June 24, 2005
Intelligent Design
The Cogitator is going to play school marm today and no, the title of this blog entry is not the latest reality show on BRAVO.
The following H. Allen Orr article from The New Yorker
is the most insightful one I've come across in the evolution v.
intelligent design debate. Read it at your own edification or peril,
whichever the case may be.
MASTER PLANNED
by H. ALLEN ORR
Why intelligent design isn’t
If you are in ninth grade and live in Dover,
Pennsylvania, you are learning things in your biology class that differ
considerably from what your peers just a few miles away are learning.
In particular, you are learning that Darwin’s theory of evolution
provides just one possible explanation of life, and that another is
provided by something called intelligent design. You are being taught
this not because of a recent breakthrough in some scientist’s
laboratory but because the Dover Area School District’s board mandates
it. In October, 2004, the board decreed that “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.”
While the events in Dover have received a good deal
of attention as a sign of the political times, there has been
surprisingly little discussion of the science that’s said to underlie
the theory of intelligent design, often called I.D. Many scientists
avoid discussing I.D. for strategic reasons. If a scientific claim can
be loosely defined as one that scientists take seriously enough to
debate, then engaging the intelligent-design movement on scientific
grounds, they worry, cedes what it most desires: recognition that its
claims are legitimate scientific ones.
Meanwhile, proposals hostile to evolution are being
considered in more than twenty states; earlier this month, a bill was
introduced into the New York State Assembly calling for instruction in
intelligent design for all public-school students. The Kansas State
Board of Education is weighing new standards, drafted by supporters of
intelligent design, that would encourage schoolteachers to challenge
Darwinism. Senator Rick Santorum, a Pennsylvania Republican, has argued
that “intelligent design is a legitimate scientific theory that should
be taught in science classes.” An I.D.-friendly amendment that he
sponsored to the No Child Left Behind Act—requiring public schools to
help students understand why evolution “generates so much continuing
controversy”—was overwhelmingly approved in the Senate. (The amendment
was not included in the version of the bill that was signed into law,
but similar language did appear in a conference report that accompanied
it.) In the past few years, college students across the country have
formed Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness chapters. Clearly, a
policy of limited scientific engagement has failed. So just what is
this movement?
First of all, intelligent design is not what people
often assume it is. For one thing, I.D. is not Biblical literalism.
Unlike earlier generations of creationists—the so-called Young Earthers
and scientific creationists—proponents of intelligent design do not
believe that the universe was created in six days, that Earth is ten
thousand years old, or that the fossil record was deposited during
Noah’s flood. (Indeed, they shun the label “creationism” altogether.)
Nor does I.D. flatly reject evolution: adherents freely admit that some
evolutionary change occurred during the history of life on Earth.
Although the movement is loosely allied with, and heavily funded by,
various conservative Christian groups—and although I.D. plainly
maintains that life was created—it is generally silent about the
identity of the creator.
For the rest of the article, go here.
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