"Lest you think this is merely of academic interest, consider the
stakes: the Pentagon last week revealed that it is spending money to
train certain scientists how to write screenplays for thrillers
related to their specialties. Why? Because the status of science has
sunk so low that the government needs these disciplines to become sexy
again among students or the brain drain will threaten national
security. One of the reasons we have fewer science majors is the
pernicious right-wing notion that conventional biology is vaguely
atheistic."

Anotherwords, good Christian children should not study that godless
science lest it tempt them to stray from the one path to God.  

Good Grief! Now all we need is a mob of Luddites!

Personally, I would prefer to rely on science to produce the weapons
and equipment for Iraq and the war on terror rather than a mere belief
in the voodoo science of Intelligent Design.  And I would hope that
the schools educating American children would teach science to them
instead of a belief system that dooms them to non-technical
occupations and eats away the National Security of this nation.

David Bier


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8853604/site/newsweek/

Monkey See, Monkey Do

Offering ID as an alternative to evolution is a cruel joke. It walks
and talks like science but in the lab performs worse than medieval
alchemy.


By Jonathan Alter
Newsweek

Aug. 15, 2005 issue - A teacher in Kansas, where war over Darwin in
the schools is still raging, calls the theory of intelligent design
"creationism in a cheap tuxedo." Great line, but unfair to the elegant
tailoring of the Discovery Institute, the Seattle-based think tank
that has almost singlehandedly put intelligent design on the map.
Eighty years after the Scopes "monkey trial," the threat to science
and reason comes less from fundamentalists who believe the earth was
created in six days than from sophisticated branding experts and
polemical Ph.D. s who are clever enough to refrain from referring to
God or even the Creator, and have now found a willing tool in the
president of the United States.

Lest you think this is merely of academic interest, consider the
stakes: the Pentagon last week revealed that it is spending money to
train certain scientists how to write screenplays for thrillers
related to their specialties. Why? Because the status of science has
sunk so low that the government needs these disciplines to become sexy
again among students or the brain drain will threaten national
security. One of the reasons we have fewer science majors is the
pernicious right-wing notion that conventional biology is vaguely
atheistic.

Now President Bush has given that view a boost. When Bush was asked
about intelligent design last week, he answered, "Both sides ought to
be properly taught... so people can understand what the debate is
about." This sounds reasonable until you realize that, as the
president's own science adviser, John H. Marburger III, admits, there
is no real debate. "Intelligent design is not a scientific concept,"
Marburger told The New York Times, committing a bit of candor that
will presumably earn him a trip to the White House woodshed.

Stephen Meyer of the Discovery Institute claims ID uses a
scientifically valid "inference to the best explanation" to back up
its theories. That might be good enough for a graduate course in the
philosophy of science (and the ACLU should not prevent it from being
discussed in high-school humanities and philosophy classes), but the
idea of its being offered as an alternative to evolution in
ninth-grade biology is a cruel joke. Its basic claim—that the human
cell is too complex to be explained by natural selection—is unproven
and probably unprovable. ID walks like science and talks like science
but, so far, performs in the lab worse than medieval alchemy.

It's not God who's the problem but ID's assault on Darwin. Brown
University biologist Kenneth Miller (who attends mass every week) says
the "unspoken message" peddled by the Discovery Institute is that
evolution is the single shakiest theory in science. In fact, despite
its flaws, it remains among the most durable theories in all of science.

Even as the president helps pit faith against science in the
classroom, popes and other clerics have long known that religion and
evolution are not truly at odds. Evolution does not, for instance,
challenge the idea that the universe began with a spark of divinity.
Darwin himself wrote movingly of God. Only the scientific process—not
the scientist—must be agnostic. Long before Darwin, enlightened
Christians understood that religion and science are best kept in
separate realms. In the fifth century, for instance, Saint Augustine
criticized other Christians who "talk nonsense" about the laws of nature.

The most clever thing about intelligent design is that it doesn't
sound like nonsense. It conjures up Cambridge, not Kansas. The name
evokes Apple software, the MoMA gift shop or a Frank Gehry chair. The
scholarly articles are often well written and provocative. But the
science within these papers has been demolished over and over by other
scientists. As Miller explains, science is perhaps the last true
marketplace of ideas. After a decade in circulation, intelligent
design has failed the market test. So now its backers are seeking the
equivalent of a government bailout, by going around their scientific
peers to Red State politicians trying to slip religious dogma into the
classroom.

While the Discovery Institute calls God the "designer," to appear less
creationist, some of its biggest funders are serious fundamentalists.
An internal fund-raising memo leaked in 1999 laid out its theological
agenda and intention to use ID as a "wedge" to triumph in the culture
wars.

Last week Fox News lent a hand. Bill O'Reilly says that the National
Academy of Science is guilty of "fascism" for arguing that ID should
not take up valuable class time in high-school biology. (Not to be
outdone, Dr. James Dobson compared embryonic-stem-cell research to
"Nazi experiments.") These are the same modest gents who decry
relativism and curricular inclusiveness in the humanities, where it is
far more justifiable than in the sciences.

Bush's policy of politicizing science—retreating from the field of
facts and evidence on everything from evolution to global warming to
the number of cell lines available to justify his 2001 stem-cell
compromise—will eventually wreak havoc with his legacy. Until then,
like his masquerade-ball friends, the president will get more clever
at harming science while pretending to promote it. Monkey see, monkey do.




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