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Intelligent design, dumb science?
'Unscientific,
unwise, and unconstitutional' says American skeptic DJ Grothe
Source: The Varsity (University of Toronto, ON)
Date: September 12, 2005
Author: Chris
Damdar
Last month, US President George W. Bush made waves by endorsing the
notion that teachers ought to present the ideas of Intelligent
Design (ID) alongside the theory of evolution in high school science
classrooms. "You're asking me whether or not people ought to be
exposed to different ideas," said Bush, "the answer is 'yes.'"
ID supporters argue that life is too complex and organisms too
suited to their ways of living to have come about through natural
processes, as asserted by evolution. Instead, ID proponents invoke a
Designer, and claim that it is possible to scientifically show that
life was designed.
The majority of scientists dismiss ID as religion disguised as
science. Yet proponents of ID are on the brink of legally forcing
Kansas school boards to teach ID as a valid scientific alternative
to Darwinian evolution. This decision would set a strong precedent
for similar cases in the US and Canada.
The talk focused on whether ID should be taught in schools, and was
put on by U of T student group the Secular Alliance last Friday. It
featured DJ Grothe, the director of the Center for Inquiry, who
spoke against the teaching of Intelligent Design in science
classrooms.
Grothe began with a short clip wherein ID proponents blame society's
ills on secularism and humanism, and attribute practices such as
abortion to the rise of evolutionary thinking. "Humanism is a
religion that has gained an unmistakable grip on our schools,"
American televangelist Pat Robertson was seen saying. "Students are
forced to replace their faith in God with faith in man."
During his talk, Grothe boiled down his argument against ID to three
reasons: "It should not be taught in schools because it is
unscientific, unwise, and unconstitutional," he argued.
"Unscientific because ID proponents have not produced any scientific
evidence or research. Rather than advancing a scientific program and
appealing to a scientific forum, they use political means to show
why their evidence against evolution should be taught."
Grother said that teaching ID in
schools is unwise, because "science teachers have a responsibility
to teach the best science of the day. Would you teach astrology in
an astronomy class?" In addition, Grothe claimed that ID was
religious and that its introduction into schools would violate the
separation of church and state. Grothe also warned of the
proliferation of large religious organizations who clamour against
evolution and assist in efforts to introduce ID into classrooms. One
such organization is Campus Crusade for Christ, which operates
throughout North America on a $400-million-a-year budget; the
organization has a chapter at U of T.
In an interview with The Varsity, Grothe dismissed the notion that
schools should "teach the controversy" surrounding evolution. "There
is no scientific controversy regarding the acceptance of evolution.
The scientific evidence demands the verdict of evolution....However
there is a cultural controversy. I think Intelligent Design can and
should be taught in a history class or philosophy class as a social
controversy, but not as a science."
During the question period, one vocal audience member stood up to
challenge the audience's near-unanimous support for evolution. After
a long introductory statement asking for tolerance and pleading to
be allowed to go on without interruption, he asked four prepared
questions and then read off a long statement that purported to prove
the falsity of evolution. Most of his statements received chuckles
from the audience but patient responses from Grothe. After
presenting his point of view, the audience member advised attendees
to visit the website www.evolutiondeceit.com for more evidence.
"You can't go through life thinking you know everything," he told
The Varsity. "I don't know exactly what Intelligent Design is, but
the debate is all about whether God exists," he said. "I think God
should be taught in the classrooms." He met with hostility during
and after the talk, mainly for taking up a lot of time.
One patient voice of opposition was
Dr. Larry Moran, a professor of biochemistry at U of T, who
countered the audience member with the website talkorigins.org.
Moran's office server hosts an Internet discussion group called
talk.origins, which is devoted to debating the evolution vs.
creation controversy. Started in 1988, the newsgroup has also
spawned an archived website, talkorigins.org, a compendium of
articles presenting the evidence for evolution, and
counter-arguments to common creationist claims.
In addition to countering the audience member, Moran also criticized
the third pillar of Grothe's case against the teaching of ID-the
fact that it would be unconstitutional. "You cannot defend against a
cultural attack by invoking the Constitution," Moran said. "It's the
wrong strategy.
"[Evolutionists] rely on the courts to defend them as their first
line of defense." That, he said, "plays into the creationists'
game-it reinforces the notion they're being oppressed by the atheist
establishment."
"By and large there is no traction (for ID) among university
students in Canada," said Moran. "U of T students getting up in
class to air anti-Darwinian views would likely get laughed at by
their fellow students. Most students at U of T don't see a conflict
between their science and their religion," he said. "They just don't
see a controversy, so it's hard to stir them up."
This article was retrieved from
http://www.thevarsity.ca/media/paper285/news/2005/09/12/Science/Intelligent.Design.Dumb.Science-982225.shtml
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