This article is
reprinted from the Wall Street Journal, August 16, 1999.
A Chinese
paleontologist lectures around the world saying that recent fossil finds
in his country are inconsistent with the Darwinian theory of evolution.
His reason: The major animal groups appear abruptly in the rocks over a
relatively short time, rather than evolving gradually from a common
ancestor as Darwin's theory predicts. When this conclusion upsets
American scientists, he wryly comments: "In China we can criticize
Darwin but not the government. In America you can criticize the
government but not Darwin."
That point was
illustrated last week by the media firestorm that followed the Kansas
Board of Education's vote to omit macro-evolution from the list of
science topics which all students are expected to master. Frantic
scientists and educators warned that Kansas students would no longer be
able to succeed in college or graduate school, and that the future of
science itself was in danger. The New York Times called for a
vigorous counteroffensive, and the lawyers prepared their lawsuits.
Obviously, the cognitive elites are worried about something a lot more
important to themselves than the career prospects of Kansas high school
graduates.
The root of the
problem is that "science" has two distinct definitions in our culture.
On the one hand, science refers to a method of investigation involving
things like careful measurements, repeatable experiments, and especially
a skeptical, open-minded attitude that insists that all claims be
carefully tested. 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. Students are not supposed to approach this philosophy with
open-minded skepticism, but to believe it on faith.
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. Do you wonder why a lot of people suspect that these claims go
far beyond the available evidence?
All the most
prominent Darwinists proclaim naturalistic philosophy when they think it
safe to do so. Carl Sagan had nothing but contempt for those who deny
that humans and all other species "arose by blind physical and chemical
forces over eons from slime." Richard Dawkins exults that Darwin "made
it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist," and Richard
Lewontin has written that scientists must stick to philosophical
materialism regardless of the evidence, because "we cannot allow a
Divine Foot in the door." Stephen Jay Gould condescendingly offers to
allow religious people to express their subjective opinions about
morals, provided they don't interfere with the authority of scientists
to determine the "facts" -- one of the facts being that God is merely a
comforting myth.
There are a lot of
potential dissenters. Sagan deplored the fact that "only nine percent of
Americans accept the central finding of biology that human beings (and
all the other species) have slowly evolved from more ancient beings with
no divine intervention along the way." To keep the other 91% quiet,
organizations like the National Academy of Sciences periodically issue
statements about public school teaching which contain vague reassurances
that "religion and science are separate realms," or that evolutionary
science is consistent with unspecified "religious beliefs."
What these
statements mean is that the realms are separate because science
discovers facts and religion indulges fantasy. The acceptable religious
beliefs they have in mind are of the naturalistic kind that do not
include a supernatural creator who might interfere with evolution or try
to direct it. A great many of the people who do believe in such a
creator have figured this out, and in consequence the reassurances
merely insult their intelligence.
So one reason the
science educators panic at the first sign of public rebellion is that
they fear exposure of the implicit religious content in what they are
teaching. An even more compelling reason for keeping the lid on public
discussion is that the official neo-Darwinian theory is having serious
trouble with the evidence. This is covered over with the vague claim
that all scientists agree that "evolution has occurred." Since the
Darwinists sometimes define evolution merely as "change," and lump minor
variation with the whole creation story as "evolution," a few trivial
examples like dog-breeding or fruit fly variation allow them to claim
proof for the whole system. The really important claim of the theory --
that the Darwinian mechanism does away with the need to presuppose a
creator -- is protected by a semantic defense-in-depth.
Here's just one
example of how real science is replaced by flim-flam. The standard
textbook example of natural selection involves a species of finches in
the Galapagos, whose beaks have been measured over many years. In 1977 a
drought killed most of the finches, and the survivors had beaks slightly
larger than before. The probable explanation was that larger-beaked
birds had an advantage in eating the last tough seeds that remained. A
few years later there was a flood, and after that the beak size went
back to normal. Nothing new had appeared, and there was no directional
change of any kind. Nonetheless, that is the most impressive example of
natural selection at work that the Darwinists have been able to find
after nearly a century and a half of searching.
To make the story
look better, the National Academy of Sciences removed some facts in its
1998 booklet on Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science.
This version omits the flood year return-to-normal and encourages
teachers to speculate that a "new species of finch" might arise in 200
years if the initial trend towards increased beak size continued
indefinitely. When our leading scientists have to resort to the sort of
distortion that would land a stock promoter in jail, you know they are
in trouble.
If the Academy meant
to teach scientific investigation, rather than to inculcate a belief
system, it would encourage students to think about why, if natural
selection has been continuously active in creating, the observed
examples involve very limited back-and-forth variation that doesn't seem
to be going anywhere. But skepticism of that kind might spread and
threaten the whole system of naturalistic belief. Why is the fossil
record overall so difficult to reconcile with the steady process of
gradual transformation predicted by the neo-Darwinian theory? How would
the theory fare if we did not assume at the start that nature had to do
its own creating, so a naturalistic creation mechanism simply has to
exist regardless of the evidence? These are the kinds of questions the
Darwinists don't want to encourage students to ask.
This doesn't mean
that students in Kansas or elsewhere shouldn't be taught about
evolution. In context, the Kansas action was a protest against
enshrining a particular worldview as a scientific fact and against
making "evolution" an exception to the usual American tradition that the
people have a right to disagree with the experts. Take evolution away
from the worldview promoters and return it to the real scientific
investigators, and a chronic social conflict will become an exciting
intellectual adventure.
Mr. Johnson is
professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley, and the
author of Darwin on Trial (Intervarsity Press, 1993).
Copyright© 1999 Dow
Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. International copyright
secured.
File Date: 8.27.99