Posts with the tag 'Creationism'

“Expelled” Reviewed

By Dave Berg over at NRO:

The highlight of the film features Ben Stein interviewing Dawkins, who concedes that an intelligent being may have created life on earth. But that being cannot be “God.” Instead, he suggests it may be an alien, itself a product of “Darwinian evolution.” Oh, the scientific imagination — there’s nothing like it on God’s green earth.

Dawkins has since complained that the interview was set up under false pretenses, and that he didn’t even know who Stein was. It is rather astonishing that it did not occur to the world’s smartest atheist to look up Ben Stein on the Internet, where he might have readily discovered numerous examples of his writings that are critical of Darwinism.

Dawkins dismisses the Emmy-winning actor as having “no talent for comedy.” He believes during the interview Stein is an “honestly stupid man, sincerely seeking enlightenment from a scientist.” A lawyer, a law professor, an economist, and a speechwriter for both Nixon and Ford, Stein hardly seems to fit the description “honestly stupid.”

In the end, the film isn’t really about intelligent design as much as about a relentless attack on an authentically free inquiry. As Ben Stein points out, “Freedom of inquiry has been greatly compromised, and this is not only anti-American, it’s anti-science. It’s anti-the whole concept of learning.”

We live in an age of lies - a lot of people believe a lot of things which are either outright false, or heavily distorted. I’m constantly amazed at the amount of sheer nonsense people believe - my favorite example of this is the Kennedy assasination. I’ll bet that if we did a survey of the American people, a very large minority would come back with the opinion that a conspiracy killed Kennedy, and a much larger number of people - perhaps even a large majority - would hold that there are at least a lot of unanswered questions surrounding the event. This belief flies in the face of every single fact which has been discovered about that tragic day - the further anyone investigates, the more clear it becomes that Oswald, a lunatic acting alone, killed President Kennedy. But very, very many people believe otherwise, and no amount of evidence will convince them to change their views.

So it is with a host of issues - in this case, the debate between ID and Darwinism. Its good here to define what we’re talking about - ID is not creationism. Creationism is the belief that the world was created in six literal days approximately 6,000 years ago - many of my Evangelical brothers and sisters believe this; I don’t. ID is the belief that the development of life on earth - heck, the development of anything, anywhere - is only explicable if there is a will guiding the whole process. The chances of even one random accident resulting in anything useful are so small that to believe that we are the result of nothing but a series of random accidents is laughably foolish - and even such a theory (that its all developed by random chance) still fails to explain how the basic matter of the universe came to be. Darwinism is not a belief in evolution, as such; it is the belief that no matter what else is said, there must be no Creator, or at least no Creator which intervenes post-Big Bang in creation. When we say we’re debating “creation vs evolution”, what we’re really debating is ID vs Darwinism.

If there is one thing we should never see in the scientific community, it is the phrase “rigid orthodoxy” - but that is precisely what we have these days, and not just in the debate over origins. Such orthodoxy also reigns supreme on such matters as global warming and the genesis of homosexuality, as well as other subjects. To say that there is a “consensus” about a subject means only one thing - no one has really looked at it or been able to explain it, so the herd of science has arbitrarily decided that “X” shall be considered true about a subject. Scientific advance, of course, has always rested on those who ignore consensus - and one does wonder how many bits of sciece lie submerged beneath the waves of ideological purity which have taken over so much of the scientific community. A true scientist is not someone who asks, “what does everyone else say”, but “what evidence do we have to form an opinion?”.

Stein’s new movie might just be the thing to break this logjam - to expose to a mass audience just how purblind a great deal of our higher educational establishment has become, and thus move people to demand changes. We should not fear truth - and we should go where ever truth leads…time to stop consigning vast areas of research to the trash heap simply because we’re afraid to buck trends.

del.icio.us Reddit Digg Facebook Technorati Google StumbleUpon Yahoo Ask Newsvine

240 comments April 19th, 2008

Opening Up the Creationism/Evolution Can of Worms

As Huckabee has surged in support - almost certainly from Evangelical Christians enlisting on his side - some people seem determined to add Creationism vs Evolution to the political debate:

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, a Southern Baptist preacher who has surged in Iowa with evangelical Christian support, bristled Tuesday when asked if creationism should be taught in public schools.

Huckabee - who raised his hand at a debate last May when asked which candidates disbelieved the theory of evolution - asked this time why there is such a fascination with his beliefs.

“I believe God created the heavens and the Earth,” he said at a news conference with Iowa pastors who murmured, “Amen.”

“I wasn’t there when he did it, so how he did it, I don’t know,” Huckabee said.

But he expressed frustration that he is asked about it so often, arguing with the questioner that it ultimately doesn’t matter what his personal views are.

“That’s an irrelevant question to ask me - I’m happy to answer what I believe, but what I believe is not what’s going to be taught in 50 different states,” Huckabee said. “Education is a state function. The more state it is, and the less federal it is, the better off we are.”

The former Arkansas governor pointed out he has advocated for broad public school course lists that include the creative arts and math and science. Why, then, he asked, is evolution such a fascination?

Why? Because if there is a God which not only created but guided the development of the universe, then most liberal/left ideology wouldn’t be worth a pitcher of warm spit. On the left it is (barely) ok for there to be a God - but this God must be rather vague…a First Cause, perhaps, but not an entity which has a specific plan for His creation and a willingness to intervene from time to time to set things on the right course. Go beyond a First Cause sort of God and before you know it you might have someone getting ten hard and fast rules and, worse, an Incarnate Diety who tells people precisely what is right and what is wrong and how they are to live - you might get the anti-liberal silver bullet: absolute Truth.

Truth is pesky - it can’t be argued with, you see? Have truth and you just have to adhere to it, or admit to all and sundry that you prefer lies. Its the sort of thing which makes a lefty go bonkers…so, better to just not have truth, and demand that anything which proclaims truth be relegated to entirely outside the public square.

Be that as it may, whomever has decided that pestering Huckabee with Creationism questions is making a rather large mistake. Not for nothing did the Founders ban any religious test for office. In the Founders wisdom, it doesn’t matter if person worships a rock or thinks the Moon is made of green cheese - the personal religious beliefs of a person simply cannot be used to deny them public office. By making an issue of Creationism, a religious test is subtly being created - the concept being that anyone who believes in a Creator is not really fit to be in office. Its already being done with Romney and his Mormon faith, now its also being done with Huckabee and his Evangelical Christian faith - but the sword cuts two ways and the left won’t like it when Democrats are pressed to square their professed religion with policy prescriptions which directly violate specific rules of their faith.

It would be better, I think, if such matters are left out of Presidential politics - but, sadly, I think we’re way past the time when anything could be considered out of bounds.

del.icio.us Reddit Digg Facebook Technorati Google StumbleUpon Yahoo Ask Newsvine

58 comments December 5th, 2007


Prime Sponsor

Advertisements

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

RSS Blogs For John McCain's Victory

RSS GOP Bloggers

Archives


Blogroll

Meta

Tags

Mark Noonan on Twitter

Matt Margolis on Twitter

    Advertisements

    Buttons For Your Blog

    Disclaimer

    Blogs For Victory is privately owned and maintained. All contributors are volunteers unaffiliated with any campaign or political party.

    Material published and opinions expressed herein are solely the responsibility of the individual authors of this site.