanism capable of generating sudden, large-scale, systemic changes. Yet
strangely, when leading scientists are challenged, as in the Kansas decision,
they respond as though they had never heard of the macroevolution controversy.
They fall back on a verbal equivocation, using the term evolution to
mean both minor, limited variation and the emergence of novel structures--as
though the former were the engine driving the latter.
"Every time a farmer sprays pyrethroids and cotton moths
go right on eating his cotton, that farmer is confronting evolution in action,"
Jonathan Weiner wrote in The Philadelphia Inquirer. Don’t those Kansas farmers
understand? he fumed. The answer is, of course they do. They simply don’t
think minor variations, like insecticide resistance, produced cotton moths in
the first place.
Newer evidence against Darwinism is emerging as well. In paleontology,
the Cambrian explosion has long posed problems, revealing that all the major
body plans for animals appeared in the fossil record at the same time--a pattern
inconsistent with Darwinian gradualism.
Even more devastating, recent findings turn the tree of life
on its head: Instead of minor variations adding up to produce major categories
of organisms, the major categories appear first, then break up into varieties.
Contrary to Darwin’s prediction, says biologist Paul Chien of the University
of San Francisco, "the development of living things is not from the bottom
up but from the top down."
Meanwhile, molecular biology reveals that the living cell is
far more complex than Darwin ever dreamed. It is akin to a miniature factory,
filled with molecular machines that act as motors, pumps, springs, and clocks.
"Some are ‘trucks’ that carry supplies from one compartment to another
within the cell," explains Behe, author of Darwin’s Black Box. "Loading
machines fill up the trucks and attach an ‘address label,’ and when they reach
the right ‘address,’ docking machines open the trucks and remove the supplies."
Such complex systems cannot arise in the gradual, piece-by-piece process required
by Darwinism, Behe argues, because all the coordinated pieces must be in place
before they function at all.
In addition, the rise of information theory casts new light
on the origin of life. In The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Charles Thaxton,
Walter Bradley, and Roger Olsen argue that DNA has the same structure as a language,
and hence the origin of life must be recast as the origin of biological information.
Yet information is not created by material forces, any more than the words on
this page are created by molecular forces in the paper and ink.
Equally damaging for Darwinism are reversals in key evidence--like
the case of the peppered moths in England. According to the standard textbook
treatment, when tree trunks were darkened by soot during the Industrial Revolution,
a light-colored variety of the moth became easier for birds to see and were
eaten, while a darker variety flourished. This has long been touted as a showcase
example of natural selection. But, as Wells demonstrated in The Scientist
(May 24, 1999), the moths don’t actually perch on trunks (they fly about in
the upper branches), and those widely published photographs of the moths were
all staged. Biologist Theodore Sargent of the University of Massachusetts recently
admitted that, for the filming of a NOVA documentary, he glued dead moths
onto the trees.
Nor is this an isolated incident. "It’s typical of the
way key evidence is distorted to make the case for Darwinism look stronger,"
says Wells.
In American Biology Teacher (May 1999) Wells debunks
the familiar drawing of embryos laid out side by side--fish, amphibian, bird,
and mammal--allegedly supporting common ancestry. This drawing appears in many
biology textbooks, yet it has been known for nearly a century that the figures
were fudged--lengthened here, shortened there--to appear more similar than they
really are.
Detecting Design
Yet exposing problems with Darwinism is not enough; one must
also propose an alternative, which has proved much harder. A turning point came
in the work of Charles Thaxton, who studied under Francis Schaeffer at L’Abri
in Switzerland and then did postdoctoral work at Harvard in the 1970s. Studying
scientists of earlier centuries, Thaxton noted that they spoke of "natural
causes" and "intelligent causes," and he reasoned that there
should be a way to distinguish between the two--a way to identify empirically
the effects of intelligence.
In The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Thaxton identified the
mark of intelligent design as "specified complexity"--a complex structure
that fits a preconceived pattern. William Dembski’s Intelligent Design
explains the concept in greater detail.
"My father was a teacher, and he used to tell a story to
illustrate design," Dembski says. "The best student and the worst
student sit beside each other during a major exam, and when the teacher grades
their papers, he finds that both gave exactly the same answers. Now, who thinks
this happened by chance?" (The punch line: on the last question, the best
student wrote, "I don’t understand this question" and the worst student
wrote, "I don’t understand it either"--thus confirming the design
hypothesis.)
Not only teachers, but also many other professionals have devised
means for detecting design, Dembski points out. Scientists look for telltale
signs that an experiment was rigged, that the data were "cooked."
Detectives are trained to distinguish between murder and death by natural causes.
Insurance companies regularly distinguish between arson and accidental fires.
The claim of ID theory is that design can be detected in nature as well.
In one sense, this is something everyone admits. Evidence for
design shows up in laboratories all the time. "What we do in molecular
biology is in effect reverse engineering," explains ID proponent Scott
Minnich of the University of Idaho. "We examine complex structures in the
cell and try to figure out the blueprints." Even Darwin did not deny the
evidence for design; instead, he hoped to show that living things only appear
designed, while really being the result of chance and natural selection. In
the words of Francisco Ayala of the University of California, Darwin’s goal
was to "exclude God as the explanation accounting for the obvious design
of organisms." Thus arch-Darwinian Richard Dawkins, in The Blind Watchmaker,
defines biology itself as "the study of complicated things that give the
appearance of having been designed for a purpose." In short, design is
"obvious"; the question is only whether it is real or apparent.
What makes the question so compelling today is that design is
no longer found only in living things but also in the physical universe itself.
In cosmology, the so-called anthropic principle tells us the universe itself
is finely tuned to support life. "Imagine a universe-creating machine,"
says Meyer, "with thousands of dials representing the gravitational constant,
the charge on the electron, the mass of the proton, and so on. Each dial has
many possible settings, and what you discover is that even the slightest change
would make a universe where life was impossible." Yet, strangely, each
dial is set to the exact value needed to keep the universe running. Astronomer
Fred Hoyle, though an atheist, states the implications bluntly: "A common-sense
interpretation of the facts suggests that a superintellect has monkeyed with
the physics."
ID's Big Tent
Who is that "superintellect"? Is intelligence merely
a code word for God? So critics charge. But Thaxton’s innovative insight was
that "intelligent cause" is a generic category for talking about any
intelligence, whether human or divine or some undefined mind in nature, thus
providing a way to talk about design without making any theological presuppositions.
"One can empirically detect the products of an intelligent agent without
specifying who that agent is," Thaxton explains.
Thus the ID movement has become a "big tent," attracting
people from a variety of religious backgrounds. CRSC fellow David Berlinski,
who has published Commentary articles critical of Darwinism, is Jewish.
In Kansas, board supporters included local Muslims and a group of Hare Krishnas,
who showed up at a meeting wearing saffron robes.
Even agnostics who believe the universe is in some sense teleological
have teamed up with the ID movement--figures like Michael Denton, author of
the influential Evolution: A Theory in Crisis. His most recent book,
Nature’s Destiny, argues that purpose pervades the universe at all levels.
"The power of ID is precisely its minimalism," says
Todd Moody, an agnostic and professor at St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia.
"It travels light, with no theological baggage."
Among Christians, ID shows promise of uniting often hostile
factions, from young-earth creationists to theistic evolutionists and everyone
in between. Paul Ackerman of Wichita State University, who helped craft the
Kansas standards, is a young-earth creationist who says ID has "helped
create a broad umbrella."
Though Christians continue to debate among themselves on issues
like the age of the earth, when facing the secular world "we’re putting
aside our differences," Ackerman says. "We realize that what unites
us is greater than what divides us."
Even some theistic evolutionists, who have been among the ID
movement’s most vocal critics, are lining up behind its critique of naturalism.
Denis Lamoureux of St. Joseph’s College in Canada has taken aim at Johnson and
other design theorists many times.
Yet he told Christianity Today, "I’m a flaming design
theorist." Like the Romantic biologists of the 18th century, Lamoureux
draws an analogy between the evolution of species and the development of an
embryo, regarding both as teleological processes--the unfolding of an inbuilt
potential.
Similarly, Howard Van Till, professor emeritus at Calvin College,
has often debated ID proponents publicly. Yet his own view is that the universe
is "intentionally gifted" by God with the capacity for bringing about
new forms from simpler units, so that design is frontloaded into the initial
conditions. All Lamoureux and Van Till need to do is give empirical content
to the notion of frontloaded design, and they would fall into the design camp.
As it is, on empirical questions their position remains identical to naturalistic
evolution, while conceptually it bears no relation to the materialistic version
of evolution held by the scientific establishment. ID is incompatible only with
forms of theistic evolution that adopt methodological naturalism, the principle
that in science one may invoke only undirected, unguided natural causes.
The God Question
Clearly, while ID does not require any theological presuppositions,
it has theological implications: It is resolutely opposed to the atheistic,
purposeless, chance view of evolution taught in the power centers of science.
This suggests a final theme emerging from the Kansas controversy--the refusal
by so many to acknowledge that religion is genuinely at stake in this issue.
Pervasive through the editorials and columns was the argument that the folks
in Kansas were mistaken to see mainstream evolutionism as posing any contradiction
to religion. The underlying assumption is that science is a matter of facts
and reason, while religion is a matter of faith--and never the twain shall meet.
This commonly held idea was summarized in a 1981 NAS resolution: "Religion
and science are separate and mutually exclusive realms of human thought whose
presentation in the same context leads to misunderstandings of both scientific
theory and religious belief."
Yet this pose of neutrality is transparently false, intended
only for public relations against theists making statements about science. It
is never invoked against evolutionary naturalists making statements about religion.
For example, Gould recently wrote in Time that "No scientific theory,
including evolution, can pose any threat to religion" because they belong
to separate, nonoverlapping spheres. Yet the only way he can separate the two
so neatly is to deny that religion has any cognitive status. Science deals with
"the factual state" of the world, he writes, whereas religion deals
with "spiritual meaning and ethical values." Hence, when it comes
to what he considers the real world, Gould allows science to "overlap"
religion all the time. "Before Darwin, we thought that a benevolent God
had created us," he writes in Ever Since Darwin. "Biology took
away our status as paragons created in the image of God."
John Haught, a theistic evolutionist and theologian at Georgetown
University [see "Your
Darwin Is Too Small," CT, May 22, 2000, p. 52], suggests that
Gould is being duplicitous: If the "philosophical message" of evolution
really is that matter is all there is, as Gould insists, and that there is no
purpose to the universe, "then no conceivable theology, by anyone’s definition,
could ever live comfortably with evolution."
Precisely. That’s why, for every scientist who soothingly intones
that evolution can coexist peacefully with religion, there is another who openly
proclaims its antitheistic implications. In Darwin’s Dangerous Idea,
for example, Tufts University professor Daniel Dennett praises Darwinism as
a "universal acid" that destroys "just about every traditional
concept" of religion and morality.
Steven Weinberg told the Freedom From Religion Foundation after
the Kansas decision: "I personally feel that the teaching of modern science
is corrosive to religious belief, and I’m all for that." If science helps
bring about the end of religion, Weinberg concluded, "it would be the most
important contribution science could make."
A survey by Edward Larson and Larry Witham (Scientific American,
September 1999) reveals that more than 90 percent of NAS members reject belief
in a personal God--and, furthermore, they think science itself compels that
conclusion [see "Inherit
the Monkey Trial," CT, May 22, 2000, p. 50]. There is a glaring
incongruity when those same scientists reassure the public that science is neutral
on the God question. "This has been figured out, I can assure you, by the
people in Kansas," Johnson says. "They consider that the scientific
elite is simply lying through its teeth about this issue."
The people of Kansas and elsewhere know very well that their
children are being taught that they are products of an undirected, material
mechanism--and that this has enormous religious implications. A biology textbook
used at the University of Kansas states baldly that "biological phenomena,
including those seemingly designed, can be explained by purely material causes,
rather than by divine creation."
A widely used high-school textbook from Prentice Hall describes
evolution as "random and undirected," working "without either
plan or purpose." A textbook from Addison-Wesley claims that "Darwin
gave biology a sound scientific basis by attributing the diversity of life to
natural causes rather than supernatural creation." Public schools are supposed
to be neutral regarding religion, but these statements are clearly antagonistic
to all theistic religions.
Untangling these religious implications is the key to teaching
origins in public schools. The common assumption is that the denial of
design is science, but that the affirmation of design is religious, and
therefore cannot be taught in public schools. "But how can this be?"
asks Meyer. "Darwinism and design theory do not address two different subjects.
They represent two competing answers to the same question: How did life arise
and diversify on earth?" This mistaken asymmetry has been used to justify
a form of "viewpoint discrimination," Meyer argues, something the
Supreme Court has ruled unconstitutional.
Teach the Controversy
Whether or not the verbal attack on Anna Harvey had anything
to do with the Kansas decision, it remains a vivid example of the hostility
Christian students often face in public schools. The board’s decision may not
have been ideal--even sympathizers say schools ought to teach more about macroevolution,
not less; they ought to acquaint students with the unsolved problems and contrary
evidence facing the theory. Indeed, board members agree. But given the threat
of expensive lawsuits, they took the only course that seemed open to them at
the time.
The political question is Who decides? Linda Holloway,
chairwoman of the Kansas board, says what bothered her was the attitude the
state science committee seemed to exhibit: "Give us your kids and get out
of the way." The Gallup Poll has consistently shown (most recently in August
1999) that only about 10 percent of Americans believe life evolved strictly
by chance and natural forces. Roughly 90 percent of Americans believe that God
created life either directly or by guiding a gradual process. This large majority
is beginning to suspect that Darwinism is less about objective science than
about maintaining cultural power.
Any group with authority to tell a culture’s dominant creation
story functions as a kind of priesthood, defining what shall be deemed ultimate
truth. In the late 19th-century conflict over Darwinism, T.H. Huxley pursued
a deliberate strategy of overthrowing the clergy and ordaining scientists as
society’s new priesthood.
That’s why it was crucial for him--and remains crucial for his
successors--to entrench naturalistic evolution as scientific orthodoxy. The
result is that while 19th-century science has been superseded in other fields,
biology remains locked in an outdated mechanistic paradigm.
In The Boston Review, James A. Shapiro of the University
of Chicago says molecular biology reveals a complexity in living things "more
consistent with computer technology than with the mechanical viewpoint which
dominated when the neo-Darwinian modern synthesis was formulated."
Living things are packed with complex information analogous
to the software in a computer--programs or algorithms that direct the whole
complicated mechanism. Where does that information come from? Information exhibits
specified complexity, which is produced neither by law nor chance, but only
by design.
The slogan of the ID movement is "teach the controversy."
A June 1999 Gallup Poll found that Americans favor teaching creation along with
evolution by a margin of 68–29 percent. Similarly, in February, John Zogby’s
American Values Poll revealed that 64 percent of adults believe creationism
should be part of the public-school curriculum.
And many students agree: In a reader survey by Seventeen
magazine, half said they wanted creation taught alongside evolution. New resources
for teaching design are rapidly becoming available; among the most popular is
the supplemental text Of Pandas and People, published by the Foundation
for Thought and Ethics. A just-released cartoon book from InterVarsity Press,
titled What’s Darwin Got to Do With It?, uses humor to clarify the issues.
Clearly, Anna Harvey is not alone in wanting to expand the science
curriculum. The question is when the scientific establishment is going to allow
students to learn the latest data, wherever they may lead. How ironic that current
events are taught in every class--except biology.
Nancy Pearcey is coauthor of How Now Shall
We Live? (with Charles Colson) and The Soul of Science (with Charles
Thaxton).
From Christianity Today (May 22, 2000). Copyright 2000
Nancy Pearcey.
All Rights Reserved. International copyright secured.
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