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Deception by Design
The Intelligent Design
Movement in America
by Lenny Flank
Posted August 20, 2006
All
Rights Reserved
Permission
is granted for the free reprinting and distribution of this book for
noncommerical educational purposes.
DedicationTo
Matt Duss and Tim Rhodes, who originally leaked the Wedge Document to the
Internet. They did far more to protect
democracy than they ever could have realized at the time.
Foreword
I first became
involved with the creation/evolution fight back in 1982, when several members
of a local school board in eastern Pennsylvania attempted to introduce a policy
requiring "equal time" for creationism and evolution. A local coalition of teachers, clergy, and
business leaders formed to oppose the move, and the policy was dropped. By the time the "intelligent
design" movement appeared in the mid-90's to replace creation
"science" as the spearhead of anti-evolutionism, I was an active
contributor to the Talk.Origins Internet newsgroup, the webmaster for the "Creation 'Science' Debunked"
website and, within a few years, had
formed the DebunkCreation email list, which quickly gained the largest
membership of any evolution/creation list at Yahoogroups. Just before the "intelligent design"
trial in Pennsylvania, the DebunkCreation group raised money from activists all
over the world to purchase and donate a total of 23 science books, including
several that were specifically critical of ID, to the Dover Senior High School
Library. Since then, I have also been a
regular commentator at the well-respected Panda's Thumb blog, which serves as a
nerve center for anti-creationist and anti-ID activists, and I am a founding
member of Florida Citizens for Science, which acts as a pro-science anti-creationism
watchdog in the Sunshine State.
This book has one
very clear objective in mind -- to present a history of creation
"science" and its latest reincarnation as Intelligent Design
"theory", and to lay bare the political and social roots of this movement.
There have already been several excellent books that have dissected the
scientific distortions and errors made by the creationist/ID movement and the
devastating effects they would have on science education.
This book aims to go beyond that, and to
instead examine the underlying social/political aims of creationism/ID. It is impossible to fully understand the
anti-evolution movement in the US without looking at the political Christian
fundamentalist movement of which it is a larger part, and for which it has been
selected as the "wedge issue". As a longtime grassroots activist, with decades of experience in the
environmental, antiwar, labor and consumer rights movements, I have come to
view the ID/creationists as a well-defined political movement, with carefully
selected theocratic political goals, and a well-financed deliberately-planned
strategy to implement them.
It is my opinion
that the ID/creationists (along with the rest of their Religious Right
companions) represent, in their attempts to re-mold all of American society in
accordance with their own narrow sectarian beliefs, the single greatest threat
to freedom and democracy in the United States today./p>
Introduction
For most of the
world, the controversy over creation and evolution was settled way back in the
19th century, after the theory of evolution was presented in a paper by Charles
Darwin to the Linnean Society in July 1858. During the five-year around-the-world trip of the Royal Navy ship Beagle,
Darwin had collected a variety of specimens from South America and across the
globe, including the various finches that inhabited the Galapagos Islands and
which now bear his name. Darwin's study
led him to conclude that species were not, as was generally accepted at the
time, fixed and immutable, but changed over time to become entirely new
species, through the process of natural selection. Although he had written about the evolution of species in private
notebooks as early as 1844, Darwin did not publish his ideas at first, knowing
that they would be highly controversial. Instead, he wrote detailed studies of coral reefs, volcanic islands, and
geology -- work which placed him among the best-known and most highly regarded
naturalists in Britain. Darwin's hand,
though, was forced in 1858, when another naturalist, Alfred Russell Wallace,
working in southeast Asia, independently formed the same idea of evolution
through natural selection, and wrote to Darwin asking for his opinion about
it. Darwin and Wallace jointly
submitted their papers to the Linnean Society, and Darwin followed up the next
year with On the Origin of Species, which spelled out his ideas with
detailed supporting arguments and evidence.
Within the space of
a few years, Darwin's theory of evolution was accepted almost universally by
the scientific community. Conservative
religious groups, however, particularly in the United States, were outraged by
the idea. The wave of religious
opposition to evolution peaked in the United States in 1925, when Clarence
Darrow eviscerated William Jennings Bryan in a country courtroom in Dayton,
Tennessee, in the famous "Scopes Monkey Trial". The anti-evolution movement fell to
virtually nothing after Scopes.
After decades of
quiet, however, the creationist movement surged back into prominence in the
1980s, when the fundamentalist Religious Right took up the anti-evolution
cudgel, and allied itself with the conservative elements of the Republican
Party to form a powerful political constituency that has dominated American
politics for the past 25 years. During
this time, anti-evolutionists, first under the name "creation
scientists" and then later as "intelligent design theorists",
waged pitched battles against evolutionary science, culminating in a series of
Federal court fights in Arkansas, Louisiana and Pennsylvania. In Arkansas in 1982, a Federal judge ruled
that teaching creation "science" was an impermissible violation of
the Constitution, a ruling that the Supreme Court echoed in a 1987 case from
Louisiana. Within a few months of the
Supreme Court ruling, creation "science" was transformed into
Intelligent Design "theory" (ID), and the effort to depose Darwin
began anew. In 2005, a Federal judge in
Pennsylvania ruled that ID was nothing but creation "science"
renamed, and was unconstitutional to teach. Nevertheless, the campaign against
the theory of evolution continues, and new courtroom battles are already
shaping up in Kansas and elsewhere.
The popular image
of intelligent design/creationists tends to picture a group of rural hayseeds
with not much education, who continually thump the Good Book as they
speak. This image is completely
wrong. Modern anti-evolutionists are
very slick, tend to be quite well-educated, and are very well-versed in the
tactics of sophistry and debate. Their
"scientific" arguments, while nonsensical, are very intricate and
detailed, and certainly sound convincing to people who do not have enough
scientific knowledge to make a good judgment (such as local school board
members). The ID/creationist movement
is well-organized, well-financed, and is fanatically dedicated. They also exercise an enormous amount of
political influence at the federal, state and local levels.
Although the stated
aim of the ID/creationist movement is to oppose what they see as the
"godless theory of evolution" and to, quite literally, change the
definition of "science" to include the religious and to make science
"theistic", it must be recognized that the evolution/creation debate
is, at core, not really about science
or education. The creationists are not
concerned in the slightest about scientific questions, or about correctly
interpreting data, or about forming better explanations and understanding of
the natural world. Instead,
creationism/ID is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the fundamentalist Religious
Right -- it is a religious and political movement, not a scientific one, and
its goals are entirely religious and political, not scientific. The ID/creationists are a part of a larger
political movement with radical theocratic aims, and their anti-evolution and
anti-science efforts are, as they themselves declare, simply the "wedge
issue" which they have chosen in order to gain entry for their wider
anti-democratic political agenda. Indeed, the most prominent "intelligent design" group in the
United States today, the Seattle-based Discovery Institute, is largely funded
by a single extremist Christian fundamentalist billionaire who, for 20 years,
preached the Taliban-like idea that the US should repudiate the Constitution,
dismantle the wall between church and state, and place the country completely
under "Biblical law", to include such Biblical imperatives as stoning
sinners and executing nonbelievers or heretics.
What
is evolution?
The word
"evolution" actually means two quite distinct and separate things
(and it is a favorite ID/creationist tactic to attempt to blur the distinction
between the two). On the one hand, "evolution" means simply that
organisms have changed over time, that some organisms have disappeared from the
planet and have been replaced by other organisms that did not exist before. In
this sense, "evolution" is not a scientific theory or hypothesis; it
is an observable fact, in the same way that the life cycle of a frog is an
observable fact. The fossil record is very clear in indicating that organisms
once existed which no longer exist (dinosaurs, trilobites, pterodactyls,
mastodons), and that organisms exist now which did not exist in earlier geological
eras (humans, chimps, white-tailed deer, viperine snakes).
On the other hand,
"evolution" is also the word used to indicate the scientific theory
of how this process of organism replacing organism occurred. In this sense,
"evolution" is not an observable fact; it is a scientific model (more
later on the definition of a "model") which purports to explain the
fact of evolution (changes in species through time).
Most of the time,
when a scientist speaks of "evolution", he or she is talking about
the currently accepted model of the process through which organisms have
changed over time, not about the actual existence or nonexistence of such
change itself. The creationists, on the other hand, like to interpret various
scientific criticisms of some aspects of the evolutionary model as an attack on
the concept of evolution itself. It is important to recognize that scientific
arguments over how evolution happens are not the same as arguments over whether
evolution happens. While biologists
often engage in scientific argument over how particular aspects of evolution
operate, there is no scientific dispute at all that life evolves, and
evolutionary theory forms the bedrock of all modern life sciences.
The currently-accepted
scientific model of evolution was first laid out in Darwin's book On The
Origin of Species Through Natural Selection. The Darwinian theory of
evolution can be summed up in a number of simple postulates:
- The members of
any particular biological population will differ from each other in minor ways,
and will have slightly differing characteristics of construction and behavior.
This is the principle of "variation".
- These
variations can be passed from one generation to the next, and the offspring of
those possessing a particular type of variation will also tend to have that
same variation. This is the principle of "heritability".
- Certain of
these variations will give their possessor an advantage in life (or avoid some
disadvantage), allowing that organism to obtain more food, escape predators
more efficiently, or gain some other advantage. Thus, those organisms that
possess such a useful variation will tend to survive longer and produce more
offspring than other members of that population. These offspring, through the
principle of heritability, will also tend to possess this advantageous
variation, and this will have the affect of increasing, over a number of
generations, the proportion of organisms in the population which possess this
variation. This is the principle of "natural selection".
These principles
are combined to form the core of the evolutionary model. The Darwinian outlook
holds that small incremental changes in structure and behavior, brought about
by the natural selection of variations, produce, after a long period of time,
organisms that differ so greatly from their ancestors that they are no longer
the same organism, and must be classified as a separate species. This process
of speciation, repeated over the 3.5 billion year span of time since life first
appeared on earth, explains the gradual production of all of life's diversity.
In recent years,
two new theories have been widely accepted which complement the traditional
Darwinian theory of evolution. The first of these is "punctuated
equilibria", a theory set forth by Stephen Gould and Niles Eldredge in the
early 1970s. The original Darwinian theory holds that the incremental changes
which produce a new species occur throughout the entire population of the
"parent" species, and that the entire population gradually becomes
replaced by the new species, a scenario known technically as "sympatric
speciation" (sympatric means "same place"). In 1972, Gould and
Eldredge proposed that the majority of speciations take place not in the entire
population of the parent species, but within a small, geographically isolated
portion of it. After this isolated transition to a new species has taken place,
the new species moves outward from the area of its birth to replace the older
species throughout its range, either by outcompeting it or by moving into a
niche that is left empty by the subsequent extinction of the older species.
This scenario is known as "allopatric speciation", from the words for
"different place".
Gould and Eldredge
pointed out that an allopatric mode of speciation, in which the evolutionary
transition from one species into another takes place only in an isolated
geographic area and over a relatively short period of time, would necessarily
limit the number of such transitional fossils that would be found by
paleontologists, since these transitional populations would be extremely
limited in both space and time, and would not be found unless they were
preserved as fossils (itself a rare occurrence) and also unless a fossil hunter
happened to stumble onto the specific area where such a transition had taken
place (Gould and Eldredge did manage to describe one such area--a single small
quarry in New York which illustrated the transition from one Phacops species
of trilobite to another; the lower levels contained the parent species of
trilobites, the upper levels contained the new species, and in between were a
series of transitions leading from one to the other).
Another theory of
evolution is called "genetic drift", "neutralism" or
"nonadaptive evolution". In the Darwinian view, all of an organism's
traits are the result of natural selection, which continuously weeds out
unsuitable variations and selects suitable ones to be retained in the next
generation. However, in at least some instances, the presence of a particular
genetic trait may be solely the result of chance. In a small population in
which a portion of the members possessed one trait and a portion possessed
another, it is possible for an accidental set of circumstances such as a
disease or natural disaster to wipe out all of those possessing one of these
traits, leaving only one trait left. Thus, this trait would be retained not
through natural selection, but solely because of fortuitous circumstances. The
most devastating of these circumstances are the periodic mass extinctions which
have occurred throughout earth history -- at least one of which, the Cretaceous
extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs, was caused by a huge
extraterrestrial rock that impacted the earth near the present-day Yucatan
peninsula. Under these extreme
circumstances, it may be nothing but blind chance that determines which species
are wiped out and which are left. This is often referred to as "survival
of the luckiest".
There also seem to
be a large number of traits which are equal in their "fitness"; none
has any selection advantage over the others. In this manner, these traits are
said to be "neutral" -- they are neither selected for nor selected
against, and the proportion of one trait to another in a population can change
haphazardly through purely statistical variations.
Neither the
punctuated equilibria theory nor the neutralist theory replaces the Darwinian
theory of gradualist natural selection, nor does either consider the Darwinian theory
to be "wrong". Rather, both processes are complementary to the
Darwinian viewpoint, while at the same time completely separate from it. Thus,
it cannot really be said that there is a single "theory of
evolution"--there are in fact several. Although much scientific debate
today centers around the relative frequency and importance of each of these
modes of speciation, none of this debate concerns the actual existence or
nonexistence of evolutionary change (although ID/creationists are very fond of
citing selected quotations from evolutionary theorists criticizing this or that
aspect of evolutionary mechanism theory, in an attempt to cast doubt on the
entire model).
It is also
important to note here that evolution as a scientific model is completely silent
on the ultimate origin of life on earth; although the evolution model asserts
that all life is descended from some common source (which may have been a
single original organism, or may have been a number of different organisms
which appeared at more or less the same time), the model itself has nothing to
say about the process through which this original organism or organisms
appeared on earth --evolutionary mechanism theory is only concerned with the
question of how life can be transformed into new forms of life. There is no
evolutionary theory concerning the original development of life from non-living
chemicals, since this topic falls outside of the framework of the evolutionary
model. The question of origins belongs to an entirely separate biological discipline
known as "abiogenesis", which is the province of bio-chemists rather
than of evolutionary biologists. In the same vein, the evolution model has
nothing whatsoever to do with astronomy or cosmology, and is completely silent
about the original formation of the universe.
And, like any other
scientific model (gravity, relativity, quantum physics, molecular chemistry),
the evolution model presents no moral, religious, ideological, economic or
political agenda. Evolution theory does not posit any way that humans
"should" act, or any assertions about how society "should"
be organized, any more than does the theory of relativity or the theory of
quantum electrodynamics. Science is a method; it is not a worldview, not a way
of life, and not a philosophy. Science
is something one does, not something one believes in.
Evolutionary theory
does not assert that history (either human or biological) is inevitably
"progressive", moving inexorably from "good" to
"better"; all organisms alive today have evolved just as far from
life's common ancestor as has any other, and all have reached a level of
evolutionary "fitness" to survive and reproduce in their
environmental niche. No organism can be
viewed as being "more evolved" than any other -- they have all simply
evolved in different directions. The
process of evolution is totally ad hoc and nondirectional.
Neither does the
history of life move from "less complex" to "more complex"
-- parasites continually evolve that lose significant portions of their anatomy
and are simpler than their hosts, while in the biochemical sense, all the most
complex evolution happened in life's earliest stages, three billion years ago,
as one-celled organisms. Once multi-cellular animals appeared half a billion
years ago, in the pre-Cambrian period, the biochemical story of life became
rather routine; life since the pre-Cambrian has consisted largely of relatively
simple variations on the same biochemical theme.
ONE: A History of Fundamentalism
In order to fully
understand the creation science/intelligent design movement, we must look at
the larger movement of which it is a part -- the fundamentalist Christian
religious crusade in the United States -- and how the ID/creationists fit into
this.
Christian
fundamentalism is almost uniquely an American phenomenon. Although most of the development of
fundamentalist thought occurs in the United States, this phenomenon was itself,
originally, a reaction to a series of intellectual trends that happened in
Europe.
From the time of
the earliest Christian church in the first century CE, to the time of the
European Enlightenment, the dominant view was that the Bible had been directly
revealed by God to a small number of authors. The first five books of the Bible, known as the Pentateuch (Genesis,
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy), were, according to tradition, all
written by Moses during the 40 years of wandering in the Sinai desert.
One of the first
criticisms of the traditional view of the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch
was made in Germany in 1520, when the Reformation scholar Carlstadt wrote an
essay pointing out that the description of Moses's death (Deuteronomy 32:5-12)
shared several literary characteristics with portions of the rest of
Deuteronomy. Since, Carlstadt pointed
out, Moses could not have written of his own death, he concluded that the same
person had written both sections of the book, and that person could not have
been Moses. In 1651, Thomas Hobbes, in
his book Leviathan, also concluded that several portions of the
Pentateuch could not have been written by Moses. In support of his hypothesis, he cited several Biblical verses
which referred to events that happened after Moses's death. Twenty-five years later, the Jewish philosopher
Baruch Spinoza concluded that not only had Moses not written the Pentateuch,
but much of the rest of the Old Testament was not written by a single person
either, and was probably edited together from pre-existing manuscripts.
The first serious
attempt to examine the matter took place in 1753, when a French doctor, Jean
Astruc, published a pamphlet (anonymously) titled Conjectures on the
Original Documents That Moses Appears to Have Used in Composing the Book of
Genesis. Astruc pointed out that
many of the incidents and events described in Genesis were
"doublets", that is, they often were described twice in back-to-back
accounts that differed in details. There are, for instance, two different
accounts of the creation story in Genesis 1 and 2, and two different accounts
of the Flood story in later chapters. The presence of these repeated but different accounts, Astruc concluded,
didn't make sense if, as tradition held, Genesis was a single narrative written
in complete form by a single author.
To explain the
presence of these doublets, Astruc proposed what later became known as the
"Documentary Hypothesis". Using the techniques of literary and textual analysis that had already
been used for secular literature, Astruc compared the wording and style of
various passages in Genesis and concluded that there were two distinctly
different accounts in Genesis which, based on differing literary conventions,
were written by two different authors at different times, and then later
combined into one book. One of these
accounts consistently referred to God as "Elohim", or "The
Lord", while the other account consistently referred to God by the name
"Jehovah". Astruc labeled
these two different sources as "A" and "B".
Within a short
time, a group of German scholars expanded upon Astruc's ideas, and produced a
school of Biblical study that became known as "Higher
Criticism". By taking the
linguistic/textual analysis done by Astruc and applying it to the rest of the
Old Testament (which also contained doublets or even triplets -- there are for
instance three different versions of the Ten Commandments in Exodus and
Deuteronomy), the German scholars Eichhorn, Ewal, DeWette, Graf and Wellhausen
identified four different sources for the Old Testament. One of these source documents always
referred to God by the name "Jehovah", and therefore was labeled the
"J" source. The J source was
also distinguished by the particular words it used to describe the pre-Israeli
inhabitants of the Promised Land, and tended to depict God in anthropomorphic
terms. From implicit political assumptions made in the descriptions, it is
apparent that the J source was identified with the Aaronid priesthood which was
centered in Judah. The second identified source always referred to God as "Elohim",
and was called the "E" source. The E source used different words to describe the pre-Israeli
inhabitants of the Holy Land, and also tended to avoid anthropomorphic
depictions of God. The political
opinions implied in the account suggest that this source was allied with the
Shiloh priesthood in Israel. The book
of Deuteronomy had linguistic styles and topics that did not match either the J
or E source, and thus was identified with a different source "D".
Literary similarities led to the conclusion that the D source had also written
the books of Joshua, Judges, First and Second Samuel, and First and Second
Kings. Since the D source makes
references to material found in both the J and E source, it was concluded that
it had been written later. Finally, there is a fourth source text that seemed
to be most concerned with details of rituals and the conduct of priests, as
well as a penchant for long lists of dates and geneologies. This has been labeled the "P"
source (for "priestly"). This
is the source for the detailed laws of Leviticus. The P source is generally held to have been the most recent,
chronologically. All of these varying
sources were later edited together into their final form by an unknown person
or persons known as the Redactor, who probably performed this task in about 400
BC. This view, known as the Documentary
Hypothesis, is still held today by most Biblical scholars.
When the
Documentary Hypothesis entered the United States during the late 19th century
and became widely accepted (under the name "Modernism"), it exploded
like a bombshell among the conservative elements of the Protestant churches.
Not only did the German school reject the traditional idea that the Pentateuch
was the work of a single author who had recorded the words dictated by God, but
it concluded that the Bible itself was a collection of different documents by
different authors, each with differing theologies and motives. The American conservatives flatly rejected
the idea of a Bible that was pieced together years after the events which it
describes. William Jennings Bryan, one
of the most prominent Christian conservatives, thundered, "Give the
modernist three words, 'allegorical,' 'poetical,' and 'symbolically,' and he
can suck the meaning out of every vital doctrine of the Christian Church and
every passage in the Bible to which he objects."
In response to the
Modernist Higher Criticism, conservative Protestants in the United States met,
in the Niagara Bible Conference in1897, to hammer out a counter-theology, a process
that continued within several of the conservative Protestant denominations for
over a decade. By 1910, the
conservative traditionalists had settled on a set of five principles which,
they argued, defined Christianity. These were (1) the inerrancy of the Bible, (2) the Virgin Birth and the
deity of Jesus, (3) the belief that Jesus died to redeem mankind's sin and that
salvation resulted through faith in Jesus, (4) the physical resurrection of
Jesus, and (5) the imminent Second Coming of Jesus. Between 1910 and 1915, a series of twelve booklets were
published, titled The Fundamentals; A Testimony to the Truth, containing
94 articles by 64 authors, setting out and defending these principles. The introduction to the first volume
declared, "In 1909 God moved two Christian laymen to set aside a large sum
of money for issuing twelve volumes that would set forth the fundamentals of
the Christian faith, and which were to be sent free of charge to ministers of
the gospel, missionaries, Sunday school superintendents, and others engaged in
aggressive Christian work throughout the English speaking world." From these booklets, the conservative
Christians became known as "the fundamentalists". Financed by the wealthy oil businessmen
Milton and Lyman Stewart, some 3 million copies of The Fundamentals were
printed. In 1919, the World Conference
on Christian Fundamentals met in Philadelphia. At around the same time, the Moody Bible Institute was formed to publish
fundamentalist defenses of Biblical inerrancy, and fundamentalist theologian
Cyrus Scofield published an annotated Reference Bible, with margin notes
defending literalist interpretations of Biblical passages. The fundamentalist conviction that they
alone were the True Christians led to a long series of bitter fights with other
Christians, as fundamentalists sought to take over as many theological
institutes as they could in order to purge them of "modernists" and
"liberals".
In addition to the
five Biblical "fundamentals", the conservative Protestants also came
to largely accept and embrace a number of other concepts that had not
previously been a tenet of any of the major Christian denominations. These included (1) exclusivity, the idea
that only the fundamentalists are able to authoritatively interpret the
"true meaning" of the Bible, and thus are the only legitimate
"True Christians", and (2) separation, the idea that not only are any
other Christian interpretations (Catholic, liberal churches) utterly wrong, but
it is the duty of fundamentalists to oppose and overcome them, while remaining
apart from their corrupting influence. These characteristics, indeed, have today come to be almost the defining
characteristics of any "fundamentalist" church.
The majority of the
essays included in The Fundamentals were attacks on Higher Criticism,
and defenses of an inerrant Bible that was to be taken as literal history and
revelation. Other essays attacked the
idea of the "Social Gospel", in which many liberal Christians
asserted that Christians should ally with other social groups and become active
in political movements to improve the living conditions for all humans. The fundamentalists rejected this idea,
arguing instead that, since the Second Coming was imminent, the only task of
the church should be to save as many souls as possible in the short time left
before the world came to an end. The
fundamentalists also did not want to associate with what they viewed as
heretical and apostate liberal Christians.
It was the third
major target of the fundamentalists, however, which ignited a conflict that
continues to this day and is the direct ancestor of the creationist/intelligent
design movement -- the political campaign targeting science, and, in
particular, evolution.
In the years after
Darwin first published On the Origin of Species, there was, as Darwin
had expected, a storm of criticism from European religious figures who viewed
the idea that humans had descended from animals as a direct attack on the
Bible. Anglican Bishop Sam Wilberforce,
in a public debate with evolution-supporter Thomas Huxley, famously asked if it
was on his father's side or mother's side that Huxley claimed descent from
apes. In a remarkably short time,
however, religion had made its peace with Darwin, and by 1900, nearly every
religious authority in Europe accepted the conclusions of science, just as it
had accepted the conclusions of the Bible's literary scholars concerning the
Documentary Hypothesis.
In America,
however, the situation was quite different. The fundamentalists rejected evolution and the scientific outlook with
all the fervor and vitriol that they had aimed at the German Biblical
scholars. Princeton theologian J.
Gresham Machen declared, "The root of the movement (liberalism) is one;
the many varieties of modern liberal religion are rooted in naturalism -- that
is, in the denial of any entrance of the creative power of God (as
distinguished from the ordinary course of nature) in connection with the origin
of Christianity . . . our principle concern . . . is to show that the liberal
attempt at reconciling Christianity with modern science has really relinquished
everything distinctive of Christianity, so that what remains is in essentials
only that same indefinite type of religious aspiration which was in the world
before Christianity came upon the scene. In trying to remove from Christianity
everything that could possibly be objected to in the name of science, in trying
to bribe off the enemy by those concessions which the enemy most desires, the apologist
has really abandoned what he started out to defend...The plain fact is that
liberalism, whether it be true or false, is no mere 'heresy' -- no mere
divergence at isolated points from Christian teaching. On the contrary it
proceeds from a totally different root, and it constitutes, in essentials a
unitary system of its own . . . It differs from Christianity in its view of
God, of man, of the seat of authority and the way of salvation . . .
Christianity is being attacked from within by a movement which is
anti-Christian to the core." Tent
revivalist Billy Sunday referred to evolution as a "bastard theory"
which was supported only by "hireling ministers".
Fundamentalist
religious organizations formed alliances with conservative lawmakers to pass
"monkey laws" -- laws which made it illegal to teach evolution -- in
almost half of the states. In 1928, for
instance, the state of Arkansas passed a law (by referendum) making it illegal
to teach "the theory or doctrine that mankind ascended or descended from a
lower order of animals." (Arkansas Initiated Act 1, 1928, cited in
Eldredge 1982, p. 15 and LaFollette, 1983, p. 5) Another such law was the Butler Act, approved by the Tennessee
state legislature in March 1925. The
Butler act stated: "It shall be
unlawful for any teacher in any of the Universities, Normals and all other
public schools of the State which are supported in whole or in part by the
public school funds of the State, to teach any theory that denies the story of
the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that
man has descended from a lower order of animals." (Butler Act, Tennessee
State Legislature, 1925)
The American Civil
Liberties Union decided to challenge the constitutionality of the new Tennessee
law, and announced that it would defend any teacher who would intentionally
violate the Butler Act to produce a test case. In Dayton, Tennessee, biology teacher John T Scopes volunteered,
probably with the encouragement of local officials who wanted to generate some
publicity. William Bell Riley, the
founder and president of the World Christian Fundamentals Association, asked
William Jennings Bryan (a populist political figure and three-time Democratic
Party candidate for President) to join the legal team defending the Butler Act,
which in turn led Clarence Darrow, one of the most prominent lawyers in the US,
to join the Scopes defense team. The
result was the Scopes Monkey Trial, perhaps the most famous court proceeding in
American history. Amidst the carnival-like
atmosphere (aided by the acid commentary of widely-read journalist HL Mencken),
the trial degenerated into an attack and counter-attack concerning the
influence of fundamentalism on science and education. Bryan himself took the stand as an "expert witness on the
Bible", and was grilled by Darrow for two hours concerning his
fundamentalist interpretations:
"DARROW:
I will read it to you from the Bible: "And the Lord God said unto the
serpent, because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and
above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go and dust shalt
thou eat all the days of thy life." Do you think that is why the serpent is compelled to crawl upon its
belly?
BRYAN:
I believe that.
DARROW:
Have you any idea how the snake went before that time?
BRYAN:
No, sir.
DARROW:
Do you know whether he walked on his tail or not?
BRYAN:
No, sir. I have no way to know. (Laughter in audience)." (Scopes trial transcript)
Bryan thundered
that Darrow's only purpose was "to cast ridicule on everybody who believes
in the Bible", leading Darrow to shoot back, "We have the purpose of
preventing bigots and ignoramuses from controlling the education of the United
States." (Scopes trial transcript)
Although Scopes was
convicted of teaching evolution and was fined $100, the case was overturned on
appeal due to a technicality, robbing the ACLU of its chance to take the matter
to the Supreme Court. For the
fundamentalist movement, however, the Scopes trial was a disaster. Sarcastic newspaper articles, by Mencken and
others, as well as novels such as Sinclair Lewis's Elmer Gantry, depicted fundamentalists as uneducated hicks
and backwoods country bumpkins. The
political victories won by the fundamentalists, including the monkey laws, died
within a few years. The infighting
within seminaries and theological institutes between fundamentalists and
modernists led to a steep decline in students training for the clergy, and a
sharp decrease in church memberships. By the time of the Great Depression in 1929, fundamentalism was all but
dead as an effective social or political movement.
After the end of
World War II, the beginning of the Cold War with the Soviet Union revived the
fundamentalist's fortunes. The
atheistic Leninists who ran the USSR were a convenient enemy for the
fundamentalists, and they quickly entered into alliances with right-wing
anti-communist political figures. The
era of rampant McCarthyism was a fertile breeding ground for fundamentalist
theology, and gave fundamentalists a measure of political influence that they
had not enjoyed for decades. It was not
until the mid-1970s, however, that the fundamentalist wing of Christianity
began to make political influence an aim in itself, and actively sought to use
the power of right-wing politicians to
enforce their fundamentalist religious and social opinions onto the rest of
society. This marked the rise of the Religious Right, the immediate ancestors
of the ID/creationists.
Like the
fundamentalist movement of the 20s, the Religious Right was a reactionary
response to social changes which they found religiously objectionable and
intolerable. The late 1960s were a time
of intense and far-reaching social change in the US. Within the space of ten years, a new generation had placed all of
the traditional American social structures under critical examination, and
found them wanting. The civil rights
movement broke down traditional social roles and also led to the renewed rise
of the Social Gospel advocates, who advocated that Christians work together to
improve social conditions for the poor and the oppressed. During the 60s, the anti-war and human
rights movements led to questions about patriotism and the role of the US in
world affairs; participatory democracy
movements challenged traditional political authority; the women's liberation
and gay liberation movements challenged sexual mores and family structures;
interest in Eastern religious traditions led to skepticism about the role of
traditional Christianity in society. All of these were anathema to the fundamentalists.
Fundamentalist
hostility was particularly marked towards a number of Supreme Court decisions
during the period. The first of these
was the 1954 Brown v Board of Education decision, which outlawed
segregated schools. Southern
fundamentalists in particular viewed segregation as Biblically-approved, and
bitterly fought desegregation and the civil rights movement. In response to the 1954 decision, many
fundamentalist churches set up their own private schools, which were not
subject to the Court's decision and were therefore free to continue to practice
segregation. (The fundamentalist Bob
Jones University would later sue the Federal government in an effort to be
allowed to continue to ban Black students; after losing, BJU banned
inter-racial dating among its students, a policy that was only withdrawn in the
face of public disapproval in the wake of a visit by President George W. Bush
in 2000.) In 1961, the Supreme Court
dealt the fundamentalists another blow when, in the Engel v Vitale case,
it outlawed government-sanctioned prayer in schools, saying, "We think
that, in this country, it is no part of the business of government to compose
official prayers for any group of the American people to recite as a part of a
religious program carried on by government." (US Supreme Court, Engel v
Vitale, 1961) In 1968, the Court ruled,
in the case of Epperson v Arkansas, that all of the various
anti-evolution "monkey laws" were unconstitutional.
The fundamentalists
saw their views as coming under attack on nearly every front. In response, as they did in the 20s,
fundamentalists in the 1970s sought to gain political influence by allying
themselves with politicians. In the
1976 election, presidential candidate Jimmy Carter caught the attention of
fundamentalists when he spoke publicly about his religion and about being
"born again". Some elements
of the fundamentalists saw Carter's candidacy as an opportunity to have their
religious concerns addressed, and supported Carter and the Democratic
Party. It quickly became apparent,
however, that Carter's policies were far too liberal to suit the
fundamentalists, and they turned to the Republican Party instead.
As it happened, the
right wing of the Republican Party was also looking for allies to help it
defeat not only the Democrats, but also the moderate and
traditional-conservative elements within their own party. The marriage was made. After the 1976 elections, Robert Grant
formed a group called Christian Voice to channel fundamentalist money and votes
to right-wing Republican candidates, including Ronald Reagan and Dan
Quayle. One of Christian Voice's most
effective members was Richard Viguerie, who turned direct-mail marketing into
an astoundingly effective method of raising money and informing supporters
which candidates were "godly" and which weren't. After a falling-out with Grant in 1979,
Viguerie left and, working together with conservative political figure Paul
Weyrich and televangelist Jerry Falwell, formed the first effective national
fundamentalist political organization, Moral Majority Inc. The fundamentalists were instrumental in
getting Ronald Reagan elected in 1980, and have not left the fold of the
Republican Party ever since. Over the
next two decades, under a number of organizations such as Christian Coalition, Concerned Women of America,
Focus on the Family, Coalition for
Traditional Values, and Eagle Forum, fundamentalist Christians allied with the
Republican Party gained unprecedented political power and influence -- which
they continue to exercise under the Presidency of George W. Bush.
The Religious Right
was also quick to take up the anti-evolution crusade. In late 1981, Falwell telecast an appeal for money to help defend
the anti-evolution law in Arkansas -- using as the backdrop for his appeal the
very same Dayton, Tennessee, courthouse in which the original Scopes trial was
held. Moral Majority also ran a number of ads in various magazines to publicize
the trial and raise money. One of the ads took the form of a
"survey", which asked the reader (with all the appropriate catch
words emphasized) to mail in a "ballot":
"Cast
your vote for creation or evolution. Where do you stand in this vital debate?
-
Do you agree with 'theories' of evolution that DENY the Biblical account of
creation?
-
Do you agree that public school teachers should be permitted to teach our
children AS FACT that they are descended from APES?
-
Do you agree with the evolutionists who are attempting to PREVENT the Biblical
account of creation from also being taught in public schools?" (TV Guide,
June 13, 1981, p. A-105)
Those who sent in
their "ballot" (with the proper answers checked) were put on Moral
Majority's mailing list for fundraising and further anti-evolution mailings.
Falwell also turned
the resources of Liberty University, a large Bible college which was wholly
funded by Moral Majority, towards the fight against evolution. All students at
Liberty University, regardless of major, were required to take a semester-long
course in creationist biology. The state-approved teacher training program at
Liberty was heavily focused on creationism. As a symbol of the close affinities
between the creationists and the Moral Majority, Liberty University Chancellor
Jerry Falwell himself awarded an honorary doctorate to ICR founder Henry Morris
during commencement exercises in 1989.
As researcher
Philip Kitcher points out, both the creationists and the fundamentalists gained
benefits from this partnership. "Jerry Falwell's Old Time Gospel Hour
offers a forum for broadcasting creationist ideas. On the other hand, Falwell
needs concrete issues around which to build his movement." (Kitcher, 1982,
p. 2) The televangelists recognized the creation "scientists" as a
powerful apologetic tool to bring new people into the Christian political
movement, while the creationists came to depend upon the Religious Right as a
powerful political and economic ally.
Moral Majority
co-founder Tim LaHaye (he later became the author of the fundamentalist Left
Behind series of books) had close
ties to the creationists. In his influential fundamentalist manifesto Battle
for the Mind, LaHaye put the fight against evolution squarely in the middle
of the evangelical Christian world-view. The basic enemy of the Religious Right
is something they refer to as "secular humanism", which seems to be a
catch-all term for any outlook or philosophy which they find religiously
offensive--everything from pornography to feminism to socialism to evolutionary
science. "Most of the evils in the world today," says LaHaye,
"can be traced to humanism, which has taken over our government, the UN,
education, TV and most of the other influential things in life." (LaHaye,
1980, p. 1)
And a major component
of this "secular humanism", LaHaye asserts, is evolutionary theory:
"The humanistic doctrine of evolution has naturally led to the destruction
of the moral foundation upon which this country was originally built. If you
believe that man is an animal, you will naturally expect him to live like one.
Consequently, almost every sexual law that is required in order to maintain a
morally sane society has been struck down by the humanists, so that man may
follow his animal appetites." (LaHaye, 1980, p. 64) LaHaye's book depicts
a diagram of "secular humanism", which shows a pyramidical
construction in which "evolution" rests on the base of
"atheism", in turn supporting "amorality" and, at the top,
the "socialist one world view" (LaHaye, 1980, p. 63)
Some of the
statements made by creationists reveal the underlying connection between
creation "science" and LaHaye's religious crusade against
"secular humanism". "Since animals are indiscriminate with regards to partners in
mating," says Henry Morris, "and since men and women are believed to
have evolved from animals, then why shouldn't we live like animals?"
(Morris, Troubled Waters of Evolution, 1974, p. 167) Morris declared that
evolutionary theory is literally the work of the Devil -- given to Nimrod at
the Tower of Babel -- and that most scientists refuse to accept creationism
solely because they are atheists. Ken Ham, formerly of the ICR and now leader
of the Answers in Genesis organization, says, "As the creation foundation
is removed, we see the Godly institutions also start to collapse. On the other
hand, as the evolution foundation remains firm, the structures built on that
foundation -- lawlessness, homosexuality, abortion, etc -- logically increase. We
must understand this connection." (cited in Eve and Harrold, 1991, pp
58-59) The Creation Science Research
Center blamed the scientific model of evolution for "the moral decay of
spiritual values, which contributes to the destruction of mental health",
as well as "a widespread breakdown in law and order" (Creation
Science Report, April 1976, cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 285). Evolutionary
theory, the CSRC pontificated, is directly responsible for "divorce,
abortion, and rampant venereal diseases." (Segraves, The Creation Report,
1977, cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 285)
The creationists
and the Religious Right thus shared a world-view, a world-view that revolves
around the supposed evils of evolutionary theory. Both groups see evolution as
a major pillar which supports Satanic "secular humanism", and both are
determined to do away with that pillar and substitute a "Godly"
outlook instead -- creationism. "Although they make every effort to be
diplomatic about the subject," notes writer Perry Dean Young, "the
religious-right leaders are not speaking of teaching the story of the creation
in Genesis alongside Darwin's theory; they want it taught instead of evolution.
A headline in Religious Roundtable's newsletter that read 'Get Evolution Out of
Our Schools' let that fact slip." (Young, 1982, p. 73) The creationists
also occasionally let their ultimate goal slip in print too; while pushing the
Arkansas "Balanced Treatment Act" through, creationist Paul
Ellwanger, who drafted the original bill, wrote to a supporter, "Perhaps
this is old hat to you, Tom, and if so, I'd appreciate it your telling me so
and perhaps where you've heard it before -- the idea of killing evolution instead
of playing these debating games that we've been playing for nigh over a decade
already." (Attachment to Ellwanger Deposition, McLean v Arkansas, 1981,
cited in Overton Opinion)
But "killing
evolution" is not their only stated goal. The Religious Right is defiantly
open about its ultimate theocratic political aims. As Bob Werner, a leader of
the "Christian shepherding" movement, bluntly put it, "The Bible
says we are to . . . rule. If you don't rule and I don't rule, the atheists and
the humanists and the agnostics are going to rule. We should be the head of our
school board. We should be the head of our nation. We should be the Senators and
Congressmen. We should be the editors of our newspapers. We should be taking
over every area of life." (cited in Diamond, 1989, p. 45) Paul Weyrich, a
co-founder of Moral Majority and director of the fundamentalist Committee for
the Survival of a Free Congress, declared, "We are no longer working to
preserve the status quo. We are radicals, working to overturn the present power
structures of this country." (cited in Young, 1982, p. 321 and Kater 1982,
p. 7) Weyrich added, "We are talking about the Christianizing of
America." (cited in Vetter 1982, p. 5) Randall Terry, who founded the militant anti-abortion group Operation
Rescue, put it, "I want you to just let a wave of intolerance wash over
you. I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good... Our
goal is a Christian nation. We have a biblical duty, we are called on by God to
conquer this country. We don't want equal time. We don't want pluralism."
(The News Sentinel, Ft. Wayne, IN., August 16, 1993) "This is God's world, not Satan's," declared leading
fundamentalist political figure Gary North. "Christians are the lawful
heirs, not non-Christians . . . . The long-term goal of Christians in politics
should be to gain exclusive control over the franchise. Those who refuse to
submit publicly to the eternal sanctions of God by submitting to His Church's
public marks of the covenant -- baptism and holy communion -- must be denied
citizenship, just as they were in ancient Israel." (Political Polytheism:
The Myth of Pluralism, Institute for Christian Economics, 1989, p.87, p.
102) North continues, "So let us
be blunt about it: We must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain
independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who
know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral
education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will be get busy in
constructing a Bible-based social, political and religious order which finally
denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God." ("The Intellectual Schizophrenia of the
New Christian Right" in Christianity and Civilization: The Failure of the
American Baptist Culture, No. 1, 1982, p. 25)
As the
fundamentalists pointed out, one of the most important areas in which
"Christians" must "govern" are the local school
districts -- and they make it clear that creationism is the issue which provided
them with the opportunity to do this. As Tim LaHaye bluntly put it, "The
elite-evolutionist-humanist is not going to be able to control education in
America forever." (LaHaye 1980, p. 3) Pat Robertson said, "Humanist
values are being taught in the schools through such methods as 'values
clarification'. All of these things constitute an attempt to wean children away
from biblical Christianity". (cited in Boston, 1996, p. 168)
Other
fundamentalist apologists were just as clear about their ultimate goals for
public education:
"Our
purpose must be to spread the gospel on the new mission field that the Lord has
opened -- public high schools". (Jay Alan Sekulow, American Center for Law
and Justice, CASE Bulletin, July 1990)
"To
abandon public education to Satan is to compromise our calling. The attitude
and approach of Christians should be that they never expose their children to
public education, but that they should work increasingly to expose public
education to the claims of Christ. Certain specially suited Christians, in
fact, should pray and work tirelessly to obtain teaching and school board and
even administrative positions within public education. The penultimate goal of
these Christians should be the privatization of these larcenous institutions,
and the ultimate aim the bringing of them under the authority of Christ and His
word." (Rev. Andrew Sandlin, Chalcedon Report, March 1994)
"There
are 15,700 school districts in America. When we get an active Christian
parents' committee in operation in all districts, we can take complete control
of all local school boards. This would allow us to determine all local policy;
select good textbooks; good curriculum programs; superintendents and
principals." (Robert Simonds, Citizens for Excellence in Education, 1984)
"The
Christian community has a golden opportunity to train an army of dedicated
teachers who can invade the public school classrooms and use them to influence
the nation for Christ." (D. James Kennedy, Education; Public Problems and
Private Solutions, Coral Ridge Ministries, 1993)
A fundraising
letter sent from the Creation Science Research Center seconded these
sentiments: "We already have a state-mandated religion of atheism -- of
Godlessness -- of Satanism -- and no church training of one hour a week will
overcome this onslaught of anti-God teachings in the classroom. The Church must
get involved." (Letter from CSRC, cited in LaFollette 1983, p. 126) Gary North frankly pointed out, "Until
the vast majority of Christians pull their children out of the public schools,
there will be no possibility of creating a theocratic republic." (cited in
Blaker, 2003, p 187)
During the
Reagan/Bush/Gingrich years, creationists were very active in state textbook
committees and curriculum boards, where they attempted to pressure various
states into dropping biology textbooks which feature evolutionary theory. In
the late 1980s, bowing to creationist pressure, the state of Texas mandated
that all biology textbooks carry a disclaimer stating that evolution is
"only a theory" and "not established fact". And the GOP was quick to attempt to tap this
resource. State Republican Parties in Texas, Oklahoma and Iowa all adopted
platform planks which advocate teaching creationism in schools.
Even the national
Republican leadership demonstrated a willingness to kowtow to the creationists.
In its 1994 "Contract for America", the GOP asserted, of its proposed
"Family Reinforcement Act", that it "will strengthen the rights
of parents to protect their children against education programs that undermine
the values taught at home" -- a code word for removing evolution, sex
education, and other things which offend fundamentalist sensibilities. During
the 1996 campaign, Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan appealed to
fundamentalist support by attacking evolution. When asked by a commentator if
he favored the teaching of creationism in public schools, Buchanan replied,
"You may believe you descended from monkeys -- I don't believe it. I think
you're created --I think you're a creature of God." When asked, "Do
parents have the right, in your judgment, to insist, if they believe in
creationism, that it also be taught in public schools?", Buchanan
declared, "I think they have a right to insist that godless evolution not
be taught to their children, or their children not be indoctrinated into
it." Several days later, fellow
GOP candidate Alan Keyes was asked about creationism and its critics. "I
think they ought to take a look at our country's founding document," Keyes
replied. "It says, 'All men were created', and 'endowed by their creator
with inalienable rights'. . . I don't think it is only a question of
Judeo-Christian beliefs. It is of American beliefs."
To the initiated
faithful, the creationists also make no secret of their political goals. As
Henry Morris of the Institute for Creation Science admits, the ultimate goal of
the creationists is to bring first science, then the rest of society under
Biblical proscriptions: "A key purpose of the ICR is to bring the field of
education -- and then our whole world insofar as possible -- back to the
foundational truth of special creation and primeval history as revealed first
in Genesis and further emphasized throughout the Bible".
In essence, the
fundamentalists and their creationist allies want to do for the United States
what the fundamentalist Taliban did for Afghanistan and the Ayatollahs have
done for Iran -- they want to run the country in accordance with their interpretation
of "God's will". As they make clear, they are perfectly willing to
dismantle most of American democracy in order to save America from Satan. Rev.
James Robison put it like this, "Let me tell you something else about the
character of God. If necessary, God would raise up a tyrant -- a man who might
not have the best ethics -- to protect the freedom and the interests of the
ethical and the godly." (cited in Vetter 1982, p. 6)
In the United
States, however, any such attempt to rule in accordance with any
"Christian" religious doctrine runs head-on into a solid wall -- the
Constitutional wall between church and state.
TWO: Separation of Church and State
"Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof."
With those words,
in the First Amendment to the Constitution, the fledgling United States of
America became the first nation to place into law the notion that religious
beliefs were a private matter for individuals who had the legal right to
freedom of conscience, and that no government had the right or authority to
dictate what religious opinions people shall or shall not hold. Since then, the "wall of separation
between church and state" has been a bedrock principle of democracy -- and it is this very principle that has
become the focus of attack by the fundamentalist political movement in the US
today. The openly-declared aim of the
fundamentalist Christian movement is precisely to dismantle the wall between
church and state, and to legally establish the US as a fundamentalist version
of a "Christian Nation".
In order to
understand the significance of the First Amendment's "establishment clause",
it is helpful to look at the reasons why it was adopted, and the history that
made it necessary. That history begins
in Europe.
For 1500 years, the
Roman Catholic Church was the only religious authority in Europe. The Papal organization had also come to
enjoy a significant secular political influence, as well. By the beginning of the 16th century, the
Catholic Church was the most powerful (and wealthy) organization in Europe. Not surprisingly, it had also become riddled
with corruption and abuses of both religious and secular power, and these
provoked criticism, opposition, and, eventually, outright rebellion.
The explosion
happened in 1517, when an Augustinian monk named Martin Luther nailed his
"95 Theses" to the door of the Wittenburg Church in Germany. The Theses protested the corruption and
abuses that Luther saw in the Church hierarchy, including such practices as the
sale of indulgences, the marriage of priests, and the secular power and wealth
of the Pope. Three years later, Luther
wrote three books which attacked the doctrine of papal infallibility and the
status of priests as intermediaries between humans and God. Instead, Luther argued, every man was
entitled to be his own priest, to read and interpret the Bible for
himself. The resulting
"Protestant" movement soon spread throughout Europe. In 1535, the city of Geneva overthrew the
local prince (who was also a Bishop in the Catholic Church) and declared itself
a Protestant city. In response,
Protestants in Bern sent John Calvin to Geneva to help organize the new
churches. Calvin followed a severely
strict interpretation of the Bible, and imposed a harsh set of moral laws on
the city of Geneva. The citizens of
Geneva, in turn, viewed Calvin as no better than the Pope, and exiled him three
years later. Calvin settled in the city
of Strasbourg, where he wrote "The Institutes of the Christian
Church". Along with Luther, Calvin
would become one of the most influential founders of Protestant Christianity.
Calvin popularized
two ideas which would later become important in Christian fundamentalism
(indeed, most modern fundamentalists are heavily Calvinist in their
views). The first of these was
"biblical literalism", the idea that every word written in the Bible
had to be followed totally and unquestioningly, and, conversely, any religious
doctrine that was not found in the Bible was false and must be rejected. Calvin's second idea was that of
"predestination", the idea that the vast majority of Christians would
not be saved and would go to Hell, while only a tiny minority of Christians had
already been selected by God to enjoy salvation. While nobody knew who had been predestined to be saved or not,
Calvin asserted that, since the truly saved would naturally gravitate towards
the correct Christian beliefs, his own church would be made up mostly of the
selected elite. They were, Calvin
declared, "living saints".
The Protestant
Reformation split Europe in two, leading to centuries of political and
religious conflicts. Between 1560 and 1715,
there were only thirty years during which there were no large-scale wars
between Catholic and Protestant rulers. In Germany, various Catholic and Protestant principalities fought each
other until the Peace of Augsburg in
1555 divided Germany into Catholic and Protestant regions. In France, a Calvinist group known as
Huguenots rebelled against the Catholic king. The French Wars of Religion lasted from 1562 to 1598. The climax of the French Wars of Religion
was the St Bartholomew Massacre in 1572, when the French King's troops rounded
up over 3,000 French Huguenots in Paris and systematically killed them
all. By 1609, Europe was divided into
two hostile armed camps, the Catholic League and the Protestant Union. In 1618, all of Europe was consumed by the
Thirty Years War, in which Catholics and Protestant slaughtered each other on a
scale not seen again in Europe until the Napoleonic Wars. The war ended in 1648, leaving Europe
fragmented into over 300 different kingdoms and principalities, each with its
own state religion of Catholicism, Lutheranism or Calvinism.
In England, a group
known as the Puritans shrilly criticized the Church of England, which, though
Protestant, was not "reformed" enough for Puritan taste. The Anglican Church itself had broken from
the Catholics in 1534, when Henry VIII, angered by Pope Clement's refusal to
grant an annulment of the King's marriage to Catherine of Aragon, declared
himself the head of the Church of England, installed his own bishops and church
hierarchy, and made it a crime punishable by death to refuse to acknowledge the
King's supreme religious authority.
In 1603, the
Puritans (who were largely Calvinists) demanded a set of reforms to be applied
to the Church of England which would have imposed Puritan religious opinions
onto the entire country. These proposed
reforms were rejected, and under Archbishop William Laud, the Church of England
attempted to marginalize and repress the Puritans -- a difficult task, since
the Puritans made up a large section of the English population. The Puritans, meanwhile, viewed King Charles
I with suspicion, pointing to his French wife and his reluctance to enter the
Thirty Years War as evidence of his "papist" leanings. When the English Civil War broke out in
1642, the Puritans made up most of the Parliamentarian forces under Oliver
Cromwell, which defeated the Royalist armies of King Charles I and beheaded him
in 1649.
For the next four
years, Parliament ruled England. In
1653, however, Cromwell and his army took over, disbanded Parliament ("in
the name of God", he announced to them, "go"), and declared
himself the "Lord Protector" of England. Until his death in 1658, Cromwell ruled as king in all but name,
and placed England under the harshly strict moral code demanded by his
Calvinist faith. Theaters were closed;
work on the Sabbath was forbidden; even swearing was outlawed under penalty of
a fine or, for repeat offenders, prison. His anti-Catholic stance prompted him to invade Ireland and
"tame" it with a large force of troops. By the time he died in September 1658, Cromwell was a hated
man. Within two years, England no
longer had any functional central government, and in 1660, at the behest of the
Army, Charles II, the son of the beheaded Charles I, was restored to the
throne. In 1662, the Act of Uniformity
expelled all of the remaining Puritans from the Church of England, and other
laws outlawed any non-Anglican religious gatherings and required all public
officeholders to swear allegiance to the Church of England.
All of this had a
direct effect on what would become the United States. In 1608, a sect of Puritans, called the Separatists, were
convinced that the Church of England was so corrupt that it could not be
reformed, and decided to form their own church. They quickly came to the attention of Anglican Archbishop Laud's
efforts to repress religious dissenters, and left England for the more
religiously open Netherlands. By 1620,
88 Separatist "Pilgrims" embarked on the ship Mayflower for
Delaware, in the New World, where they hoped to establish their own version of
the "pure church". By
mistake, they landed at a spot in Massachusetts now known as "Plymouth
Rock" in December 1620. Within a
few years, other Puritans had formed the Massachusetts Bay Company, which
obtained a charter from Charles I (who was glad to be rid of them) for a colony
in the New World. In 1630, the
Massachusetts Bay colony was formed, with John Winthrop as its governor. By 1640, there were some 17,800 Puritan
colonists in New England, growing to over 100,000 by 1700. The bulk of immigration from England to
North America, known as The Great Migration, took place in the twelve years
before the outbreak of the English Civil War. Between the English Civil War and the American War of Independence, the
flow of people from England to America slowed to a mere trickle; most New
Englanders in 1776 were descendents of ancestors who had come over in the Great
Migration.
The Puritans who
founded the New England colonies may have fled what they perceived as
"religious intolerance" (it was, after all, the Puritans themselves
who were attempting to force their religious extremism onto the English state),
but this did not prevent them from practicing religious intolerance
themselves. The Puritans believed
themselves to be God's Elect, and each of their colonies was a tiny Cromwellian
theocracy, ruled in strict accordance with Biblical strictures. In most
respects, Puritans in America were even stricter and more harsh than their
English counterparts. Although
ministers were not usually members of the civil government, they exercised
enormous influence, and the secular authorities scrupulously enforced Puritan
religious ideals. Laws required all
colony members to attend Sunday church services, and taxes were used directly
for church expenses. Contrary to
English law, the Puritan colonists in Massachusetts required voters and public
office-holders to be Puritans, rather than Anglican -- a defiance which led the
King of England to revoke the colony's charter in 1684.
Religious dissent,
however, infested the Puritan colonies, and they reacted in the same manner
that Cromwell did -- by repressing it. Quakers, Anglicans and other non-Puritans were denied the right to either
vote or hold public office. In 1635,
one of the most prominent dissenters, Roger Williams, was banished by the
Massachusetts Bay colony. Williams had
argued on Biblical grounds that no human government could have any power over
the church, and that the Puritan theocracy was heretical. After his banishment, Williams founded his
own colony at Rhode Island, and declared that the colonial government there
would not support or repress any religious views, including Quaker, Jew or
Anglican.
By 1776, economic
and political realities had turned most of the colonies away from strict
Puritan theocracy. The religious
influence of the Puritans, however, continued to be evident, and after
Independence was gained in 1783, many state constitutions continued to
establish official religions and use public funds to support favored
churches. Of the thirteen colonies,
eleven had religious requirements for voting or holding public office. Massachusetts, Delaware and Maryland
required all public officials to be Christians; Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New
Hampshire, Vermont, North and South Carolina and Georgia all required, more
specifically, that officeholders be Protestants. Even Rhode Island, which had been founded on Roger Williams'
principle of religious freedom, specified that only Protestants could vote or
hold office. At this time, Protestants
of various sects dominated the colonies -- the entire United States in 1780
contained only 56 Catholic churches and 5 Jewish synagogues. In the southern colonies, which had all been
established by Royal Charter, the state constitutions established the Church of
England as the official state church.
These official
state endorsements, naturally, were opposed by members of competing sects, and
after Independence, the colonies faced the question of how to placate the
critics. In New England, several
colonies tried to solve the problem by collecting taxes for the support of
churches, but allowing each individual taxpayer to decide which church would
receive his payment. This, however,
produced problems of its own. The
Quakers and the Baptists objected on religious grounds to any state involvement
in their church, even if the state was giving the money to their own church. The colonial governments responded by
allowing Quaker and Baptist objectors to apply for certificates which exempted
them from paying these taxes. This,
however, provoked even more problems. Members of other denominations could not object to paying these taxes
unless they "converted" to Baptism or Quakerism. This led to complaints that many of the
objectors weren't really Baptists or Quakers at all, which necessitated the
state deciding who really was or wasn't a Baptist or Quaker, and thus
"entangling" itself in delicate matters of religious doctrine.
A similar program
was attempted in Virginia in 1784. After the Anglican Church was disestablished, a group of Virginian
legislators introduced a proposed law that would tax citizens to support all
churches in the state equally. According to the proposed law, the result would be "a General and
equal contribution of the whole State upon the most equitable footing that it
is possible to place it", and "would have no Sect or Denomination of
Christians privileged to encroach upon the rights of another." (cited in
Feldman, 2005, p 35) This proposal
became known as General Assessment.
General Assessment
was opposed by many prominent Virginians, including James Madison. Although proponents of General Assessment
argued that the bill only supported religion in general, and was
"nondenominational" and "nonsectarian" because it did not
favor one religious group over another, Madison argued that this was not enough
-- the state had no business supporting or interfering with religion at all:
"Because
we hold it for a fundamental and undeniable truth, 'that religion or the duty
which we owe to our Creator and the manner of discharging it, can be directed
only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence.' The Religion then of
every man must be left to the conviction and conscience of every man; and it is
the right of every man to exercise it as these may dictate. This right is in
its nature an unalienable right. It is unalienable, because the opinions of
men, depending only on the evidence contemplated by their own minds cannot
follow the dictates of other men . . . The preservation of a free Government
requires not merely, that the metes and bounds which separate each department
of power be invariably maintained; but more especially that neither of them be
suffered to overleap the great Barrier which defends the rights of the people.
The Rulers who are guilty of such an encroachment, exceed the commission from
which they derive their authority, and are Tyrants. The People who submit to it
are governed by laws made neither by themselves nor by an authority derived
from them, and are slaves. . . . Who does not see that the same authority which
can establish Christianity, in exclusion of all other Religions, may establish
with the same ease any particular sect of Christians, in exclusion of all other
Sects? that the same authority which can force a citizen to contribute three
pence only of his property for the support of any one establishment, may force
him to conform to any other establishment in all cases whatsoever? . . . Because the Bill implies either that
the Civil Magistrate is a competent Judge of Religious Truth; or that he may
employ Religion as an engine of Civil policy. The first is an arrogant
pretension falsified by the contradictory opinions of Rulers in all ages, and
throughout the world: the second an unhallowed perversion of the means of
salvation." (Madison, "Memorial and Remonstrance" 1785)
When the
Constitutional Convention met in 1787, the topic of religion, and its relation
to the government, weighed heavily in the minds of the delegates. The bloody carnage of recent European
history, including the French Wars of Religion, the Thirty Years War, and the
English Civil War, were all directly the result of governmental support for and
action on behalf of religions, and the Founding Fathers were determined that
the new United States would not fall victim to the same mistakes. As Madison told the Constitutional
Convention, ""Religion itself may become a motive to persecution and
oppression." (http://www.usconstitution.net/consttop_reli.html) Citing the English Test Laws (which required
all public officials to be Anglicans), future Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth,
argued, "The business of civil government is to protect the citizen in his
rights. . . Civil government has no
business to meddle with the private opinions of the people . . . A test law
(is) the offspring of error and the spirit of persecution. Legislatures have no right to set up an
inquisition and examine into the private opinions of men." (cited in Kramnick and Moore, 1996, p 42)
The delegates' goal
of keeping the Federal Government independent of religion was the topic of very
little actual debate at the Convention. The matter of religion was only mentioned twice in the Constitution. The first reference, in Article Six,
specifies that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a
Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States." This was a direct rejection of the European
practice (taken up by the Puritan colonies) of requiring public officials to
swear loyalty to one religion or another, and to exclude any others from
office. The second reference to
religion is more obscure -- it occurs in the Oath of Office required of the
President: "I do solemnly swear (or
affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United
States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States." The option to either "swear" or "affirm" the oath of
office is a direct result of the delegates' desire to avoid government siding
for or against any religion. Several
colonial churches, including the Quakers, considered it un-Christian to
"swear" oaths, and the Constitution therefore protected the right of
these dissidents, as well as non-religious people, to instead
"affirm" the Oath of Office in a religiously neutral or non-religious
form.
When the
Constitution was finished and presented for ratification, it did not contain
the listing of individual rights and liberties that we now refer to as the Bill
of Rights. The Framers had not thought
it necessary to specifically list these, but the omission sparked a storm of
criticism, including that of religious figures who were alarmed that no
specific freedom of religious thought had been enumerated. Influential Baptist minister John Leland
objected that the Constitution didn't specifically guarantee freedom of
religion, pointing out that "if a Majority of Congress with the President
favour one System more than another, they may oblige all others to pay to the
support of their System as much as they please."
(http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel06.html)
When the state
legislature of Virginia ratified the US Constitution, it did so with the
understanding that the new Congress would pass a bill of rights, based on
twenty recommendations proposed by the Virginia delegates. One of these was that "no particular
religious sect or society ought to be favored or established by Law in
preference to others."
(http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel06.html) This proposal was based on a law written by Thomas Jefferson
(Jefferson was absent for the entire Consitutional Convention -- he was in
France serving as Ambassador), that had been passed in Virginia in 1777,
stating "our civil rights have no dependance on our religious opinions,
any more than our opinions in physics or geometry . . . WE, the General
Assembly of Virginia, do enact that no man shall be compelled to frequent or
support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be
enforced, restrained, molested, or burthened in his body or goods, nor shall
otherwise suffer, on account of his religious opinions or belief; but that all
men shall be free to profess, and by argument to maintain, their opinions in
matters of religion, and that the same shall in no wise diminish, enlarge, or
affect their civil capacities."
As a result of the
Virginia stipulation and other criticism, the First Congress passed ten
amendments to the new constitution, the Bill of Rights. And the first of these amendments took up
the topic of the relationship of government to religion. Several different versions were introduced,
but they were distilled down to "Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof", and
this was the wording that was codified into the First Amendment. The Bill of Rights was ratified in 1791.
When the new
Constitution was presented to the state legislatures for ratification, it came
under immediate attack by religious groups and political figures, on the
grounds that it did not support religion and did not officially
establish the US as a Christian nation. The "no religious test" provision in Article 6 was the object
of severe criticism. A critic in New
Hampshire argued that the lack of a religious test would allow "a papist,
a Mohomatan, a deist, yea an atheist at the helm of government". In North Carolina, one delegate complained
that "pagans, deists and Mahometans might obtain offices among us",
while another delegate was terrified that "Jews and pagans of every kind" could take office. In Massachusetts, another critic declared
that he hoped Christians would be voted into office, but "by the
Constitution, a papist, or even an infidel was as eligible as they". In the south, the slavery issue was raised;
a writer in Charleston, South Carolina, pointed out that without any religious test
for office, anti-slavery sects such as the Quakers "will have weight, in
proportion to their numbers, in the great scale of the continental
government". A Virginia writer
declared, "The Constitution is deistical in principle, and in all probability
the composers had no thought of God in all their consultations." (cited in Kramnick and Moore, 1996, p 33-34)
One of the most
widely read attacks on the new Constitution was a satirical pamphlet by
"Aristocrotis", titled The Government of Nature Delineated, or an
Exact Picture of the New Federal Constitution. In it, the writer argued that the Constitution was a godless
document, written by a handful of apostates, with the express goal of stamping
out religion:
"There
has been but few nations in the world where the people possessed the privilege
of electing their rulers; of prefixing a bill of rights to their constitutions,
enjoyed a free press. or trial by jury; but there was never a nation in the
world whose government was not circumscribed by religion. . . .What the world
could not accomplish from the commencement of time till now, they easily
performed in a few moments, by declaring, that 'no religious test shall ever be
required as a qualification to any office, or public trust; under the united
states.' "(Anti-Federalist #51, cited in http://www.members.tripod.com/candst/testban5.htm)
Other opponents
attacked the Constitution in the same vein. In New Hampshire, a delegate to the Ratifying Convention argued that
under the Constitution, "Congress might deprive the people of the use of
the Holy Scriptures". In
Massachusetts, another writer declared that "without the presence of
Christian piety and morals, the best Republican Constitution can never save us
from slavery and ruin". Other
Anti-Federalists warned ominously that the godless Constitution would cause God
to turn his back on the US, "because thou hast rejected the word of the
Lord, he hath also rejected thee". (cited in Kramnick and Moore, 1996, p 35-36)
Members of several
state ratifying conventions moved to change the Constitution by adding a
religious test to it; all these efforts were voted down.
Other states tried to add amendments banning
only government establishment of a
"particularly religious sect or society . . . in preference to
others". (cited in Feldman, 2005,
p 49)This was rejected on the grounds that it would still allow an unacceptable
General Assessment type of government support for "nondenominational"
or "nonsectarian" religion. The Constitution, with its explicit rejection of all governmental
support for religion, was ratified in 1788, and the First Amendment banning
establishment of religion was passed three years later.
Decades later,
Jefferson summarized the stance of the Constitution towards religion with a
famous phrase: "Believing that
religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his God, that he owes
account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legislative powers
of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with
sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that
their Legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation
between Church and State" (Letter to the Danbury Baptists, 1802).
The
Courts and Church/State Issues
It is not enough,
however, to consider solely what the Founding Fathers intended for the
church/state relationship when they wrote the Constitution. After all, those same Founding Fathers also
clearly supported and legitimized human slavery in the Constitution, as well as
specifically limiting the right to vote to white male property-owners (less
than five percent of the colonial population actually had the right to vote
under the Constitution). In the centuries since, of course, the American
understanding of civil rights and human rights has evolved, and the
Constitutional status of voting rights and civil rights has changed in
response. Just as no sane person would
argue today that slavery should be legalized or that 95% of the US should be
denied the right to vote since that is what the Founding Fathers intended,
neither can we base current laws concerning the relationship between religion
and state solely on the opinions of the Founding Fathers on the matter. As Chief Justice William Brennan wrote in a
1997 essay, "The genius of the Constitution rests not in any static
meaning it may have had in a world that is dead and gone, but in the
adaptability of its great principles to cope with current problems and present
needs." (quoted in Washington
Post, July 25, 1997, p. A1) In the
years since the US was founded, several Supreme Court cases have therefore
played major roles in deciding exactly where the wall between church and state
lies, and how much, if any, intercourse there can be through this wall.
For its first
half-century, the United States was fairly homogenous in its religious
outlooks. Protestants dominated every
state, and while these all squabbled with each other over doctrinal
differences, for the most part they were able to live in harmony with each
other. >By the second half of the 19th
century, however, serious religious conflicts began to appear in the US.
In the 1840s, large numbers of Catholics
began emigrating to the US from Ireland. Not long after, the Mormons founded the Church of Jesus Christ Latter
Day Saints. Theological conflict
between these groups and the dominant Protestants invariably led to both sides
seeking political support for their religious views, and this ran directly into
the wall between church and state.
The first major
Supreme Court ruling involving church/state issues was the 1878 Reynolds v
United States decision. In this case, a Mormon defendant argued that he
should not have been convicted of bigamy, since his religion mandated multiple
wives, and therefore the state's anti-bigamy law violated the free practice of
his religion.
In its ruling, the
Supreme Court noted: "Congress
cannot pass a law for the government of the Territories which shall prohibit
the free exercise of religion. The first amendment to the Constitution
expressly forbids such legislation. Religious freedom is guaranteed everywhere
throughout the United States, so far as congressional interference is
concerned. The question to be determined is, whether the law now under
consideration comes within this prohibition." (Supreme Court, Reynolds v
US, 1878)
The Court ruled
that, although people have the right to hold whatever religious opinions they
like, they do not have the right to act upon them if such actions have been
banned in the interests of public order or safety. "Laws are made for the government of actions, and while they
cannot interfere with mere religious belief and opinions, they may with
practices. Suppose one believed that human sacrifices were a necessary part of
religious worship, would it be seriously contended that the civil government
under which he lived could not interfere to prevent a sacrifice? Or if a wife
religiously believed it was her duty to burn herself upon the funeral pile of
her dead husband, would it be beyond the power of the civil government to
prevent her carrying her belief into practice? So here, as a law of the organization of society under the exclusive dominion
of the United States, it is provided that plural marriages shall not be
allowed. Can a man excuse his practices to the contrary because of his
religious belief? To permit this would be to make the professed doctrines of
religious belief superior to the law of the land, and in effect to permit every
citizen to become a law unto himself. Government could exist only in name under
such circumstances." (Supreme
Court, Reynolds v US, 1878)
The real basis for
most of 20th century law concerning church/state issues was set by the Supreme
Court in 1947, in the Everson v Board of Education ruling.
In this case, a state law in New Jersey
allowed state funds to be used to reimburse parents of children who had to use
public transportation in order to get to school. Since a number of parents who sent their children to parochial
Catholic schools were also reimbursed under this plan, a resident of New Jersey
filed suit, arguing that this practice was an unconstitutional support for
religion.
In its decision,
the Court spelled out what has become the legal basis for every
"establishment clause" case since:
"The
'establishment of religion' clause of the First Amendment means at least this:
Neither a state nor the Federal Government can set up a church. Neither can
pass laws which aid one religion, aid all religions, or prefer one religion
over another. Neither can force nor influence a person to go to or to remain
away from church against his will or force him to profess a belief or disbelief
in any religion. No person can be punished for entertaining or professing
religious beliefs or disbeliefs, for church attendance or non-attendance. No
tax in any amount, large or small, can be levied to support any religious
activities or institutions, whatever they may be called, or whatever form they
may adopt to teach or practice religion. Neither a state nor the Federal
Government can, openly or secretly, participate in the affairs of any religious
organizations or groups and vice versa. . . . New Jersey cannot consistently
with the "establishment of religion" clause of the First Amendment
contribute tax-raised funds to the support of an institution which teaches the
tenets and faith of any church. On the other hand, other language of the
amendment commands that New Jersey cannot hamper its citizens in the free
exercise of their own religion. Consequently, it cannot exclude individual
Catholics, Lutherans, Mohammedans, Baptists, Jews, Methodists, Non-believers,
Presbyterians, or the members of any other faith, because of their faith, or
lack of it, from receiving the benefits of public welfare
legislation." (Supreme Court,
Everson v Board of Ed, 1947, emphasis in original)
Oddly enough, the
Court then decided, by a 5-4 vote, that
the state of New Jersey had not violated this principle by using state funds to
transport parochial students to their schools -- it was simply providing public
transportation for all. The
"establishment clause" test spelled out by Justice Hugo Black in the
majority opinion, however, remains as the basis for all subsequent church/state
decisions. Specifically, the Everson
ruling was the basis for one of the most divisive Supreme Court cases of the
20th century, one resulting in the rise to political prominence of the
Christian fundamentalist movement -- the 1962 Engel v Vitale school
prayer case.
The New York Board
of Regents had issued a "Statement on Moral and Spiritual Training",
which recommended daily prayers at the beginning of the school day. In response, a school district in New Hyde
Park, New York, instructed its teachers to lead their students in reciting,
"Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence upon Thee, and we beg Thy
blessings upon us, our parents, our teachers and our Country" each
morning.
In its 6-1 ruling,
the Supreme Court flatly concluded that state-sponsored or endorsed prayer was
unconstitutional and violated the Establishment Clause. "We think that by using its public
school system to encourage recitation of the Regents' prayer, the State of New
York has adopted a practice wholly inconsistent with the Establishment Clause.
There can, of course, be no doubt that New York's program of daily classroom
invocation of God's blessings as prescribed in the Regents' prayer is a
religious activity. It is a solemn avowal of divine faith and supplication for
the blessings of the Almighty." (Supreme Court, Engel v Vitale, 1961)
The Court concluded
by saying:
"It
has been argued that to apply the Constitution in such a way as to prohibit
state laws respecting an establishment of religious services in public schools
is to indicate a hostility toward religion or toward prayer. Nothing, of
course, could be more wrong. . . . It
is neither sacrilegious nor antireligious to say that each separate government
in this country should stay out of the business of writing or sanctioning
official prayers and leave that purely religious function to the people
themselves and to those the people choose to look to for religious
guidance." (Supreme Court, Engel v
Vitale, 1961)
The Engel ruling
was expanded upon in the Abington School District v Schempp case two
years later. The Abington case was
actually a consolidation of two different cases which dealt with the same
question --- Bible readings in public schools. The Pennsylvania Abington case involved a requirement to read ten Bible
verses daily at the beginning of the school day; the Murray v Curlett case
involved a Maryland school requiring a passage from the Bible or the Lord's
Prayer daily.
In its ruling, the
Court cited the Establishment Clause principle laid out in the Engel case, and
concluded "In light of the history of the First Amendment and of our cases
interpreting and applying its requirements, we hold that the practices at issue
and the laws requiring them are unconstitutional under the Establishment
Clause, as applied to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment."
(Supreme Court, Abington v Schempp, 1963) The Court then went on to specify the "secular purpose" and
"primary effect" tests to be used in Establishment Clause cases:
"The test may be stated as follows: what are the purpose and the primary
effect of the enactment? If either is the advancement or inhibition of religion
then the enactment exceeds the scope of legislative power as circumscribed by
the Constitution. That is to say that to withstand the strictures of the
Establishment Clause there must be a secular legislative purpose and a primary
effect that neither advances nor inhibits religion." (Supreme Court,
Abington v Schempp, 1963)
The
"purpose" and "effect" tests laid out in Abington v
Schempp were expanded upon in the 1971 Lemon v Kurtzman case, in a
ruling which has served ever since as the principle guideline for Establishment
Clause cases. The Lemon case was
a consolidation of three different cases, all of which involved state funds
being used to supplement teacher salaries in non-public parochial schools. The Court, in ruling that these actions were
unconstitutional, set out what has since been known as the Lemon Test, a
three-pronged approach to be used in determining whether or not a law violates
the Establishment Clause. As spelled
out in the opinion, written by Chief Justice Burger, "First, the statute
must have a secular legislative purpose; second, its principal or primary
effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion; finally, the
statute must not foster "an excessive government entanglement with
religion." (Supreme Court, Lemon v Kurtzman, 1971) If any of these three prongs is violated,
the law is unconstitutional.
In a concurring
opinion in the 1984 Lynch v Donnelly case, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
reduced the "purpose" and "effect" prongs of the Lemon Test
to the single idea of "Endorsement": "The proper inquiry under the purpose prong of Lemon, I submit, is
whether the government intends to convey a message of endorsement or
disapproval of religion. . . What is
crucial is that the government practice not have the effect of communicating a
message of government endorsement or disapproval of religion.." (Supreme
Court, Lynch v Donnelly, 1984)
In recent years,
the Lemon Test has come under fire, mostly from conservative-leaning
scholars. Justice Antonin Scalia has
been one of the fiercest critics, for instance writing, in a dissenting opinion
in the June 2005 McCreary County v ACLU case, "Nothing stands
behind the Court's assertion that governmental affirmation of the society's
belief in God is unconstitutional except the Court's own say-so, citing as
support only the unsubstantiated say-so of earlier Courts going back no farther
than the mid-20th century. And it is, moreover, a thoroughly discredited
say-so. It is discredited, to begin with, because a majority of the Justices on
the current Court (including at least one Member of today's majority) have, in
separate opinions, repudiated the brain-spun "Lemon test" that embodies the
supposed principle of neutrality between religion and irreligion."
(Supreme Court, McCreary County v ACLU, 2005)
Criticism of the
Lemon Test has been particularly vocal from the fundamentalist Christian wing
and its political supporters, who, in addition to advocating the elimination of
the Lemon test, have also argued that the First Amendment does not really
require that the government be neutral in matters of religion --- only that it
cannot advocate preference for one view over another. As a critic from the religious magazine First Things says,
"A good beginning would be to recognize that the First Amendment does not,
and never did, require strict neutrality as between religion and non-religion
for purposes of the Establishment Clause. Requiring the state to be neutral as
between sects is both constitutionally necessary and morally desirable.
Requiring it to be neutral as between religion and non-religion generally
produces a decidedly unneutral result—the triumph of practical atheism in the
public square." (Michael M Uhlmann, First Things, Oct 2005) This assertion is the source of the
ID/creationist penchant for labeling evolution and science as
"religion" or "materialist philosophy" or "secular
humanism".
Fundamentalist
Efforts to Undermine Church/State Separation
One of the primary
goals of the fundamentalist movement in the US has been to go far beyond merely
modifying the legal tests which are used to adjudicate the boundary between
church and state -- they openly declare that they want to dismantle that wall
completely. And in support of that
goal, they have attempted to re-write history by declaring that the
Constitution was intended by the Founding Fathers to set up a "Christian
Nation", and that it was only after the secular humanists and atheists
seized control of the Supreme Court that the concept of "separation of
church and state" was allowed to interfere with the original wishes of the
Framers.
That this argument
is contrary to historical fact has not prevented the fundamentalists from
endlessly repeating it. According to
the fundamentalists, the principle of separation of church and state is illegal
and communistic. Pat Robertson declared: "We often hear of the
constitutionally-mandated 'separation of church and state'. Of course, as you
know, that phrase appears nowhere in the Constitution or the Bill of Rights. .
. We do find this phrase in the constitution of another nation, however: 'The
state shall be separate from the church, and the church from the school.' These
words are not in the constitution of the United States, but that of the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics -- an atheistic nation sworn to the destruction of
the United States of America." (Testimony before Senate Judiciary
Committee, Aug 18, 1982, cited in Boston, 1996, p. 70) Robertson also said: "They have kept us
in submission because they have talked about separation of church and state.
There is no such thing in the constitution. It is a lie of the left, and we're
not going to take it anymore." (cited in Boston, 1996, p. 71)
The Christian
Roundtable, an umbrella group of Religious Right figures, flatly stated,
"The Constitution was designed to perpetuate a Christian order."
(cited in Vetter 1982, p. 5) "It is time," declares the Moral
Majority Report, "to reject the godless, communistic definition of
separation of church and state that says there is no place for Biblical moral
law in public policy." (cited in Hill and Owen 1982, p. 45) The Colorado
chapter of the Christian Coalition echoed: "There should be absolutely no
'separation of church and state' in America. (cited in Boston, 1996, p. 76)
In 1995, a
resolution was introduced that would add a statement to the Texas Republican
Party's platform, "The Republican Party is not a church . . . A Republican should never be put in the
position of having to defend or explain his faith in order to participate in the
party process" (cited in Kramnick and Moore, 1996, p 19) The resolution was defeated. Indeed, by 2002, the Texas Republican Party
Platform declared instead: "Our
Party pledges to do everything within its power to dispel the myth of
separation of church and state." At a Christian Coalition rally, Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore referred
to the separation of church and state as "a fable" that "has so
warped our society it's unbelievable." Sen. James Inhofe called
church/state separation "the phoniest argument there is." Televangelist Joyce Meyer referred to
church/state separation as "really a deception from "Satan",
while in 2001, Tom DeLay, former House
Majority leader, called for "standing up and rebuking this notion of
separation of church and state that has been imposed upon us over the last 40
or 50 years . . . You see, I don't believe there is a separation of church and
state." (http://www.theocracywatch.org/separation_church_state2.htm)
The modern
fundamentalists have always openly declared that they intended to create a
"Christian government" that will make America "godly"
again. Jerry Falwell pontificates, "I have a Divine Mandate to go into the
halls of Congress and fight for laws that will save America." (cited in
Vetter 1982, p. 119) Falwell made his
idea of the role of government very clear: "A politician, as a minister of
God, is a revenger to execute wrath upon those who do evil . . . The role of
government is to minister justice and to protect the rights of its citizens by
being a terror to evildoers within and without the nation." (cited in
Conway and Siegelman, 1984, p. 89)
The most militant
of the Ayatollah-wanna-be's are the members of the
"Reconstructionist" movement. The Reconstructionists were founded by
Rousas John Rushdoony, a militant fundamentalist. According to Rushdoony's
view, the United States should be directly transformed into a theocracy in
which the fundamentalists would rule directly according to the will of God.
"There can be no separation of Church and State," Rushdoony declares.
(cited in Marty and Appleby 1991, p. 51) "Christians," a
Reconstructionist pamphlet declares, "are called upon by God to exercise
dominion." (cited in Marty and Appleby 1991, p. 50) The Reconstructionists propose doing away
with the US Constitution and laws, and instead ruling directly according to the
laws of God as set out in the Bible---they advocate a return to judicial
punishment for religious crimes such as blasphemy or violating the Sabbath, as
well as a return to such Biblically-approved punishments as stoning.
In effect, the Reconstructionists are the
"Christian" equivalent of the Taliban.
Rushdooney was a guest on Pat Robertson's 700
Club several times. ICR has had
close ties with Reconstructionists. Rushdoony was one of the financial backers
for Henry Morris's first book, The Genesis Flood, and Morris's son John
was a co-signer of several documents produced by the Coalition On Revival, a
Reconstructionist coalition founded in 1984. ICR star debater Duane Gish was a
member of COR's Steering Committee, as was Richard Bliss, who served as ICR's
"curriculum director" until his death. Gish and Bliss were both
co-signers of the COR documents "A Manifesto for the Christian
Church" (COR, July 1986), and the "Forty-Two Articles of the
Essentials of a Christian Worldview" (COR,1989), which declares, "We
affirm that the laws of man must be based upon the laws of God. We deny that
the laws of man have any inherent authority of their own or that their ultimate
authority is rightly derived from or created by man." ("Forty-Two
Essentials, 1989, p. 8).
The Discovery
Institute, the chief proponent of "intelligent design theory", is
particularly cozy with the Reconstructionists. The single biggest source of
money for the Discovery Institute is Howard Ahmanson, a California savings-and-loan
bigwig. Ahmanson's gift of $1.5 million was the original seed money to organize
the Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture, the arm of the Discovery
Institute which focuses on promoting "intelligent design theory".
Ahmanson is a Christian Reconstructionist
who was long associated with Rushdooney, and sat with him on the board of
directors of the Chalcedon Foundation -- a major Reconstructionist think-tank
-- for over 20 years In 1995, Ahmanson resigned from Chalcedon, and now sits on
the Board of Directors of Discovery Institute.
Ahmanson prefers to
work behind the scenes, and does his best to avoid publicity and
attention. By 2002, though, his
extremist views were becoming more widely known in political circles, and some
politicians began returning campaign contributions from him. In October 2002,
the Republican candidate for Governer in Hawaii, Linda Lingle, returned a
$3,000 campaign contribution from Ahmanson's Fieldstead Foundation after she
learned who he was and what his views were.
The incident set
off alarm bells for Ahmanson -- as his wife Roberta pointed out, "When a
politician sends money back, it's
serious". (Orange County Register,
August 8, 2004) Ahmanson has therefore
tried to backpeddle from his extremist views, and present a kinder, gentler
image of himself. With his wife as his
spokesperson (Ahmanson suffers from Tourrette's syndrome and avoids public
speaking), he went on a media blitz to declare that he's not as nutty as he used
to be in his Chalcedon Foundation days. But Ahmanson just could not bring himself to repudiate his
Reconstructionist views on such things as stoning sinners:
"I think what upsets people is that
Rushdoony seemed to think -- and I'm not sure about this - that a godly society
would stone people for the same thing that people in ancient Israel were
stoned. I no longer consider that
essential. It would still be a little
hard to say that if one stumbled on a country that was doing that, that it is
inherently immoral, to stone people for these things." (Ahmanson, quoted in Orange County Register,
August 10, 2004)
Among the most
prominent Reconstructionist political activists are Randall Terry (founder of
Operation Rescue), Gary North (head of the Institute for Christian Economics), David
Chilton (the late author of Paradise Restored), David Barton (founder of
Wallbuilders), Gary DeMar (founder of American Vision), and Larry Pratt
(founder of Gun Owners of America). Tim
LaHaye, author of the Left Behind series of books, has prominent ties to
the Reconstructionists, and while he has always been coy about his own
sympathies for them, he is considered by most right-wing watchers as a key part
of the movement. His wife, Beverley
LaHaye, is the head of Concerned Women for America.
While most
fundamentalist Christian political figures disavow the radically extremist
excesses of the Reconstructionists, most of them nevertheless accept the broad outlines of Reconstructionist
ideas that the US is, or should be, a Christian Nation, and that national
policies and laws should be based on the fundamentalist version of Biblical
Christianity. Although the extremist Reconstructionists and the less radical
fundamentalists start from different assumptions, the end result is the same.
But the Reconstructionists
are not the only political extremists who find a level of support among
fundamentalists and creationists. In the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing in
April 1995, Americans learned of a shadowy network of far-right
"patriot" groups at the very fringe of extremist politics, who
considered themselves to be at war with the United States government.
The "patriot" movement was a loose
collection of anti-government activists, including tax protestors, conspiracy
theorists, anti-gun-control extremists, radical anti-environmentalists,
militias, and a smattering of neo-Nazis and other ultra-right political
groups. Much of the movement fell under
the label of "Christian Patriots", who believed that the United
States had become a godless oppressor, and therefore God wanted the movement to
defend themselves from this godless government and ultimately to bring about
its downfall, therefore making the US godly again. The more extremist "patriots" armed themselves to form
"militias". Some, but not
all, of the Christian Patriots followed a particularly virulent form of
fundamentalist religion called "Christian Identity", which argued
that white people were the true "Chosen People" of the Bible, and
that Jews, along with all of the nonwhite races, were descended from the
Devil. The various neo-Nazi, Klan, and
other anti-Semite and racists who embraced Christian Identity referred to the
federal government as "ZOG", or "Zionist Occupation
Government".
Many of the people
in the 1990's Christian Patriot movement were motivated by apocalyptic
fundamentalist Christian notions that the end of the world was near and that
the return of Jesus was imminent. The
best-known example was a group of religious extremists called the Branch
Davidians in Waco, Texas, led by David Koresh, who stockpiled weapons and
waited for Armageddon. Most of Koresh's
followers were killed in a confrontation with the Federal government in
1993. The Federal building in Oklahoma
City was bombed exactly two years later to the day, by militia-movement
supporters Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, in retaliation for the Waco
raid.
Several prominent
Reconstructionists have had close ties to the right-wing
"patriots". Gun Owners of
America, a radical pro-gun group (which criticizes the NRA for being too tame)
is run by Reconstructionist Larry Pratt, while the US Taxpayers Party, a
patriot-type tax protestors organization, was founded by Reconstructionist
Howard Phillips. The patriot/militia
movement also generated some sympathy from several prominent fundamentalist
Christians, who shared the theocratic aims of the Christian Patriots. Pat
Robertson invited a guest from the Militia of Montana to serve as an
"expert" for a story on the BATF and FBI that ran on The 700 Club after
the Oklahoma City bombing. "A lot of it goes right back to what happened
with the Branch Davidians, Randy Weaver and these other people," Robertson
said. "It's reminiscient of the Nazis, and something's got to be
done". (700 Club, July 11, 1995, cited in Boston, 1996, p. 141) In his
book The New World Order, Robertson manages to parrot virtually every
one of the canards tossed around by the paranoid far-right wing of the
patriot/militia movement. According to Robertson, a secret cabal of
"international bankers and financiers", along with the Illuminati,
the Trilateral Commission and various other groups, is trying to destroy
Christianity, take over the world and impose a satanic "one world
government". Among other things, says Robertson, these conspirators killed
Lincoln, started the First World War, have taken over the world monetary
system, and are using the education system to destroy morality so the US can be
taken over by UN troops.
Another evangelist
with ties to right-wing Christian Patriot and militia movements was Jack van
Impe. On several occasions, van Impe presented "news stories" about
foreign troops in the US which are training to take over the country at the
behest of the UN -- a standard tale of the far right. He further stated that
the armed militias were one way to counter the evils of the "one world
government". Van Impe's sources for his "news stories" included The
Spotlight, the publication of the anti-Semitic and racist Liberty Lobby,
and the Patriot Report.
Finally, there was
Chuck Missler, founder of Koinonia House in Idaho and a minister with the
Cavalry Chapels in california. Missler published the newsletter "Personal
Update", which used at its sources The Spotlight and the American
Patriot Fax Network, run by various far-right groups. Among other things,
Missler suggested that the Federal government itself blew up the Alfred Murrah
Building in Oklahoma City in an attempt to blame the bombing on the militia
movement and discredit it.
A number of
creationists also parroted a lot of standard militia and "Christian
Patriot" conspiracy theories. In a "Back to Genesis" article
that discusses the Pope's 1996 announcement concerning evolution, ICR's Henry
Morris presents a picture that could could have come from any of a number of
far-right loons and militia types. After noting that the Pope had announced
that it's not ungodly to believe the theory of evolution, Morris makes the
curious statement: "One cannot help suspecting that the recent spate of
events and media articles 'puffing' evolution is being orchestrated somewhere
to combat the modern resurgance of creationism around the world." (ICR,
Back to Genesis, "Evolution and the Pope", December 1996, p. 1)
Veteran right-wing
watchers will immediately recognize this schtick -- the "worldwide
conspiracy to destroy god, mother and country". The Pope's pronouncement
comes as no surprise to Morris, since after all, he< points out, Teilhard de Chardin, a Catholic priest, was an early
supporter of evolutionary theory. "Evolution was, to all intents and
purposes," says Morris, "Teilhard's 'god', and his goal was
globalism, a unified world government, culture and religion, with all religions
merged into one." (Back to Genesis, December 1996)
And who is behind
this "globalist conspiracy"? Morris declares: "There are more and
more signs that such globalism is also the aim of Pope John Paul II and other
modern liberal Catholics. If so, this publicized commitment to evolutionism
would contribute substantially to such a goal. All world religions -- including
most of mainline Protestantism, as well as Hinduism, Buddhism and the
rest -- except for Biblical Christianity, Orthodox Judaism and Fundamentalist
Islam, have embraced some form of evolutionism (either theistic, deistic or
pantheistic) and rejected or allegorized the true record of origins in Genesis.
The Pope has participated in important meetings with leaders of Communism, Zen
Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, Lamaism and others, as well as the World Council of
Churches, the Trilateral Commission, the B'nai B'rith of liberal Judaism, and a
wide assortment of still others." (Back to Genesis, December 1996)
Morris, like the
militias and extremist Christian Patriots, refers to this shadowy
behind-the-scenes group of conspirators as "the new world order",
that international conglomeration of dark forces who are conspiring to destroy
Christianity and impose a secular humanist socialist one-world-government upon
everyone. As Morris puts it, "All cults and movements associated with the
"new world order" of the so-called New Age Movement have two things
in common -- evolutionism as their base and globalism as their goal." (Back
to Genesis, December 1996)
The creationist
with the strongest ties to the lunatic fringes of the political right, however,
is "Dr" Kent Hovind, also known as "Dr Dino". A prominent young-earth creationist, Hovind
tirelessly passed around the militia movement's paranoid conspiracy theories,
and even made up a few of his own. At
various times, "Dr" Hovind (his degree comes from an unaccredited
diploma mill) has argued that the American government knew that the 9-11
attacks were about to happen and allowed it to proceed, that AIDS is a
biowarfare weapon developed by the United States, that there were United
Nations forces at Waco during the Branch Davidian siege, that the UN is using
black helicopters and black tanks to prepare for an invasion of the US, and
that the US government was really behind the Oklahoma City bombing.
Hovind has also spoken in favor of The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a staple among anti-Semitic hard-righters.
Hovind also has
strong ties to the "tax protestor" movement.
Following the standard "patriot"
line, he has announced that he is a "sovereign citizen" and that the
US government has no jurisdiction over him. He also announced that, as a minister of God, he doesn't own anything
and all his million-dollar-a-year income belongs to God (so he doesn't have to
pay any taxes on it). Hovind is
currently facing a slew of tax-evasion charges from the IRS.
While they each
have different (sometimes contradictory) motives, the religious goals of the
Reconstructionists, the "Christian Patriots" and the creation
"scientists" all converge on the same place.
Each of these factions argue that the US
should be run according to "Christian" values and beliefs; each of
these factions argue that they are the final arbiters of what
"God's will" really is, each of these factions view creationism as a
weapon with which to bring about this "Christian order".
And all of them want to erode and eliminate
the separation of church and state.
And what would this
fundamentalist utopia look like? Although the creationists liked to speak about "academic
freedom" and about allowing students to make a "choice", statements
by creationists and their fundamentalist supporters made it clear that this is
just rhetoric. The fundamentalists have a deep and barely-concealed contempt
for democracy and free choice -- an attitude which is not surprising given
their world-view, which is based upon unquestioned obedience to an inerrant
Bible and the infallible authority of those who interpret it. Jerry Falwell, in
a moment of remarkable candor, once remarked that "Christians, like slaves
and soldiers, ask no questions." (cited in Vetter 1982, p. 17) Democracy,
then, with its messy guarantees of freedom of thought and popular control over
authority, is dangerous to the fundamentalists and their world-view. "Our
Founding Fathers," Falwell declared, "would not accept the tyranny
of a democracy because they recognized that the only sovereign over men and
nations was Almighty God." (cited in Young, 1982, p. 184, emphasis added)
Charles Stanly of Moral Majority made this anti-democratic attitude even more
plain: "We do not want a democracy in this land because if we have a
democracy a majority rules," (cited in Young 1982, p. 65) while Rich
Anguin of the Minnesota Moral Majority added, "Freedom of speech has never
been right. We've never had freedom of speech in this country and we never should
have." (cited in Young, 1982, p. 65) Gary Potter, a Weyrich partner and head of Catholics for Political
Action, stated his theocratic goals with chilling clarity: "After the
Christian majority takes control, pluralism will be seen as immoral and evil and
the state will not permit anybody the right to practice evil." (cited in
Conway and Siegelman, 1984, p. 115-116)
And this contempt
for political democracy was reflected by the creationists as well. Kelly
Segraves, the co-founder of the Creation Science Research Society, declared,
"Humanism is a far-reaching social program that aims for the establishment
throughout the world of democracy (lowest common denominator mob rule), peace
and a high standard of living." (Segraves, Creation-Science Report, January
1980, cited in LaFollette, 1983, p. 182) Apparently, Segraves views democracy,
peace and a high standard of living as the work of the Devil, and is determined
to use creation "science" to help stamp these evils out. His view is
echoed by prominent creationist "Dr" Kent Hovind, who flatly
declared, "Democracy is evil and contrary to God's law."
(http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=205)
This, then, is the
picture that emerges of the ultimate aims of the fundamentalists and their creationist
allies: a "theocratic republic" in which a "Christian
order" will "take over every area of life"; in which democracy
is contemptuously referred to as "mob rule" and a
"tyranny", and where we "never should have" freedom of
speech; in which "pluralism will be seen as immoral and evil" and
"the state will not permit anybody the right to sin"; a nation in
which people, "like slaves and soldiers", ask no questions; where the
separation of church and state is "communistic" and Christians rule
by "Divine mandate"; where laws are ordained by God and the
"sinful" are executed by the state.
In short, the
fundamentalists want a theocratic police state. After all, a police state is
great -- if you get to be the police.
THREE: Creation "Science" Appears
As we have seen, the Scopes Monkey Trial in 1925 marked the downfall of
the fundamentalist movement in the United States and the end of its efforts to
pass laws forcing its religious opinions into science classrooms. However, the
Scopes trial also had a negative effect on science education in the US,
particularly as it related to evolution. Although the teaching of evolutionary theory was not illegal in every
state, and the existing "monkey laws" were not enforced where they
remained, the affects of these laws permeated biology education throughout the
country. The textbook that Scopes had
used in Tennessee, Civic Biology by George W. Hunter, had been adopted
by the State Textbook Commission in 1919, and treated the subject of evolution
in a fair amount of detail. In the wake
of the Scopes trial, however, a new version, entitled New Civic Biology,
appeared. In this version, evolution
was not mentioned at all.
Other publishers bowed to economic realities and followed suit.
As researchers Raymond Eve and Francis
Harrold note, "Publishers are in business to make money.
Books containing too much evolution might be
rejected where the topic was illegal or unpopular. It was easier on the balance sheet to issue a simple nationwide
edition of a book that contained material offensive to no one." (Eve and
Harrold, 1991, p. 27) The effect on
science education was profound. Almost
overnight, evolution as a topic was banished from nearly every science textbook
in the country. As Judith Grabiner and
Peter Miller note, "It is easy to identify a text published in the decade
following 1925. Merely look up the word
'evolution' in the index or glossary; you almost certainly will not find
it." (Grabiner and Miller, "Effects of the Scopes Trial", Science,
Sept 6, 1974, p. 833) While Darrow and
the evolutionists had won the Scopes battle by discrediting the
fundamentalists, they had lost the war. The creationist "monkey laws" had a chilling effect on
biological education in the United States for several decades.
The United States
was shocked out of its intellectual complacency in 1957, when the Soviet Union
launched the Sputnik satellite. In
response, US government officials were forced to confront the dismal state of
science education, including the biological sciences, and were forced to
institute a crash program to bring American science education up to par. One of
these new programs was the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study, begun in 1959,
to produce new up-to-date biology textbooks. Written by professional scientists
in their fields, the BSCS texts prominently featured evolutionary theory as the
foundation of all the biological sciences. Within a few years, nearly half the
high schools in the country were using BSCS biology textbooks, despite the fact
that anti-evolution laws were still on the books in a number of states.
Creationists were
quick to respond. The Institute for
Creation Research, in California, was formed by a group of anti-evolutionists
including Henry Morris and Duane Gish, with money from several fundamentalist
church groups. It quickly became the
largest anti-evolution organization in the US. Smaller creationist groups included the Creation Research Society and
the Creation Science Research Center.
In 1961, the
Tennessee state legislature attempted to repeal the Butler Act (the law which
had prompted the Scopes trial), but failed after an acrimonious debate, during
which one legislator equated evolutionists with communists: "Any persons
or any groups who assist in any way to undermine faith in the teachings of the
Bible are working in harmony with communism." (W. Dykeman and J. Stokely,
"Scopes and Evolution--The Jury is Still Out", New York Times Magazine,
March 12, 1971, p. 72) In 1967,
teacher Gary Scott of Jacksboro, Tennessee was fired for violating the Butler
Act. He fought his firing in court and won, and the Butler Act was finally
ruled unconstitutional by the Federal courts.
Shortly afterwards,
Arkansas biology teacher Susanne Epperson filed a court challenge to the
Arkansas monkey law. When the Arkansas Supreme Court upheld the law, Epperson
appealed to the US Supreme Court, which ruled in 1968 that all state monkey
laws were unconstitutional, on the grounds that they served to establish a
state-supported religion and eroded the separation of church and state. The
anti-evolution laws, the Court decided, were nothing more than "an attempt
to blot out a particular theory because of its supposed conflict with the Biblical
account, taken literally." (US Supreme Court, Epperson v Arkansas, 1968)
In 1973, just six
years after repealing the Scopes anti-evolution law, the Tennessee State
Legislature passed a replacement for the Butler Act. The new law stated,
"Any biology textbook used for teaching in the public schools, which
expresses an opinion of, or relates a theory about origins or creation of man
and his world shall [give] . . . an equal amount of emphasis on . . . the
Genesis account in the Bible." (Public Acts of Tennessee, 1973, Chapter
377, cited in LaFollette, 1983, p. 80) Within two years, this law had also been
struck down by the Federal Courts, which ruled that the Tennessee law was
"a clearly defined preferential position for the Biblical version of creation
as opposed to any account of the development of man based on scientific
research and reasoning. For a state to seek to enforce such preference by law
is to seek to accomplish the very establishment of religion which the First
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States squarely forbids." (US
District Court, Daniel v Waters, 1975)
The creation "science" movement was a response to these Court
decisions. Creationists from the
Institute for Creation Research and Creation Research Society wanted, in
effect, to turn the clock back to 1925, when evolution was illegal and the
Biblical story of origins was mandated by law. As CRS co-founder Walter Lammerts put it, "Our aim is a rather
audacious one, namely, the complete re-evaluation of science from the theistic
viewpoint." (Lammerts, 1975, p. 2) Henry Morris echoed, "A key purpose of the ICR is to bring the
field of education -- and then our whole world insofar as possible -- back to the
foundational truth of special creation and primeval history as revealed first
in Genesis and further emphasized throughout the Bible." (Morris, Back to
Genesis, July 1995)
The creationists cited several reasons why they believe creationism
should be taught in the public schools, and one of these, they flatly admitted,
was that it encouraged belief in a personal Deity and thus encouraged a
"Christian lifestyle": "There is no greater stimulus to responsible behavior and earnest
effort, as well as honesty and consideration for others, than the awareness
that there may well be a personal Creator to whom one must give account."
(Morris, Scientific Creationism, 1974, p. 14)
However, since the Supreme Court had now prohibited as unconstitutional
the teaching of religious doctrines in the public schools, creationists were no
longer able to make these religiously-based arguments in court, and instead had
to resort to a new strategy -- arguing, in an Orwellian inversion, that (1)
creationism is science, not religion, and (2) evolution is religion, not
science. As Morris summarizes,
"Since creationism can be discussed effectively as a scientific model, and
since evolution is fundamentally a religious philosophy rather than a science,
it is clearly unsound educational practice and even unconstitutional for
evolution to be taught and promoted in the public schools to the exclusion or
detriment of special creation. . . . Creationist children and parents are
thereby denied 'equal protection of its laws' and the state has, to all intents
and purposes, made a law establishing the religion of evolutionary humanism in
its schools." (Morris, 1975, p. 14) Therefore, in response to the Supreme Court decisions, the creationist
movement made the strategic decision to downplay the religious aspects of
creationism, and to argue that creationism could be supported solely through
scientific evidence, without any reference to God or the Bible. Thus was
born "creation science" -- it was nothing more than an attempt by the
fundamentalists to dishonestly sneak their religious views into the classroom by
pretending that they are really a "science". It was, in fact, a
deception by design.
A large variety of
people have claimed the mantle "creation scientists".
According to one source, there were in 1984
no less than 22 national creationist organizations in the United States, and at
least 54 state and local organizations. As in any political and religious movement, there are several schools of
creationist thought, separated by doctrinal differences in their interpretations
of the Bible.
The
"day-age" faction of creationism argues that the "days"
referred to in Genesis are really symbolic of enormous stretches of time, and
not 24-hour days. Perhaps the best-known of the "day-age" groups
today are the Jehovah's Witnesses. Another school of thought is that of the
"gap" theorists, who argue that there is an unmentioned lapse of time
between the first and second verses of Genesis, and that the six-day creation
event did not happen until after a long period of time had already passed.
Several of the televangelists were "gap" theorists. Finally, there
are the "strict" creationists, who assert that creation happened as
described in Genesis, and that the universe and all life was created within six
days, several thousand years ago. The first two schools, the "day-age" and the "gap", accept the geological evidence of a very
ancient earth (but not the evidence of evolution), and are usually referred to
collectively as the "old earth creationists" or OECs. The strict
creationists, however, assert that the earth is, based on the geneologies in
Genesis, just 6,000 to 10,000 years old, and they are referred to as
"young-earth creationists" or YECs.
There is also
another school of thought, the "theistic evolutionists", who argue
that evolution is simply the method which God used to create life, and that
there is no conflict between science and the Bible. Nearly all mainstream
religious denominations (as well as most scientists) are supporters of theistic
evolution. Although they could be considered "creationist", since they
do assert that the universe was made by God, theistic evolutionists are viewed
by the fundamentalists as "the liberal enemy" who is doing the work
of Satan. It would be more proper to view the fundamentalist creationists as
"anti-evolutionists", since the one thing that unites them all is the
belief that evolutionary theory is contrary to the tenets of Christianity.
Since, on this matter, the theistic evolutionists are on the "wrong"
side, they are not accepted as "creationists" by the fundamentalists.
Throughout the 80s,
however, it was the young-earth creationists who dominated the creation
"science" movement and who headed all of the major creationist
organizations, and it was the viewpoints of the young-earthers which found
their way into the various anti-evolution or "balanced treatment"
laws which they sought to pass. The pivotal 1981 Arkansas Balanced Treatment
Act, for instance, defined "creation science" in terms of young-earth
creationism:
"'Creation-science' includes the scientific evidences and related inferences
that indicate: (1) Sudden creation of the universe, energy and life from
nothing, (2) The insufficiency of mutation and natural selection in bringing
about development of all living kinds from a single organism, (3) Changes only
within fixed limits of originally created kinds of plants and animals, (4)
Separate ancestry for men and apes, (5) Explanation of the earth's geology by
catastrophism, including the occurrence of a world- wide flood, and (6) A
relatively recent inception of the earth and living kinds." (Arkansas
Legislature Act 590, 1981)
Young-earth
creationism (which later became "scientific creationism") can
essentially be traced back to one man, George McCready Price, a fundamentalist
Seventh Day Adventist who accepted the literal truth of the Bible as a matter
of course. In 1923, Price published a book called The New Geology, in
which he argued that all of the geological features we see today were the
result of Noah's Flood, and not the slow geological processes described by
scientists. The geological column, Price asserted, was nothing more than the
deep sediments deposited by the Flood, while all of the various fossils were
merely the dead bodies of organisms that had drowned in the Deluge.
Conventional geology, Price asserted, was a fraud, fostered upon an
unsuspecting public by scientists who were doing the work of the Devil:
"Some of the tricky methods used by the Great Deceiver to befuddle the
people of the last days". (cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 137) Price's ideas became
known as "Flood geology".
While geologists
dismissed Price as a crank and ridiculed The New Geology as being
riddled with error and distortion, the book caused a sensation among religious
fundamentalists, who cited it as the first book to use science to show that the
Bible is literally correct. Price (who was not a geologist) was even cited
during the Scopes trial as a scientific expert. For a time, he traveled to
England, where a disciple of his, Douglas Dewar, enthusiastically echoed his
mentor, saying bluntly, "The Bible cannot contain false statements, and so
if its statements undoubtedly conflict with the views of geologists, these
latter are wrong." (cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 146) Much of Price's "flood geology"
can be found, nearly intact, in the writings of modern young-earth
creationists.
In 1935, Price
helped to form the Religion and Science Association, the first nationwide
creationist organization. The RSA had as its acknowledged purpose that of using
scientific data to support the Bible. Shortly after it was formed, however, the
RSA was torn by an internal feud between those who accepted Price's Flood
geology and those who rejected it. One of RSA's founding members, the Lutheran
theologian Theodore Graebner (an old-earth creationist who taught biology in
several fundamentalist universities) flatly declared that Flood geology had no
supporting evidence: "In spite of all that I have read about the Flood
theory to account for stratification, erosion and fossils, I cannot view the
mountains without losing all faith in that solution of the problem."
(cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 112) By 1937, the Religion and Science Association
had collapsed under the weight of this feuding.
Shortly after the
death of the RSA, the Price supporters formed their own organization, the
Deluge Geology Society, with the specific purpose of supporting the theories of
Flood geology. Price was a co-founder and the most illumined member. Another
co-founder was fellow Seventh Day Adventist Harold W. Clarke, who had also been
a founding member of the RSA while teaching biology at an Adventist college in
California. Another person who joined the DGS was a grad student from the
University of Minnesota named Henry Morris, whose name will crop up very often
in later creationist history.
To prevent the kind
of internecine fighting that destroyed the RSA, the Deluge Geology Society only
admitted committed Flood geologists as members. Despite this precaution,
however, internal feuding broke out anyway, over the question of the age of the
solar system. The old-earthers argued that the scientific evidence which
indicated a very old solar system did not conflict with Genesis, a position
which the young-earthers found heretical. The organization collapsed in 1948.
During this period,
a new creationist organization appeared, one which became much more influential
than the oft-ignored DGS. This was the American Scientific Affiliation, which
was formed in 1941 to explain how science supported the Bible. Unlike the RSA
and DGS, which were more concerned with theology than science, the ASA required
all of its members to have legitimate scientific credentials. It also required
all members to sign an oath of membership, swearing:
"I believe the
whole Bible, as originally given, to be the inspired Word of God, the only
unerring guide of faith and conduct. Since God is the Author of this Book, as
well as the Creator and Sustainer of the physical world about us, I cannot
conceive of discrepancies between statements in the Bible and the real facts of
science." (cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 159)
This tactic of
limiting membership to scientists who already agreed to the literal truth of
Genesis would later be repeated by other creationist groups. In effect, by
using scientific knowledge as an apologetic for Biblical truth, the ASA became
the first "creation science" organization.
Although the ASA
had no connections to the Deluge Geology Society when it was formed, it was
quickly approached by the DGS, which wanted to publish a joint anti-evolution
periodical. The ASA leadership, distrustful of the "strong Seventh-Day
Adventist flavor" of the Deluge Society (cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 161),
turned them down.
In the end,
however, it was the ASA's insistence on a semblance of scientific
respectability which proved to be its undoing. Once again, Flood geology was at
the center of the dispute. Dr. J. Laurence Kulp, a chemist and geologist,
flatly rejected Flood geology and pointed out that it was demonstrably untrue,
and to insist upon it as Biblically-inspired would make a laughingstock out of
creationism. "This unscientific theory of Flood geology," Kulp wrote,
"has done and will do considerable harm to the strong propagation of the
Gospel among educated people." (cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 167) Kulp was
soon joined by biologist J. Frank Cassell, who presented a paper to the ASA in
1951 bluntly stating, "Evolution has been defined as 'the gradual or
sudden change in animals and plants through successive generations' . . . Such
changes are demonstrable. Therefore, evolution is a fact." (cited in
Numbers, 1992, p. 174-175) Cassell argued that ASA's entire attitude on
evolution had to change if it was to maintain any scientific respectability,
and urged ASA to adopt an attitude of theistic evolution. (This effort was
partially successful. ASA took no official position on the question of creation
"science", and most of its members are theistic
evolutionists--although the group did publish a booklet entitled Teaching
Science in a Climate of Controversy, which defended old-earth creationism.)
The young earthers
defended their "science" against the attacks of Kulp and Cassell.
During the 1953 ASA annual convention, Henry Morris presented a paper entitled
"The Biblical Evidence for a Recent Creation and Universal Deluge".
Morris, a staunch Biblical literalist and young-earth creationist, had
deliberately chosen to major in hydraulic engineering and minor in geology, so
he could study the effects that flood waters would have on the earth. In 1946,
the year he entered graduate school at the University of Minnesota, he
published a pamphlet called "That You Might Believe", which defended
Flood geology. Morris joined the Deluge Geology Society while still a graduate
student.
At the 1953 ASA
convention, Morris first met John C. Whitcomb, Jr., a theologian with an
interest in Flood geology and young-earth creationism. In 1957, Whitcomb
finished a ThD dissertation entitled "The Genesis Flood", which
presented a detailed defense of the historicity and geological affects of
Noah's Flood. Shortly afterwards, he decided to publish the thesis as a book,
but thought it would have more impact if a geologist wrote the sections dealing
with Flood geology. Whitcomb approached several creationist geologists for help
in the book, but was turned down by all of them, who rejected Flood geology for
various reasons. Finally, he approached hydraulic engineer Henry Morris, who,
after some initial hesitation, agreed to co-author the book. The Genesis Flood
was financed by a number of religious fundamentalists (including Rousas J.
Rushdooney, who would go on to begin the Christian
"Reconstructionist" movement). The book was published in February
1961.
For geologists, The
Genesis Flood was a yawn, merely an updated rehash of McCready Price's New
Geology. The book also received criticism from the old-earth creationists,
who argued that the very idea of a global Flood was not supported by any of the
geological evidence. In response, Whitcomb and Morris answered simply that
Genesis said there had been a global Flood, therefore there must have been one:
"The real issue is not the correctness of the interpretation of various
details of the geological data, but simply what God has revealed in His Word
concerning these matters." (Whitcomb and Morris, 1961, p. xxvii) To the
ASA Journal, which was vocal in its criticism of the book, Morris wrote,
"The real crux of the matter is 'What saith Scripture?' " (cited in
Numbers, 1992, p. 208)
The Southern
Baptist Church where Morris taught apparently disagreed, and Morris left over
theological differences concerning the Flood. Shortly afterwards, Morris formed
his own College Baptist Church, and one of his guest pastors was Jerry Falwell,
a then-obscure minister in nearby Lynchburg, Virginia. Since then, Falwell and
Morris became (and have remained) silent partners -- Falwell's Moral Majority
Inc. gave financial support to Morris's creationist institutions, and Falwell
has plugged Morris's creationist books to his large television audience.
The dispute within
the American Scientific Affiliation over Flood geology soon convinced the
young-earthers that the ASA was getting "soft on evolution". In late
1961, the plant breeder Walter Lammerts, who had long been affiliated with creationist
organizations, joined with Henry Morris and Duane Gish to form an
"anti-evolution caucus" within the ASA. Lammerts was an extremist
even for a creationist -- unlike most young-earthers, who accepted a limited
form of evolution within "created kinds", Lammerts rejected even this
and asserted that no speciation of any sort was possible. Gish, a Regular
Baptist and a fundamentalist, had joined the ASA in the late 1950s, after
getting his PhD in bio-chemistry from Berkeley. He worked as a protein researcher
for the Upjohn Company. Together, the three formed a breakaway creationist
organization called the Creation Research Committee in 1963. The Committee
later changed its name to the Creation Research Society, the name it still
bears today.
The CRS was the
first national group to be headed by Henry Morris, the "Father of Creation
Science", and it quickly came to reflect the views of its leader. The
purpose of the CRS, it declared, is "to publish research evidence
supporting the thesis that the material universe, including plants, animals and
man are the result of direct creative acts by a personal God." (Creation
Research Society, Articles of Incorporation, Lansing, Michigan, cited in
Nelkin, 1982, p. 78) Morris had by this time decided that scientific data could
be used as an effective tool for bringing people to Christ, and he began to
point to his Flood geology model as an "alternative science", one
that proved the literal correctness of the Bible. He also began to explore the
possibility of using the state legislatures to have "Balanced
Treatment" acts passed, mandating equal treatment of "evolution
science" and "creation science" in biology classrooms.
To help legitimize
this viewpoint, CRS maintained the old ASA tactic of admitting only
credentialled scientists as members. And, in an effort to avoid the faction-
fighting and ideological bickering that had marked the earlier creationist
organizations, CRS also adopted a long, detailed oath which all members had to
swear, which bound them firmly to a literal interpretation of Genesis, a
young-earth outlook, and acceptance of the Flood geology model: "The Bible is the Written Word of God,
and because it is inspired thruout, all its assertions are historically and
scientifically true in all the original autographs. To the student of nature,
this means that the account of origins in Genesis is a factual presentation of
simple historical truths. (By-Laws of
the Creation Research Society, cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 230-231)
It may seem strange
for an institution which tried to present itself as "scientific" to
require all of its members to swear an oath affirming their belief in certain
specific conclusions, regardless of the scientific evidence, but clearly the
purpose of the Creation Research Society had less to do with scientific
investigation than it had in proselytizing people to fundamentalist Biblical
literalism. In fact, a large number of creationists objected to the use of
science at all, arguing that the religious message was weakened and cheapened
by attempting to use scientific data to "prove" the act of creation.
One of the most vociferous objectors was Morris's former co-author John C.
Whitcomb, who complained that "One might just as well be a Jewish or even
a Muslim creation scientist as far as this model is concerned . . . By avoiding
any mention of the Bible, or Christ as the Creator, we may be able to gain an
equal time in some schools. But the cost would seem to be exceedingly high, for
absolute certainty is lost and the spiritual impact that only the living and
powerful Word of God can give is blunted." (Whitcomb, Grace Theological
Journal, 1983, cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 246)
In 1978, Walter
Lang, the editor of the creationist Bible Science Newsletter, echoed the
sentiments of many creationists who felt that scientific justification for
creation was unnecessary and detracted from the spiritual message: "Only
about five percent of evolutionists-turned-creationists did so on the basis of
the overwhelming evidence for creation in the world of nature." (Lang,
Bible Science Newsletter, June 1978, cited in Numbers, 1992, p. 233) Indeed,
Lammerts, Gish and Morris had all been staunch creationists before they had
gained any scientific experience.
Morris, however,
was completely committed to his strategy of using "creation science"
to get around the Supreme Court's Epperson decision and win a place for
Genesis in American science classrooms, and took steps to present creationism
as a scientific, not a religious, outlook. "Thus," Morris explained,
"creationism is on the way back, this time not primarily as a religious
belief, but as an alternative scientific explanation of the world in which
we live." (Morris, Troubled Waters of Evolution, 1974, p. 16, emphasis
added) Morris's book Scientific
Creationism was intended to be the definitive book on the science of
creationism, suitable for use in public school biology courses.
In 1970, Morris and
Christian fundamentalist preacher Tim LaHaye (of the Moral Majority Inc),
working with the Scott Memorial Baptist Church, raised money and set up the
Christian Heritage College in San Diego, an unaccredited Bible college. In its
1981 academic catalogue, the College offered several courses in science, all
taught, it says, in a "consistently creationist and Biblical
framework". As for evolutionary theory, the catalogue stated,
"Biblical criteria require its rejection as possible truth."
(1981-1982 General Catalogue, Christian Heritage College, p. 10, cited in
LaFollette, 1983, p. 107) Morris himself was teaching a course in
"creation science" at the College.
Working with fellow
creationists Kelly and Nell Segraves, who had helped establish a local chapter
of the Bible Science Association -- a hardline creationist organization --
Morris helped establish the Creation Science Research Center, for the specific
purpose of producing "creation science" materials which could be used
in public classrooms once the creationists succeeded in having creation
"science" put into the schools. Morris also founded the Institute for
Creation Research as a scientific laboratory for the Christian Heritage
College, with the avowed purpose of attempting to scientifically
"prove" the literal validity of Genesis.
Shortly afterwards,
however, a power struggle broke out in the CSRC between Morris and the
Segraves. The Segraves wrested control of the Center, and promptly
disaffiliated it from the Christian Heritage College and from the ICR.
ICR remained affiliated with the Christian
Heritage College until the early 1980s, when it became expedient for the
creationists to downplay ICR's religious connections and attempt to paint its
Bible science research as a purely secular, scientific institution. ICR
attempted to maintain the fiction that it was a scientific institute with no
religious affiliations, but most ICR staffers, including Henry Morris and Duane
Gish, were still adjunct professors at the Christian Heritage College. The ICR
carried out no field research in any of the life sciences, and, despite its
claim to be purely scientific, it maintained its tax-exempt status with the IRS
on the grounds that it is a religious institution carrying out
"non-scientific research".
A number of smaller
creationist organizations also existed. The old Geoscience Research Institute
was still active. It was based at Loma Linda University, a Seventh-Day
Adventist college. For the most part, GRI avoided legislative or political
work, and focused instead on providing creationist reference materials to
biology and geology teachers. GRI adheres to old-earth creationism.
Another small
organization which got some press occasionally was the Creation Evidences
Museum near Glen Rose, Texas. The Museum is still run today by the Rev Carl
Baugh, who has a PhD in anthropology from the College of Advanced Education, an
unaccredited Bible college on the grounds of the Sherwood Park Baptist
Church. (Baugh also claims several
other doctoral degrees -- all of them come from diploma mills owned by either
himself or his business partner). The primary attractions of the Museum are the
so-called "man tracks" from nearby Dinosaur Valley State Park, along
the Paluxy River. According to the creationists, the state park contains
dinosaur tracks alongside those of modern humans, proving that the two lived
together on a young earth. Baugh has also claimed to have found a fossil human
tooth buried among the dinosaur bones. Ever since his claims have been
debunked, Baugh is viewed as somewhat of an oddball by the major creationist
groups.
Perhaps some
mention should be made of the fringe creationist groups which even the ICR and
CSRC acknowledged were a bit loony. The best known of these has to be the Flat
Earth Society, which argues on both scientific and religious grounds that the
earth is really flat, and that geological and astronomic data, if properly
interpreted, prove this to be true. Another fringe group is the Tychonian
Society, which, unlike the Flat Earth Society, accepts that the earth is round,
but which argues, on scientific and religious grounds, that the earth is at the
center of the universe and the sun revolves around it.
ICR, however, was
(and still is) the shining star of the young-earth creationist movement, and is
responsible for most of the creationist literature that is available.
The ICR makes a lot of self-congratulatory
noise about its "scientific credentials". Members of the ICR, it
proudly declares, are required to have an advanced degree in at least one of
the sciences. They usually fail to mention, however, that, like the CRS, all of
its members must sign an oath affirming their belief in a literal
interpretation of Genesis and their acceptance of Jesus Christ as their Lord
and Savior. Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, and any other non-fundamentalist creationists
are not allowed membership in the ICR unless they renounce those beliefs and
sign the ICR's oath of Biblical infallibility.
When Henry Morris
died in February 2006, his son, John Morris, took over as head of ICR.
Not all of the
young-earth creationists are scientists. One of the creationist witnesses at
the Arkansas trial was Dr. Norman Geisler, a fundamentalist theologian at the
Dallas Theological Seminary. During his pre-trial deposition, Geisler was asked
if he believed in a real Devil. Yes, he replied, he did, and cited some
Biblical verses as confirmation. The conversation then went:
"Q.
Are there, sir, any other evidences for that belief besides certain passages of
Scripture?
GEISLER:
Oh, yes. I have known personally at least 12 persons who were clearly possessed
by the Devil. And then there are the UFOs.
Q.
The UFOs? Why are they relevant to the existence of the Devil?
GEISLER:
Well, you see, they represent the Devil's major, in fact, final attack on the
earth.
Q.
Oh. And sir, may I ask how you know, as you seem to know, that there are UFOs?
GEISLER:
I read it in the Readers Digest." (Trial Transcript, US District Court,
McLean v Arizona, 1981, cited in Gilkey, 1985, p. 76)
At trial, Geisler
testified under oath (apparently with a straight face) that flying saucers were
"Satanic manifestations for the purposes of deception". (Trial
transcript, US District Court, McLean v Arkansas, 1981, cited in Gilkey, 1985,
p. 77, LaFollette, 1983, p. 114 and Nelkin, 1982, p. 142)
Geisler also
testified that the Arkansas creationism bill did not introduce religion into
the schools for the simple reason that God is not a religious concept. "It
is possible," Geisler intoned, "to believe that God exists without
necessarily believing in God." In support of this idea, Geisler argued
that the Devil acknowledged the existence of God but did not worship Him, and
therefore treated God as a non-religious concept. (Trial transcript, McLean v
Arkansas, 1981, cited in Berra, 1990, p. 134) Judge Overton rather politely
concluded that Geisler's notion "is contrary to common
understanding". (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981)
Recently, ICR's
dominance of the young-earth creationist movement has been challenged by two
others. The first is "Dr" Kent Hovind, a Florida preacher who is
perhaps best-known for his "challenge" offering $250,000 to anyone
who can prove (to him, anyway) that evolution happens. "Dr" Hovind
(the "doctoral degree" comes from an unaccredited diploma mill) is an
unabashed "patriot" tax-protestor type, and has spouted all sorts
of "government conspiracy"
theories. Hovind also thinks that flying saucers come from the Devil. Most
other creationist organizations view Hovind as an embarrassment.
The most successful
young-earth challenger to ICR, though, is Answers in Genesis, led by Carl
Weiland and former ICR staffer Ken Ham. Unlike the creation
"scientists", AIG is openly adamant about the religious basis of its
opposition to evolution, and makes no attempt to hide the fact that it is a
"Christian apologetics organization". In general, AIG's theology and
"science" are much the same as ICR's. AIG's significance, however,
comes from the fact that it is much more active in supporting international
efforts to expand creationism than is ICR (AIG funds anti-evolution movements
in England, Russia, South America and elsewhere). AIG has also distinguished
itself by publishing a long list of "arguments creationists should not
use". In response, AIG has drawn criticism from other young-earthers (including
Hovind) for "fragmenting" the Christian movement. Historically,
fundamentalists have never been very good at tolerating any criticism or
dissent, particularly from within their own ranks.
In April 2006, AIG
announced that it was splitting into two distinct organizations.
Ken Ham's American section would continue
under the name "Answers in Genesis", while Carl Weiland and the
Australian section would become the independent "Creation Ministries".
It's not clear what led to the split, but it
appears to revolve around funding issues for the American section's
"creation science museum" in Kentucky, and around disputes regarding
publishing practices. It probably also
involved some personality conflicts between the two groups.
Even after the split, however, the American
AIG rivals ICR in size, and plays a far more active role in supporting and
funding creation "science" movements overseas.
The young-earth
creationists, while dominating most of the creation "science"
movement, have been opposed by the "old-earth" groups. The
old-earthers accept that the earth is billions of years old and that the
young-earth "flood geology" is largely wrong, but agree with the
young-earthers that evolution is wrong, false and anti-Christian. The largest
and best-known of the old-earth creationist groups is Reasons to Believe,
founded by astronomer Hugh Ross. The very name of the group makes its aim
apparent. Ross's credibility is perhaps best illustrated by his recent book
(co-authored with two other fundamentalists) entitled Lights In the Sky and Little Green Men: A Rational Christian
Look at UFO's and Extraterrestrials (NavPress, Colorado Springs CO,
2002). Over several chapters, Ross
dismisses, on scientific and Biblical grounds, the existence of any life other
than terrestrial. But, he declares, there are so many reliable UFO reports that
they can't all be mistakes or hoaxes (he calls the remaining reliable reports
"Residual UFO's"). His "rational Christian" conclusion is
something he calls the "trans-dimensional hypothesis" -- flying
saucers are actually entities that come from "beyond our space and time
dimensions" and which, although real entities, are not physical beings.
OK, so what are the flying saucers, then? According to Ross: "It can now
be determined who is behind the RUFO experiences. Only one kind of being favors
the dead of night and lonely roads. Only one is real but nonphysical, animate,
powerful, deceptive, ubiquitous throughout human history, culture, and
geography, and bent on wreaking
psychological and physical harm. Only one entity selectively approaches those
humans involved in cultic, occultic or New Age activities. It seems apparent
that residual UFO's, in one or more ways, must be associated with the
activities of demons." (pages 122-123).
Ross is not the
only creationist who seems to be obsessed with flying saucers (or
demonology). As we have already seen,
Dr Norman Geisler testified at the Arkansas trial that flying saucers come from
the Devil, an opinion echoed by "Dr" Kent Hovind.
In my years of online discussions with
creationists, three different creationists, at different times, have told me in
all apparent seriousness that flying saucers are actually time machines that
are used by atheistic scientists to travel back into the past and plant fake
fossils as evidence for evolution.
Another active
old-earth creationist organization is the Foundation for Thought and Ethics.
The FTE produced a proposed creationist biology textbook, Of Pandas and
People, which had not been approved by any state education boards but
occasionally turned up in local school districts. Although FTE claims it is a
scientific group, on the tax exemption forms it files with the IRS, it states
that the organization's purpose is "proclaiming, publishing and preaching .
. . the Christian gospel and understanding of the Bible" (cited in Eve and
Harrold, 1991, p.131) Pandas
lists two authors, Percival Davis and Dean Kenyon. Davis later co-wrote a book
titled Case for Creation with young-earth creationist Wayne Frair in which
he wrote: "We accept by faith the revealed fact that God created living
things. We believe God simultaneously created those crucial substances (nucleic
acids, proteins, and so on) that are so intricately interdependent in all of
life's processes, and that He created them already functioning in living
cells." (cited in NCSE's review of Pandas and People,) In 1994,
Davis was asked by the Wall Street Journal if he had religious motives in
writing Pandas. "Of course my motives were religious," Davis
replied. "There's no question about it." (Wall Street Journal, cited
in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Jan 9, 2005) As for Dean Kenyon, he was one of the
creation "scientists" who testified during hearings on the Louisiana
"balanced treatment" bill that creationism was science and had no
religious basis whatsoever. Kenyon is now a Fellow at the Discovery Institute,
the leading proponent of Intelligent Design "theory".
His Pandas book, ironically, would
serve as the instrument of death for ID "theory".
FOUR: Creation "Science" and its
Arguments"
Although the basic tenet of creation
"science" -- the notion that God created the world by Divine fiat --
is not testable and cannot be investigated scientifically, many of the
secondary conclusions and assertions of the creationists are subject to
empirical data and examination. As we
will now see, in every instance, the data do not support any of the scientific
conclusions reached by the creationists.
The creationists write voluminously about their interpretations of
scientific data, but for reasons of space we cannot discuss all of those
various elements here (the entire "scientific" case for creationism
has been thoroughly refuted, in great detail, by writers such as Strahler,
Kitcher, Montague and Godfrey). Instead, we will present the creationist case in a handful of scientific
areas and show how the data they present is misinterpreted, misunderstood and,
in many cases, blatantly misrepresented by creation "scientists".
The creationist failure in these areas will
indicate how much weight we should give to the rest of their claims.
What
is the scientific theory of creation?
One of the most
common accusations heard from creationists is that "evolution is only a
theory and hasn't been proven". Such assertions are also heard from
right-wing conservatives who give political support to the creationists. For
instance, during the 1980 Presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan told an
audience, concerning evolution, "Well, it's a theory -- it is a scientific theory
only, and it has in recent years been challenged in the world of science and is
not yet believed in the scientific community to be as infallible as it was once
believed." (cited in Berra 1990, p. 123, Wills 1990 p. 120, and Eldredge
1982 p. 28)
This accusation
demonstrates a basic ignorance of the methods and principles of science. The
scientific method holds as a matter of course that all conclusions are
tentative, and that nothing can ever be absolutely proven to a certainty. Every
conclusion reached by any scientist must always include, even if it is only
assumed, the unspoken preface that "This is true only to the best of our
current knowledge". Science does not deal with absolute truths; it deals
with hypotheses, theories and models. The distinction between these is
important in understanding and in countering ID/creationist arguments, since
the word "theory" also has a popular usage that is quite different
from its scientific meaning.
In the popular
view, the word "theory" means simply something that is unproven -- an
assertion which may or may not be true. It is this meaning which the
creationists refer to when they assert that evolution is "just a
theory", the implication being that, if evolution hasn't been proven, then
it should have no more standing than creation "science". In science,
however, the word "theory" has a very definite meaning. Under the
scientific method, the first step in investigation is to gather data and
information, in the form of verifiable evidence. Once data has been gathered,
the next step is to form a hypothesis which would explain the data. This
hypothesis is, quite simply, nothing more than an intelligent guess. A
hypothesis is, in fact, the closest scientific term to what most people mean
when they say "theory".
Once a hypothesis
has been formed, it is compared against the data (both old and new) to see how
well it fits with the established facts. If the hypothesis is contradicted by
the data, then it must be either modified and tested again, or discarded
completely and a new hypothesis formed. Once a hypothesis has passed the test
of verification through data, it becomes a scientific theory -- i.e., it
becomes an established framework within which to interpret the relationship of
various bits of raw data. On the basis of this theory, new hypotheses are
formed, and areas in which new data may be gathered are identified. If the
theory continues to correctly explain new data (and indeed serves to correctly
predict the outcome of scientific experiments), it is said to have a high
degree of reliability. Such a theory is not a mere supposition or guess; it is
a hypothesis that has been verified by direct experimentation and which has
demonstrated a high degree of predictive ability. When it fits data well and makes accurate predictions, scientists
refer to it as being "robust".
When a related
group of theories are correlated to one another and demonstrate the ability to
be predictive and to explain the data, they form a scientific model. Models are
the intellectual framework within which vast areas of particular data are
explained and described. They also serve to indicate potential new areas of
research and new hypotheses which can be tested to see if they can be
integrated into the model.
An example may help
to illustrate these distinctions. Observational data indicates to us that we
can see the masts of tall ships while they are still far out on the horizon,
before we can see the deck or the hull. We can also observe that the shadow of
the earth, cast upon the moon during a rare eclipse, appears to be circular. We
can therefore formulate the hypothesis that the earth is round. This would
explain all of our data. Using this hypothesis, we can predict that, if the
earth is indeed a sphere, we should be able to sail completely around the earth
without falling off or coming to an edge. And, if this experiment is performed,
we find that we can indeed do so. Our hypothesis has now been verified by
experimentation, shows itself capable of correlating a variety of disparate
data, and shows an ability to be predictive, and is therefore established as a
scientific theory, the Theory of the Round Earth.
If we combine our
theory of the round earth with other theories such as the theory of a round
moon and a theory of heliocentrism (the sun is at the center of the solar
system), we can formulate a model -- the moon orbits around the earth, the earth
orbits around the sun, and all are part of a system of planets orbiting around
a central star. This is the model of the heliocentric solar system.
Please note that none
of this is to be treated as an absolute fact -- all scientific models are
tentative, and are valid only insofar as they continue to explain and predict
new findings. It is entirely possible that some later observation or data will
completely upset our model. Many times, a model must be modified and altered in
order to explain new data or to expand its explanatory power. No scientific
model can be viewed as an absolute proof. Perhaps at some point in time the shadow
of the earth upon the moon will be seen to be a square, or perhaps one day we
will see that the moon does not really revolve around the earth. However, based
upon all of the data we possess currently, we can conclude that neither of
these possibilities is very likely, and we are justified in having a high
degree of confidence in the solar system model. Although it has not been (and
cannot logically be) proven to an absolute certainty, it has been verified by
every experiment we have conducted so far, and it has proven to have profound
predictive power.
This model then
becomes a basis on which to formulate new hypotheses and to investigate new
areas of research. As various scientists produce new data and formulate new
theories and hypotheses, a consensus will be reached about which theories are
better suited to the data and which have a higher degree of confidence. In this
manner, the model is constantly being modified, improved and expanded in order
to encompass more and more data. Scientific models can never be stagnant -- they
are constantly changing and expanding as our knowledge of the universe
increases.
Thus, scientific
models can never be viewed as "the truth". At best, they are an
approximation to truth, and these approximations become progressively closer to
"the truth" as more testing of new evidence and data is done.
However, no scientific model can ever reach "the truth", since no one
will ever possess knowledge of all facts and data. As long as we do not
have perfect and complete knowledge, our scientific models must be considered
tentative, and valid only within the current limits of what we know.
The current
theories of evolutionary mechanisms (Darwinian gradualism through natural
selection, punctuated equilibria and neutralist evolution) together constitute
a scientific model. This model has survived (with some modifications) every
experimental test, and has not been invalidated by any data or evidence that we
now possess. Evolutionary theory has demonstrated an ability to correlate and explain
a wide variety of disparate data with a high degree of confidence, and has
proven to have the ability to predict experimental results and to point out new
areas that may be investigated for new data. As a scientific theory, the theory
of evolution has the same robust standing and authority that atomic theory,
germ theory, the theory of relativity and the theory of quantum physics
possess.
As a complement to
labeling evolution as "just a theory", the creationists also like to
refer to their own particular outlook as a "model". Examination will
quickly show that this is simply not true -- creationism is not a scientific
model in any sense of the word. Scientific hypotheses, theories and models are
all based upon several basic criteria. First, they must explain the world as it
is observed, using naturalistic mechanisms which can be tested and verified by
independent observation and experimentation. Although the existence of God is
not necessarily denied by science, supernatural explanations which are based
upon the unseen and undetectable
actions of God are excluded from science as a matter of necessity. As biologist
J.B.S. Haldane pointed out, science is dependent upon the assumption that the
world is real and operates according to regular and predictable laws, which are
not changed from moment to moment at the whim of supernatural forces: "My
practice as a scientist is atheistic. That is to say, when I set up an
experiment I assume that no god, angel or devil is going to interfere with its
course." (cited in Montagu, 1984, p. 241) Geologist and theologian Dr
James Skehan also notes, "I undertake my scientific research with the
confident assumption that the earth follows the laws of nature which God
established at creation . . . . My studies are performed with the confidence
that God will not capriciously confound scientific results by 'slipping in' a
miracle!" (Strahler, 1987, pp. 40-41)
The creationist
idea that God divinely created the universe may or may not be true, but, by
postulating a supernatural event which occurs outside of the natural laws of
the universe, such an idea places itself firmly outside the realm of science.
There is simply no experiment which can verify any of its assertions and no
predictions of future data that can be drawn from this hypothesis, and those
who hold such conclusions can do so only on the basis of faith. This is fine
for a religious outlook or an ideology, but it has nothing at all in common
with science.
Another
characteristic of science is that it must be falsifiable. As we have seen, it
is not possible to "prove" that any scientific model is absolutely
true and correct. It is, however, quite possible to prove that any given
scientific model is not correct -- that is, it can be conclusively shown
to be false. The evolution model, for instance, could be falsified in any
number of ways--a new species could be reliably observed to suddenly poof!
into existence from nowhere, for instance. On a more realistic level, the
evolution model would be conclusively falsified if any of the three basics we
pointed out earlier--variation, heritability or selection, were shown by
experiment to be invalid (i.e., if some genetic mechanism were to be found
which made it chemically impossible for mutations to occur in the DNA, or for
any such mutations to be passed down from one generation to the next). The
evolutionary model would also be falsified if the fossil remains of a fully
modern human being or a flowering plant were to be reliably found in strata
that have been dated to the Cambrian period of earth's history, or the
Devonian, or the Permian, or if it were to be conclusively shown that all
fossils found to date are elaborate fakes, planted by an international
conspiracy of evolution scientists to impose secular humanism upon the earth.
So far, however, no evidence has been reliably presented, by the creationists
or by anyone else, which falsifies the evolution model. Every experiment that
has been performed and every bit of data which has been collected has tended to
confirm its validity.
For legal reasons,
the creationists (and their Intelligent Design successors) are insistent that
their outlook is really "science", and is not merely a rehash of
their fundamentalist religious beliefs. However, when pressed to tell us
exactly what their scientific theory is, they usually either do not respond at
all, or else they respond with a long list of inaccurate criticisms of
evolutionary theory (which of course do nothing at all to demonstrate the
scientific validity of the creationist outlook).
However, the
creation "scientists" have published what they refer to as their
"scientific model" of creation, and it is worth examining. Looking at
what they present as their "scientific model", it is no wonder that
the creationist prefer to depend on their tried-and-untrue criticisms of
evolutionary theory, since their own "scientific model" is so
patently religious in nature.
The ICR begins by
pointing out:
"Creationism
can be studied and taught in any of three basic forms, as follows: (1) 'Scientific creationism' (no reliance on
Biblical revelation, utilizing only scientific data to support and expound the
creation model). (2) 'Biblical
creationism' (no reliance on scientific data, using only the Bible to expound
and defend the creation model). (3)
'Scientific Biblical creationism' (full
reliance on Biblical revelation but also using scientific data to support and
develop the creation model)." (All quotes are from ICR Impact No, 85,
"The Tenets of Creationism", Henry Morris, July 1980)
The second and
third of these, of course, rely explicitly on religious doctrines (as indicated
by the Book of Genesis and the rest of the Christian Bible), and are,
therefore, illegal to teach in public schools in the United States, under the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. The first form, then, is the one
that creation "scientists" were investigating and defending, and also
the one that the creationists wanted to have taught in science classrooms as an
alternative to the scientific model of evolution.
That these three
forms are, in fact, one and the same is explicitly acknowledged by the
creationists themselves. The ICR points out, "These are not contradictory
systems, of course, but supplementary, each appropriate for certain
applications. For example, creationists should not advocate that Biblical
creationism be taught in public schools, both because of judicial restrictions
against religion in such schools and also (more importantly) because teachers
who do not believe the Bible should not be asked to teach the Bible. It is both
legal and desirable, however, that scientific creationism be taught in public
schools as a valid alternative to evolutionism."
Leaving aside for
now the fact that it is most definitely not "legal and desirable" for
"scientific creationism" to be taught in a public school, it is worth
noting that, according to the creationists themselves, "scientific"
creationism and "biblical" creationism are the same doctrines';
they differ only according to their audience. In churches and Sunday Schools,
where teaching religious doctrine is perfectly acceptable, the ICR recommends
teaching Biblical creationism. But in public schools, where openly religious
instruction is illegal, the ICR advocates teaching these same religious doctrines
as "science".
Evidence that it is
plain old Biblical literalism that the creation "scientists" are
preaching can be found in one of the most important major works of creation
"science", the book Scientific Creationism, published by the
ICR in 1974 (Henry Morris, ed., Scientific Creationism, Creation Life
Publishers, San Diego CA, 1974). This book, the ICR informs us, was written by
"the scientific staff of the Institute for Creation Research" (p. i).
It is, the editor declares, a work of science, and "makes no reference to
the Bible or other religious literature as its authority, but only on the facts
of science" (p. v): "It is
possible to discuss the evidences relating to evolution versus creation in a
scientific context exclusively, without reference to religious literature or
doctrine." (p. 3) "The
purpose of Scientific Creationism (Public School edition) is to treat
all of the more pertinent aspects of the subject of origins and to do this on a
scientific basis, with no references to the Bible or to religious
doctrine." (p. iv) Morris
emphasizes again that the book treats creationism in "a strictly
scientific context" (p. iii) and as a "scientifically sound
alternative to evolution" (p. iii). This is all a deliberate calculated attempt on the part of
fundamentalist creationists (and their conservative politicalscience.
And after all this
high-sounding talk about the scientific data and the lack of reference to
religious doctrines or beliefs, what do we find as the very first tenet of
"scientific creationism"? "The physical universe of space, time, matter and energy has not
always existed, but was supernaturally created by a transcendent personal
Creator." Morris's book echoes:
"The creation model involves a process of special creation which is: (1)
supernatural, (2) externally directed, (3) purposive, and (4) completed."
(p. 11) The "scientific"
creationists, who ask us to judge them solely on the data of science, without
any reference to any religious or Biblical doctrine, have blown it already,
since the very core of their "scientific model" is based on a
religious belief that a "transcendent Creator" made the universe
"supernaturally".
The creationists
did try to explain this, though -- and their argument was quite clever:
"There is nothing inherently religious about the terms 'creator' or
'creation', as used in the context of Act 590. Act 590 is concerned with a
non-religious conception of 'creation' and 'creator', not the religious
concepts dealt with in the Bible or religious writings. . . All that creation-
science requires is that the entity which caused creation have power, intelligence
and a sense of design." (Defendant's Trial Brief, McLean v Arkansas, 1981)
In other words, the creationists argue, their first tenet of "scientific
creationism" is not religious even though it mentions a personal
supernatural Creator, because this Creator doesn't necessarily refer to God. As
creationist witness Norman Geisler argued in court (apparently with a straight
face), a supernatural Creator is not a religious concept. The Judge in
the Arkansas creationism case rather charitably commented that this argument
was "contrary to common understanding".
After telling us
that creation is a science with no need for any religious references or
beliefs, the creationists finally admit that they do need to bring in one teeny
tiny little religious concept after all -- the concept of God as creator. Their
excuse for this? "The rationalist, of course, finds the concept of special
creation insufferably naive, even 'incredible'. Such a judgement, however, is
warranted only if one categorically denies the existence of an omnipotent
God." (p. 17) "The only
reason for saying that special creation is incredible would be if one had
certain knowledge that there was no God. Obviously, if no Creator exists, then
special creation is incredible. But since a universal negative can only be
proved if one has universal knowledge, such a statement requires
omniscience." (p. 8)
Morris seems to
have forgotten that he himself was the one who promised to discuss creationism
"in a scientific context exclusively, without reference to religious
literature or doctrine." In fact,
a casual reading of Morris's book reveals a total of 19 times when a
"personal", "omnipotent", or "supernatural"
"Creator" is mentioned, and a total of 12 instances when
"God" specifically is mentioned. Awfully strange for a book that is
supposed to be about science, written specifically for a public school science
classroom, and claims not to be based upon religious doctrines or references.
The ICR's
"science" consists of nothing more than one fundamentalist religious
assertion and Biblical doctrine after another, not one of which can be
supported by any scientific data whatsoever. Every single tenet of the ICR's
"science" makes it clear that these conclusions are based, not on any
scientific data, but on the fundamentalist Christian religious doctrines of the
creationists. Thus, using the ICR's own description of creation
"science", we can demonstrate that there is simply no science in
creation "science".
And, since
creationism is not science, it is not surprising to find that all of the
"scientific arguments" made by the creationists are demonstrably
wrong -- and many of them are based on flat-out dishonesty. Most of these
creationist arguments would be repeated, nearly verbatim, decades later by the
Intelligent Design "theorists".
The
Age of the Earth
The modern science
of geology tells us that the planet earth is approximately 4.5 billion years
old, while the science of astronomy concludes that the universe itself is
approximately 13.7 billion years old. The young-earth creation
"scientists", however, reject these conclusions, and assert instead
that the universe (and the earth along with it), is only between 6,000 and
10,000 years old -- a view which has not been held by any reputable scientist for
over 150 years.
Although the
creationists attempt to justify this date using scientific data, their writings
make it apparent that they prefer a young earth because of religious factors,
not because of any scientific evidence. Henry Morris, for instance, points out,
"Although the creation model is not necessarily linked to a short time
scale, as the evolution model is to a long scale, it is true that it does fit
more naturally in a short chronology. Assuming the Creator had a purpose in His
creation, and that purpose centered primarily in man, it does seem more
appropriate that He would not waste aeons of time in essentially meaningless
caretaking of an incomplete stage or stages of His intended creative
work." (Morris, Scientific Creationism, 1974, p. 136). Assertions about
the "purpose" and "intention" of the Creator have no
scientific meaning whatsoever, but they do have particular religious meanings
for the creationists. Morris goes on to say, "There is no sure way (except
by divine revelation) of knowing the true age of any geologic formation."
(Morris, Scientific Creationism, 1974, pp. 137-138) And in case we miss the
point, Morris explicitly states: "The only way we can determine the true
age of the earth is for God to tell us what it is. And since He has told us,
very plainly, in the Holy Sciptures that it is several thousand years in age,
and no more, that ought to settle all basic questions of terrestrial
chronology." (Morris, 1972, p. 94)
During the Arkansas
trial, Harold Coffin, a Creation Research Society member from Loma Linda
University, was asked about the Burgess Shale fossil site, which has been dated
to the early Cambrian period:
"Q: The Burgess Shale is said to be
500 million years old, but you think it is only 5,000 years old, don't you?
COFFIN: Yes.
Q: You say that because of information
from the Scriptures, don't you?
COFFIN: Correct.
Q: If you didn't have the Bible, you could
believe the age of the earth to be many millions of years, couldn't you?
COFFIN: Yes, without the Bible."
(Trial transcript, McLean v Arkansas, cited in Berra, 1990, p. 135)
Duane Gish also
makes the religious preconceptions of the creationists plainly apparent when he
writes, "The genealogies listed in Genesis and elsewhere in the Bible, it
is believed, would restrict the time of creation to somewhere between six
thousand and about ten thousand years ago." (Gish, 1972, General Edition,
p. 60)
The creationist
efforts to demonstrate a young earth are, therefore, nothing more than a direct
result of their religious efforts to show that their literalist interpretation
of the Bible is correct.
Fossil
Record
One of the best-selling of the creationist books was Evolution? The
Fossils Say No!, written by Duane Gish in 1972 (reprinted in 1978 and 1981,
and re-issued later under the new title Evolution: The Challenge of the
Fossil Record). In the book, Gish
argued that the fossil evidence proves the sudden creation of all life, and
shows that evolutionary descent with modification never happened: "Ever since Darwin the fossil record
has been a source of embarrassment to evolutionists. The predictions concerning what evolutionists expected to find in
the fossil record have failed miserably. Not only have they failed to find the many tens of thousands of
undoubted transitional forms that are demanded by evolutionary theory, but the
number of arguable, let alone demonstrable, transitional forms that have been
suggested are few indeed. This has
placed evolutionists in a most difficult situation, made even more embarassing
by the fact that the fossil record is remarkably in accord with the predictions
based on special creation." (Gish, 1972, p. i)
In reality, the creationists' arguments concerning the fossil record
have no more validity than the rest of their "science".
Contrary to Gish's assertion, the fossil
record provides no support whatsoever for the creation "model", and
much evidence for evolutionary descent.
Like all of the other parts of creationism, the
creationist view of the fossil record is based directly upon Biblical
Scripture, and centers around the "type" or "kind", also
sometimes called a "baramin" (from the Hebrew words bara, or
"created", and min, or "kind"). This comes from the
description of creation given in Genesis, which states, "And God said, let
the earth bring forth grass, the herb yeilding seed, and the fruit tree
yeilding fruit after his kind . . . And God created great whales and every
living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly after
their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind . . . And God said, let the
earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle and creeping
thing, and beast of the earth after his kind, and it was so." (Genesis 1:12-24)
Thus, the
creationists assert:
"By
creation we mean the bringing into being by a supernatural Creator of the basic
kinds of plants and animals by the process of sudden, or fiat, creation."
(Gish, 1978, p. 40)
"The
creation model, on the other hand, postulates that all basic animal and plant
types (the created kinds) were brought into existence by acts of a supernatural
Creator using special processes which are not operating today." (Gish,
1978, p. 11)
Nevertheless, the
creationists also realize that overwhelming evidence exists in nature for the
transformation of organisms and the appearence of new species. Unlike the
creationists of the 19th century, therefore, who refused to believe that
speciation of any sort was possible, modern creationists instead assert that
some "variation" is possible, but only within the Divine limits
imposed upon the original "created kinds":
"The
variation that has occurred since the end of creation has been limited to
changes within kinds." (Gish, 1978, p. 40)
"All
present living kinds of animals and plants have remained fixed since creation,
other than extinctions, and genetic variation in originally created kinds has
occurred within narrow limits." (ICR Impact, May 1981)
And what is the
biological mechanism which the creationists propose for producing all of these
"variations" within the original "created kinds"?
Surprisingly enough, it is evolution. As Morris puts it: "Modern
creationists recognize and accept all the observed biological changes which
evolutionists offer as proof of evolution. New varieties of plants and animals
can be developed rather quickly by selection techniques, but creationists point
out that no new basic kind has ever been developed by such processes."
(Morris, The Troubled Waters of Evolution, 1977, p. 16) Richard Bliss of the
ICR echoes, "We accept change one hundred percent. We accept the same
change that the evolutionist is accepting, only he's calling it micro-evolution
and we're calling it variation." (Conway and Siegelman, 1984, p. 152)
Thus, the basic creationist hypothesis has been, in effect, that "evolution
happens, but only a little bit".
The fossil record, of course, demonstrates clearly that evolutionary
change has been profound -- indeed, all life that exists today, everything from
dogs to daffodils, evolved over a period of 3.75 billion years, from a tiny
primitive one-celled organism. Entire
series of fossils have been found documenting the evolutionary change from
small dinosaurs to modern birds (as shown in the famous Archaeopteryx fossil). Another series of fossils demonstrates that
modern mammals developed over a period of millions of years, from reptiles
known as therapsids. A series of
fossils including Ambulocetus and Pakicetus shows how modern
sea-going whales evolved from land animals over millions of years, while fossil
discoveries of Australopithecus and early Homo tell the story of
how modern humans evolved from apelike primates in Africa some 4-5 million
years ago.
The creationists,
of course, must answer this clear evidence for evolution, and demonstrate in
some way that this apparent evolutionary sequence is not valid. And, as usual,
they turn to their Biblical source for this -- specifically, to the Flood of
Noah described in Genesis. As Morris
puts it, "The creationist suspects that the fossil record and the
sedimentary rocks, instead of speaking of a long succession of geological ages,
may tell rather of just one former age, destroyed in a great worldwide aqueous
cataclysm." (Morris, Troubled Waters of Evolution, 1974, p. 21) "In
effect," Morris further concludes, "this means that the organisms
represented in the fossil record must all have been living contemporaneously,
rather than scattered in separate time frames over hundreds of millions of
years. . . The only reason to think that all should not have been living
contemporaneously in the past is the assumption of evolution. Apart from this
premise, there is no reason to doubt that man lived at the same time as the
dinosaurs and trilobites." (Morris, Scientific Creationism, 1974, p. 112)
In other words,
according to the creationists, all of the organisms whose remains we find in
the fossil record -- everything from trilobites to dinosaurs and the wooly
mammoths and human beings -- were all actually living together, simultaneously
and side by side, until the Flood of Noah drowned them all and then sorted
their dead remains into an order that just happens to make it look as
though all of these organisms developed slowly by a long process of
evolutionary descent. This is the creationist's "scientific"
explanation for the fossil record, which they refer to as "Flood
geology".
The entire
structure of Flood geology is nonscientific and is based directly on the
creationists' religious beliefs. As the creationists themselves admit, there is
no scientific evidence whatsoever to support any of their Flood geology:
"The study of the Flood, especially its scientific aspects, is often
called 'Flood geology' or 'Deluge geology'. However, it has not yet reached
that state of development where it can be rightfully called a science, and I
doubt that it ever will. It is only a model of the action of the Flood
described in Genesis." (Clarke, 1977, p. 8)
One of the most
commonly heard arguments made by creationists centers around the laws of
thermodynamics. Basically, the creationist argument goes like this: The Second
Law of Thermodynamics deals with something called "entropy", which is
a measure of the amount of disorder in a system. In most systems, entropy tends
to increase over time. This is based on the fact that there is a limited amount
of free energy in any closed system, and once that energy is used to do work
(and thus produce order) it becomes unavailable for any further work (and
therefore the order it produces tends to break down over time). I can use
energy to do work and build a house, for instance. But once that energy is
expended, the house will begin to decay and fall into disrepair-unless I keep
expending more free energy to keep fixing it. In the absence of additional free
energy, the house will eventually collapse. And unless I add energy to the
system by performing more work, the collapsed pieces will never re-assemble
themselves. The system always tends towards disorder, not towards increased
order.
Evolution, however,
the creationists assert, constantly creates order as it moves from small less
complex organisms to larger more complex ones. And this process of increasing
order, they assert, is in violation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which,
they claim, specifies that no system can move from a state of simplicity to
more complexity. Therefore, evolutionary progression of life, they conclude,
could not have happened without some sort of "intelligent intervention".
The creationist
argument is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of thermodynamics and the
Second Law. The laws of thermodynamics only apply within a thermodynamically
"closed" system, in which no free energy can enter from outside the
system. Under such circumstances, the available free energy is used up and
degraded until it can no longer do work, leading to thermodynamic decay and
increase in entropy and disorder, just as the house in our example falls
inevitably into disrepair.
However, there is a
way to reverse this trend towards disorder and maintain order -- by expending
new energy and do more work. A system in which free energy is available from
the outside is a thermodynamically "open" system, and in such a
system it is possible to reverse entropy (by adding new free energy). This new
energy comes at a cost, however-it reduces the amount of free energy that is
available elsewhere and thus increases the entropy of the entire system.
Life on earth is
not a thermodynamically closed system -- it is constantly receiving free energy
from the outside in the form of sunlight and solar energy. Life on earth is
capable of channeling this free energy to do work and thus to decrease entropy
and actually move from disorder to a higher state of organization.
However, while the earth is using this free
energy from the sun to decrease its entropy, the solar system as a whole is
experiencing increased entropy, and will inevitably die out as the sun uses up
all its free energy and reaches heat death. Until that point, however, free
energy is available on earth to do work and reduce entropy locally, and this
allows life to become more and more organized (less entropy) even though the
solar system as a whole is losing free energy (more entropy).
An analogy may be
useful here: all streams and rivers run downhill, but near rocks and other
obstructions small portions of the stream can use kinetic energy to temporarily
and locally reverse this flow and actually swirl uphill for a time. The water
molecules use free energy from the outside to do work and thus temporarily
circumvent the flow of gravity. The fact that parts of a vortex flow uphill
does not invalidate the affects of gravity on water, any more than the fact
that life locally decreases its entropy invalidates the Second Law. Both
processes are temporary and completely dependent on an outside source of
energy.
Thus, the evolution
of life does not violate the Second Law of Thermodynamics -- it merely uses
available free energy to circumvent it temporarily, just as some parts of a
water vortex move upstream without violating the laws of gravity. Chemical
processes, powered by free energy from the sun, allow life to grow in
complexity, without in any way violating any of the laws of thermodynamics.
Information
Theory and "Genetic Information"
It did not take
creationists long to link their "second law of thermodynamics"
argument to their (mis)understanding of information theory, and declare yet
another "disproof of evolution". Now, they argued, entropy, as applied to information theory, makes it
impossible for any "new genetic information" to appear, and therefore
evolution cannot happen:
"Genes
do not evolve new information. They remain stable in their function or they
degenerate and go through various steps of loss of efficiency which are
increasingly detrimental to the organism." (AIG, Creation Magazine, Nov
1980)
"All
observed biological changes involve only conservation or decay of the
underlying genetic information." (Carl Weiland, AIG Creation Magazine, April 1991)
Despite creationist
claims, however, there are observed instances of mutations which have produced
totally new proteins with new functions. In 1975, for instance, Japanese biologists caused a stir when they
discovered a variety of flavobacteria that had the unique ability to digest
nylon. Since nylon itself didn't even
exist until it was artificially produced in 1935, it was apparent that this
bacteria couldn't have existed prior to that. When its genetics was examined, researchers discovered that the gene
which normally produced the protein that helped the bacteria digest
carbohydrates had suffered a mutation known as a "frame shift", in
which an extra nucleotide had been inserted into the beginning of the
gene. The effect of this was drastic;
since the genetic code produces proteins by reading the nucleotides in groups
of three, putting an extra nucleotide at the beginning produces different
groups of three all along the gene, and thus results in a completely different
protein, as this example illustrates:
normal
gene: ATCCTGCGCTACGTCGTA
insert
nucleotide: C
frame-shifted
gene: CATCCTGCGCTACGTCGT
Instead
of reading the gene as ATC CTG CGC TAC GTC GTA, it is now read as CAT CCT GCG
CTA CGT CGT, a completely different protein.
In most
circumstances, this would be a disaster -- the new protein would likely be
nonfunctional, and the organism would likely die. In the case of the Japanese flavobacteria, however, the new
protein had the very weak ability to break down nylon into edible components,
thus allowing the bacteria to digest previously-inedible nylon, instead of its
normal food of carbohydrates. And,
since nylon itself didn't exist until 1935, and wasn't very abundant in the
environment for several years after that, the bacteria must have undergone this
mutation only recently, within the last 40 years.
What
good is half an eye?
This argument is a
longtime creationist favorite because, they say, it comes from Darwin himself:
"To
suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the
focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and for
the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by
natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest
degree" (Darwin, "Origin of
Species, 1859)
The creationists,
of course, neglect to finish the rest of Darwin's paragraph:
"Reason
tells me, that if numerous gradations from a simple and imperfect eye to one
complex and perfect can be shown to exist, each grade being useful to its
possessor, as is certainly the case; if further, the eye ever varies and the
variations be inherited, as is likewise certainly the case and if such
variations should be useful to any animal under changing conditions of life,
then the difficulty of believing that a perfect and complex eye could be formed
by natural selection, though insuperable by our imagination, should not be
considered as subversive of the theory." (Darwin, "Origin of Species", 1859)
Nevertheless,
creationists soon took to taking the "what good is half a . . . . ?"
argument and applying it to anything and everything they could think of. The argument, put simply, is that no complex
structure can appear through step-by-step evolution, since it would all have to
appear at once with all its parts, or it would not work at all and would not be
able to be selected into the next generation. Therefore, the argument goes, these complex structures must have been
created, all at once, intact:
"No
known mechanism of mutation, either at the gene level or the chromosome level
has been discovered which will produce evolutionary advancement. This is
particularly so because all molecules involved in replication (DNA, RNA,
protein) are interdependent with each other, and do not function in isolation.
In other words the cell and its genetic contents, give the appearance of having
been an initially created complex unit ready to work." (J.G. Leslie, AIG,
"In Brief—D.N.A. mutation and design", Creation Magazine, May 1984)
"The
tiny bombardier beetle could not possibly have evolved. His defence mechanism
is amazingly complicated, and could only have been created with all the parts
working together perfectly." (AIG,
Creation Magazine, Dec 1989)
Some have come to
call this the "argument from personal incredulity" -- "I can't
see how this could have happened, therefore it could not have
happened". Others have pointed out
that it's just another version of "god of the gaps".
It is virtually impossible to deal with
these creationist arguments since (1) the creationist can multiply them
indefinitely simply by asking about each and every living organism on earth,
and (2) no explanation will satisfy them unless it specifies every genetic
change in every individual organism within every member of the evolutionary
lineage -- an impossible task for anyone.
Nevertheless,
evidence does exist illustrating how many of these supposedly "unevolvable
structures" could have evolved. So, how can an eye evolve step by step? Well, we start with an eyespot,
a small spot on the skin of a small invertebrate that contains pigments (and
nearly ALL organisms have pigments in their skin). Some pigments (such as
rhodopsin) are light-sensitive and produce chemical changes in the presence of
light. Hence, an organism with a crude "eyespot" like this would have
the selective advantage of telling light from dark -- all with nothing but a
patch of pigmented skin. This is the sort of eye that many unicellular
organisms and some very simple multicellular organisms like worms have.
Let's make a small
improvement, and add a mutation which allows a layer of transparent skin to
cover the eyespot (two or three genes at most -- largely a change in the growth
pattern of the skin). This will protect it from damage and give a selective
advantage to the worms that have it.
Now let's make a
minor change in how the pigmented spot grows, and change one regulatory gene to
make the central portion of the spot grow faster than the outer< portions. This has the effect of pulling the
center of the spot in to make a shallow dish or bowl shaped area, lined with
light-sensitive pigment. A simple change, but a very large advantage -- it
allows differing areas of pigment to react according to the way in which light
is falling on it -- allowing the organism to detect the direction of the
light. It is the type of eye found in
some worms and in some mollusks (clams and scallops).
Another small
change in regulatory genes deepens the cup, making it more and more
direction-sensitive (and thus gives more and more selective advantage). The
result is a hollow ball, lined with light-sensitive cells, with a small pinhole
in front, and a fiber at the back that is connected to the nervous system. This
is nothing but a pinhole camera. It gives maximum direction sensitivity, and
also allows a crude image to be focused on the back of the eyeball, where each
individual light-sensitive cell is impinged upon by differing intensities of
light, thus providing the nervous system with the information necessary to form
an image. This is the type of eyeball found in the nautilus.
Next, another minor
change in regulatory genes causes the transparent skin covering the front of
the eye to thicken. This changes the refraction of the light entering the
eyeball. Mutations which allow the center of this transparent layer to grow
more quickly than the edges, form a semi-spherical transparent layer in the
front of the eyeball -- a lens. This is the type of eye that many fish have.
Now, a mutation
which doubles the transparent layer, allowing the inner one to grow and form
the spherical lens, while the outer layer remains thin. Now we have a cornea.
Just as in many fish today.
Now, we add a
change in regulatory genes which alters the growth pattern of some of the
muscles and connective tissue just inside the cornea, one which allows them to
form a flat circular sheet in front of the lens, which can be pulled in or out
against the sides of the eyeball. Now we have an iris. The same sort of eye
found in many fish today.
Now, mutations
which change the rate at which different portions of the lends grow will change
its focusing length and thus the sharpness of the image it is able to form.
Since sharper images will be selected for, these will tend to transform the
spherical lens into a lenticular one, fastened to the side of the eyeball by
the same connective tissue and muscles which held the original transparent layer
in place (and from which the iris developed). As yet, these muscles are
incapable of changing the focal length of the eye by pulling the lens into
different shapes. At best, they can pull the lens a short distance to and fro
to change the focal length. This is the same sort of eye that modern snakes and
frogs have.
Mutations which
produce stronger and more controlled muscles will allow the eye to be focused
by pulling on the lens to alter its shape, rather than by moving the whole lens
back and forth. And this is the type of eye found in birds and mammals.
And there we have
an eye, produced step by step, each with just small changes, each change being
fully functional and a selective advantage for the organism that has it.
And how do we know
that each of these steps is not only possible, but actually works? Because all
of them still exist today in various organisms.
Cambrian
explosion
The creationists
liked this argument because it not only allowed them to criticize evolution,
but also allowed them to claim that this part of the fossil record supported
their own ideas about the sudden creation of all life.
The Cambrian was a
period of life that began about 540 million years ago, and lasted until about
480 million years ago. For over 3
billion years previous to the Cambrian, life existed almost exclusively as
single-celled organisms. At the time of
the Cambrian period, however, multicellular life appeared, and rapidly
diversified to produce organisms as different as sponges, trilobites, and
strange animals that resembled nothing alive today. (The process was "rapid" when view in geological terms -- the actual process required at
least 10 or 15 million years). The
Cambrian organisms are best known from the Burgess Shale fossils, which were
described by Stephen Jay Gould in his best-selling book Wonderful Life.
The creationist
argument is that since all the major groups of life appeared suddenly in the
Cambrian, and there were no life forms prior to that, and evolution can't
explain where they came from, then this must represent the time when all the
major "kinds" of life were first created: "In the supposedly 600-million-year-old layers of rock
designated as Cambrian (the first appearance of multicelled life), sponges,
clams, trilobites, sea urchins, starfish, etc., etc., are found with no
evolutionary ancestors. Evolutionists don't even have any possible ancestors to
propose." (John Morris, Dr John's
Q&A, June 1, 1989)
Indeed, this
argument was so commonly heard that Stephen Jay Gould was asked about it when
he testified during the Arkansas trial in 1981:
Q:
Professor Gould, are you familiar with the creation science argument that there
are unexplained gaps between pre-Cambrian and Cambrian life?
A:
Yes, indeed. The pre-Cambrian fossil record was pretty much nonexistent until
twenty or thirty years ago. Creationists used to like to make a big point of
that. They argued, `Look, for most of earth's history until you get rocks that
you say are six hundred million years old, there were no fossils at all.'
Starting
about 30 years ago, we began to develop a very extensive and impressive fossil
record of pre-Cambrian creatures. . . .
These fossils are pre-Cambrian. They are not very ancient pre-Cambrian fossils.
They occur in rocks pretty much just before the Cambrian. They are caught all
over the world invariably in strata below the first appearance of still
invertebrate fossils. And the creation scientists, as far as I can see, for the
most part, just simply ignore the existence of the Ediacaran fauna. (Gould
testimony, McLean v Arkansas transcript, 1982)
The creationist
assertion that "all the major groups of life" appear suddenly in the
Cambrian period without any ancestors, is simply wrong. There are, for instance, no plants at all
anywhere in the Cambrian. Reptiles,
fish, birds and mammals didn't exist then -- the only vertebrate that existed
at the time was Pikaia, a tiny creature that looked something like the
modern lancelet fish. No terrestrial organisms of any sort existed -- the
Cambrian animals were entirely ocean-living.
The
Probability of Life
According to this
argument, the complex molecules of life, DNA or amino acids or proteins, are,
"too complicated" and "too improbable" to have arisen on
their own through random chance or chemical interactions, and therefore they
must have been deliberately strung together by a creator with supernatural
powers. Some creationists illustrate their claim by pointing out that the odds
of an intact strand of DNA forming all at once from chance are the same as the
odds of a tornado sweeping through a junkyard and assembling a functional
Boeing 747.
"The
fact is that the remarkable DNA molecule provides strong evidence of original
creation (since it is far too complex to have arisen by chance) and of
conservation of that creation (since the genetic code acts to guarantee
reproduction of the same kind, not evolution of new kinds)." (Henry Morris, ICR Impact #107)
"What
was the incredibly powerful force operating within the naturalistic world that
managed to overcome the fantastically impossible odds against getting the first
living cell? There simply was none, and thus the origin of life by
naturalistic, mechanistic process is totally impossible." (Gish, ICR
Impact #43)
There are a number
of things wrong with the creationist "probability" argument, however.
The first and most obvious is that wildly improbable things happen all the
time. How improbable must a thing be before it is "too improbable" to
have happened without Divine Influence? The odds of any human being being
struck by lightning are enormously improbable, yet every year at least a dozen
people are killed in the United States by lightning bolts. Is the chance of any
particular person being struck by lightning "too improbable" to have
happened by chance? Have they all been
struck down by God?
Another example: in
an ordinary deck of playing cards there are 52 cards. If we deal these out face
up, the odds of that particular combination arising in order, by chance, are
52-factorial; that is, 52 x 51 x 50 . . . x 3 x 2. That is one heck of a big
number, and the odds are astronomically against dealing that particular hand at
that particular time. Yet there it will be, staring us right in the face. If we
were to take ten decks of cards and deal them all out, face up, the odds
against that particular combination arising by chance are higher than the
number of electrons in the universe. Yet again, there it will be. Is it
therefore impossible for that particular combination to have arisen by chance?
Is the appearance of this particular combination "too improbable" to
have happened by chance? Do we witness a Divine Miracle every time we deal out
ten decks of playing cards?
Even more fatal to
the creationist "probability" argument, however, is the simple fact
that the odds they are talking about are irrelevant, since neither biomolecules
nor living cells are formed "randomly" or "by chance". Life
is a chemical process, and like all chemical processes it is governed by the
deterministic laws of chemistry and physics. These laws are not
"random". Thus, in their
"probability" argument, the creationists conveniently neglect to
mention that the combination of the components of those biomolecules is not
"random"--they are precisely determined by the laws of chemistry and
nuclear physics.
FIVE: Arkansas and Louisiana
By 1980, creation
"science", with financial support from the Religious Right and
political support from the Reaganite right wing of the Republican Party,
reached the pinnacle of its power. >In
January 1979, the Institute for Creation Research, the largest creationist
group in the US, had bragged in its newsletter, "Efforts to introduce the
teaching of the scientific evidence for the creation model of origins,
distinctly apart from the use of any part of the Bible, along with the
evolution model at the state and local level is meeting with increasing
success. The scientific, educational, and Constitutional basis for this
approach has been set forth in a number of Impact articles and in
booklet form. It has recently been
given strong support by an article in the Yale Law Journal.
Action to implement the teaching of the
creation model along with the evolution model has been taken by the Columbus,
Ohio and the Dallas school districts, among others. Some action has been taken
at the state level in several states, most recently in South Carolina, as
described later in this article. Mr.
Paul Ellwanger of Anderson, South Carolina, after many months of effort,
appears to have succeeded in efforts to have the scientific evidence for the
creation model presented in his school district. The school board of the local
district, apparently due mainly to the opposition of the district
superintendent, refused several requests even to hear Mr. Ellwanger's proposal.
Mr. Ellwanger refused to be discouraged, and his persistence is now being
rewarded." (ICR Impact #67, Jan
1979)
Ellwanger, the head
of a creationist organization in South Carolina called "Citizens for
Fairness in Education", had based his arguments on an article written by
Wendell Bird (who would shortly afterwards become the ICR's staff lawyer) in
the Yale Law Journal. In this
article, Bird argued that the Constitutional prohibition on teaching religious
doctrines in public schools could be evaded if, instead of presenting
fundamentalist beliefs as religious, they were presented as science instead
-- science which just so happened to echo all of their religious
opinions. Bird repeated his arguments
in several ICR newsletters: "Is
instruction in scientific creationism an establishment of religion? Scientific
creationism is not a religious doctrine, and unlike classroom prayer and Bible
reading it can be taught in public schools. Instruction in scientific
creationism involves presentation of the scientific evidence for creation
rather than use of Genesis in the classroom. For example, it discusses the
evidence that man does not have an ape-like ancestor rather than the Biblical
statement that God created Adam and Eve; it summarizes the scientific proof
that a worldwide flood shaped this planet's geology rather than the scriptural
teaching that Noah and his family survived the flood in an ark." (ICR
Impact #69, March 1979)
Shortly after this,
ICR published a "Model Resolution" that parroted all of Bird's legal
arguments: "The theory of special
creation is an alternative model of origins at least as satisfactory as the
theory of evolution, and that theory of special creation can be presented
from a strictly scientific standpoint without reference to religious doctrine
(special creation from a strictly scientific standpoint is hereinafter referred
to as "scientific creationism"), because many scientists accept
the theory of scientific creationism, and because scientific evidences have
been presented for the theory of scientific doctrine. Public school
presentation of both the theory of evolution and the theory of scientific
creationism would not violate the Constitution's prohibition against
establishment of religion, because it would involve presentation of the
scientific evidences for each theory rather than any religious doctrine".
(ICR Impact #71, May 1979, emphasis
added)
Ellwanger, in turn,
modified this Resolution slightly and turned it into a Model Bill to grant
"equal time" between "evolution science" and "creation
science". ICR had intended for its
Resolution to be put into effect only by local school districts (where the
fundamentalists had enormous political influence). Ellwanger, however, used his connections to Republican political
figures to have the Model Bill introduced into state legislatures with the
intention of making it law. By 1980, 16
different states were considering versions of Ellwanger's model bill.
The first test of it came in 1981, in
Arkansas.
In 1981, the state
of Arkansas passed a law, Act 590, based on Ellwanger's Model Bill, mandating
that "creation science" be given equal time in public schools with
evolution: "Public schools within
this State shall give balanced treatment to creation-science and to
evolution-science . . . Creation-science is an alternative scientific model of
origins and can be presented from a strictly scientific standpoint without any
religious doctrine just as evolution-science can, because there are scientists
who conclude that scientific data best support creation-science and because
scientific evidences and inferences have been presented for
creation-science."(Act 590, Arkansas Legislature, 1981)
The Bill was signed
into law on March 19, 1981. On May 27,
1981, the ACLU filed suit on behalf of a number of plaintiffs to have the law
declared unconstitutional on church/state grounds. The plaintiffs, who included
a dozen or so clergymen of differing denominations, argued that creation
"science" was nothing more than fundamentalist Biblical literalism
pretending to be science. Creationists from the Creation Research Society and the
Institute for Creation Research argued to the court that their viewpoint was a
scientific model and not based at all on religion. ICR's own lawyer, Wendell Bird, sought to have himself appointed
as a special state attorney for Arkansas so he could be allowed to argue the
case himself. His request was refused,
but he stayed on as an advisor to the state attornies.
ICR's chief debator, Dr Duane Gish, also
advised the state attornies, and was often seen passing them notes in court
regarding various testimony.
Judge William
Overton, after listening to both sides, was unconvinced by the creationists'
arguments, and ruled that creation "science" was not a science, but
was merely an attempt to introduce religious beliefs into the public school
system, and was therefore unconstitutional. "The evidence is overwhelming," Overton wrote, "that both
the purpose and the effect of Act 590 is the advancement of religion in the
public schools." (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981) Citing a
number of letters and statements made by the creationists themselves, the judge
concluded that "Act 590 is a religious crusade, coupled with a desire to
conceal this fact". (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981)
"The
proof in support of creation science consisted almost entirely of efforts to
discredit the theory of evolution through a rehash of data and theories which
have been before the scientific community for decades. The arguments asserted
by creationists are not based upon new scientific evidence or laboratory data
which has been ignored by the scientific community." (Overton Opinion,
McLean v Arkansas, 1981)
"The
creationists' methods do not take data, weigh it against the opposing
scientific data, and thereafter reach the conclusions stated in Section 4(a).
Instead, they take the literal wording of the Book of Genesis and attempt to
find scientific support for it." (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas,
1981)
The creationists,
of course, had argued that creationism was not religious at all, but was purely
based on science. Judge Overton flatly
rejected that assertion:
"Defendants
argue that : (1) the fact that 4(a) conveys idea similar to the literal
interpretation of Genesis does not make it conclusively a statement of
religion; (2) that reference to a creation from nothing is not necessarily a
religious concept since the Act only suggests a creator who has power,
intelligence and a sense of design and not necessarily the attributes of love,
compassion and justice; and (3) that simply teaching about the concept of a creator
is not a religious exercise unless the student is required to make a commitment
to the concept of a creator.
The
evidence fully answers these arguments. The idea of 4(a)(1) are not merely
similar to the literal interpretation of Genesis; they are identical and
parallel to no other story of creation." (Overton Opinion, 1981)
"The two model
approach of the creationists," Overton concluded, "is simply a
contrived dualism which has no scientific factual basis or legitimate
educational purpose. It assumes only two explanations for the origins of life
and existence of man, plants and animals: it was either the work of a creator
or it was not. Application of these two models, according to creationists, and
the defendants, dictates that all scientific evidence which fails to support
the theory of evolution is necessarily scientific evidence in support of
creationism and is, therefore, creation science "evidence" in support
of Section 4(a)." (Overton
Opinion, 1981)
The cynicism and
intellectual dishonesty of the creationist movement was best illustrated by
documents presented during the Arkansas trial, which showed that the
creationists were advising potential witnesses to downplay the religious
dogma behind creationism in an attempt to avoid having the law declared
unconstitutional. Paul Ellwanger, the creationist who actually drafted the
Arkansas law, wrote to one supporter: "It would be very wise, if not
actually essential, that all of us who are engaged in this legislative effort
be careful not to present our position and our work in a religious framework.
For example, in written communications that might somehow be shared with those
other persons whom we may be trying to convince, it would be well to exclude
our own personal testimony and/or witness for Christ, but rather, if we are so
moved, to give that testimony on a separate attached note." (Attachment to
Ellwanger deposition, McLean v Arkansas, 1981, cited in Overton Opinion) In
another letter, Ellwanger wrote: "We'd like to suggest that you and your
co- workers be very cautious about mixing creation-science with
creation-religion. . . Please urge your co-workers not to allow themselves to
get sucked into the 'religion' trap of mixing the two together, for such mixing
does incalculable harm to the legislative thrust." (Attachment to Miller
deposition, McLean v Arkansas, 1981, cited in Overton Opinion). And in yet another letter, he says, "If
you have a clear choice between having grassroots leaders of this statewide
bill promotion effort to be ministerial or non- ministerial, be sure to opt for
the non-ministerial. It does the bill effort no good to have ministers out
there in the public forum, and the adversary will surely pick up at this point.
. . . . " (Attachment to Ellwanger Deposition, McLean v Arkansas, 1981,
cited in Overton Opinion).
As for the argument
that the teaching of evolution, which is offensive to the religious beliefs of
fundamentalist students, infringes upon students in their free exercise of
religion, Overton simply and clearly concluded, "The argument has no legal
merit." (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981) Overton cited the
Epperson case, in which the US Supreme Court had ruled that "There is and
can be no doubt that the First Amendment does not permit the State to require
that teaching and learning must be tailored to the principles and prohibitions
of any religious sect or dogma . . . It forbids alike the preference of a
religious doctrine or the prohibition of a theory which is deemed antagonistic
to a particular dogma." (US Supreme Court, Epperson v Arkansas , 1968)
The most common
argument heard from creationists was the "fairness" approach--since
there are two "models" of origins, evolution and creationism, and
since neither can be "proved", why not simply present both arguments
and let the students decide for themselves which is the better supported? As
Morris puts it, "Both models should be taught, as objectively as possible,
in public classrooms, giving arguments pro and con for each. Some students and
parents believe in creation, some in evolution, and some are undecided . . .
This is clearly the most equitable and constitutional approach." (Morris,
ICR Impact, January/February 1973)
In support of their
"fairness" argument, the creationists liked to cite a long string of
opinion polls and surveys which demonstrated widespread support for the idea.
In 1981, during the Arkansas trial, an NBC News poll showed that 76% of the
public thought that both creation and evolution should be taught in the
schools, with 10% believing that only the creation story should be taught, and
only 7% believing that evolution alone should be taught. A 1986 study of
American college students concluded that 50% believed in the Divine Creation of
life (33% of college students, it was also pointed out, believed in flying
saucers). And in 1987, a survey of college students in several states concluded
that approximately half of American students believed that both creationism and
evolution should be taught in schools. The percentages ranged from 46% in
Connecticut to 47% in California to 57% in Texas. (On the other hand, the
percentages were much lower when the question was changed to whether
"there is a good deal of scientific evidence against evolution and in
favor of the Bible's account of creation" -- the percentage in agreement
dropped to 25% in California, 30% in Connecticut and 47% in Texas.)
The creationist
"fairness" argument was also dealt with by Judge Overton. Under a
Constitutional form of government, Overton pointed out, the rights of a
minority are protected against the opinions of even an overwhelming majority.
"The application and content of First Amendment principles," Overton
concluded, "are not determined by public opinion or by a majority vote.
Whether the proponents of Act 590 constitute the majority or minority is quite
irrelevant under a constitutional system of government. No group, no matter how
large or small, may use the organs of government, of which the public schools
are the most conspicuous and influential, to foist its religious beliefs on
others." (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981) The First Amendment
was clear, Overton ruled, that religious doctrines may not be introduced into
public school curricula, whether such an idea was popular or not.
The "balanced
treatment" requirement also presented enforcement difficulties. The bill
explicitly states that religious instruction and discussion of religious
doctrines must be avoided: "Treatment of either evolution-science or
creation-science shall be limited to scientific evidence for each model and
inferences from those scientific evidences, and must not include any religious
instruction or references to religious writings." (Arkansas Legislature
Act 590, 1981) However, as Judge Overton points out, "The Act is self-contradictory
and compliance is impossible . . . . There is no way teachers can teach the
Genesis account of creation in a secular manner." (Overton Opinion, McLean
v Arkansas, 1981) In order to see that the law is upheld, and that no illegal references
to religious doctrines or religious writings are introduced into the classroom,
the state would have no choice but to scrutinize every creationist textbook and
to listen in on classroom discussions.
Overton describes
where this process leads: "How is the teacher to respond to questions
about a creation suddenly and out of nothing? How will the teacher explain the
occurrence of a worldwide flood? How will the teacher explain the concept of a
relatively recent inception of the earth? The answer is obvious because the
only source of this information is ultimately contained in the Book of Genesis.
. . . Involvement of the State in screening texts for impermissible religious
references will require State officials to make delicate religious judgments.
The need to monitor classroom discussion in order to uphold the Act's
prohibition against religious instruction will necessarily involve
administrators in questions concerning religion. These continuing involvements
of State officials in questions and issues of religion create an excessive and
prohibited entanglement with religion." (Overton Opinion, McLean v
Arkansas, 1981)
In other words, the
creationist "balanced treatment" bill would lead to direct state
involvement in religious decisions. The creationists, of course, have no
problem with this, since, as we have seen from their writings, they would in
any case like to do away with the separation between church and state. For
those who believe in the free expression of religion without interference from
the state, however, the prospect of direct state involvement in such religious
matters is chilling.
"Creation
science," Overton concluded, "has no scientific merit or educational
value as science . . . Since creation science is not science, the conclusion is
inescapable that the only real effect of Act 590 is the advancement of
religion." (Overton Opinion, McLean v Arkansas, 1981)
The creationists,
however, were unbowed. As the state representative who sponsored Act 590 told
the newspapers, "If we lose, it won't matter that much. If the law is
unconstitutional, it'll be because of something in the language that's wrong .
. . . So we'll just change the wording and try again with another bill . . . We
got a lot of time. Eventually we'll get one that is constitutional."
(Washington Post, December 7, 1981) On the very day that Judge Overton ruled
the Arkansas law unconstitutional, the Mississippi State Legislature passed a
similar "Balanced Treatment" bill by a vote of 48-4.
Within a short time, Ellwanger had produced
another Model Bill, titled "Unbiased Presentation of Creation-Science and
Evolution-Science Bill", and was peddling it to state legislatures..
Creationists tended
to view the Arkansas ruling as a fluke, pointing out that the state Attorney
General had refused to allow prominent creationist lawyers to assist in the
case (prompting charges from fundamentalists that he "hadn't really been
trying" to win the case). Duane Gish whined, "From his decision it is
obvious that Judge Overton (as well as most of the news media) completely
ignored the scientific evidence presented by the defense witnesses while
accepting without question evidence offered by the plaintiffs' witnesses. Many
remarks made by Judge Overton during the trial revealed his bias against the
creationist side." (ICR Impact #105, March 1982) Wendell Bird sniffled, "The Arkansas district court gave a
constitutionally erroneous and factually inaccurate opinion in McLean v. Arkansas
Board of Education. It is
regrettable that the Arkansas defense did not adequately present or adequately
support the strong constitutional arguments that could have been made in favor
of balanced treatment of creation-science and evolution-science."
When the Louisiana
State Legislature passed a "Balanced Treatment" bill mandating equal
classroom time for "creation science" and "evolution
science", the creationists finally got their chance for an all-out attack,
led by Wendell Bird, the creationist lawyer who had drafted the original
"balanced treatment" arguments, and who had now won his request to be
appointed as a special Louisiana state attorney to argue the case.
The legal history
of the Louisiana creationism bill is somewhat convoluted.
On December 2, 1981, a group of state
legislators, religious representatives and parents (led by the state legislator
who had introduced the bill), filed an action in Baton Rouge (Keith v
Louisiana) asking the Federal Court to issue a declaratory judgment that
the Louisiana law was not unconstitutional and did not violate
the separation of church and state. A
day later, the ACLU filed a lawsuit of its own in New Orleans, challenging the
constitutionality of the law. In June
1982, the Baton Rouge case was dismissed, and the ACLU's case (Edwards v
Aguillard) was scheduled for a 1983 trial. The ACLU, however, then filed a motion for summary judgment (an
immediate ruling without a trial), on the grounds that the Louisiana
Constitution granted the state's Board of Elementary and Secondary Education
(BESE) sole authority to set curricula in public schools. The judge agreed and issued a summary
finding that the state legislature did not have any authority to mandate what
is or isn't taught in science classrooms. That finding was appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court, which ruled in
October 1983, in a 4-3 decision, that the state legislature did after all have
the legal authority to pass laws concerning curricula content. So the case was once again scheduled for
trial.
The ACLU, however,
quickly filed another motion for summary judgment, citing the Mclean decision
and arguing that no facts disputed the religious nature of creationism, and
that therefore the law was manifestly unconstitutional and there were simply no
legal issues to be decided. Federal
Judge Adrian Duplantier agreed, and ruled summarily that creation
"science" was nothing but religious doctrine, and the Louisiana law
was unconstitutional "because it promotes the beliefs of some theistic
sects to the detriment of others." (US District Court, Edwards v
Aguillard, 1985, cited in Berra, 1990, p. 137) This ruling was upheld by a
Judge on the Federal Court of Appeals six months later, who concluded that the
only purpose of the law was "to discredit evolution by counterbalancing
its teaching at every turn with the teaching of creationism, a religious
belief." (US Circuit Court, Edwards v Aguillard, 1985). The creationists appealed to the US Supreme
Court, petitioning the Justices to issue an order for the Federal Circuit Court
to meet "en banc", that is, to have all the appellate judges
meet together to hear the arguments.
In June 1987, the
Supreme Court ruled against the creationists, concluding by a vote of 7-2 that
there was no need for any en banc hearing, since "The Act is
facially invalid as violative of the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment, because it lacks a clear secular purpose." (Supreme Court,
Edwards v Aguillard, 1987) The real
purpose of creation "science", the Court concluded, was "to
restructure the science curriculum to conform with a particular religious
viewpoint. . . .The pre-eminent purpose of the Louisiana Legislature was
clearly to advance the religious viewpoint that a supernatural being created
humankind." (US Supreme Court, Edwards v Aguillard, 1987)
One of the
arguments made by the creationists was that the real purpose of the law was to
promote "academic freedom" and not "religion".
The Supreme Court rejected this argument:
"While
the Court is normally deferential to a State's articulation of a secular
purpose, it is required that the statement of such purpose be sincere and not a
sham. . . . In this case, the purpose of the Creationism Act was to restructure
the science curriculum to conform with a particular religious viewpoint. Out of
many possible science subjects taught in the public schools, the legislature
chose to affect the teaching of the one scientific theory that historically has
been opposed by certain religious sects." (US Supreme Court, Edwards v
Aguillard, 1987)
"We do not
imply," the Court concluded, "that a legislature could never require
that scientific critiques of prevailing scientific theories be taught. Indeed,
the Court acknowledged in Stone that its decision forbidding the posting of the
Ten Commandments did not mean that no use could ever be made of the Ten
Commandments, or that the Ten Commandments played an exclusively religious role
in the history of Western Civilization. In a similar way, teaching a variety of
scientific theories about the origins of humankind to schoolchildren might be
validly done with the clear secular intent of enhancing the effectiveness of
science instruction. But because the primary purpose of the Creationism Act is
to endorse a particular religious doctrine, the Act furthers religion in
violation of the Establishment Clause." (US Supreme Court, Edwards v
Aguillard, 1987)
As a result of this
decision, all existing "Balanced Treatment" laws were thrown out.
Following this
defeat, however, the creation scientists once again changed their tactics.
Instead of arguing that creationism is a science and should therefore be taught
in public schools, they now argued that creationism really is religion, but so
is evolution -- evolution is, they now said, really nothing more than the
"religion" of "secular humanism", and therefore evolution
should not be taught in public schools either.
This argument had
already failed in a Federal court. In
1981, a prominent creationist in California sued to have the teaching of
evolution removed from the classroom on the grounds that it violated his and
his children's Constitutional right to free exercise of their religion. In
response, the California Superior Court ruled that teaching evolution in
science class does not establish a religion or interfere with the religious
rights of any citizens (Sacramento Superior Court, Segraves v California,
1981).
In the wake of the
Supreme Court's Aguillard decision, however, the issue came up again in
1994, when a California biology teacher sued the state and the local school
district, claiming that teaching evolution illegally established the
"religion of secular humanism". The teacher also claimed that the
state and school district were conspiring against him as a result of their
"group animus towards practicing Christians" (US Circuit Court,
Peloza v New Capistrano School District, 1994).
The Court ruled,
"Adding 'ism' does not change the meaning nor magically metamorphose
'evolution' into a religion. 'Evolution' and 'evolutionism' define a biological
concept: higher life forms evolve from lower ones. The concept has nothing to
do with how the universe was created; it has nothing to do with whether or not
there is a divine Creator (who did or did not create the universe or did or did
not plan evolution as part of a divine scheme). " (US Circuit Court,
Peloza v New Capistrano School District, 1994)
"Evolutionist
theory is not a religion," the Court ruled. "Plaintiff's assertions
that the teaching of evolution would be a violation of the Establishment Clause
is unfounded." (US Circuit Court, Peloza v New Capistrano School District,
1994) The court concluded that Peloza's case was "frivolous" and
ordered him to compensate the state and school board for costs and attorney
fees. An appelate court later upheld the decision, but removed the
"frivolous" conclusion.
The real stage for
the next act in the fundamentalist war against evolution had already been
spelled out in a press release that Wendell Bird sent out after the Supreme
Court's Aguillard ruling:
"The
U.S. Supreme Court held on June 19 that Louisiana's 'Act for Balanced Treatment
of Creation-Science and Evolution' is unconstitutional because it had an
unconstitutional legislative purpose. However, the Court Ruling was narrow and did not say that teaching
creation-science is necessarily unconstitutional if adopted for a secular
purpose. In fact, the Court said the exact opposite: 'Teaching a variety of scientific theories about the origins of
human-kind to school children might be validly done with the clear secular
intent of enhancing the effectiveness of science instruction.' " (p.
14).(ICR Impact #170, August 1987)
ICR was quick to
echo:
"The
ICR staff concurs with Attorney Bird that the Majority Opinion of the Court
does not preclude teaching the scientific evidences for creation, as long as
this is done with the "secular purpose" of good science and good
education, rather than the "religious purpose" of supporting belief
in a supernatural God." (ICR Impact #170, August 1987)
The dissenting
opinion in the Aguillard case, written by Antonin Scalia, gave
particular hope to the anti-evolutionists -- and painted the path they would
follow in the future. "The Act's
reference to 'creation'," Scalia writes, "is not convincing evidence
of religious purpose. The Act defines creation science as 'scientific
evidence', and Senator Keith and his witnesses repeatedly stressed that the
subject can and should be presented without religious content.
We have no basis on the record to conclude
that creation science need be anything other than a collection of scientific
data supporting the theory that life abruptly appeared on earth. Creation
science, its proponents insist, no more must explain whence life came than
evolution must explain whence came the inanimate materials from which it says
life evolved. But even if that were not so, to posit a past creator is not to
posit the eternal and personal God who is the object of religious veneration.
Indeed, it is not even to posit the 'unmoved mover' hypothesized by Aristotle
and other notably nonfundamentalist philosophers. Senator Keith suggested this
when he referred to 'a creator however you define a creator.' "
(Scalia, Dissenting Opinion, Edwards v
Aguillard, 1987)
Within a year, the
movement would begin which would directly attempt to get around the Aguillard
ruling, using Scalia's own argument concerning "scientific data
supporting the theory that life abruptly appeared on earth . . . whatever
scientific evidence there may be against evolution . . . however you define a
creator".
SIX:
The Birth of Intelligent Design
"Theory"
Although the
one-two punch of the Mclean and Aguillard rulings was devastating
to the creationists, it did not lessen their determination to slay the
Darwinist dragon.
The post-Louisiana
strategy of the creation "scientists" depended upon the enormous
political pressure that the fundamentalists could bring to focus at the local
level. Creationists had been very active in state textbook committees and
curricula boards, where they attempted to pressure various states into dropping
biology textbooks which feature evolutionary theory. In June 1996, for instance,
three families in Cobb County, Georgia asked that the Cobb County Board of
Education remove a chapter from a fourth grade science textbook. The offending
chapter discussed the age and formation of the universe.
Historically, this
had been one of the creationist's most effective tactics -- campaigns for
book-banning had long been a staple of fundamentalist moralists. In the
anti-evolution fight, the idea was to influence the treatment of evolution in
biology textbooks, insuring that the subject is mentioned only briefly or not
at all. Dorothy Nelkin describes how this tactic works:
"Twenty-two
states, including Texas and California (the largest consumers of textbooks),
make major educational decisions through centralized state school boards and textbook
commissions. These are composed of teachers and layman, often political
appointees. The commissions meet every five or six years to select textbooks in
various subject areas for the state board of education. While local school
districts can use textbooks that do not appear on the list, there are financial
incentives to order state-approved textbooks, for these are usually the only
books that are subsidized. Thus, it becomes extremely important for publishers
to have their books on these lists, especially in the more populous states.
State recommendations also influence the general policies of textbook
publishers, who normally do not print separate editions for each state. A
decision in California or Texas may have repercussions throughout the industry,
affecting the character of books available in the whole country. Thus, textbook
watchers direct much of their energy toward the state boards of education and
curriculum committees, hoping to influence the state-approved textbook
lists." (Nelkin, 1982, pp 93-94)
The creationist
effort to influence the state textbook committees usually focused on a handful
of large states, where they can the get maximum effect for a minimum
expenditure of money and manpower. The state of California alone, for instance,
accounted for over ten percent of all money spent on textbooks in the United
States. Another large state, Texas, has traditionally been sympathetic to the
creationists (in 1994, the Republican Party in Texas adopted a platform plank
advocating teaching creationism in the schools), and also accounts for a large
portion of the textbook market. In both of these states, creationists attempt
to win a majority on the textbook selection committees so they can influence
the content of biology textbooks.
By pressuring these
large markets towards expunging or limiting mention of evolution in textbooks,
the creationists hoped to influence the textbooks which are made available to
other states as well. And such efforts seem to have been at least partially
successful. In the late 1970s, when creationists were attempting to pressure
the California state education committee to mandate "equal treatment"
for creation science, the most widely-used biology textbook in the state (also
used throughout the country), Biology: Living Systems, dropped the
number of index entries under "evolution" from 17 lines of references
in 1973 to just 3 lines in 1979.
The textbook
publisher's interest is economic (it is, after all, much less expensive for
publishers to produce a single "safe" version for nationwide use
rather than a version without evolution for use in those states which have
rejected such texts, and a separate version, including evolution, for other
states). Some publishers who caved in to this sort of creationist pressure attempted
to justify this by trying to sound open-minded. Louis Arnold, the senior
science editor of Prentice-Hall, remarked in 1980, "We don't advocate the
idea of scientific creation, but we felt we had to represent other points of
view." (Godfrey, 1983, p. 25) Other publishers were more blunt about their
motivations: "Creation has no place in biology books," one publisher
acknowledged, "but after all we are in the business of selling
textbooks." (Nelkin, 1982, p. 154)
In the late 1980s,
the Texas State Board of Education mandated that all biology textbooks carry a
disclaimer stating that evolutionary science was "only a theory" and
was "not established fact". (This provision was withdrawn in 1990.)
Despite this symbolic victory, however, efforts to have creationist textbooks
adopted by state education committees were not very successful. Creationists in
1995 managed to convince the Alabama state school board to include a disclaimer
in all biology textbooks stating that evolution was a "controversial theory",
and listing all the standard creationist arguments against evolution (ICR Acts
and Facts, January 1995, p. 4), but it was later dropped.
Efforts were also
made to coerce state textbook committees into adopting anti-evolution books as
texts. Early efforts focused on Duane
Gish's Evolution: The Fossils Say NO! or Henry Morris's Scientific
Creationism, but both of these books were shot down by textbook committees
as being religiously-based apologetics for creation "science", which
the Supreme Court had already ruled could not be taught.
In 1990, though, a church campaign in
Alabama gathered over 11,800 signatures on a petition to place a new book, Of
Pandas and People, on the list of approved textbooks. After a storm of
public criticism, the book was withdrawn. A similar campaign in Idaho also failed. >In 1995, the school board in Plano, Texas, voted unanimously to
reject Pandas as a "supplementary textbook".
Of Pandas And
People was the first major
post-Aguillard book that was produced by the anti-evolutionists.
It was also the first to introduce a new
incarnation of the creationist movement known as "intelligent
design", which deliberately attempted to get around the legal restrictions
of the Supreme Court's Aguillard ruling by dropping all references,
explicit or implicit, to "a creator" and referring instead only to an
unspecified "intelligent designer".
The concept of
"design" had long been a staple of the creation
"scientists":
"Life
is something like an amazingly well-designed machine, but much more complex
than those designed by humans. Such evidence of design speaks eloquently for a
Designer, and those who choose to disbelieve are still "without
excuse" (Romans 1:20). (John Morris, Dr Johns Q&A, ICR, March 1, 1990)
"By
its very nature, creation involves the intelligent application of design
information, which it would seem logical to conserve." (Ken Ham, AIG
Creation Magazine, October 1978)
It was Of Pandas
And People, however, produced by the Foundation for Thought and Ethics,
which really set the stage for the introduction of the Intelligent Design
movement. The book, written by two
creationist authors (one of whom had testified on behalf of the Louisiana
"equal time" bill) was in the process of preparation during the
Louisiana legal proceedings, and the original draft mentioned the word
"creationism" prominently. The book was being edited by creationist
chemist Charles Thaxton. After the
Supreme Court decision making it illegal to teach "creationism",
however, simply FTE edited all the references to "creationism" to
refer to "intelligent design" instead. As a later Federal court
document put it:
"Intelligent
design followed the Supreme Court's rejection of creation science as night
follows day: At the time that Edwards was decided, the Foundation for
Thought and Ethics (a publisher of Christian texts) had been developing Of
Pandas and People as a creationist work to advance the FTE's religious and
cultural mission. After the Supreme Court rejected the proffered expert
opinions in Edwards claiming that creation science is 'science,' Kenyon
and FTE took their draft textbook (which advocated for creationism) and, with
all the elegance of a word processor's algorithm, replaced references to
'creationism' with the new label 'intelligent design.' When they issued Pandas's
first edition just two years later, they presented intelligent design as if
it were a new intellectual endeavor rather than merely a rechristening of
creationism. But Pandas defines 'intelligent design' exactly as an
earlier draft had defined 'creationism.'" ("Opposition to Defendant's
Motion for Summary Judgement, Kitzmiller v Dover, Aug 8, 2005)
The Discovery
Institute's history of design theory phrases this change somewhat differently:
As
the academic editor for the Foundation of Thought and Ethics, Thaxton was then
serving as the editor for a supplemental science textbook co-authored by
Kenyon, named Of Pandas and People: The Central Question of Biological
Origins. As it neared completion, Thaxton continued to cast around for a
term that was less ponderous and, at the same time, more general, a term to
describe a science open to evidence for intelligent causation and free of
religious assumptions. He found it in a phrase he picked up from a NASA
scientist. "That's just what I need," Thaxton recalls thinking. "It's a good
engineering term…. After I first saw it, it seemed to jibe. When I would go to
meetings, I noticed it was a phrase that would come up from time to time. And I
went back through my old copies of Science magazine and found the term
used occasionally." It was soon incorporated into the language of the book
With the crushing
defeat of the creation "science" movement, anti-evolutionists were
forced to adopt a new tactic, one that attempted to unify all of the various
sects and dogmas into a single "big tent" which could set aside their
internal doctrinal differences and focus on their common enemy. As a matter of
legal necessity, moreover, the new incarnation of anti-evolutionism had to
distance itself as far as it could from the creation "science"
movement, which had already had its day in court and lost, and it could not be
built around the now-discredited leaders of the young-earth creation
groups. This new movement was called
"intelligent design theory", and it's intellectual forefather is Phillip Johnson.
Johnson was a law
professor at Berkeley when he underwent a painful divorce that crushed him
deeply and prompted him to turn to fundamentalist religion in a search for
meaning. One of the pet projects that
Johnson has undertaken since then has been an effort to demonstrate that AIDS
is not caused by HIV, but by what he terms "an unhealthy
lifestyle". Johnson has declared
that it is the "science establishment" that is hiding "the
cracks in the official story" and preventing "more open
investigation" by "ridiculing opponents" and
"deception" which is "fostered by the AIDS industry".
(http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/index/pjohnson.htm)
But it was the
fight against evolution that Johnson made his life's work (although all of his
paranoid conspiratorial approach to AIDS would be echoed in his crusade against
Darwin). In the same year that the
Supreme Court struck down creation 'science', Johnson read Evolution; A
Theory in Crisis, a creationist book by Michael Denton.
And here, Johnson later recalled, he found
his purpose in life; "This is it. This is where it all comes down to, the
understanding of creation." (Christianity Today, "The Making of a
Revolution", December 8, 1997) In
1991, Johnson published his first book, Darwin on Trial, which argued
that evolution was not science but an atheistic religion based on
"philosophical materialism". In Darwin on Trial, Johnson did not offer any alternative to
evolution, but the book's publication lead directly to the formation of the
Intelligent Design Movement. In 1992, a
group of scientists and philosophers who were influenced by Johnson's book met
at Southern Methodist University, which brought together Johnson, William
Dembski (a mathematician and theologian), Michael Behe (a biochemist), Stephen
Meyer (a geophysicist), and Paul Nelson (a young-earth creationist with a PhD
in philosophy). They formed the core of
the ID movement for the next 15 years. When paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould published a withering critique of
Johnson's book in Scientific American, Johnson responded with a letter that noted:
"What
divides Gould and me has little to do with scientific evidence and everything
to do with metaphysics. Gould approaches the question of evolution from a
philosophical starting point in scientific naturalism. From that standpoint the
blind watchmaker thesis is true in principle by definition. Science may not
know all the details yet, but something very much like Darwinian evolution
simply has to be responsible for our existence because there is no acceptable
alternative. If there are gaps or defects in the existing theory, the
appropriate response is to supply additional naturalistic hypotheses. Critics
who disparage Darwinism without offering a naturalistic alternative are seen as
attacking science itself, probably in order to impose a religious straitjacket
upon science and society. One does not reason with such persons; one employs
any means at hand to discourage them. But maybe Darwinism really is false--in principle, and not just in
detail. Maybe mindless material processes cannot create information-rich
biological systems. That is a real possibility, no matter how offensive to
scientific naturalists. How do Darwinists know that the blind watchmaker
created animal phyla, for example, since the process can't be demonstrated and
all the historical evidence is missing? Darwinists may have the cultural power
to suppress questions like that for a time, but eventually they are going to
have to come to grips with them. There are a lot of theists in America, not to
mention the rest of the world, and persons who promote naturalism in the name of
science will not forever be able to deny them a fair hearing."
(Johnson, "Response to Gould")
When Scientific
American refused to publish Johnson's religious criticism, Dembski, Behe and
Meyer and 36 other anti-evolutionists responded by mass-mailing a copy of it, along with a supporting letter, to
scientists and biology departments all over the US. In its supporting letter, the group, calling itself the "Ad
Hoc Origins Committee", identified itself as "Scientists Who Question
Darwinism", and declared: "We
are a group of fellow professors or academic scientists who are generally
sympathetic to Johnson and believe that he warrants a hearing -- thus this
mailing. Most of us are also Christian Theists who like Johnson are unhappy
with the polarized debate between biblical literalism and scientific
materialism. We think a critical
re-evaluation of Darwinism is both necessary and possible without embracing
young-earth creationism. It is in service of this re-evaluation that we
commend the Johnson/Gould discourse to you." (available at http://www.apologetics.org/news/adhoc.html#3,
emphasis added)
In 1993, the
nascent ID movement met again in California, and this meeting is generally
acknowledged as the birth of the Intelligent Design movement.
As young-earth creationist turned IDer Paul
Nelson later reported:
"In
June 1993, Johnson invited several of the (mostly younger) members of that
community to a conference at the California beach town of Pajaro Dunes. Present
were scientists and philosophers who themselves would later become well known,
such as biochemist Michael Behe, author of Darwin s Black Box (1996);
mathematician and philosopher William Dembski, author of The Design Inference (1998)
and Intelligent Design (1999); and developmental biologist Jonathan Wells,
author of Icons of Evolution (2000). Of the 14 participants at the Pajaro Dunes
conference, only three (microbiologist Siegfried Scherer of the Technical
University of Munich, paleontologist Kurt Wise of Bryan College, and me) could
be seen as traditional creationists. Moreover, theological diversity marked the
meeting: in addition to the expected presence of evangelicals, Behe was Roman
Catholic; Wells was a member of the Unification Church; and one participant,
paleontologist David Raup of the University of Chicago, was an agnostic.
Pajaro Dunes thus became a model for what
has come to be known as the intelligent
design movement. Unlike other science
and faith organizations (such as the traditional creationist CRS or the
moderate American Scientific Affiliation [ASA]), no statement of faith was
required at Pajaro. What united the participants (with the possible exception
of Raup) was a deep dissatisfaction with neo-Darwinism and its naturalistic
philosophical foundation and an interest in scientifically exploring the
possibility of design.
Until
recently, the majority of active dissenters from neo-Darwinian (naturalistic)
evolution could be classified as young-earth (or what I call
traditional) creationists. Their dissent
could be dismissed as motivated by biblical literalism, not scientific
evidence. While this criticism of traditional creationists is unfair to the
actual content of their views many
prominent creationists are outstanding scientists the absence of a wider community of dissent from Darwinism
hindered the growth of scientific alternatives to the naturalistic theory. Such
a wider community now exists in the intelligent design (ID)
movement. Within the past decade, the
ID community has matured around the insights of UC Berkeley professor Phillip
Johnson, whose central insight is that science must be free to seek the truth,
wherever it lies. The possibility of design, therefore, cannot be excluded from
science. This outlook has deep roots in the history of Western science and is
essential to the health of science as a truth-seeking enterprise. Under the
canopy of design as an empirical possibility, however, any number of particular
theories may also be possible, including traditional creationism, progressive
(or old-earth ) creationism, and
theistic evolution. Both scientific and scriptural evidence will have to decide
the competition between these theories. The big tent of ID provides a
setting in which that struggle after truth can occur, and from which the
secular culture may be influenced." (Paul Nelson, "Life in the Big Tent", Christian Research
Journal, 2002, available at: http://www.equip.org/free/DL303.htm)
At this conference,
biochemist Michael Behe first presented his ideas about "irreducible
complexity", the idea that certain structures within a cell could not have
evolved piece-by-piece because if any one piece were missing, the entire
structure would be nonfunctional and thus could not be preserved by natural
selection. This, of course, was just a
rehash of the old "what good is half an eye" argument used by
creation "scientists", but in 1996, Behe released his book, Darwin's
Black Box, laying out his arguments. It was this book which first brought ID to public attention; it was
followed two years later by William Dembski's Mere Creation and The
Design Inference. With the
publication of these books, the anti-evolution movement was transformed; no
longer did they talk about old ICR staples like thermodynamics or transitional
fossils or radiodating -- now they talked about irreducible complexity and
complex specified information. ID did
not, of course, actually present anything new -- it simply introduced new
verbiage for the same "scientific arguments against evolution" that
the creation "scientists" had already made decades ago.
ID's innovation was to refer to an
unspecified "designer" instead of a "creator", and to drop
any discussion of the age of the earth, the descent of humans, or "flood
geology" -- all of which would have tied ID directly to creation
"science", which the courts had already rejected.
Shortly after this
conference, the ID movement reached organizational maturity.
In 1995, Johnson released another book, Reason
in the Balance; The Case Against Naturalism in Science, Law and Education,
which argued against atheistic "methodological materialism" (which he
defines as "The Creator belongs to the realm of religion, not scientific
investigation" (Johnson, 1995, p. 208) ) in favor of "theistic
realism", which Johnson defined as:
"A
theistic realist assumes that the universe and all its creatures were brought
into existence for a purpose by God. Theistic realists expect this
"fact" of creation to have empirical, observable consequences that
are different from the consequences one would observe if the universe were the
product of nonrational causes . . . . Many important questions -- including the
origin of genetic information and human consciousness -- may not be explicable
in terms of unintelligent causes." (Johnson, 1995, p. 208-209)
That same summer,
Johnson and the IDers organized a conference titled "The Death of
Materialism and the Renewal of Culture". A year later, in 1996, the conservative Seattle think tank Discovery
Institute, using a grant provided by extremist fundamentalist Howard Ahmanson,
founded a division specifically to carry on the political work of expanding
"intelligent design theory" into education. The Discovery Institute had been founded in 1990, by conservative
Republican political figures Bruce Chapman (a former official in the Reagan
Administration) and George Gilder. The
Institute embraced a number of conservative political causes, including
free-market economics, opposition to assisted suicide and euthenasia, opposition to the animal-rights movement,
and opposition to human stem cell research and human cloning. The Discovery Insitute's Cascadia Project
involves improving regional public transportation, and is partially funded by a
grant from Microsoft founder Bill Gates.
The Discovery
Institute's new Intelligent Design division grew directly out of Philip
Johnson's "Death of Materialism and the Renewal of Culture"
conference, and was itself originally named the Center for the Renewal of
Science and Culture. Shortly
afterwards, the name was changed to the Center for Science and Culture because
the old name produced too much religious connotation. At about the same time, the Center's logo, showing
Michealangelo's God reaching out to touch a strand of DNA, was dropped and
replaced by some photos from the Hubble Space Telescope -- apparently the old
logo was too explicit about the Center's religious aims. All along, the ID movement has made every
possible effort to downplay its religious motives.
All of the founding
figures in the design movement -- Johnson, Dembski, Meyer, Behe, Nelson, Wells
-- are Fellows or Senior Fellows at Discovery Institute, and the Center for
Science and Culture remains the largest, most prominent and most prolific advocate
of Intelligent Design "theory". Indeed, the Discovery Institute has become so thoroughly linked with
Intelligent Design in the public mind that its other projects have been led to
publicly distance themselves from the ID movement. Bill Gates, for example, who helps fund the Institute's Arcadia
transportation project, has publicly stated that he does not agree with
Intelligent Design theory and does not provide any funding for the Center for
Science and Culture.
The
"intelligent design" movement, like the earlier creation
"scientists", claims to be a solely scientific group with no
religious motives or goals, and which simply argues that the "scientific
evidence" supports the view that "an unknown intelligent
designer" manipulated the development of life. Unlike the creation
"science" movement, though, which published book after book detailing
their conclusions about evolution (or the lack of it) and a young earth, the
intelligent design movement is very careful to avoid any and all discussion
about such topics as the age of the earth, or whether humans are descended from
primates. This is a deliberate strategy on their part to avoid the internal
doctrinal schisms which have always destroyed creationist organizations -- it
is also a deliberate effort to distance themselves from the earlier creation
"scientists" who the Supreme Court had rejected. IDers are also very
careful to make no statement or implication about who or what this
"intelligent designer" is, or what exactly it is supposed to have
done. In particular, they deny strenuously that ID is just creationism renamed,
or that the "intelligent designer" is really just God, instead
asserting that it could just as easily be space aliens who "intelligently
designed" life:
"Creationism
is focused on defending a literal reading of the Genesis account, usually
including the creation of the earth by the Biblical God a few thousand years
ago. Unlike creationism, the scientific theory of intelligent design is
agnostic regarding the source of design and has no commitment to defending
Genesis, the Bible or any other sacred text." (Discovery Institute
website)
"Intelligent
design theory may hold implications for fields outside of science such as
theology, ethics, and philosophy. But such implications are distinct from
intelligent design as a scientific research program." (Discovery Institute
website)
"Although
intelligent design fits comfortably with a belief in God, it doesn't require
it, because the scientific theory doesn't tell you who the designer is,"
Behe said. "While most people -- including me -- will think the designer is
God, some people might think that the designer was a space alien...".
Michael Behe (quoted in Pittsburg Post-Gazette")
"It
could be space aliens. There are many possibilities." (William Dembski,
quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle)
"For
this purpose, it does not matter whether the intelligence is thought to belong
to God, or to some alien race of intelligent beings, or to some entity we
cannot yet imagine." (Phillip Johnson, posting in the ARN discussion
forum)
In their candid
moments, though, in front of their core supporters -- fundamentalist Christian
anti-evolutionists -- the prominent IDers are open about their real aims:
"We
are building on this momentum, broadening the wedge with a positive scientific
alternative to materialistic scientific theories, which has come to be called
the theory of intelligent design (ID). Design theory promises to reverse the
stifling dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it with a
science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions." -- Discovery
Institute's "Wedge Document"
"1.
To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and
political legacies. 2. To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic
understanding that nature and human beings are created by God." --
Discovery Institute's "Wedge Document"
"What
I always say is that it's not just scientific theory. The question is best
understood as: Is God real or imaginary?" Phillip Johnson quoted, The
Search for Intelligent Design in the Universe, Silicon Valley Magazine, January
9, 2000.
"Our
strategy has been to change the subject a bit so that we can get the issue of
intelligent design, which really means the reality of God, before the academic
world and into the schools." (Phillip Johnson, American Family Radio, Jan
10, 2003 broadcast)
"Intelligent
design is the Logos of John's Gospel restated in the idiom of information
theory." (William Dembski, Jul/Aug 1999, Touchstone, p. 84)
"Intelligent
design theory" is simply a watered-down version of creationism which
attempts to avoid falling afoul of Constitutional conflicts by removing mention
of nearly all of the previously accepted tenets of creationism. It is, as one
reviewer memorably referred to it, "creationism in a cheap
tuxedo". Rather than a
"creator", ID "theory" speaks of an un-named
"intelligent designer", which they now make no effort to identify. In
order to avoid associations with Genesis or with other religious beliefs,
"intelligent design theory" makes no statements about the age of the
earth, or any of the particular actions which the "intelligent
designer" may or may not have done. By limiting ID "theory" to
vague assertions and inferences, advocates hoped to avoid identifying their
"scientific theory" with religion, and thus to avoid the
Constitutional issues that had doomed all of the previous anti-evolution
efforts.
The Center for
Science and Culture's real aims,
however, can be revealed by looking at its funding sources. Nearly all of the
Discovery Institute's money for the Intelligent Design project comes in the
form of grants from wealthy fundamentalists and from Christian political
groups. In 2003, the Discovery Institute received some $4.1 million in
donations and grants. At least twenty-two different foundations give money to
the Intelligent Design project; two-thirds of these are religious institutions
with explicitly Christian aims and goals. In its first year of operations,
Center for Science and Culture got around $450,000 from the Maclellan
Foundation, a fundamentalist lobbying group in Tennessee. The executive
director of the Maclellan Foundation was explicit about the purpose of its
donation; "We give for religious purposes. This is not about science, and
Darwin wasn't about science. Darwin was about a metaphysical view of the
world." (NY Times, Aug 21, 2005) The ID movement has also received
donations from the Henry P. and Susan C. Crowell Trust of Colorado Springs. The
trust's website states, "Our Mission: The teaching and active extension of
the doctrines of Evangelical Christianity through approved grants to qualified
organizations." Another donor is the AMDG Foundation in Virginia, run by
Mark Ryland, a former Microsoft exec and Discovery vice president. According to
the New York Times, "the initials stand for Ad Majorem Dei Glorium, Latin
for 'To the greater glory of God,' which Pope John Paul II etched in the corner
of all his papers." (NY Times, Aug 21, 2005) The Stewardship Foundation
gave the group more than $1 million between 1999 and 2003. According to their
website, "The Stewardship Foundation provides resources to Christ-centered
organizations whose mission is to share their faith in Jesus Christ with people
throughout the world."
The single biggest
source of money for the Discovery Institute's anti-evolution fight, though, is
Howard Ahmanson, a California savings-and-loan bigwig and a longtime supporter
of Christian Reconstruction fundamentalist extremism. Ahmanson's gift of $1.5
million was the original seed money to organize the Center for Science and
Culture, the arm of the Discovery Institute which focuses on promoting
"intelligent design theory". By his own reckoning, Ahmanson gives
more of his money to the IDers than to any other politically active group --
only a museum trust in his wife's hometown in Iowa and a Bible college in New
Jersey get more. In 2004, he reportedly gave the Center another $2.8 million.
Ahmanson has, by himself, provided about one-third of the total donations to
the ID movement during its existence, and funds about one-fourth of the
Center's annual operating expenses. He sits on the Board of Directors of
Discovery Institute.
After the Discovery
Institute's Center for Science and Culture was established, one of its first
tasks was to organize the fledgling ID movement and make it ready for political
and legal action. At the 1996
"Mere Creation" conference at Biola University in California, over
160 ID supporters met to plan strategy. Participant John Angus Campbell reported:
The
theme of the talks on Friday morning was "Foundations for a Theory of
Design" and in the afternoon "Biological Evidence for Design." .
. . Dembski gave what I thought was one of his most cogent accounts of how and
where "intelligent design" fits into science as an explanation. His
talk was titled "Redesigning Science"--and that clearly is what he
had in mind. He offered us the Explanatory Filter, explaining how the three
levels (law, chance, design) functioned in scientific explanation. Meyer was
just as cogent and came through with an exceptionally lively and detailed talk
on "DNA and the Origin of Information." . . . . Of this trinity presaging the designed philosophic wrath
to come, Nelson spoke last, on "Applying Design Within Biology." He
stressed that worries about making erroneous design inferences (as, for
instance, Kepler did concerning intelligent life on the moon) should not
exclude design from science generally. In the afternoon Michael Behe (Lehigh)
weighed in with the most entertaining and one of the most effective talks of
the conference. . . . What I thought
was particularly helpful and new in Mike's talk was his theme, which as his
title indicated was "Intelligent Design As a Tool for Analyzing
Biochemical Systems." I came away from Mike's talk in particular impressed
with the point that "intelligent design" offers real research
program. (Campbell, "Report on the
Mere Creation Conference", Origins and Design, 1997)
William Dembski's
first book, Mere Creation, was an edited compilation of presentations
from this conference. Other books by
IDers followed; William Dembski's Intelligent
Design: The Bridge Between Science and Theology, and No Free Lunch;
Jonathan Wells' Icons of Evolution; Privileged Planet, by
Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay Richards; and Darwinism, Design, and Public
Education, by John Angus Campbell
and Stephen Meyer.
The most important
document in understanding the Intelligent Design movement, however, was one
that was not intended for publication at all.
SEVEN:
Intelligent Design Arguments
In 1999, an
internal Discovery Institute document was leaked to the Internet by two people
in Seattle. In January 1999, Matt Duss,
a part-time employee in a copy center, was handed a document from the Center
for the Renewal of Science and Culture, stamped TOP SECRET and NOT FOR
DISTRIBUTION, to copy. Having an
interest in evolution and science, Duss glanced through the document and was
amazed at what he saw -- he promptly made himself an extra copy and passed it
on to friend Tim Rhodes, who scanned the entire document and put it up on the
World Wide Web on February 5, 1999 . The document appears to have been written
in 1998, and it outlines the Discovery Institute's longterm plan to, as it
states, replace science with a "broadly theistic understanding of
nature" (Discovery institute, The Wedge Document, 1999), and its
tactic of using the fight against evolution as a "wedge" to do this.
The authenticity of the "Wedge Document", as it quickly became known,
was later admitted by the Discovery Institute.
The Wedge Document
is crucial in understanding exactly what the goals of the ID movement are, and
how they planned to meet them. The
document is reproduced, in its entirety, as an appendix at the end of this
book.
It is a remarkable
document. It lays out, in clear detail,
a deliberate calculated five-year plan to, in effect, undo the Enlightenment
and replace the entire idea of a secular society with the ID movement's own
vision of religious supremacy. Not just
biology or science, but all of civil society, including law, politics
and even art, would bow before fundamentalist religious views.
The Wedge outlines
its plan for "cultural renewal" in three phases, containing a number
of different tracks and approaches. All
of them have been instituted.
Phase
I: Research, Writing and Publication
Phase
I is the essential component of everything that comes afterward. Without solid
scholarship, research and argument, the project would be just another attempt
to indoctrinate instead of persuade. A lesson we have learned from the history
of science is that it is unnecessary to outnumber the opposing establishment.
Scientific revolutions are usually staged by an initially small and relatively
young group of scientists who are not blinded by the prevailing prejudices and
who are able to do creative work at the pressure points, that is, on those
critical issues upon which whole systems of thought hinge. So, in Phase I we
are supporting vital witting and research at the sites most likely to crack the
materialist edifice.
Phase
II: Publicity and Opinion-making
Phase
II. The primary purpose of Phase II is to prepare the popular reception of our
ideas. The best and truest research can languish unread and unused unless it is
properly publicized. For this reason we seek to cultivate and convince
influential individuals in pnnt and broadcast media, as well as think tank
leaders, scientists and academics, congressional staff, talk show hosts,
college and seminary presidents and faculty, future talent and potential
academic allies. Because of his long tenure in politics, journalism and public
policy, Discovery President Bruce Chapman brings to the project rare knowledge
and acquaintance of key op-ed writers, journalists, and political leaders. This
combination of scientific and scholarly expertise and media and political
connections makes the Wedge unique, and also prevents it from being
"merely academic." Other activities include production of a PBS
documentary on intelligent design and its implications, and popular op-ed
publishing. Alongside a focus on influential opinion-makers, we also seek to
build up a popular base of support among our natural constituency, namely,
Chnstians. We will do this primarily through apologetics seminars. We intend
these to encourage and equip believers with new scientific evidence's that
support the faith, as well as to "popularize" our ideas in the broader
culture.
Phase
III: Cultural Confrontation and Renewal
Phase
III. Once our research and writing have had time to mature, and the public
prepared for the reception of design theory, we will move toward direct
confrontation with the advocates of materialist science through challenge
conferences in significant academic settings. We will also pursue possible
legal assistance in response to resistance to the integration of design theory
into public school science curricula. The attention, publicity, and influence
of design theory should draw scientific materialists into open debate with
design theorists, and we will be ready. With an added emphasis to the social
sciences and humanities, we will begin to address the specific social
consequences of materialism and the Darwinist theory that supports it in the
sciences.
The very first
sentence of the Wedge Document makes plain the underlying religious aim of the
Discovery Institute's anti-evolution campaign: "The proposition that human
beings are created in the image of God is one of the bedrock principles on
which Western Civilization was built." (Wedge Document) The Discovery
Institute, like other fundamentalist Christians, refers to the rejection of
this religious idea as "the philosophy of materialism" or "naturalism"
or sometimes "darwinism" (all are phrases which have long been the
fundamentalist code words for "atheism"), and explicitly states that
this materialistic atheism is the direct result of science: "This cardinal
idea came under wholesale attack by intellectuals drawing on the discoveries of
modern science. Debunking the traditional conceptions of both God and man,
thinkers such as Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, and Sigmund Freud portrayed humans
not as moral and spiritual beings, but as animals or machines who inhabited a
universe ruled by purely impersonal forces and whose behavior and very thoughts
were dictated by the unbending forces of biology, chemistry, and environment.
This materialistic conception of reality eventually infected virtually every
area of our culture, from politics and economics to literature and art."
(Wedge Document) Thus, the Discovery Institute's basic complaint can be summed
up as "science is atheistic". Under the heading "Governing
Goals", the Discovery Institute lists, "To replace materialistic
explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are
created by God." (Wedge Document, 1999)
The goal of
Discovery Institute's "intelligent design theory", then, is to
replace "materialism" with . . . . well . . . they are very careful
in court and in legislation to not name their replacement. In public,
the IDers are studiously circumspect about their views, attempting to maintain
the fiction that ID is all about science and doesn't have any religious aims, purpose
or goals. However, since
"materialism" and "naturalism" have long been the
fundamentalist code words for "atheism", and since nothing but a god
or deity is capable of using any non-"materialistic" or super-"naturalistic"
mechanism or process, it's not hard to see that what Discovery Institute wants
is to introduce theism into science and to force science to bow before its
religious opinions. Of course, the IDers must be coy about their aims,
since the Supreme Court has already concluded repeatedly that religious
opinions cannot be legally taught in public schools. Nevertheless, in the Wedge Document (which of course was not
intended for public release) the IDers can afford to be open about their
ultimate aims: "Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science
and Culture seeks nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its
cultural legacies. Bringing together leading scholars from the natural sciences
and those from the humanities and social sciences, the Center explores how new
developments in biology, physics and cognitive science raise serious doubts
about scientific materialism and have re-opened the case for a broadly theistic
understanding of nature."
The Discovery
Institute, after a long silence, has attempted to deflect concerns about the
Wedge Document in a web article ("The Wedge Document; So what?",
Discovery Institute website, March 1, 2004). Their "response" is
fraught with deception and evasion.
The Institute first
tries to downplay the significance of the document, by dismissing it as a mere
"early fundraising proposal". Even a cursory reading of the document,
however, demonstrates this claim to be nonsense. Nowhere in the entire document
is there any appeal for funds, nor any mention of fundraising. What is mentioned,
however, are things such as "The Wedge Strategy", "Five Year
Strategic Plan Summary", "Governing Goals", "Five Year
Goals", "Twenty Year Goals", and "The Wedge Strategy
Progress Summary".
The document also
lists a number of steps to be taken to advance the ID agenda -- every one of
which Discovery Institute subsequently carried out (or attempted to). The DI's
claim that the Wedge Document is just a "fundraising proposal" and
not actually a planning document outlining the goals of the Institute and the
steps it plans to take in order to reach those goals, is not only dishonest and
plainly untrue, it is also completely irrelevant. It makes no difference
whether the Wedge Document is a strategy guide, a fundraising proposal, or a
memo for the Institute's janitor. What does matter (and what the Discovery
Institute's "response" fails utterly to acknowledge or defend) is
that the Wedge Document clearly, unequivocably and unmistakably declares, in
print, that the "governing goal" of the Institute is to advance their
religious beliefs, that "intelligent design theory" is the primary
method they have chosen to pursue that goal, and that they have an articulated
pre-planned 20-year strategy to use ID "theory" as a method of using
public schools to advance their religious goals. All of this is, of course,
completely illegal under US law. Despite all the DI's statements to the
contrary, the Wedge Document demonstrates that the sole aim of the Institute is
to use "intelligent design theory" in classrooms as a means of advancing
a religious renewal -- exactly what the US Constitution says they cannot do.
And when they claim that ID "theory" has no religious aims or
purpose, the Wedge Document demonstrates that IDers are simply lying.
Phillip Johnson,
who talks openly about the explicit theistic goals of "intelligent design
theory", specifically contrasts "scientific materialism" with
"divine intervention";
"Science
also has become identified with a philosophy known as materialism or scientific
naturalism. This philosophy insists that nature is all there is, or at least
the only thing about which we can have any knowledge. It follows that nature
had to do its own creating, and that the means of creation must not have
included any role for God. . . . The reason the theory of evolution is so
controversial is that it is the main scientific prop for scientific naturalism.
Students first learn that "evolution is a fact," and then they
gradually learn more and more about what that "fact" means. It means
that all living things are the product of mindless material forces such as
chemical laws, natural selection, and random variation. So God is totally out
of the picture, and humans (like everything else) are the accidental product of
a purposeless universe." (Johnson, "The Church of Darwin", Wall
Street Journal, August 16, 1999).
"For
now we need to stick to the main point: In the beginning was the Word, and the
'fear of God'-- recognition of our dependence upon God-is still the beginning of
wisdom. If materialist science can prove otherwise then so be it, but
everything we are learning about the evidence suggests that we don't need to
worry. (Johnson, "How to Sink a Battleship; A Call to Separate Materialist
Philosophy from Empriical Science", address to the 1996 "Mere
Creation Conference")
Johnson explicitly
calls for "a better scientific theory, one genuinely based on unbiased
empirical evidence and not on materialist philosophy" (Johnson, "How
to Sink a Battleship). Johnson doesn't tell us what this non-materialistic
philosophy might be that he wants to base science on, but it is clear from the
rest of his statements that he, like every other IDer, wants to base science on
his religious beliefs.
DI associate
Michael Behe also makes the connection between fighting "scientific
materialism" and "theistic understanding of nature" explicitly
clear.
"Darwinism
is the most plausible unintelligent mechanism, yet it has tremendous
difficulties and the evidence garnered so far points to its inability to do
what its advocates claim for it. If unintelligent mechanisms can't do the job,
then that shifts the focus to intelligent agency. That's as far as the argument
against Darwinism takes us, but most people already have other reasons for
believing in a personal God who just might act in history, and they will find
the argument for intelligent design fits with what they already hold. With the
argument arranged this way, evidence against Darwinism does count as evidence
for an active God, just as valid negative advertising against the Democratic
candidate will help the Republican, even though Vegetarian and One-World
candidates are on the ballot, too. Life is either the result of exclusively
unintelligent causes or it is not, and the evidence against the unintelligent
production of life is clearly evidence for intelligent design." (Behe,
"The God of Science", Weekly Standard, June 7, 1999, p. 35)
"Naturalism
is a philosophy which says that material things are all that there is. But
philosophy is not science, and therefore excluding ideas which point to a
creator, which point to God, is not allowed simply because in public schools in
the United States one is not allowed to discriminate either for or against
ideas which have religious implications." (Behe, Speech at Calvary Chapel,
March 6, 2002)
Another DI
associate, William Dembski, makes the connection between ID and Christian
apologetics even more explicit:
"Not
only does intelligent design rid us of this ideology, which suffocates the
human spirit, but, in my personal experience, I've found that it opens the path
for people to come to Christ. Indeed, once materialism is no longer an option,
Christianity again becomes an option. True, there are then also other options.
But Christianity is more than able to hold its own once it is seen as a live
option. The problem with materialism is that it rules out Christianity so
completely that it is not even a live option. Thus, in its relation to
Christianity, intelligent design should be viewed as a ground-clearing
operation that gets rid of the intellectual rubbish that for generations has
kept Christianity from receiving serious consideration." (Dembski,
"Intelligent Design's Contribution to the Debate Over Evolution", Designinference.com website, February 2005).
Indeed,
Dembski titled one of his books Intelligent Design; the Bridge Between
Science and Theology (Dembski, 1999). In that book, Dembski makes the
religious basis of ID "theory" explicit: "The conceptual
soundings of the theory can in the end only be located in Christ." (Dembski,
1999, p. 210).
As the Wedge
Document puts it:
"We
are convinced that in order to defeat materialism, we must cut it off at its
source. That source is scientific materialism. This is precisely our strategy.
If we view the predominant materialistic science as a giant tree, our strategy
is intended to function as a "wedge" that, while relatively small,
can split the trunk when applied at its weakest points. The very beginning of
this strategy, the "thin edge of the wedge," was Phillip Johnson's
critique of Darwinism begun in 1991 in Darwinism on Trial, and continued
in Reason in the Balance and Defeatng Darwinism by Opening Minds.
Michael Behe's highly successful Darwin's Black Box followed Johnson's
work. We are building on this momentum, broadening the wedge with a positive
scientific alternative to materialistic scientific theories, which has come to
be called the theory of intelligent design (ID). Design theory promises to
reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it
with a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions." (Wedge
Document, 1999)
The Wedge Document
also explicitly and clearly linked "intelligent design theory" with
creationism, by acknowledging that one of its "governing goals" was
"Major Christian denomination(s) defend(s) traditional doctrine of
creation." (Wedge Document,
1999, emphasis added)
The IDers
recognized, however, that their aims were in direct conflict with US law and
previous Supreme Court decisions, and explicitly laid out tactics that would,
they hoped, allow them to get around those obstacles:
"Our
strategy has been to change the subject a bit so that we can get the issue of
intelligent design, which really means the reality of God, before the academic
world and into the schools." (Phillip Johnson, American Family Radio, Jan
10, 2003 broadcast)
"So
the question is: "How to win?" That's when I began to develop what
you now see full-fledged in the "wedge" strategy: "Stick with
the most important thing"—the mechanism and the building up of
information. Get the Bible and the Book of Genesis out of the debate because
you do not want to raise the so-called Bible-science dichotomy. Phrase the
argument in such a way that you can get it heard in the secular academy and in
a way that tends to unify the religious dissenters. That means concentrating
on, "Do you need a Creator to do the creating, or can nature do it on its
own?" and refusing to get sidetracked onto other issues, which people are
always trying to do." (Phillip E.
Johnson, Touchstone Magazine interview, June 2002.)
"The
first thing that has to be done is to get the Bible out of the discussion.
...This is not to say that the biblical issues are unimportant; the point is
rather that the time to address them will be after we have separated
materialist prejudice from scientific fact." (Phillip Johnson, "The Wedge", Touchstone: A Journal of
Mere Christianity, July/August 1999.)
"(T)he
Wedge strategy stops working when we are seen as just another way of packaging
the Christian evangelical message." (Phillip Johnson. "Keeping the Darwinists Honest", an
interview with Phillip Johnson, Citizen Magazine, April 1999.)
In these public
statements by DI associates and its own internal documents, we see the legal
and political strategy of "Intelligent Design theory" in a nutshell
-- ID wants to eliminate "materialism" and "atheism" in
favor of "theistic understanding", but since it's illegal in the US
to advance religion in public schools, ID advocates have no choice but to
downplay and avoid mentioning their clearly stated goal of doing exactly what
the law says they cannot do -- using the public schools to advance their
religious beliefs. In other words, they must be dishonest and evasive, and
practice a deception, by design.
It is important to
understand that intelligent design "theory" is, if you will pardon
the pun, intelligently designed, specifically to evade and get around all of
the Federal court cases which make it illegal to use the schools to advance
religion. However, the fundamentalist
IDers seem to be their own worst enemies, and their own incessant compulsion to
attack "materialism", "atheism", "darwinism" and
"naturalism", gives the lie to their claims to be non-religious. The
entire approach of ID is fatally flawed, right from the start, by an insoluble
contradiction. In order for the ID
strategy to be successful, it absolutely requires that all of its supporters
keep quiet, indefinitely, about the one thing they care most about in the whole
world -- their fundamentalist religious opinions. As the history of ID shows, they can't do it.
They don't want to do it. What IDers
want to do is preach, and it is simply an impossible task to preach while at
the same time claiming that one is not preaching. Intelligent Design "theory" is, as the Discovery
Institute admitted from the beginning in its own internal document, simply a
legal and political strategy to "wedge" their religious opinions into
public schools and from there to larger society. Nothing more, nothing
less, nothing else. It has the sole and only aim of advancing religion by
attacking science's presumed "atheism" and "materialism".
ID "theory" is nothing but an advancement of religious beliefs, and
IDers are denying their own statements when they claim otherwise.
Since ID is, at
root, merely an attempt to continue the creationist program of teaching
religious opinions in public schools, it is no surprise that all of the
"scientific arguments" made by the IDers are simply rehashed versions
of decades-old creation "science" boilerplate (although the IDers
must strenuously deny this for legal reasons, since creation
"science" has already been ruled illegal to teach).
All of the ID arguments are subordinated to
the overall political goal laid out in the Wedge Document.
What
is the Scientific Theory of Intelligent Design?
Like the
creationists before them, the IDers are faced with the seemingly unsolvable
problem of arguing an explanation for the material world that is patently
religious in nature, but at the same time attempting to argue to everyone that
it is really "science" and not religion. The creationists unsuccessfully tried to get around this by
arguing that the concept of a "creator" wasn't necessarily religious
but could be treated scientifically. The IDers apparently learned a lesson from that creationist failure --
so the IDers instead refuse to present or discuss their "alternative
theory" at all. They categorically
refuse to say anything at all about the topic of what their
"designer" is, what it does, or what methods it uses to do whatever
it does.
During the Kansas
school board hearings in 2005, several IDers were asked about the
"alternative explanation" offered by ID "theory", and
flatly refused to present any:
Q.
So the answer, which ID attempts to provide, is a supernatural one, is it not?
A.
I won't go there. (Wells testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Q.
What's your alternative explanation how the human species came into existence
if it is not through common descent?
A.
Design.
Q.
And design would imply a designer?
A.
Implies a designer, but we don't go there. . . .
Q.
Isn't design a philosophical assumption?
A.
No.
Q.
How do we falsify the designer?
A.
We don't go there. We're not going to talk about the designer. . . . (Ely
testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Q.
You think it's wise for science without a supernatural model to attempt to answer
those questions that we still don't understand?
A.
You know, I don't really work in that area, so I'm not going to venture any
more opinions about the topic.(Meyer testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Let's be blunt. As
a careful reading of the transcript reveals, there is no scientific theory
of ID. When pressed, the most that IDers can do is recite a long list of
criticisms of evolution -- all of which are untrue, none of which is accepted
by the scientific body at large, and most of which are simply restatements of
the same tired old "criticisms" that creation "scientists"
have been making for almost 40 years now. By declaring that "evidence
against evolution, equals evidence for design", the IDers are just
continuing the very same "two models" idea that the creation
"scientists" tried to argue. Unfortunately for them, the "two
models" argument was decisively and explicitly rejected by the 1981 Maclean
v Arkansas case, and also in the 1987 Edwards v Aguillard Supreme Court
ruling.
Furthermore, and
significantly in the legal sense, in the 1982 Maclean v Arkansas case,
the federal court listed the characteristics of what constituted
"science". That list consisted of:
"More
precisely, the essential characteristics of science are:
- It is guided by natural law;
- It has to be explanatory by reference to natural law;
- It is testable against the empirical world;
- Its conclusions are tentative, i.e. are not necessarily the final word; and
- It is falsifiable. (Ruse and other science witnesses)"
(Overton Opinion, Maclean v Arkansas, 1981)
Let's see how
Intelligent Design "theory" measures up to those criteria:
- "It is
guided by natural law." Not only
is ID 'theory' not "guided
by natural law", but ID "theorists" explicitly, clearly and
plainly reject the idea that science should be based on "natural
law". Indeed, their most strident complaint is that science in general and
evolution in particular are "philosophical materialism" (their code
word for "atheism") and that this, they say, unfairly rules out the
IDers' non-materialist or non-natural "explanations". Not only is ID
"theory" not based on natural law, it explicitly rejects natural
law in favor of supernatural methods, i.e., in favor of religious doctrine.
- "It has to
be explanatory by reference to natural law". Once again, not only does ID not
explain anything by reference to natural law, it tries to argue that it doesn't
have to. What the IDers are complaining about in the first place is that
science, they say, unfairly rejects anything but reference to natural
law -- i.e., that science rejects religious explanations.
- "It is
testable against the empirical world". ID 'theory' makes no testable
statements. It can't tell us what the designer did. It can't tell us what
mechanisms the designer used to do whatever it did. It can't tell us where we
can see these mechanisms in action. And it can't tell us how to go about
testing any of this. Of course, they can't make any statements about
this topic, since any honest answer would clearly reveal that ID is religious
doctrine -- the "designer" is God, and uses supernatural methods to
create.
- "Its
conclusions are tentative, i.e. are not necessarily the final word". Well,
we don't know whether ID passes this test, since ID "theory" refuses
to make any conclusions. As noted before, ID can't even give a coherent
hypothesis, or even tell us how to form one.
- "It is
falsifiable". The core argument of ID 'theory', that "An Unknown
Intelligent Designer" created life, is inherently unfalsifiable. After
all, if we know nothing about the Designer, nothing about its nature, and
nothing about what it can or can't do (as the IDers claim), then there is
simply no way we can falsify any statement made about it. The entire
"argument" of ID boils down to "we think an unknown thing did an
unknown thing at an unknown time using unknown methods". How can anyone
falsify that?
ID simply does not
meet any of the criteria listed by the federal court in determining what
is "science". That, of course, is because ID is not science;
it is fundamentalist religious doctrine pretending, for legal reasons,
to be science.
But how accurate is
the ID whining that science unfairly rules out, a priori, supernatural
or non-material explanations? As with everything else in ID "theory",
this claim is based solely on deception and dishonesty.
The scientific
method is very simple, and consists of five basic steps. They are:
- Observe some aspect of the universe
- Form a hypothesis that potentially explains what you have observed
- Make testable predictions from that hypothesis
- Make observations or experiments that can test those predictions
- Modify your hypothesis until it is in accord with all observations and
predictions
Nothing in any of
those five steps excludes on principle, a priori, any "supernatural
cause". Indeed, scientific experiments have been proposed (and carried out
and published) on such "supernatural causes" as the effects of prayer
on healing, as well as such "non-materialistic" or
"non-natural" causes as ESP, telekinesis, precognition and
"remote viewing". So ID's claim that science unfairly rejects
supernatural or non-material causes out of hand on principle, is demonstrably
quite wrong. However, what science does require is that any supernatural
or non-material hypothesis, whatever it might be, then be subjected to steps 3,
4 and 5. And here is where ID fails miserably. Despite all their voluminous writings and arguments, IDers have
never yet given any testible predictions from their ID hypothesis that
can be verified through experiment. It
is not any presupposition of "philosophical naturalism" on the part
of science that stops ID dead in its tracks -- it is the simple inability (or
refusal) of ID "theory" to make any testable predictions.
Deep down inside,
what the IDers are really complaining about is not that science unfairly
rejects their supernaturalistic explanations, but that science demands ID's
proposed "supernaturalistic explanations" be tested according to the
scientific method, just like every other hypothesis has to be. Not only
can ID not test any of its "explanations", but it wants to modify and
re-define science so it doesn't have to. In effect, the IDers want their
supernaturalistic "hypothesis" to have a privileged position -- they
want their hypothesis to be accepted by science without being tested.
And that is what their entire argument over "materialism" (or
"naturalism" or "atheism" or "sciencism" or
"darwinism" or whatever else they want to call it) boils down to.
There is no
legitimate reason for the ID hypothesis to be privileged and have the special
right to be exempted from testing, that other scientific hypotheses do
not. If IDers cannot put their
"hypothesis" through the same scientific method that everyone else
has to, then they have no claim to be "science".
Irreducible
Complexity
The most
widely-known proponent of this view has been Michael Behe, a Roman Catholic
biochemist at Lehigh University who, unlike most creationists, accepts that
life evolved over billions of years and also accepts that humans are evolved
from apelike primates, but who thinks that God (or "an Unknown Intelligent
Designer") intervenes at certain points to manipulate the evolutionary
process. In his book Darwin's Black Box, Behe uses a concept he calls
"irreducible complexity" to illustrate this intervention.
"Irreducible complexity" means, according to Behe, that there are
systems in the natural world that are made up of a number of interdependent
parts, and these systems are so interdependent that they cannot function
without the simultaneous presence of all the components. They are
"irreducibly complex", and can exist only as a total collection or
not at all. As he puts it: "By irreducibly complex I mean a single system
composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the
basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system
to effectively cease functioning. An irreducibly complex system cannot be
produced directly (that is, by continuously improving the initial function,
which continues to work by the same mechanism) by slight, successive
modifications of a precursor system, because any precursor to an irreducibly
complex system that is missing a part is by definition nonfunctional."
(Behe, p. 39)
Behe cites the
example of a mousetrap, which, he says, must be complete with all its parts or
it will not work. A mousetrap cannot appear once piece at a time -- it can only
appear if all its required components are assembled, at the same time, by a
guiding intelligence. Since the odds
that all of these necessary components would have evolved all at once, intact
and functional, at the same time are too improbable, and since it is impossible
for them to have arisen step by step, Behe concludes, they must have been
deliberately placed together by an "intelligent designer". Behe cites
a number of biological processes, including the bacterial flagellum, the human
immune system and the human blood clotting system, which, he says, are
"irreducibly complex" and must be the product of an "intelligent
designer".
Behe's entire
argument is best viewed as a version of the "argument from
ignorance". In essence, his entire argument boils down to "I can't see
how this process could have evolved step-by-step, therefore it could not
have." The fact that Behe (or
anyone else) cannot determine how a process evolved step-by-step does not
constitute evidence that it did not, however. In fact, in several of the cases
that Behe cites as "irreducibly complex", new discoveries in
biochemistry have indeed led to descriptions of precisely the sort of
step-by-step development that Behe claimed was impossible.
In his work, Behe
discounts a very important concept of biological evolution, the idea of
"exaptation". This occurs when a biological trait is modified for use
in a completely different system, and takes up a new function that it did not
have before. Exaptations explain many of the "complex systems" we see
in living things.
We can illustrate
this with Behe's own example. Behe cites a mousetrap as an illustration of an
"irreducibly complex system", and argues that since each component of
the mousetrap -- the spring, the wooden base, the wire hammer -- is necessary
for the functioning of the mousetrap, no functional trap can have developed
step by step, without all of these things being present. Let us, then, show how
a mousetrap could indeed evolve step by step, using exaptation.
We begin with the
simplest possible "mousetrap" -- a simple piece of bait left out on
the floor. When the mouse approaches the bait, we hit it with a hammer. A
slight modification to our existing system. We place the bait in a small hole
or hollow in the wall. This has the advantage of momentarily confusing the
mouse when we surprise it at the bait, since it takes a moment for the mouse to
find the exit hole, giving us more time to hit it with the hammer.
Another slight modification -- we place a
small metal hinged door over the opening to the hole, which swings freely back
and forth. This confuses the mouse slightly more and it takes a little bit more
time to find the exit -- giving us a bit more time to hit it with the
hammer. >Next, we add a spring mechanism
that can be tripped by the mouse as it takes the bait, thus causing the door to
close behind it. The advantage is that we no longer have to be waiting there
when the mouse enters -- instead, the mouse is now confined and can be hit with
us by a hammer at any convenient later time. Another modification: we turn the whole apparatus 90 degrees so it rests
horizontally instead of vertically. In other words, our baited hole is now in
the floor instead of in the wall. This has the advantage of allowing the mouse
to approach our trap from any direction, instead of limiting access to just one
side of the wall. Another modification:
We eliminate the hole and simply place the spring door apparatus on the floor
in such a way that, when tripped, the trap door slams down forcefully on the
floor where the trigger is located, mashing the mouse for us when it trips the
trigger. The new advantage is that we no longer have to hit the mouse with the
hammer at all -- the new trap in effect does that for us.
A final modification. We cut out the part of
the floor that surrounds our trap and attach the trap mechanism directly to it.
This allows us to deploy our trap anywhere we like, instead of limiting it to
one locality.
And there we have
it -- step by step development of something that is supposed to be
"irreducibly complex". Each step is fully functional by itself, and
in each step, the intended result is achieved -- a dead mouse. Each successive
step builds upon the preceding one by small modifications, yet each step is
more efficient in some way than its predecessor. And each step uses
"exaptation" -- it co-opts whatever happens to be handy and
incorporates it into our growing system.
Evolution is full
of examples of such exaptation, in which previously unrelated structures are
incorporated into developing systems and given new functions. One example is
the development of feathers for insulation in small theropod dinosaurs --
feathers which were later incorporated into wings as flying mechanisms. There
is no evolutionary requirement for any of the parts to appear for the
particular "irreducibly complex" purpose -- each part can appear
independently for entirely separate reasons, with entirely different functions,
only to be cobbled together later by evolution for a completely different purpose,
just as the mammalian inner ear bones were cobbled together from jawbones that
originally had nothing to do with hearing.
Another biological
process, ignored by Behe, which can build "irreducibly complex"
systems, is "scaffolding". This concept can be best illustrated by using the example of a stone
arch, such as those built by the Romans and Greeks. It is, as any engineer knows, impossible to build a stone arch
one stone at a time, since if any of the stones is missing, the stones fall
apart and the arch collapses. The arch
can only maintain its shape if all of the stones are simultaneously present --
a situation exactly analogous to Behe's idea of "irreducible
complexity".
So how are stone
arches built? With scaffolds.
A scaffold is a structure, outside the
structure of the arch itself, which holds all the pieces in place until the
complete arch is formed, at which point the scaffolding is taken away and the
arch stands on its own. Biochemical
processes can follow a similar pathway.
Behe also asserted
in his book that, "There has never been a meeting, or a book, or a paper
on details of the evolution of complex biochemical systems." (Behe, 1996,
p. 179) As a matter of fact, there
have been dozens of scientific papers published concerning the evolutionary
history of the "irreducibly complex" systems that Behe cites -- most
of them published before Darwin's Black Box was written, and many of
which were presented to Behe on the witness stand during his Dover
testimony. As the judge described in
his decision, "Although in Darwin's Black Box, Professor Behe wrote
that not only were there no natural explanations for the immune system at the
time, but that natural explanations were impossible regarding its origin.
However, Dr. Miller presented peer-reviewed studies refuting Professor Behe's
claim that the immune system was irreducibly complex. Between 1996 and 2002,
various studies confirmed each element of the evolutionary hypothesis
explaining the origin of the immune system. In fact, on cross-examination, Professor Behe was questioned concerning
his 1996 claim that science would never find an evolutionary explanation for
the immune system. He was presented with fifty-eight peer-reviewed
publications, nine books, and several immunology textbook chapters about the
evolution of the immune system; however, he simply insisted that this was still
not sufficient evidence of evolution, and that it was not 'good enough'". (Jones Opinion, 2005)
In effect, Behe's
"irreducible complexity" is nothing but a restatement of the old ICR
"what good is half an eye?" argument, applied this time to cellular
structures rather than multicelled organisms. Indeed, Behe's very favorite example of "irreducible complexity",
the bacterial flagellum, first appeared in a creation "science"
publication, the Creation Research Society Quarterly, in June 1994, some
two years before Behe offered it as evidence of Intelligent Design in Darwin's
Black Box.
Complex
Specified Information and Dembski's Filter
Perhaps the most celebrated
of the Intelligent Design "theorists" is William Dembski, a
mathematician and theologian. A
prolific author, Dembski has written a number of books defending Intelligent
Design.
The best-known of
his arguments is the "Explanatory Filter", which is, he claims, a
mathematical method of detecting whether or not a particular thing is the
product of design. As Dembski himself
describes it:
"The
key step in formulating Intelligent Design as a scientific theory is to
delineate a method for detecting design. Such a method exists, and in fact, we
use it implicitly all the time. The method takes the form of a three-stage
Explanatory Filter. Given something we think might be designed, we refer it to
the filter. If it successfully passes all three stages of the filter, then we
are warranted asserting it is designed. Roughly speaking the filter asks three
questions and in the following order: (1) Does a law explain it? (2) Does
chance explain it? (3) Does design explain it? . . . . . . . . I argue that the
explanatory filter is a reliable criterion for detecting design. Alternatively,
I argue that the Explanatory Filter successfully avoids false positives. Thus
whenever the Explanatory Filter attributes design, it does so correctly." (http://www.arn.org/docs/dembski/wd_explfilter.htm)
The most detailed
presentation of the Explanatory Filter is in Dembski's book No Free Lunch:
Why Specified Complexity Cannot Be Purchased Without Intelligence.
In the course of 380 pages, heavily loaded
with complex-looking mathematics, Dembski spells out his "explanatory
filter", along with such concepts as "complex specified
information" and "the law of conservation of information".
ID enthusiasts lauded Dembski for his
"groundbreaking" work; one reviewer hailed Dembski as "The Isaac
Newton of Information Theory", another declared Dembski to be "God's
Mathematician".
Stripped of all its
mathematical gloss, though, Dembski's "filter" boils down to:
According to
Dembski, the first step of applying his "filter" is:
"At
the first stage, the filter determines whether a law can explain the thing in
question. Law thrives on replicability, yielding the same result whenever the
same antecedent conditions are fulfilled. Clearly, if something can be
explained by a law, it better not be attributed to design. Things explainable
by a law are therefore eliminated at the first stage of the Explanatory
Filter." (http://www.arn.org/docs/dembski/wd_explfilter.htm)
Right away, the
filter runs into problems. When Dembski
refers to laws that explain the thing in question, does he mean all current explanations
that refer to natural laws, or does he mean all possible explanations
using natural law? If he means all current
explanations, and if ruling out all current explanations therefore means
that Intelligent Design is a possibility, then Dembski is simply invoking the
centuries-old "god of the gaps" argument -- "if we can't
currently explain it, then the designer diddit".
On the other hand,
if Dembski's filter requires that we rule out all possible explanations
that refer to natural laws, then it is difficult to see how anyone could ever
get beyond the first step of the filter. How exactly does Dembski propose we be able to rule out, not only all current
scientific explanations, but all of the possible ones that might be
found in the future? How does
Dembski propose to rule out scientific explanations that no one has even
thought of yet -- ones that can't be made until more data and evidence is
discovered at some time in the future?
Science, of course,
is perfectly content to say "we don't know, we don't currently have an
explanation for this". Science then moves on to find possible ways to answer
the question and uncover an explanation for it. Dembski's filter, however, completely sidesteps the whole matter
of possible explanations that we don't yet know about, and simply asserts that
if we can't give an explanation now, then we must go on to the second step of
the filter:
"Suppose,
however, that something we think might be designed cannot be explained by any
law. We then proceed to the second stage of the filter. At this stage the
filter determines whether the thing in question might not reasonably be
expected to occur by chance. What we do is posit a probability distribution,
and then find that our observations can reasonably be expected on the basis of
that probability distribution. Accordingly, we are warranted attributing the
thing in question to chance. And clearly, if something can be explained by
reference to chance, it better not be attributed to design. Things explainable
by chance are therefore eliminated at the second stage of the Explanatory
Filter." (http://www.arn.org/docs/dembski/wd_explfilter.htm)
This is, of course,
nothing more than the standard creationist "X is too improbable to have
evolved" argument, and it falls victim to the same weaknesses. But,
Dembski concludes, if we rule out law and then rule out chance, then we must go
to the third step of the "filter":
"Suppose
finally that no law is able to account for the thing in question, and that any
plausible probability distribution that might account for it does not render it
very likely. Indeed, suppose that any plausible probability distribution that
might account for it renders it exceedingly unlikely. In this case we bypass
the first two stages of the Explanatory Filter and arrive at the third and
final stage. It needs to be stressed that this third and final stage does not
automatically yield design -- there is still some work to do. Vast
improbability only purchases design if, in addition, the thing we are trying to
explain is specified. The third stage
of the Explanatory Filter therefore presents us with a binary choice: attribute
the thing we are trying to explain to design if it is specified; otherwise,
attribute it to chance. In the first case, the thing we are trying to explain
not only has small probability, but is also specified. In the other, it has
small probability, but is unspecified. It is this category of specified things
having small probability that reliably signals design. Unspecified things
having small probability, on the other hand, are properly attributed to
chance." (http://www.arn.org/docs/dembski/wd_explfilter.htm)
But Dembski and the
rest of the IDers are completely unable (or unwilling) to give us any objective
way to measure "complex specified information", or how to
differentiate "specified" things from nonspecified.
He is also unable to tell us who specifies
it, when it is specified, where this specified information is stored before it
is embodied in a thing, or how the specified design information is turned into
an actual thing.
Dembski's inability
to give any sort of objective method of measuring Complex Specified Information
does not prevent him, however, from declaring a grand "Law of Conservation
of Information", which states that no natural or chance process can
increase the amount of Complex Specified Information in a system.
It can only be produced, Dembski says, by an
intelligence. Once again, this is just
a rehashed version of the decades-old creationist "genetic information
can't increase" argument.
With the
Explanatory Filter, Dembski and other IDers are using a tactic that some like
to call "The Texas Marksman". The Texas Marksman walks over to the side of the
barn, blasts away randomly, then draws bullseyes around each bullet hole and
declares how wonderful it is that he was able to hit every single bullseye. Of
course, if his shots had fallen in different places, he would then be
declaring how wonderful it is that he hit those marks, instead.
Dembski, it seems,
simply wants to assume his conclusion. His "filter", it seems, is nothing more
than "god of the gaps" (if we can't explain it, then the Designer must have
done it), written with nice fancy impressive-looking mathematical formulas.
That suspicion is strengthened when we
consider the carefully specified order of the three steps in Dembski's
filter. Why is the sequence of
Dembski's Filter, "rule out law, rule out chance, therefore design"? Why isn't
it "rule out design, rule out law, therefore chance"? Or "rule out law, rule
out design, therefore chance"? If Dembski has an objective way to detect or
rule out "design", then why doesn't he just apply it from the
outset? The answer is simple -- Dembski
has no more way to calculate the "probability" of design than he does the
"probability" of law, and therefore simply has no way, none at all whatsoever,
to tell what is "designed" and what isn't. So he wants to dump the burden onto others. Since he can't demonstrate that any thing was designed, he
wants to relieve himself of that responsibility, by simply declaring, with
suitably impressive mathematics, that the rest of us should just assume that
something is designed unless someone can show otherwise. Dembski has
conveniently adopted the one sequence of steps in his "filter", out
of all the possible ones, that relieves "design theory" of any need to either
propose anything, test anything, or demonstrate anything
I suspect that
isn't a coincidence.
Cambrian
Explosion
While the
public-relations and political efforts of the Wedge strategy were spectacular
successes for the ID movement, the effort to publish scientific articles in
peer-reviewed science journals supportive of ID has been an utter failure.
Only one ID article has ever appeared in any
peer-reviewed science journal, and it did more harm for ID than good.
In their 2003 book Darwinism,
Design and Public Education, DI Fellows Stephen Meyer and John Angus
Campbell devoted an entire chapter to what they called "The Cambrian
Explosion: Biology's Big Bang". In
it, they repeated, almost word for word, all of the "Cambrian
explosion" arguments that had been made thirty years earlier by the
creation "scientists": "Organisms such as trilobites (phylum
Arthropoda), with their articulated body plans, intricate nervous systems, and
compound eyes, first appear fully formed at the beginning of the Cambrian
explosion along with many other phyla of equal complexity."
A year later, this
ID tract reappeared in shortened form as a peer-reviewed article in The
Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, a scientific journal
that normally devoted itself to routine taxonomic descriptions.
The article, by Stephen Meyer, was entitled,
"The Origin of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic
Categories", and it repeated most of the chapter from Darwinism, Design
and Public Education, and added a few other standard ID arguments:
"During
the Cambrian, many novel animal forms and body plans (representing new phyla,
subphyla and classes) arose in a geologically brief period of time. The
following information-based analysis of the Cambrian explosion will support the
claim of recent authors such as Muller and Newman that the mechanism of
selection and genetic mutation does not constitute an adequate causal
explanation of the origination of biological form in the higher taxonomic
groups. It will also suggest the need to explore other possible causal factors
for the origin of form and information during the evolution of life and will
examine some other possibilities that have been proposed.
The
Cambrian explosion represents a remarkable jump in the specified complexity or
"complex specified information" (CSI) of the biological world.
. . .An experience-based analysis of the
causal powers of various explanatory hypotheses suggests purposive or
intelligent design as a causally adequate--and perhaps the most causally
adequate--explanation for the origin of the complex specified information
required to build the Cambrian animals and the novel forms they
represent." (Meyer, Proceedings of
the Biological Society of Washington, 2004, pp 213 - 239)
The article
provoked a storm of protest from scientists, who flooded the journal with
letters pointing out that Meyer's piece was not only inaccurate and mistaken,
but also simply repeated the same arguments that had been made decades before
by creation "scientists". As
it turned out, the paper had been accepted for publication by editor Richard
von Sternberg, who was himelf on the editorial board of a creation
"scientist" organization called the Baraminology Study Group at Bryan
College in Tennessee. "Baramin" is the term that creation "scientists" use
for "created kind" when they want to sound nice and scientific.
In the very next
issue of the journal, Meyer's paper was withdrawn, with the Biological Society
explaining: "The paper by Stephen
C. Meyer, 'The origin of biological information and the higher taxonomic
categories,' in vol. 117, no. 2, pp. 213-239 of the Proceedings of the
Biological Society of Washington, was published at the discretion of the former
editor, Richard v. Sternberg. Contrary to typical editorial practices, the
paper was published without review by any associate editor; Sternberg handled
the entire review process. The Council, which includes officers, elected
councilors, and past presidents, and the associate editors would have deemed
the paper inappropriate for the pages of the Proceedings . . . . (T)here is no
credible scientific evidence supporting ID as a testable hypothesis to explain
the origin of organic diversity. Accordingly, the Meyer paper does not meet the
scientific standards of the Proceedings."
EIGHT:
The Rise of Intelligent Design
One of the most
effective ID/creationist tactics has been to lobby state textbook committees to
either drop mention of evolutionary biology altogether, or to add a
"disclaimer" to their texts opining that evolution is "just a
theory". On January 16, 1998, for instance, the Washington State Senate
introduced a bill requiring that all science textbooks contain a printed
disclaimer stating that evolution is only a "theory", and listing a
series of inaccurate criticisms of evolution. The bill is a virtual
word-for-word copy of an earlier proposal passed by the Alabama state Board of
Education in November, 1995. The Washington bill reads:
"All
science textbooks purchased with state moneys must have the following notice
placed prominently in them.
A
MESSAGE FROM THE WASHINGTON STATE LEGISLATURE
This
textbook discusses evolution, a controversial theory some scientists present as
a scientific explanation for the origin of living things, such as plants,
animals, and humans.
No
one was present when life first appeared on earth. Therefore, any statement
about life's origins should be considered as theory, not fact.
The
word "evolution" may refer to many types of change. Evolution
describes changes that occur within a species. (White moths, for example, may
"evolve" into gray moths.) This process is microevolution, which can
be observed and described as fact. Evolution may also refer to the change of
one living thing to another, such as reptiles into birds. This process, called
macroevolution, has never been observed and should be considered a theory.
Evolution also refers to the unproven belief that random, undirected forces
produced a world of living things.
"There
are many unanswered questions about the origin of life which are not mentioned
in your textbook, including:
-
Why did the major groups of animals suddenly appear in the fossil record (known
as the "Cambrian Explosion")?
-
Why have no new major groups of living things appeared in the fossil record for
a long time?
-
Why do major groups of plants and animals have no transitional forms in the
fossil record?
-
How did you and all living things come to possess such a complete and complex set of "Instructions" for
building a living body?"
In April 1994, the
Tangipahoa School Board, in Louisiana, passed a policy mandating that a
disclaimer be presented before any discussion of evolutionary theory. The
disclaimer states:
"It
is hereby recognized by the Tangipahoa Board of Education, that the lesson to
be presented, regarding the origin of life and matter, is known as the
Scientific Theory of Evolution and should be presented to inform students of
the scientific concept and not intended to influence or dissuade the Biblical
version of Creation or any other concept. It is further recognized by the Board of Education that it is the basic
right and privilege of each student to form his/her own opinion and maintain
beliefs taught by parents on this very important matter of the origin of life
and matter. Students are urged to exercise critical thinking and gather all
information possible and closely examine each alternative toward forming an
opinion." (US Circuit Court, Freiler v Tangipahoa Board of Ed, 1999)
A number of parents
in the school district filed suit. In the Freiler v Tangipahoa Board of
Education case, the Federal District judge ruled that the disclaimer was an
unconstitutional establishment of religion. This decision was upheld on appeal
by the Federal Circuit Court. In its opinion upholding the appeal, the Circuit
Court writes, "We conclude that the primary effect of the disclaimer is to
protect and maintain a particular religious viewpoint, namely belief in the
Biblical version of creation," and noted that the stated purpose of the
disclaimer, to "exercise critical thinking", was "a sham"
(US Circuit Court, Freiler v Tangipahoa Board of Ed, 1999). In June 2000, the US Supreme Court refused
to hear an appeal of the Freiler case and let the Circuit Court's ruling
stand.
The Freiler ruling
made it likely that all the remaining "disclaimers" would also be
rejected by the Courts on Constitutional grounds. And indeed, the creationists
lost yet another "disclaimer" case in January 2005, when a Federal
judge in Georgia ruled that such disclaimers violated the separation of church
and state. "Due to the manner in which the sticker refers to evolution as
a theory, the sticker also has the effect of undermining evolution education to
the benefit of those Cobb County citizens who would prefer that students
maintain their religious beliefs regarding the origin of life," Judge
Clarence Cooper wrote in his ruling. "The distinction of evolution as a
theory rather than a fact is the distinction that religiously motivated
individuals have specifically asked school boards to make in the most recent
anti-evolution movement, and that was exactly what parents in Cobb County did
in this case," he ruled. (Selman v Cobb County School District, US
District Court, January 2005)
However, despite
their steady string of losses regarding "disclaimer stickers", the
ID movement at the same time was
pursuing an alternative strategy.
In 2001, the
Discovery Institute took the anti-evolution issue to the Federal level. The
"Intelligent Design" movement got its first legal test in June 2001,
when the US Senate was debating the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
Authorization Bill (later renamed the "No Child Left Behind" Act).
During the debate, Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum introduced an amendment
that had been partially written by Discovery Institute adviser Phillip Johnson
(and based on a law journal article written by Discovery Institute activist
David DeWolf). The Santorum Amendment read:
"It
is the sense of the Senate that (1) good science education should prepare
students to distinguish the data or testable theories of science from
philosophical or religious claims that are made in the name of science; and (2)
where biological evolution is taught, the curriculum should help students to
understand why the subject generates so much continuing controversy, and should
prepare the students to be informed participants in public discussions
regarding the subject."
Because the House
version of the No Child Left Behind Act did not include any corresponding
version of the Santorum Amendment, a House/Senate Conference Committee was
required to reach agreement on a joint bill to be agreed upon by both chambers
of Congress. After a flood of letters and testimony from prominent science and
education groups pointed out that the Santorum amendment was nothing but a
thinly veiled excuse for teaching "intelligent design theory" in
classrooms, the conference committee dropped the amendment, noting, in their
Conference Report, "The conferees recognize that a quality science
education should prepare students to distinguish the data and testable theories
of science from religious or philosophical claims that are made in the name of
science. Where topics are taught that may generate controversy (such as
biological evolution), the curriculum should help students to understand the
full range of scientific views that exist, why such topics may generate
controversy, and how scientific discoveries can profoundly affect
society." When the final version of the No Child Left Behind bill was
passed by both the House and the Senate, it did not contain any portion of the
Santorum Amendment.
Creationists/IDers
and their supporters have, however, attempted to claim that the No Child Left
Behind bill not only permits but actually requires schools to teach
"intelligent design theory". Santorum himself, for instance, wrote in
March 2002, "At the beginning of the year, President Bush signed into law
the 'No Child Left Behind' bill. The new law includes a science education
provision where Congress states that 'where topics are taught that may generate
controversy (such as biological evolution), the curriculum should help students
to understand the full range of scientific views that exist. If the Education
Board of Ohio does not include intelligent design in the new teaching standards,
many students will be denied a first-rate science education.' "
(Washington Times, March 14, 2002, cited in "ID-Activists-Guide",
NCSE website). Two Ohio Congressmen also claimed, "The Santorum language
is now part of the law". (Washington Times, March 20, 2002, cited in
"ID-Activists-Guide"). Neither of these claims, of course, are true
-- the Santorum language was dropped from the bill in committee, and the only
time it is mentioned is in the accompanying Conference Report, which is not a
part of the bill and has no legal force or authority.
The topic of the
Santorum Amendment was brought up in Ohio as the result of another legal effort
to force "intelligent design theory" into school classrooms. In early
2002, the state of Ohio was carrying out a review of its statewide science
curriculum, when chemist Robert Lattimer, of a pro-ID "citizens
group" called Science Excellence for All Ohioans (SEAO), objected to the
prominence of evolution in the science standards, and lobbied for inclusion of "intelligent
design theory" as a "scientific alternative" to evolution. IDers
had also captured the state education board's standards committee, where five
of the eight members were ID supporters. At a meeting in January 2002, they argued in favor of making, in the standards,
"a clear distinction between the different understandings of evolution as
minor genetic variation versus evolution as a single common ancestry", and
referred to evolution as "a theory, or an assumption, but not a
fact". (cited in Forrest and Gross,
p.228) When word of this got out, a
statewide organization, Ohio Citizens for Science, was formed to oppose the ID
efforts and to protect the integrity of Ohio's science standards.
The IDers on the
standards committee invited Lattimer to join the team that was writing the new
standards, and held hearings which included a presentation by attorney John
Calvert, from IDNet, a national ID organization. Calvert tried to argue to the committee that it might face legal
action if it excluded ID from the standards:
"The
effect of modern origins science is to imbue a belief in naturalism . .
A Constitutional issue arises when the state
decides to teach origins science. The
reason is that origins science unavoidably takes students into a religious
arena . . . Are you causing the state to be neutral or are you causing it to
imbue Ohioans in a belief in naturalism -- a non-religion?
The effort soon
attracted the attention of the Discovery Institute, which unleashed all its
lobbying abilities in an effort to push ID "theory" into the Ohio
science standards. However, it also attracted a widespread effort by science
and education groups to oppose the IDers. In the face of this opposition, the IDers introduced a
"compromise" which would, according to Meyer, "permit, but not
require" students to be taught about ID's "alternative
theory". "Instead,"
Meyer offered, "I proposed that Ohio teachers should teach the scientific
controversy about Darwinian evolution."(cited in Forrest and Gross, p 231)
Friendly
legislators introduced a bill into the State House of Representatives which
read:
"(T)he
instructional program provided by any school district or educational service
center shall do all of the following: (A) Encourage the presentation of scientific evidence regarding the
origins of life and its diversity objectively and without religious,
naturalistic, or philosophic bias or assumption; (B) Require that whenever explanations regarding the origins of
life are presented, appropriate explanation and disclosure shall be provided
regarding the historical nature of origins science and the use of any material
assumption which may have provided a basis for the explanation being
presented; (C) Encourage the
development of curriculum that will help students think critically, understand
the full range of scientific views that exist regarding the origins of life,
and understand why origins science may generate controversy." (Ohio House
Bill 481)
The Discovery
Institute brought out all its big guns in Ohio, including such luminaries as
Johnson and Dembski, but in the end, the legislative bills all failed in the
face of heavy public opposition, led by the Ohio Citizens for Science group.
Not only did the Ohio board not include "intelligent design theory"
in its final standards, but it specifically excluded it by name:
The next major
event in the ID political campaign, however, happened in May 2005, when what
was planned as a huge propaganda blitz to finally make ID respectable, instead
turned ID into a laughingstock across the nation.
In August 1999, a
group of creationists on the Kansas State Education Board, led by veterinarian
Steve Abrams, had tried to cut evolution from the state standards. The action
failed, but caused so much popular outrage (led by anti-ID watchdog group
Kansas Citizens for Science) that most of the board members were kicked out of
office in the next election.
In 2004, however,
riding on George W. Bush's coattails, the fundamentalists again captured most
of the seats on the Education Board, and once again made plans to advance an
ID/creationist agenda. A routine periodic evaluation of the state's science
curriculum led to a split in the curriculum committee, as the majority report,
written by seventeen professional scientists, described evolution as the core
concept of modern biology, and the minority report, written by eight
non-scientist creationists/IDers, rejected evolution. The Education Board in
turn refused to accept the majority report and instead announced that it would
hold a "trial" between evolution supporters and deniers, since there
was, they said, "significant disagreement . . . about issues that seem to
be of legal and scientific substance, particularly with respect to the issue of
the definition of science and the issue of origins and evolution." (Kansas
State Board Of Education Resolution, February 9, 2005). The Board drew up a
list of 23 "witnesses", most of them IDers, and invited state science
groups to name its own representatives to testify. Instead, science groups
throughout the state denounced the proposed hearings (which quickly became
known as the Kansas Kangaroo Court) as a fraud which had the sole intent of
propping up the minority report so the creationist-dominated Board could vote
to accept it. Instead of participating
in what they viewed as a fraud, the state's pro-science groups and universities
announced a complete boycott of the hearings. As the President of Kansas
Citizens for Science Harry McDonald put it, "Intelligent design is not
going to get its forum, at least not one in which they can say that scientists
participated. We have learned too much to continue participating in this
charade." (Associated Press, April 8, 2005) Not a single evolution defender testified at the hearing.
Instead, civil rights lawyer Pedro Irigonegaray was allowed to question all of
the 23 ID witnesses and then make a statement defending science. "We're
not calling scientists to debate evolution," Irigonegaray said.
"That's not going to happen. To debate whether evolution is true is to
debate whether the Earth is round or flat. There's no argument. It is a
minority view of a religious group asserting that all other Christians are
wrong." (Pitch.com, May 5, 2005)
The real aim of the
hearings became apparent even before the first witness was called. In an
interview in April, Board member Kathy Martin remarked, "We are not going
to give up until the standards say what we want them to say. Evolution has been
proven false. ID is science-based and strong in facts." When asked if ID
had a religious agenda, Martin declared, "Of course this is a Christian
agenda. We are a Christian nation. Our country is made up of Christian
conservatives. We don't often speak up, but we need to stand up and let our
voices be heard. (Pitch.Com, May 5, 2005) To add to the air of surrealism, a
week before the hearings were to begin, Irigonegaray was ordered to produce a
list of any witnesses he planned on calling. Board member Connie Morris
explained that she would be "praying over" the proposed witness list.
(Kansas Star, April 20,2005) Irigonegary refused to call any witnesses.
The hearings were a
disaster for the ID/creationists right from the beginning.
Chemist William Harris, who had helped write
the minority curriculum report supporting ID, said in an opening statement,
"The Minority Report does not introduce religion into this discussion.
This is not to introduce creationism. .
. . The Minority Report does not mandate the teaching of Intelligent Design.
Intelligent Design is not a code word for creationism." (Harris testimony,
Kansas Hearing transcripts) The IDers
then presented a parade of its own witnesses, who demolished every one of
Harris's own statements.
Every witness made
it clear that his or her objections to evolution were religiously motivated.
Harris himself stated:
"We
want to make the point that this controversy has profound implications for
religion and philosophy. If this didn't have implications to religion this room
would be far emptier today. Because it impacts religion and the reason that
this issue does impact religion is because we're dealing with what we call
origin science. " (Harris Testimony, Kansas Hearing Transcripts).
Other witnesses
also complained about science's "atheism" and its exclusion of
"theism":
Q.
Is it your job that evolution as it is taught in mainstream America today is
atheistic?
A.
Well --
Q.
Yes or no?
A.
Yes, by definition it is. . . . (DeHart testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Q.
Do you believe that the issue of evolution and origins impact religion?
A.
Yes.
Q.
And what is the effect in your mind-- in your view of methodological naturalism
as applied to the issue of origin, the origin of life?
A.
Well, if we insist on methodological naturalism, then that is inconsistent and
excludes any theistic ideas.
Q.
So it excludes evidence that would support theistic views?
A.
Yes. (Bryson testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
In addition to
pointing out the religious motivations of all the ID witnesses, Irigonegaray
further demonstrated the close links between ID and creation 'science' by
asking each of the witnesses how old they thought the earth was. Some frankly
admitted to a young-earth creationist position:
Q.
What is your opinion in years the age of the earth?
A.
I'm fine with 5,000 to 100,000.
Q.
You're fine with 5,000 to 100,000?
A.
Correct. (DeHart testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Some of the
witnesses, on the other hand, recognized the danger in the tactic that
Irigonegaray was pursuing, and tried to evade the question, with some still
leaving a crack open for a young earth.
Q.
The first thing I'd like to ask you is what is your personal opinion as to what
the age of the world is?
A.
I'm undecided.
Q.
What is your best guess?
A.
I'm totally undecided.
Q.
Give me your best range.
A.
Anywhere from 4.5 billion years to ten thousand years.
Q.
And, of course, you have reached that conclusion based on the best scientific
evidence available?
A.
Yes. (Bryson testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Q.
What is your personal opinion as to what the age of the earth is?
A.
I don't know. And that's my final answer.
Q.
Do you have an opinion as to what the age of the earth is?
A.
I'm not giving an opinion.(Menuge testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Perhaps the oddest
of the ID witnesses in Kansas was Warren Nord, who declared that religious
people were an oppressed minority, comparable to women or blacks, and that as a
matter of cultural fairness, their views should be taught in all school
classes:
A.
Simply the title of my second book,
"Taking Religion Seriously Across the Curriculum," suggests that religion
should be taken seriously in most all disciplines. I used to say except
mathematics and driver's education, but the Amish let me know that driver's
education is religiously very important. And, actually, a case can be made for
mathematics because the philosophy -- well, I'm not going to get into that. . . .
Q.
Is it also your opinion, sir, that it is important to have religion taught in
economics?
A.
Oh, for sure.
Q.
Mathematics?
A.
That's a harder case, but you can actually make a case for that. I'll be happy
to do it if you like. (Nord testimony, Kansas Hearings transcript)
Despite its efforts
to gain credibility and respectability for ID, the Kansas Kangaroo Court was an
unmitigated PR disaster for the IDers. Nearly every major newspaper in the US
ran editorials denouncing ID. The Washington Post noted, "But there
is no serious scientific controversy over whether Darwinian evolution takes
place. Intelligent design is not science. Whatever its rhetoric, the public
questioning of evolution is fundamentally religious, not scientific, in
nature." (Washington Post, May 8, 2005) The New York Times editorialized,
"The minority even seeks to change the definition of science in a way that
appears to leave room for supernatural explanations of the origin and evolution
of life, not just natural explanations, the usual domain of science. All this
is wildly inappropriate for a public school curriculum. The Kansas board, which
held one-sided hearings this month that were boycotted by mainstream scientists
on the grounds that the outcome was preordained, is expected to vote on the
standards this summer. One can only hope that the members will come to their
senses first." (New York Times, May 18, 2005) The Baltimore Chronicle stated
"Intelligent Design is a cleverly packaged form of Creationism which the
Religious Right is attempting to sneak into public classrooms through a variety
of means, including this farcical 'hearing' in Kansas." (Baltimore
Chronicle, May 10, 2005)
Despite the fact
that ID was beaten into a bloody pulp during its own one-sided hearings,
however, it was expected that the Board's creationist majority would vote to
accept the minority report and reject the majority report, and to enshrine ID's
"criticisms" into the Kansas curriculum. It was also expected that they would alter the definition of
"science" contained in the standards, specifically so it could be
read as including supernatural or non-material explanations.
Before that could
happen, though, the ID movement faced its biggest challenge yet, in a courtroom
in rural Pennsylvania.
NINE:
The Fall of Intelligent Design
In 1999, a new
player emerged in the Intelligent Design campaign. Conservative Catholic businessman Tom Monoghan, the founder of
the Domino's Pizza chain, joined forces with former Michigan prosecutor Richard
Thompson, best-known for his repeated attempts to jail assisted-suicide doctor
Jack Kevorkian, to form the Thomas More Law Center (TMLC).
Describing itself as "the sword and
shield for people of faith", the TMLC declared its aim as "Defending
the religious freedom of Christians". (TMLC website, 2005) From the
beginning, the TMLC sought out a fight with the ACLU, and the issue over which
TMLC most wanted to cross swords with ACLU, was evolution.
Beginning in early
2000, the TMLC actively sought out a test case involving evolution and
intelligent design that it could take to the Supreme Court.
In April, TMLC lawyer Robert Muise went to
Charleston, West Virginia, recommending that these school districts adopt the
ID textbooks Of Pandas and People into their science courses, and
offering to provide "a world class defense" for free when the ACLU
sued. "We'll be your shield
against such attacks," Muise told
the school board. The Charleston board
turned TMLC down because, as board President John Luoni recalled, "It's
not really a scientific theory. It's more of a religious theory. It should be
taught if a church or a denomination believes in it, but I didn't think that
religious viewpoint should be taught as part of a science class." (New
York Times, Nov 4, 2005) One school
district after another, in Minnesota and Michigan, turned down the offer.
Then, in rural central Pennsylvania, the
TMLC hit paydirt.
In June 2004, the
Dover School District, near York, Pennsylvania, was carrying out a routine
review of the textbooks being used by the district's biology students.
During the review, School Board Curriculum
Committee member William Buckingham complained that the biology textbooks were
"laced with darwinism" (York Daily Record, Dec 26, 2005). In a TV
interview a week later, Buckingham declared, "My opinion, it's OK to teach
Darwin, but you have to balance it with something else such as
creationism". (York Daily Record, Jan 16, 2005). A month later, in July
2004, an "anonymous donation" of 60 copies of the intelligent design
textbook Of Pandas and People, was made to the school district for use
as a "supplemental text" in classrooms. In October 2004, the full
School Board voted 6-3 to amend the district's curriculum to include
intelligent design "theory". The amended curriculum guide read,
"Students will be made aware of gaps/problems in Darwin's Theory and of
other theories of evolution including, but not limited to, Intelligent Design.
The Origin of Life is not taught." (York Daily Record, Dec 26, 2004)
The Board,
meanwhile, wrote up a brief "statement" to be announced in each
biology class, which read:
The
Pennsylvania Academic Standards require students to learn about Darwin's Theory
of Evolution and eventually to take a standardized test of which evolution is a
part. Because Darwin's Theory is a
theory, it continues to be tested as new evidence is discovered. The Theory is
not a fact. Gaps in the Theory exist for which there is no evidence. A theory
is defined as a well-tested explanation that unifies a broad range of
observations. Intelligent Design is an
explanation of the origin of life that differs from Darwin's view. The
reference book, Of Pandas and People, is available for students who
might be interested in gaining an understanding of what Intelligent Design
actually involves. With respect to any
theory, students are encouraged to keep an open mind. The school leaves the
discussion of the Origins of Life to individual students and their families. As
a Standards-driven district, class instruction focuses upon preparing students
to achieve proficiency on Standards-based assessments." (York Daily
Record, Jan 8, 2005)
In December, eleven
parents contacted the ACLU in Pennsylvania, which filed a lawsuit on their
behalf charging the district with violating church/state provisions by teaching
the religious doctrine of Intelligent Design "theory". The ACLU was
joined by Americans United for Separation of Church and State in the suit, and
advice and assistance was also offered by the National Center for Science
Education, a national nonprofit group that opposes efforts to weaken science
education with creationism or intelligent design. NCSE's legal advisory counsel, Eric Rothschild, offered to head
up the plaintiff team. The Thomas Moore
Law Center, in turn, immediately offered to defend the Board for free.
School Board members, meanwhile, were making
statements to the press acknowledging that their aims were indeed religious:
"If
the Bible is right, God created us. If God did it, it's history and also
science". -- Dover School Board member John Rowand (Washington Post, Dec
26, 2004, p A01)
"Our
country was founded on Christianity and our children should be taught as
such." -- Board Member William Buckingham (Washington Post, Dec 26, 2004,
p A01)
"Nearly
2000 years ago, someone died on the cross for us. Shouldn't we have the courage
to stand up for him?" -- Board Member William Buckingham (New York Times,
Jan 16, 2005)
"Our
country was founded on Christian beliefs and principles.
. . . You can teach creationism without it being Christianity. It can be
presented as a higher power." --
Board Member Heather Geesey (York Daily Record, June 27, 2004)
The Discovery
Institute was lukewarm about the case right from the beginning, and was
particularly wary since the Dover board members had made so many public
religious comments: "Although
Discovery Institute believes that there are a number of secular purposes in
teaching students about intelligent design, it was not evident whether the
Dover board had based its policy on these purposes."
(Discovery Institute press release, Nov 4,
2005) The Thomas More Law Center
planned to call prominent IDers William Dembski, Stephen Meyer, Michael Behe,
John Angus Campbell and Scott Minnich as "expert witnesses".
During the deposition process, however,
problems arose that quickly led to a split. Just before their depositions,
Dembski, Meyer and Campbell were all fired (or left) as experts.
Behe and Minnich had already been deposed --
the Discovery Institute apparently wanted them to withdraw from the case too,
but both decided to stay.
It is still not
entirely clear what happened. Dembski,
it turned out, had close ties to the Pandas book -- he worked as an
editor for the Foundation for Thought and Ethics, the publisher of Pandas,
and in fact was himself writing a section of the newest version of the book,
already in the works. In addition, as
Barbara Forrest noted in an online interview with Americans United,
"Although the website is registered under the organizational name, William
Dembski is the administrative contact, and the FTE mailing address is actually
Dembski's." (Forrest, AU website, Feb 2005)
The DI's
sensitivity over the Foundation for Thought and Ethics may have had something
to do with FTE's own attempts to join the lawsuit as a defendant.
In May 2005, the FTE filed a motion to join
the case on the grounds that it had an economic interest in the Pandas book
which would be adversely effected if the Kitzmiller case were to rule that ID
is religious and is illegal to teach. Judge Jones concluded that FTE had nothing new or relevant to bring to
the case, and rejected the motion in July.
Although the motion
for FTE to join the case was rejected, the testimony that was given in support
of the motion revolved around the Of Pandas and People book, and it
turned out to be central to the trial. The National Center for Science Education, a national anti-ID watchdog
group, maintained an extensive archive of materials pertaining to virtually
every ID text ever published. One of
these was Pandas, and in its files, NCSE found a 1987 book proposal to a
larger publisher, offering them the opportunity to publish Pandas (then
known under the title Biology And Origins), and describing the book as
supporting "creation". Nick
Matzke, who was serving as NSCE's liaison to the Kitzmiller legal team,
wondered if these pre-Aguillard manuscripts about "creation"
had mutated, after the Aguillard ruling, into manuscripts about
"intelligent design". If so,
this would help establish a direct link between ID and creation
"science". (It was already
known that both of the co-authors of Pandas were creationists -- indeed,
one of them, Percival Davis, had also co-authored A Case for Creation with
young-earther Wayne Frair, who had testified for the creationists at Arkansas;
the other co-author, Dean Kenyon, had written the foreward to Morris and
Parker's What is Creation Science?, and had also filed a deposition
defending creationism for the Louisiana trial). During the "discovery" phase of the Dover trial, in
which each side is obliged to turn over to the other all requested documents
that are relevant to the issue at hand, therefore, the plaintiffs asked for
copies of any existing draft versions of what was to become Of Pandas and
People. It turned out that all of
these drafts still existed; the first,
in 1983, was titled Creation Biology; the second in 1986 was titled Biology
and Creation; another version titled Biology And Origins was written
in 1987; two different versions with
the title Of Pandas and People were both written in 1987.
The final draft was published in 1989, and a
revised edition was published in 1993. Another expanded version, with the working title The Design of Life,
was being drafted at the time of the trial.
In the summer of
2005, the plaintiffs received the early drafts from 1983-1993.
They were dynamite.
In all of the
earlier draft manuscripts, the definition of "creationism" was given
as: "Creation means that the
various forms of life began abruptly through the agency of an intelligent
creator with their distinctive features already intact -- fish with fins and
scales, birds with feathers, beaks, and wings, etc." (Biology and Creation
1986, FTE 3014-3015, pp. 2-13, 2-14)
In 1987, however,
immediately after the Supreme Court issued its Edwards v Aguillard ruling
that outlawed creationism in schools, there was an abrupt change in the Pandas
manuscript: "Intelligent
design means that various forms of life began abruptly through an intelligent
agency, with their distinctive features already intact—fish with fins and
scales, birds with feathers, beaks, and wings, etc." (Pandas 1987,
As Burt Humburg and
Ed Brayton wrote in their post-trial account published in eSkeptic,
"This was truly a 'Eureka!' moment for the plaintiff's team. Here was
undeniable proof that Pandas had begun as a creationist textbook and,
after the Edwards ruling ruled creationism out of schools, the
creationists simply changed their terminology, replacing 'creation' with
'intelligent design' and giving both terms an identical definition. This
provided substantial evidence that intelligent design was simply creationism
retrofitted to adapt to modern court rulings." (http://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/05-12-20.html)
The trial opened on
September 26, 2005, and both sides declared their intentions in their opening
statements. Plaintiff attorney Eric
Rothschild pointedly noted:
"What
we will prove at this trial is that the Dover board policy has the same
characteristics and the same constitutional defects as the creation science
policy struck down in Edwards. . . . What the board did was add creationism to
the biology curriculum under its new name, intelligent design.
They have tried forbidding the teaching of
evolution, promoting creationism or creation science as an alternative to evolution,
and singling out evolution for special criticism. Each of those tactics have
been found unconstitutional by courts. Confronted with that inhospitable legal
environment, creationists have adapted to create intelligent design,
creationism with the words 'God' and 'Bible' left out."
(Rothschild Opening Statement, Kitzmiller v
Dover)
TMLC lawyer Patrick
Guillen declared:
"Defendants'
expert will show this Court that intelligent design theory, IDT, is science, a
theory that's advanced in terms of empirical evidence and technical knowledge
proper to scientific and academic specialties. It is not religion."
Testimony in the
case lasted over a month.
In his ruling, the
Judge concluded that Intelligent Design was indeed nothing more than creation
"science", rehashed in an attempt to get around the Supreme Court's
ruling:
"Dramatic
evidence of ID's religious nature and aspirations is found in what is referred
to as the 'Wedge Document.' . . .
The CSRC expressly announces, in the Wedge
Document, a program of Christian apologetics to promote ID. A careful review of
the Wedge Document's goals and language throughout the document reveals
cultural and religious goals, as opposed to scientific ones.
ID aspires to change the ground rules of
science to make room for religion, specifically, beliefs consonant with a
particular version of Christianity."
"The
evidence at trial demonstrates that ID is nothing less than the progeny of
creationism. . . . The weight of the
evidence clearly demonstrates, as noted, that the systemic change from
"creation" to "intelligent design" occurred sometime in 1987, after the Supreme
Court's important Edwards decision. This compelling evidence strongly supports
Plaintiffs' assertion that ID is creationism re-labeled."
(Jones Opinion, 2005)
The Judge also
concluded that Intelligent Design "theory" was not science and had
nothing scientific to offer:
"ID
is not science. We find that ID fails on three different levels, any one of
which is sufficient to preclude a determination that ID is science. They are:
(1) ID violates the centuries-old ground rules of science by invoking and
permitting supernatural causation; (2) the argument of irreducible complexity,
central to ID, employs the same flawed and illogical contrived dualism that
doomed creation science in the 1980s; and (3) ID's negative attacks on
evolution have been refuted by the scientific community.
. . . Moreover, ID's backers have sought to
avoid the scientific scrutiny which we have now determined that it cannot
withstand by advocating that the controversy, but not ID itself, should be
taught in science class. This tactic is at best disingenuous, and at worst a
canard." (Jones Opinion, 2005)
"The
overwhelming evidence at trial," Judge Jones concluded, "established
that ID is a religious view, a mere re-labeling of creationism, and not a
scientific theory":
Judge Jones bluntly
concluded his ruling by stating:
"The
citizens of the Dover area were poorly served by the members of the Board who
voted for the ID Policy. It is ironic that several of these individuals, who so
staunchly and proudly touted their religious convictions in public, would time
and again lie to cover their tracks and disguise the real purpose behind the ID
Policy."
"This
case came to us as the result of the activism of an ill-informed faction on a
school board, aided by a national public interest law firm eager to find a
constitutional test case on ID, who in combination drove the Board to adopt an
imprudent and ultimately unconstitutional policy. The breathtaking inanity of
the Board's decision is evident when considered against the factual backdrop
which has now been fully revealed through this trial. The students, parents,
and teachers of the Dover Area School District deserved better than to be
dragged into this legal maelstrom, with its resulting utter waste of monetary
and personal resources." (Jones
Opinion, 2005)
TEN:
"Teach the Controversy"
Even before the
Dover decision was handed down, the ID movement realized that they simply could
not demonstrate their religious views to be scientific.
They were therefore forced to produce a
parallel strategy to wedge their religious opinions into science classes. If
their religious opinions aren't science, the IDers decided, then they'll simply
use legal fiat to change the definition of science so it does include
their religious opinions. As a newspaper interview with DI spokesman Stephen
Meyer noted, "Meyer, however, says he's a scientist, who starts with
scientific evidence, not the Bible. His goal -- a big one -- is to change the
very definition of science so that it doesn't rule out the possibility that an
intelligent designer is actively at work." (Seattle Times, March
2005) In Ohio, Meyer proposed that
"Ohio should enact no definition of science that would prevent the
discussion of other theories". (cited in Forrest and Gross, p. 232)
In Kansas, the
religious aim of redefining science was just as explicit, and more
successful. The existing science
standards in Kansas stated "Science seeks natural explanations for what we
observe in the world around us." (Kansas State Curriculum Standards, 2001)
Since ID "science" cannot explain anything through "natural
explanations" and indeed doesn't think it should have to, IDers on
the Board successfully introduced a measure that changed the standards to read:
"Science is a systematic method of continuing investigation that uses
observation, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, logical argument
and theory-building to lead to more adequate explanations of natural
phenomena."
(http://www.evolutionnews.org/2005/11/kansas_definition_of_science_c.html) There is, of course, only one reason why
IDers in Ohio and Kansas would wish to alter the legal definition of
"science" to drop any reference to "natural explanations"
-- such a definition explicitly rules out ID, which is not based on any
natural explanations. Indeed, ID is based on supernaturalistic explanations.
It is religious doctrine.
The efforts in Ohio and Kansas to use legal
powers to force science into accepting religious explanations provoked the ire
of scientists from all over the world. To the public, ID's effort to redefine science reached a low point when
Dr Michael Behe, author of Darwin's Black Box, admitted on the witness
stand that, under the Discovery Institute's proposed definition of
"science", even astrology would have to be considered
scientific.
During the Ohio
fight, however, after Intelligent Design theory was specifically excluded from
the state education standards, the IDers had already realized that ID would
never prevail as an "alternative scientific theory", and that, in
addition to re-defining science, a different strategy must be simultaneously pursued
if the goals of the Wedge Document were to have any chance of success.
Out of this understanding, the strategy of
"teach the controversy" was born.
There is, of
course, no scientific "controversy" over evolution.
No serious biologist rejects it, and while
there are healthy and interesting debates within science over how evolution
happens, there is no debate at all over whether it happens.
The only "controversy" over
evolution is the social/political/religious one created by the
anti-evolutionists themselves. However,
after the annihilation of ID "theory" in Dover in 2005, "teach
the controversy" became the only game in town. As it did several times
previously in its history, the anti-evolution movement responded to a crushing
court loss by simply altering the presentation of its religious message to
avoid whatever language it was that had just been struck down.
When the Epperson case banned
religious anti-evolution arguments in schools, creation "science" was
born, which presented itself as scientific and not religious.
When the Supreme Court killed creation
"science" because of its reliance on Biblical literalist
interpretations of Genesis, "intelligent design theory" was born, and
presented itself as science that depended on no particular conception of a creator
or designer. When the Dover case killed
ID because its "alternative design theory" was inherently religious
in nature, "teach the controversy" was born, which presented itself
solely as "scientific criticism of evolution" and offered no
"alternative theory" at all. From now on, instead of attempting to push "intelligent design
theory" into schools, the Discovery Institute and its supporters were
forced to retreat to the much weaker notion of teaching the alleged
"scientific problems" with evolution instead. The new strategy
dropped any mention of "intelligent design" -- which, IDers hoped,
would allow them to do an end run around the Dover decision, just as ID had
been intended to do an end run around the Aguillard decision and
creation "science" had been intended to do an end run around the Epperson
decision. "Teach the
controversy" was, in fact, just the latest attempt in a long string of
deceptions by design.
Unfortunately for
the IDers, it is not difficult to demonstrate, using the IDers' own statements,
that "teach the controversy" is nothing but the same old creation
"science" and intelligent design "theory" under a different
name, and has the same religious motivation and effect that creation
"science" and ID did. After all, the switch was explicitly made, publicly, by the director of
the Center for Science and Culture himself, DI vice president Stephen Meyer,
during a presentation sponsored by the Ohio Board:
"(1)
First, I suggested -- speaking as an advocate of the theory of intelligent design -- that
Ohio not require students to know the scientific evidence and arguments for the
theory of intelligent design, at least not yet.
(2)
Instead, I proposed that Ohio teachers teach the scientific controversy about
Darwinian evolution. Teachers should teach students about the main scientific
arguments for and against Darwinian theory." (Meyer, found at
http://www.discovery.org/scripts/viewDB/index.php?program=CSC&command=view&id=1134)
In other words, if
it was impossible to teach a "scientific theory of intelligent
design", then IDers would attempt to re-introduce the very same
arguments, but presenting them this time as "scientific criticisms of
evolution" rather than as an "alternative scientific
theory". After almost a decade of
preaching their "alternative scientific theory of design", IDers now
hotly denied that they even wanted to have any "Intelligent Design
theory" taught.
Under this new
"teach the controversy" strategy, members of the Ohio Board of
Education, seizing on language in the standards requiring students to be able
to "critically analyze" evolution and other sciences, proposed a
"model lesson plan" that was largely written by Discovery Institute
members and supporters, entitled "Critical Analysis of Evolution".
The model lesson pointed out the same
supposed "scientific problems with evolution" that the Discovery
Institute had been preaching for years as "evidence of design", but
the new reincarnation of these arguments said nothing at all about "design
theory". The model lesson plan,
however, included links to several Internet websites from the Discovery
Institute and other supporters of intelligent design "theory", listed
as "sources of information". These websites were later dropped after
heavy criticism. Also dropped was a direct reference to the anti-evolution book
Icons of Evolution, written by Discovery Institute member Jonathan
Wells. However, in March 2003, the
Board passed a modified version of the lesson plan which, while erasing all of
the references to intelligent design "theory", nevertheless accepted
most of the Discovery Institute's "teach the controversy" strategy
and included many of the supposed "scientific criticisms of
evolution".
Meanwhile,
similar moves were being made in
Kansas. Board Chairman Steven Abrams
presented the new party line; "Teaching the arguments against evolution is
not a code word for creationism. It is simply good science education. At this
point, however, we do not think it's appropriate to mandate the teaching of
Intelligent Design. It's a fairly new science, it's a modern science of
Intelligent Design, it's a maturing science and perhaps in time it would be
there, but at this point we think mandating it is inappropriate." (Kansas
Hearings transcript) In 2006, the State
Education Board in Kansas, not unexpectedly, rejected evolution as the core
concept of modern biology, and adopted
the Discovery Institute's new "teach the controversy" strategy
instead.
It can be readily
seen, however, that "teach the controversy" is not different in any
substantial way from either ID or creation "science".
All of the "scientific evidences
against evolution" listed by the proposed "teach the
controversy" advocates are lifted, word for word, from the same old ID
books and websites. Indeed, the standards
in Ohio even attempted to list these ID resources themselves as part of the
lesson plan. None of these
"scientific arguments against evolution" has appeared in any
peer-reviewed science journal with any supporting data or evidence.
All of the anti-evolution arguments offered
in "teach the controversy" are found in ID/creation
"science" texts, and only in
ID/creationist texts. The arguments are
not substantially changed, in form or in substance, from the very same
arguments previously made in support of the "alternative scientific
theories" of ID and/or creationism. Indeed, the state standards adopted in Kansas and Ohio specifically
include all of the common ID/creationist
arguments, including the "no transitional fossils" argument, the
"Cambrian explosion" argument, and the "created kinds"
argument.
Not only are the
aims, intent and arguments presented in the "teach the controversy"
approach identical in every way with ID and/or creation "science",
but it is the very same people presenting them.
In the case of Ohio, the "teach the
controversy" policy was itself proposed by the Discovery Institute, as a
"compromise" over teaching intelligent design
"theory". Board members Deborah
Owens-Fink and Michael Cochran, and ID supporter Robert Lattimer, all initially
spoke in favor of including ID "theory" in the Ohio academic
standards -- and then later switched in mideam, spoke in
In short,
"teach the controversy" is creationism/intelligent
design. There is no substantive
difference between them, nor can there be. After all, there simply is no scientific theory of Intelligent
Design. ID was never anything other
than a string of unrelated criticisms of evolution -- the very same string of unrelated criticisms of evolution
which now make up the "controversy" that IDers want to teach.
"Teach the controversy" is,
transparently, nothing more than an attempt to respond to the Dover court
decision by dropping the words "intelligent design" altogether, while
leaving the arguments the same.
Such a strategy
seems doomed to failure, however. >The
"teach the controversy" advocates must, after all, sooner or later
specify, in a lesson plan, what exactly these "arguments against
evolution" are that they insist on presenting -- and as soon as they do,
it becomes apparent that these are just the same old ID/creationist arguments
that have already been made for forty years, and which have already been
rejected by the courts.
Indeed, in Ohio,
where "teach the controversy" was first introduced as a policy, the
Dover decision caused some re-thinking. In early February 2006, Ohio Governor Bob Taft asked for a legal review
of the state's "teach the controversy" curriculum standards.
While declaring that he remained in favor of
requirements to "critically examine evolution", Gov Taft nevertheless
stated, "But if there is an issue here where they are actually teaching
intelligent design, that's another matter, and that's what the court said as
well." (Herald-Dispatch, Feb 3, 2006) Less than two weeks later, Ohio State Board of Education members voted
11-4 to drop all of the "teach the controversy" language from the
state's science standards.
It was the
financial effects of the Dover ruling, however, that seems to have had the
deepest impact on the ID movement. The
expenses on the plaintiff side totalled over $2.4 million for witness fees,
deposition costs, attorney costs, and other expenditures (after the ruling, the
plaintiff attornies agreed to accept a reduced amount of just $1 million as
reimbursement). The political impact of
Dover was also not lost on public officials -- of the eight pro-ID Dover school
board members who faced re-election during the proceedings, every one of them
was defeated.
It was enough to
send horrified shudders through school districts across the country.
Within months of the Dover decision, the El
Tejon School District, in Lebec, California, offered a "Philosophy of
Intelligent Design" course. "This class," school officials stated, "will take a close
look at evolution as a theory and will discuss the scientific, biological, and
Biblical aspects that suggest why Darwin's philosophy is not rock solid. This
class will discuss Intelligent Design as an alternative response to
evolution." (http://www.mountainenterprise.com/IntellDesign-stories/060106-holiday_mtg.html) The course materials included several ID
and young-earth creationist books and videos, and was taught by Sharon Lemburg,
who wrote in a statement, "The idea of this class was not created on the
spur of the moment. I believe that this is the class that the Lord wanted me to
teach." (http://www.mountainenterprise.com/IntellDesign-stories/060113-SharonLemburg.html).
Americans United for Separation of Church
and State filed suit. After being
pointedly reminded about the financial settlement to the Dover decision and
"the limited resources of our small school district"
(http://www.mountainenterprise.com/IntellDesign-stories/060113-Community-Forum2.html), the El Tejon District quickly caved in, and dropped the course.
All of the legal
rulings against Intelligent Design "theory", however, or against its
latest "teach the controversy" clone, will not end the anti-evolution
fight. The anti-evolution movement will
simply be back later, with yet another repackaged version of the same old
arguments. Pro-ID Ohio board member
Michael Cochran perhaps put it best, after the vote which withdrew "teach
the controversy" from the state standards: "We'll do this forever, I guess."
(Akron Beacon Journal, Feb 15, 2006)
CONCLUSION
Many people have treated the
evolution/creation controversy as if it were a scientific dispute -- as if the
two viewpoints were merely differing ways of interpreting scientific data.
(This, in fact, is precisely how the
ID/creationists wish to present it.) Scientists in particular have tended to respond to the ID/creationist
movement by first ignoring it in the hopes that it would go away, and then with
long technical explanations of how the scientific conclusions of the
ID/creationist arguments are unsupported, incomplete or just plain wrong.
All of the scientific refutations of
ID/creationism have not, however, lessened the conflict -- if anything, they
have heightened it. The reason for this
is simple; ID/creationism is not science and it does not have scientific
goals. Because of this, it will not be
beaten by science or by scientific arguments -- these are essentially
irrelevant to the real goals of the ID/creationist movement.
The ID/creationist movement is a political
movement with political goals, and it must be beaten the same way that
every other political movement is beaten -- by out-organizing it.
The first step in beating the ID movement,
then, is to recognize that IDers have a specific agenda that they want to
follow -- and people do not support that agenda. The creationist/IDers have a clearly articulated, deliberately
planned strategy for theocracy -- and people simply don't want a theocracy.
The ID/creationists go to great lengths to
hide their political agenda and to be deceptive about their real political
goals. The only thing that will beat
ID/creationism (and all of its future derivatives), then, is an informed public
that recognizes this deception, and makes it clear that it does not want a
fundamentalist Christian theocracy, won't support it, won't allow it, and will
do whatever it takes to prevent it.
APPENDIX:
THE WEDGE DOCUMENT
NOTE FROM LENNY
FLANK: The Wedge Document is an internal memorandum from the Discovery
Institute (the leading proponent of Intelligent Designer "Theory")
that was leaked to the Internet in 1999. The Discovery Institute later admitted
to its authenticity. Since then, Discovery Institute hasn't talked very much
about the document, or the strategy it outlines. The reason is obvious, since
the Wedge Document makes it readily apparent that the Discovery Institute is
dishonest, deceptive and evasive when it claims that its Intelligent Designer
campaign is concerned only with science and does not have any religious/political
aims, purpose or effect.
The Wedge Document
is reproduced here, in full.
CENTER FOR THE
RENEWAL OF SCIENCE & CULTURE
INTRODUCTION
The proposition
that human beings are created in the image of God is one of the bedrock
principles on which Western civilization was built. Its influence can be
detected in most, if not all, of the West's greatest achievements, including
representative democracy, human rights, free enterprise, and progress in the
arts and sciences.
Yet a little over a
century ago, this cardinal idea came under wholesale attack by intellectuals
drawing on the discoveries of modern science. Debunking the traditional
conceptions of both God and man, thinkers such as Charles Darwin, Karl Marx,
and Sigmund Freud portrayed humans not as moral and spiritual beings, but as
animals or machines who inhabited a universe ruled by purely impersonal forces
and whose behavior and very thoughts were dictated by the unbending forces of
biology, chemistry, and environment. This materialistic conception of reality
eventually infected virtually every area of our culture, from politics and
economics to literature and art
The cultural
consequences of this triumph of materialism were devastating. Materialists
denied the existence of objective moral standards, claiming that environment
dictates our behavior and beliefs. Such moral relativism was uncritically
adopted by much of the social sciences, and it still undergirds much of modern
economics, political science, psychology and sociology.
Materialists also
undermined personal responsibility by asserting that human thoughts and
behaviors are dictated by our biology and environment. The results can be seen
in modern approaches to criminal justice, product liability, and welfare. In
the materialist scheme of things, everyone is a victim and no one can be held
accountable for his or her actions.
Finally,
materialism spawned a virulent strain of utopianism. Thinking they could
engineer the perfect society through the application of scientific knowledge,
materialist reformers advocated coercive government programs that falsely
promised to create heaven on earth.
Discovery
Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture seeks nothing less
than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies. Bringing together
leading scholars from the natural sciences and those from the humanities and
social sciences, the Center explores how new developments in biology, physics
and cognitive science raise serious doubts about scientific materialism and have
re-opened the case for a broadly theistic understanding of nature. The Center
awards fellowships for original research, holds conferences, and briefs
policymakers about the opportunities for life after materialism.
The Center is
directed by Discovery Senior Fellow Dr. Stephen Meyer. An Associate Professor
of Philosophy at Whitworth College, Dr. Meyer holds a Ph.D. in the History and
Philosophy of Science from Cambridge University. He formerly worked as a
geophysicist for the Atlantic Richfield Company.
THE WEDGE STRATEGY
Phase I.
* Scientific
Research, Writing & Publicity
Phase II.
* Publicity &
Opinion-making
Phase III.
* Cultural
Confrontation & Renewal
THE WEDGE PROJECTS
Phase I. Scientific
Research, Writing & Publication
* Individual
Research Fellowship Program
* Paleontology
Research program (Dr. Paul Chien et al.)
* Molecular Biology
Research Program (Dr. Douglas Axe et al.)
Phase II. Publicity
& Opinion-making
* Book Publicity
* Opinion-Maker
Conferences
* Apologetics
Seminars
* Teacher Training
Program
* Op-ed Fellow
* PBS (or other TV)
Co-production
* Publicity
Materials / Publications
Phase III. Cultural
Confrontation & Renewal
* Academic and
Scientific Challenge Conferences
* Potential Legal
Action for Teacher Training
* Research
Fellowship Program: shift to social sciences and humanities
FIVE YEAR STRATEGIC
PLAN SUMMARY
The social
consequences of materialism have been devastating. As symptoms, those
consequences are certainly worth treating. However, we are convinced that in
order to defeat materialism, we must cut it off at its source. That source is
scientific materialism. This is precisely our strategy. If we view the
predominant materialistic science as a giant tree, our strategy is intended to
function as a "wedge" that, while relatively small, can split the
trunk when applied at its weakest points. The very beginning of this strategy,
the "thin edge of the wedge," was Phillip ]ohnson's critique of
Darwinism begun in 1991 in Darwinism on Trial, and continued in Reason in the
Balance and Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds. Michael Behe's highly
successful Darwin's Black Box followed Johnson's work. We are building on this
momentum, broadening the wedge with a positive scientific alternative to
materialistic scientific theories, which has come to be called the theory of
intelligent design (ID). Design theory promises to reverse the stifling
dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it with a science
consonant with Christian and theistic convictions.
The Wedge strategy
can be divided into three distinct but interdependent phases, which are roughly
but not strictly chronological. We believe that, with adequate support, we can
accomplish many of the objectives of Phases I and II in the next five years
(1999-2003), and begin Phase III (See "Goals/ Five Year
Objectives/Activities").
Phase I: Research,
Writing and Publication
Phase II: Publicity
and Opinion-making
Phase III: Cultural
Confrontation and Renewal
Phase I is the
essential component of everything that comes afterward. Without solid
scholarship, research and argument, the project would be just another attempt
to indoctrinate instead of persuade. A lesson we have learned from the history
of science is that it is unnecessary to outnumber the opposing establishment.
Scientific revolutions are usually staged by an initially small and relatively
young group of scientists who are not blinded by the prevailing prejudices and
who are able to do creative work at the pressure points, that is, on those
critical issues upon which whole systems of thought hinge. So, in Phase I we
are supporting vital witting and research at the sites most likely to crack the
materialist edifice.
Phase II. The
primary purpose of Phase II is to prepare the popular reception of our ideas.
The best and truest research can languish unread and unused unless it is
properly publicized. For this reason we seek to cultivate and convince
influential individuals in print and broadcast media, as well as think tank
leaders, scientists and academics, congressional staff, talk show hosts,
college and seminary presidents and faculty, future talent and potential
academic allies. Because of his long tenure in politics, journalism and public
policy, Discovery President Bruce Chapman brings to the project rare knowledge
and acquaintance of key op-ed writers, journalists, and political leaders. This
combination of scientific and scholarly expertise and media and political
connections makes the Wedge unique, and also prevents it from being
"merely academic." Other activities include production of a PBS
documentary on intelligent design and its implications, and popular op-ed
publishing. Alongside a focus on influential opinion-makers, we also seek to
build up a popular base of support among our natural constituency, namely,
Christians. We will do this primarily through apologetics seminars. We intend
these to encourage and equip believers with new scientific evidences that
support the faith, as well as to "popularize" our ideas in the
broader culture.
Phase III. Once our
research and writing have had time to mature, and the public prepared for the
reception of design theory, we will move toward direct confrontation with the
advocates of materialist science through challenge conferences in significant
academic settings. We will also pursue possible legal assistance in response to
resistance to the integration of design theory into public school science
curricula. The attention, publicity, and influence of design theory should draw
scientific materialists into open debate with design theorists, and we will be
ready. With an added emphasis to the social sciences and humanities, we will
begin to address the specific social consequences of materialism and the Darwinist
theory that supports it in the sciences.
GOALS
Governing Goals
* To defeat
scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and political
legacies.
* To replace
materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and hurnan
beings are created by God.
Five Year Goals
* To see
intelligent design theory as an accepted alternative in the sciences and
scientific research being done from the perspective of design theory.
* To see the
beginning of the influence of design theory in spheres other than natural
science.
* To see major new
debates in education, life issues, legal and personal responsibility pushed to
the front of the national agenda.
Twenty Year Goals
* To see
intelligent design theory as the dominant perspective in science.
* To see design
theory application in specific fields, including molecular biology,
biochemistry, paleontology, physics and cosmology in the natural sciences,
psychology, ethics, politics, theology and philosophy in the humanities; to see
its influence in the fine arts.
* To see design
theory permeate our religious, cultural, moral and political life.
FIVE YEAR
OBJECTIVES
1. A major public
debate between design theorists and Darwinists (by 2003)
2. Thirty published
books on design and its cultural implications (sex, gender issues, medicine,
law, and religion)
3. One hundred
scientific, academic and technical articles by our fellows
4. Significant
coverage in national media:
* Cover story on
major news magazine such as Time or Newsweek
* PBS show such as
Nova treating design theory fairly
* Regular press
coverage on developments in design theory
* Favorable op-ed
pieces and columns on the design movement by 3rd party media
5. Spiritual &
cultural renewal:
* Mainline renewal
movements begin to appropriate insights from design theory, and to repudiate
theologies influenced by materialism
* Major Christian
denomination(s) defend(s) traditional doctrine of creation & repudiate(s)
* Darwinism Seminaries
increasingly recognize & repudiate naturalistic presuppositions
* Positive uptake
in public opinion polls on issues such as sexuality, abortion and belief in God
6. Ten states begin
to rectify ideological imbalance in their science curricula & include
design theory
7. Scientific
achievements:
* An active design
movement in Israel, the UK and other influential countries outside the US
* Ten CRSC Fellows
teaching at major universities
* Two universities
where design theory has become the dominant view
* Design becomes a
key concept in the social sciences Legal reform movements base legislative
proposals on design theory
ACTVITIES
(1) Research
Fellowship Program (for writing and publishing)
(2) Front line
research funding at the "pressure points" (e.g., Daul Chien's
Chengjiang Cambrian Fossil Find in paleontology, and Doug Axe's research
laboratory in molecular biology)
(3) Teacher
training
(4) Academic
Conferences
(5) Opinion-maker
Events & Conferences
(6)
Alliance-building, recruitment of future scientists and leaders, and strategic
partnerships with think tanks, social advocacy groups, educational
organizations and institutions, churches, religious groups, foundations and
media outlets
(7) Apologetics
seminars and public speaking
(8) Op-ed and
popular writing
(9) Documentaries
and other media productions
(10) Academic
debates
(11) Fund Raising
and Development
(12) General
Administrative support
THE WEDGE STRATEGY
PROGRESS SUMMARY
Books
William Dembski and
Paul Nelson, two CRSC Fellows, will very soon have books published by major
secular university publishers, Cambridge University Press and The University of
Chicago Press, respectively. (One critiques Darwinian materialism; the other
offers a powerful alternative.)
Nelson's book, On
Common Descent, is the seventeenth book in the prestigious University of
Chicago "Evolutionary Monographs" series and the first to critique
neo-Darwinism. Dembski's book, The Design Inference, was back-ordered in June,
two months prior to its release date.
These books follow
hard on the heals of Michael Behe's Darwin's Black Box (The Free Press) which
is now in paperback after nine print runs in hard cover. So far it has been
translated into six foreign languages. The success of his book has led to other
secular publishers such as McGraw Hill requesting future titles from us. This
is a breakthrough.
InterVarsity will
publish our large anthology, Mere Creation (based upon the Mere Creation
conference) this fall, and Zondervan is publishing Maker of Heaven and Earth:
Three Views of the Creation-Evolution Controversy, edited by fellows John Mark
Reynolds and J.P. Moreland.
McGraw Hill
solicited an expedited proposal from Meyer, Dembski and Nelson on their book
Uncommon Descent. Finally, Discovery Fellow Ed Larson has won the Pulitzer
Prize for Summer for the Gods, his retelling of the Scopes Trial, and
InterVarsity has just published his co-authored attack on assisted suicide, A
Different Death.
Academic Articles
Our fellows
recently have been featured or published articles in major scientific and
academic journals in The Proceedings to the National Academy of Sciences,
Nature, The Scientist, The American Biology Teacher, Biochemical and
Biophysical Research Communications, Biochemistry, Philosophy and Biology,
Faith & Philosophy, American Philosophical Quarterly, Rhetoric & Public
Affairs, Analysis, Book & Culture, Ethics & Medicine, Zygon,
Perspectives on Science and the Christian Faith, Religious Studies, Christian
Scholars' Review, The Southern Journal of Philosophy, and the Journal of
Psychology and Theology. Many more such articles are now in press or awaiting
review at major secular journals as a result of our first round of research
fellowships. Our own journal, Origins & Design, continues to feature
scholarly contributions from CRSC Fellows and other scientists.
Television and
Radio Appearances
During 1997 our
fellows appeared on numerous radio programs (both Christian and secular) and
five nationally televised programs, TechnoPolitics, Hardball with Chris
Matthews, Inside the Law, Freedom Speaks, and Firing Line. The special edition
of TechnoPolitics that we produced with PBS in November elicited such an
unprecedented audience response that the producer Neil Freeman decided to air a
second episode from the "out takes." His enthusiasm for our
intellectual agenda helped stimulate a special edition of William F. Buckley's
Firing Line, featuring Phillip Johnson and two of our fellows, Michael Behe and
David Berlinski. At Ed Atsinger's invitation, Phil Johnson and Steve Meyer
addressed Salem Communications' Talk Show Host conference in Dallas last
November. As a result, Phil and Steve have been interviewed several times on
Salem talk shows across the country. For example, in ]uly Steve Meyer and Mike
Behe were interviewed for two hours on the nationally broadcast radio show
]anet Parshall's America. Canadian Public Radio (CBC) recently featured Steve
Meyer on their Tapestry program. The episode, "God & the
Scientists," has aired all across Canada. And in April, William Craig
debated Oxford atheist Peter Atkins in Atlanta before a large audience
(moderated by William F. Buckley), which was broadcast live via satellite link,
local radio, and internet "webcast."
Newspaper and
Magazine Articles
The Firing Line
debate generated positive press coverage for our movement in, of all places,
The New York Times, as well as a column by Bill Buckley. In addition, our
fellows have published recent articles & op-eds in both the secular and
Christian press, including, for example, The Wall Street Journal, The New York
Times, The Washington Times, National Review, Commentary, Touchstone, The
Detroit News, The Boston Review, The Seattle Post-lntelligenter, Christianity
Toady, Cosmic Pursuits and World. An op-ed piece by Jonathan Wells and Steve
Meyer is awaiting publication in the Washington Post. Their article criticizes
the National Academy of Science book Teaching about Evolution for its selective
and ideological presentation of scientific evidence. Similar articles are in
the works.
Sources
and Reading List:
Intelligent
Design "Theory"
John Angus Campbell
and Stephen Meyer, Darwinism, Design and Public Education, Michigan
State University Press, 2004
Percival Davis and
Dean H Kenyon, Of Pandas And People; The Central Question of Biological
Origins, Foundation for Thought and Ethics, 1993
William Dembski, Mere
Creation; Science, Faith & Intelligent Design, Intervarisity Press,
1998
William Dembski, The
Design Inference : Eliminating Chance through Small Probabilities (Cambridge
Studies in Probability, Induction and Decision Theory), Cambridge
University Press, 1998
William Dembski, No
Free Lunch, Why Specified Complexity Cannot Be Purchased without Intelligence,
Rowman and Littlefield, 2001
William Dembski, Intelligent
Design: The Bridge Between Science And Theology, Intervarsity Press, 2002
Michael J Behe, Darwin's
Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, Free Press, 1998
Phillip E Johnson, Defeating
Darwinism by Opening Minds, Intervarsity Press, 1997
Phillip E Johnson, Reason
in the Balance: The Case Against Naturalism in Science, Law & Education,
Intervarsity Press, 1998
Phillip E Johnson, Darwin
on Trial, Intervarsity Press, 1993
Guillermo Gonzalez,
The Privileged Planet: How Our Place in the Cosmos is Designed for
Discovery, Regnery Publishing, 2004
Jonathan
Wells, Icons of Evolution: Science
or Myth? Why Much of What We Teach About Evolution is Wrong , Regnery
Publishing, 2002
Scientific
Criticism of ID:
Barbara Forrest and
Paul R Gross, Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design,
Oxford University Press, 2004
Robert T Pennock, Tower
of Babel; The Evidence Against the New Creationism, MIT Press, 2000
Robert T Pennock, Intelligent
Design Creationism and Its Critics: Philosophical, Theological, and Scientific
Perspectives, MIT Press, 2001
Mark Perakh, Unintelligent
Design, Prometheus Books, 2003
Matt Young and
Taner Edis (editors), Why Intelligent Design Fails: A Scientific Critique of the New
Creationism, Rutgers University Press, 2004
Creation
"Science"
Harold W. Clark, The
Battle Over Genesis, Review and Herald Pub Association,
Michael Denton, Evolution:
A Theory in Crisis, Adler and Adler, 1986
Duane Gish, Evolution?
The Fossils Say No! Creation-Life Publishers, 1972, re-printed 1978
Robert Kofahl and
Kelly Segraves, The Creation Explanation, Shaw Pub.,
1975
Walter Lammerts,
Ed., Why Not Creation? Presbyterian and Reformed Pub Co., 1975
Life--How Did it
Get Here? By Evolution or by Creation?, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, 1985.>
Henry Morris, The
Twilight of Evolution, Baker Book House, 1963
Henry Morris, Science,
Scripture and Salvation: The Genesis Record, Baptist Publications,
1965
Henry Morris, Studies
in the Bible and Science, Presbyterian and Reformed Pub Co., 1966
Henry Morris, Evolution
and the Modern Christian, Presbyterian and Reformed Pub Co,
1967
Henry Morris, Biblical
Cosmology and Modern Science, Craig Press, 1970
Henry Morris, The
Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth, Creation-Life Publishers,
1972
Henry Morris, Scientific
Creationism, Creation-Life Publishers, 1974
Henry Morris, The
Troubled Waters of Evolution, Creation-Life Pub.,1974
Henry Morris, The
Scientific Case for Creation, Creation-Life Publishers,
Henry Morris, A
History of Modern Creationism, Master Books,1984
Carl Weiland, Stones
and Bones: Powerful Evidence Against Evolution, Creation Science
Foundation, Ltd., 1994.
John C. Whitcomb
and Henry Morris, The Genesis Flood, 38th Printing, Presbyterian and
Reformed Pub Co, 1961
History of
Creationism:
Raymond A. Eve and
Francis B. Harrold, The Creationist Movement in Modern America, Twayne
Publishers, 1991
Ronald L. Numbers, The
Creationists, Alfred Knopf, 1992
Scientific
Criticism of Creationism:
Tim M. Berra, Evolution
and the Myth of Creationism: A Basic Guide to the Facts in the Evolution Debate,
Stanford U Press, 1990
Niles Eldredge, The
Monkey Business: A Scientist Looks at Creationism, Washington Square
Press, 1982
Niles Eldredge, The
Triumph of Evolution : and the Failure of Creationism, Owl Books, 2001
Langdon Gilkey, Creationism
on Trial: Evolution and God at Little Rock, Winston Press, 1985
Philip Kitcher, Abusing
Science: The Case Against Creationism, MIT Press, 1982
Marcel C.
LaFollette, Creationism, Science and the Law: The Arkansas Case, MIT
Press, 1983
Chris McGowan, In
the Beginning: A Scientist Shows Why the Creationists Are Wrong, Prometheus
Books, 1984
Ashley Montagu,
Ed., Science and Creationism, Oxford U Press, 1984
Dorothy Nelkin, The
Creation Controversy: Science or Scripture in the Schools, WW Norton
Co., 1982
Michael Ruse, Darwinism
Defended: A Guide to the Evolution Controversies, Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 1982
James W. Skehan, Modern
Science and the Book of Genesis, National Teachers Association, 1986
Arthur N. Strahler,
Science and Earth History: The Evolution/Creation Controversy,
Prometheus Books, 1987
Stan Weinberg, Ed.,
Review of Thirty-One Creationist Books, National Center for Science
Education, 1984
Evolution and
the Fossil Record:
Sean B Carroll, Endless
Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo and the Making of the Animal
Kingdom, WW Norton, 2005
Edwin Colbert and
Michael Morales, Evolution of the Vertebrates; A History of Backboned
Animals Through Time, Wiley-Liss, 1991
Richard Dawkins, The
Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without
Design, WW Norton, 1986
Richard Dawkins, The
Selfish Gene, Oxford University Press, 1990
Richard Dawkins, The
Ancestor's Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution, Houghton Mifflin,
2004
Adrian J. Desmond, The
Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs, A Revolution in Paleontology, Dial Press, 1976
Niles Eldredge, Time
Frames: The Rethinking of Darwinian Evolution and the Theory of Punctuated
Equilibria, Simon and Schuster, 1985
Niles Eldredge, Darwin:
Discovering the Tree of Life, WW Norton, 2005
Niles Eldredge, The
Pattern of Evolution, WH Freeman, 1998
Stephen Jay Gould, The
Panda's Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History, WW Norton,
Stephen Jay Gould, Hen's
Teeth and Horse's Toes, WW Norton, 1983
Marc W Kirschner, The
Plausibility of Life: Resolving Darwin's Dilemma, Yale University Press,
2005
Ernst Mayr, What
Evolution Is, Basic Books, 2002
Mark Norell, Unearthing
the Dragon, Pi Press, 2005
Colin Patterson, Evolution,
Cornell University Press, 1978
Alfred S. Romer, The
Vertebrate Story, University of Chicago Press, 1967
Steven M. Stanley, The
New Evolutionary Timetable: Fossils, Genes, and the Origin of Species,
Basic Books Inc, 1981
Carl Zimmer, Evolution;
The Triumph of an Idea, Harper Perennial, 2002
Religious
Discussions of Creationism:
Isaac Asimov, Asimov's
Guide to the Bible, Vol I; The Old Testament, Avon Pub.,
1968
Daniel C Dennett, Darwin's
Dangerous Idea; Evolution and the Meanings of Life, Simon and Schuster,
1996
Roland Mushat Frye,
Is God a Creationist? The Religious Case Against Creation-Science,
Scribner's Sons, 1983
John F Haught, God
After Darwin: A Theology of Evolution, Westview Press, 2001
Tim LaHaye, Battle
for the Mind, Fleming H. Revell Co., 1980
Martin E. Marty and
R. Scott Appleby, Fundamentalisms Observed, University of Chicago Press,
Kenneth R Miller, Finding
Darwin's God: A Scientist's Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution,
Harper Perennial, 2000
Richard Overman, Evolution
and the Christian Doctrine of Creation, Westminster Press, 1967
Janelle Rohr, Ed., Science
and Religion: Opposing Viewpoints, Greenhaven Press,
Michael Ruse, Can
a Darwinian be a Christian? : The Relationship between Science and Religion,
Cambridge University Press, 2004
John Shelby Spong, Rescuing
the Bible From Fundamentalism, Harper, 1991
Howard J. Van Till,
The Fourth Day: What the Bible and the Heavens are Telling Us About the
Creation, William B. Eerdmans Pub Co, 1986
Christian
Political Movements:
Robert Boston, The
Most Dangerous Man in America? Pat Robertson and the Rise of the Christian
Coalition, Prometheus Books, 1996.
Flo Conway and Jim
Siegelman, Holy Terror: The Fundamentalist War on America's Freedoms in
Religion, Politics, and Our Private Lives, Dell Pub Co,
Sam Diamond, Spiritual
Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right, South End Press,
Jerry Falwell, Listen,
America, Doubleday Co., 1980
Jerry Falwell, Ed.,
The Fundamentalist Phenomenon; The Resurgence of Conservative Christianity,
Doubleday Co., 1981
Noah Feldman, Divided
by God: America's Church-State Problem--and What We Should Do About It,
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005
Samuel S. Hill and
Dennis E. Owen, The New Religious/Political Right in America, Abington
Co., 1982
John L. Kater, Jr.,
Christians on the Right: The Moral Majority in Perspective, Seabury
Press, 1982
Isaac Kramnick and
R Laurence Moore, The Godless Constitution: The Case Against Religious
Correctness, WW Norton, 1996
Chris Mooney, The
Republican War on Science, Basic Books, 2005
Pat Robertson, The
Turning Tide: The Fall of Liberalism and the Rise of Common Sense, Word
Publishing, 1993
Cass R. Sunstein, Radicals
in Robes: Why Extreme Right-Wing Courts are Wrong for America, Basic
Books, 2005
Herbert F. Vetter,
ed., Speak Out Against the New Right, Beacon Press, 1982
Gary Wills, Under
God: Religion and American Politics, Simon and Schuster,
Perry Dean Young, God's
Bullies, Holt Rhinehart and Winston, 1982
Discussion
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