Quit pretending they're compatible.
President Bush used to be content to revel in his own ignorance. Now he wants
to share it with America's
schoolchildren.
I refer to his recent comments in favor of teaching "intelligent
design" alongside evolution. "Both sides ought to be properly taught so
people can understand what the debate is about," Bush told a group of
Texas newspaper
reporters who interviewed him on Aug. 1. "Part of education is to expose
people to different schools of thought."
The president seems to view the conflict between evolutionary theory and
intelligent design as something like the debate over Social Security reform.
But this is not a disagreement with two reasonable points of view, let alone
two equally valid ones. Intelligent design, which asserts that gaps in
evolutionary science prove God must have had a role in creation, may be-as Bob Wright
argues in camouflage. Or it may be-as William Saletan argues step in the
creationist cave-in to evolution. But whatever it represents, intelligent
design is a faith-based theory with no scientific validity or credibility.
If Bush had said schools should give equal time to the view that the Sun
revolves around the Earth, or that smoking doesn't cause lung cancer, he'd have
been laughed out of his office. The difference with evolution is that a large
majority of Americans reject what scientists regard as equally well supported: that
we're here because of random mutation and natural selection. According to the
most recent Gallup
poll on the subject (2004), 45 percent of Americans believe God created human
beings in their present form 10,000 years ago, while another 38 percent believe
that God directed the process of evolution. Only 13 percent accept the prevailing
scientific view of evolution as an unguided, random process.
Being right and yet so unpopular presents an interesting problem for
evolutionists. Their theory has won over the world scientific community but
very few of the citizens of red-state America, who decide what gets
taught in their own public schools. How can followers of Darwin
prevent the propagation of ignorance in places like Kansas, whose board of education just voted
to rewrite its biology curriculum to do what President Bush suggests?
Many biologists believe the answer is to present evolution as less menacing to
religious belief than it really is. In much the same way that intelligent-design
advocates try to assert that a creator must be compatible with evolution in order
to shoehorn God into science classrooms, evolutionists claim Darwin is compatible with religion in order
to keep God out. Don't worry, they insist, there's no conflict between evolution
and religion-they simply belong to different realms. Evolution should be taught
in the secular classroom, along with other hypotheses that can be verified or
falsified. Intelligent design belongs in Sunday schools, with stuff that can't.
This was the soothing contention of the famed paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould,
who argued that science and religion were separate magisteria, or domains of
teaching. The theme appears frequently in statements by major scientific
organizations and wherever fundamentalists try to force creationism or its descendents
on local school boards. Here, for instance, is the official position of Kansas Citizens for
Science, the group opposing the inclusion of intelligent design in the state's science
curricula: "People of faith do not have to choose between science and
religion. Science is neither anti-Christian nor anti-God. Science denies
neither God nor creation. Science merely looks for natural evidence of how the
universe got to its current state. If viewed theistically, science is not
commenting on whether there was a creation, but could be viewed as trying to
find out how it happened."
In a state like Kansas,
where public opinion remains overwhelmingly hostile to evolution, one sees the
political logic of this kind of tap-dance. But let's be serious: Evolutionary theory
may not be incompatible with all forms of religious belief, but it surely does
undercut the basic teachings and doctrines of the world's great religions (and
most of its not-so-great ones as well). Look at this 1993 NORC survey: In the United States,
63 percent of the public believed in God and 35 percent believed in evolution.
In Great Britain,
by comparison, 24 percent of people believed in God and 77 percent believed in
evolution. You can believe in both-but not many people do.
That evolution erodes religious belief seems almost too obvious to require
argument. It destroyed the faith of Darwin himself, who moved from Christianity
to agnosticism as a result of his discoveries and was immediately recognized as
a huge threat by his reverent contemporaries. In reviewing The Origin of
Species in 1860, Samuel Wilberforce, the bishop of Oxford, wrote that the religious view of man
as a creature with free will was "utterly irreconcilable with the
degrading notion of the brute origin of him who was created in the image of
God." (The passage is quoted in Daniel C. Dennett's superb book Darwin's Dangerous Idea.)
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn, the archbishop of Vienna, was saying nothing very different
when he argued in a New York Times op-ed piece on July 7 that random evolution
can't be harmonized with Catholic doctrine. To be sure, there are plenty of
scientists who believe in God, and even Darwinists who call themselves
Christians. But the acceptance of evolution diminishes religious belief in
aggregate for a simple reason: It provides a better answer to the question of
how we got here than religion does. Not a different answer, a better answer:
more plausible, more logical, and supported by an enormous body of evidence.
Post-Darwinian evolutionary theory, which can explain the emergence of the
first bacteria, doesn't even leave much room for a deist God whose minimal role
might have been to flick the first switch.
So, what should evolutionists and their supporters say to parents who don't
want their children to become atheists and who may even hold firm to the virgin
birth and the parting of the Red Sea? That
it's time for them to finally let go of their quaint superstitions? That Darwinists
aren't trying to push people away from religion but recognize that teaching
their views does tend to have that effect? Dennett notes that Darwin himself
avoided exploring the issue of the ultimate origins of life in part to avoid
upsetting his wife Emma's religious beliefs.
One possible avenue is to focus more strongly on the practical consequences of
resisting scientific reality. In a world where Koreans are cloning dogs, can
the U.S.
afford-ethically or economically-to raise our children on fraudulent biology?
But whatever tack they take, evolutionists should quit pretending their views are
no threat to believers. This insults our intelligence, and the president is
doing that already.
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