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Creationism: God's gift to the ignorant (Religion bashing alert)
Times Online UK ^ | May 21, 2005 | Richard Dawkins

Posted on 05/25/2005 3:41:22 AM PDT by billorites

Science feeds on mystery. As my colleague Matt Ridley has put it: “Most scientists are bored by what they have already discovered. It is ignorance that drives them on.” Science mines ignorance. Mystery — that which we don’t yet know; that which we don’t yet understand — is the mother lode that scientists seek out. Mystics exult in mystery and want it to stay mysterious. Scientists exult in mystery for a very different reason: it gives them something to do.

Admissions of ignorance and mystification are vital to good science. It is therefore galling, to say the least, when enemies of science turn those constructive admissions around and abuse them for political advantage. Worse, it threatens the enterprise of science itself. This is exactly the effect that creationism or “intelligent design theory” (ID) is having, especially because its propagandists are slick, superficially plausible and, above all, well financed. ID, by the way, is not a new form of creationism. It simply is creationism disguised, for political reasons, under a new name.

It isn’t even safe for a scientist to express temporary doubt as a rhetorical device before going on to dispel it.

“To suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree.” You will find this sentence of Charles Darwin quoted again and again by creationists. They never quote what follows. Darwin immediately went on to confound his initial incredulity. Others have built on his foundation, and the eye is today a showpiece of the gradual, cumulative evolution of an almost perfect illusion of design. The relevant chapter of my Climbing Mount Improbable is called “The fortyfold Path to Enlightenment” in honour of the fact that, far from being difficult to evolve, the eye has evolved at least 40 times independently around the animal kingdom.

The distinguished Harvard geneticist Richard Lewontin is widely quoted as saying that organisms “appear to have been carefully and artfully designed”. Again, this was a rhetorical preliminary to explaining how the powerful illusion of design actually comes about by natural selection. The isolated quotation strips out the implied emphasis on “appear to”, leaving exactly what a simple-mindedly pious audience — in Kansas, for instance — wants to hear.

The deceitful misquoting of scientists to suit an anti-scientific agenda ranks among the many unchristian habits of fundamentalist authors. But such Telling Lies for God (the book title of the splendidly pugnacious Australian geologist Ian Plimer) is not the most serious problem. There is a more important point to be made, and it goes right to the philosophical heart of creationism.

The standard methodology of creationists is to find some phenomenon in nature which Darwinism cannot readily explain. Darwin said: “If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down.” Creationists mine ignorance and uncertainty in order to abuse his challenge. “Bet you can’t tell me how the elbow joint of the lesser spotted weasel frog evolved by slow gradual degrees?” If the scientist fails to give an immediate and comprehensive answer, a default conclusion is drawn: “Right, then, the alternative theory; ‘intelligent design’ wins by default.”

Notice the biased logic: if theory A fails in some particular, theory B must be right! Notice, too, how the creationist ploy undermines the scientist’s rejoicing in uncertainty. Today’s scientist in America dare not say: “Hm, interesting point. I wonder how the weasel frog’s ancestors did evolve their elbow joint. I’ll have to go to the university library and take a look.” No, the moment a scientist said something like that the default conclusion would become a headline in a creationist pamphlet: “Weasel frog could only have been designed by God.”

I once introduced a chapter on the so-called Cambrian Explosion with the words: “It is as though the fossils were planted there without any evolutionary history.” Again, this was a rhetorical overture, intended to whet the reader’s appetite for the explanation. Inevitably, my remark was gleefully quoted out of context. Creationists adore “gaps” in the fossil record.

Many evolutionary transitions are elegantly documented by more or less continuous series of changing intermediate fossils. Some are not, and these are the famous “gaps”. Michael Shermer has wittily pointed out that if a new fossil discovery neatly bisects a “gap”, the creationist will declare that there are now two gaps! Note yet again the use of a default. If there are no fossils to document a postulated evolutionary transition, the assumption is that there was no evolutionary transition: God must have intervened.

The creationists’ fondness for “gaps” in the fossil record is a metaphor for their love of gaps in knowledge generally. Gaps, by default, are filled by God. You don’t know how the nerve impulse works? Good! You don’t understand how memories are laid down in the brain? Excellent! Is photosynthesis a bafflingly complex process? Wonderful! Please don’t go to work on the problem, just give up, and appeal to God. Dear scientist, don’t work on your mysteries. Bring us your mysteries for we can use them. Don’t squander precious ignorance by researching it away. Ignorance is God’s gift to Kansas.

Richard Dawkins, FRS, is the Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science, at Oxford University. His latest book is The Ancestor’s Tale


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: biblethumpers; cary; creation; crevolist; dawkins; evolution; excellentessay; funnyresponses; hahahahahahaha; liberalgarbage; phenryjerkalert; smegheads
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To: Ichneumon
"Class, this is a marvelous example of the "fallacy of the false dichotomy". The number of alternative explanations which the author has overlooked is left as an excercise for the reader."

I'll guess 6.342. Here's my dollar. (Well its Canuck, but what can I do?)

341 posted on 05/25/2005 1:27:04 PM PDT by b_sharp (Science adjusts theories to fit evidence, creationism distorts evidence to fit the Bible.)
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To: Right Wing Professor; Ichneumon
Ich is Ichneumon. However, ich bin nicht Ichneumon

Yeah, well I'm Sparticus.

342 posted on 05/25/2005 1:33:36 PM PDT by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas. The List-O-Links is at my homepage.)
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To: Junior
Okay, so if speciation can be accomplished by nothing more than breeding, why can't it happen that way naturally?

Doesn't it happen just that way?



343 posted on 05/25/2005 1:35:03 PM PDT by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: ArGee
No. It is my position that when a man is condemned for his frontal attack on the Church, it should not be mis-interpreted as Church hatred for science. It was about politics, not science.

This is such serious malarky that it offends me. Galileo was expressing a technical opinion about the nature of the universe in disagreement with the church, which, for all practical purposes, was, at the time, also the state. And a pretty bloody arbitrarily powerful one at that.

The argument was most definitely and overwhelmingly about science, and the nature of the universe. And to charactarize anything Galileo might have said, no matter how intemperate, as an "attack" on the church is like accusing a flea of trying to attack an elephant.

You have some pretty odd sensibilities, to be touting conventional, conservative and polite rules of argumentation in one breath, and promulgating this very odd, rather senseless, and un-historical take on the Trial of Galileo, with no more apparent thought to defend it in detail than a sparrow has for quantum mechanics. I believe I'll ask you to quit offering us instructions on proper argumentation.

344 posted on 05/25/2005 1:40:38 PM PDT by donh
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To: Junior
As a veteran of a thousand crevo wars,

BOC should remake their song "Veterans of the Psychic Wars" to "Veterans of the crevo Wars". :-)

I like that song.

BTW. It was played in the movie "heavy Metal" as well.

345 posted on 05/25/2005 1:41:38 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: RadioAstronomer
I first heard it in Heavy Metal too.

Veteran of a Thousand Crevo Wars

(with apologies to Blue Oyster Cult)

You see me now, a veteran
Of a thousand crevo wars.
I've been posting on these threads so long
Where the wind of ignorance roars
I've tackled ID proponents
And battled YEC.
I've ripped into catastrophism
Until there was nothing left to see.

[Refrain]
Please bring the creos on
I'll never need a break from it
Don't like it you can leave
We've been living in the flames
We've been revving up our brains
Oh, please, please bring those creos on.

Sometimes I get so weary
Repeating stuff to you
You call me a bloody commie
And blame me for Nazis too
But the war's still going on dude
And there's no end in sight
And I can't say if we're ever
I can't say if we're ever gonna end this fight

[Refrain]

You see me now a veteran
Of a thousand crevo wars
I've got energy to spare
Until my opponent's on the floor
Science supplies me weapons
Creos are helpless and bereaved

346 posted on 05/25/2005 1:50:01 PM PDT by Junior (“Even if you are one-in-a-million, there are still 6,000 others just like you.”)
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To: The_Reader_David
At one level I agree with you: Behe's wrong because his assertions of non-evolvability are based on a priori probability estimates, which are necessarily bogus since we don't have an adequate understanding of the genome to functionality mapping and no one seems to have done the necessary work on the probabilistic and information theoretic properties of actually occurring DNA transcription errors.

Worse, one needs to have a probability estimate for every possible route in genome space between ancestor and progeny. A given molecule may have occupied more than one completely different function between its role in ancestor and its role in progeny. Most of the homology data we have suggests that molecules were often coopted; that a molecule, say, that functioned as an ion pump may have fortuitously added another domain and became an ion-gradient-driven mechanical device. It's improbable that a complex multimeric protein came together all at once to fulfill a role; it's much less improbable that a simpler molecule evolved to fill some role, and that a mutation caused another domain to stick, which gave it second (probably inefficient) role, which then evolved. We're a hundred years away from being able to map out the probabilities of such events.

On the other hand, I'm dubious about the claims made on behalf of the neo-Darwinian synthesis, partly on the basis the fact that I hold a probably extreme view of falsifiablity and the predictive part--natural selection--usually ends up being tautolgous, and partly because the other part 'random variation' either has randomness defined away in any statistically meaningful sense, or is untested.

Popper began with a similar view, but changed his mind.

IMO evolution makes plenty of predictions; we can make concrete predictions, for example, about the likely characteristics of as-yet-unsequenced genomes. Using maximum parsimony, for example, I can predict the likely sequence of any even moderately conserved gene in the last common ancestor of humans and rats. You can argue that that long extinct animal will never actually be sequenced to test my prediction - and that may be true (though we are getting better at getting DNA from fossilized material) but we can look at other descendants, and see if their genomes are consistent with that of my predicted ancestor.

It would have been a much less accessible movie than Jurassic Park, but if you have enough different descendants, you could plausibly propose to reconstruct a major part of the genome of a long extinct common ancestor, just by looking at the sequences of the descendants. No mosquitoes required!I can tell you, for example, with a high probability of correctness, the chemical structure of the myoglobin of the last common ancestor of the whales, even though no living whale has exactly that myoglobin. This sort of research is in its infancy, but from the properties of such gene products, we may be able to tell, say, if the ancestor lived on the land or water, how big it was, etc.. That, IMO, is quintessentially predictive.

347 posted on 05/25/2005 1:53:24 PM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: Junior

clap clap clap :-)

Love it!


348 posted on 05/25/2005 1:54:55 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: Junior

Well, that does'nt concern me too much. Many of the Pharaohs that we know about have left no evidence of their existence beyond their name written on their kid's or grandkid's tomb that has been terribly desecrated.

It is also unlikely that the Pharaoh upon whose watch the events in Exodus took place, was eager to have that memorialized or otherwise enscrolled. Call it the "Sir Robin's Minstrels Effect". If you've ever seen that flick, If you have'nt, call it the "LBJ Effect". Or the "Jimmy Carter Effect". ;-)


349 posted on 05/25/2005 1:57:06 PM PDT by L,TOWM (Liberals, The Other White Meat [Born in California, Texan by the Grace of God.])
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To: Junior
As a veteran of a thousand crevo wars . . .

So the legends of evolutionism extend to the minds of those who espouse it. Predictable.

350 posted on 05/25/2005 2:02:17 PM PDT by Fester Chugabrew
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To: malakhi
Do you dispute the accuracy of Ichneumon's citations of the Galileo case in his #266? How do you not read that as a condemnation of science?

It was science that was being used as the excuse for the action on both sides. The scientific argument was the public face of the political battle. As so often happens in history, it was the official reason as opposed to the real one.

If Galileo had merely presented his theory, instead of trying to club the Church with it, the results would have been very different. Many in the Church had already accepted the heliocentric (sp?) theory.

Shalom.

351 posted on 05/25/2005 2:02:49 PM PDT by ArGee (Why do we let the abnormal tell us what's normal?)
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To: ArGee
Uh huh. How many heretics did Galileo burn at the stake?

How many Christians have atheists and non-Christians killed throughout the ages? Your question is no more germaine to our discussion than mine.

It most certainly is germane. Galileo did not "attack the church" with threats of condemnation, excommunication, jail, or burning at the stake. Such restraint was not observed by the other side of this argument.

They didn't react to his science. They reacted to his politics.

Good grief. Galileo was a personal friend of the Pope, and hardly one for stirring a political pot. It is one of the best known facts of history that they reacted to his science, massively. The publication of his book created such a stir that they had no choice but to crack down on him. No matter how "political" or intemperate Galileo might have been, it is a totally miniscule issue beside the publication of his book. Everybody, but I mean everybody, should know this. It is fact of history that manifests down through the subsequent centuries in so many ways that it hard to believe there is anyone in the western world who could really believe what you are putting forth.

only the churches--rather as is now the case with creationists and biologists.

Broad brush bigotry again.

I don't understand how this response even makes sense in the context we were discussing. But at this point, I don't care. Please concentrate on one thing at a time until you can produce a cogent argument with some legs regarding facts you didn't make up in a daydream.

352 posted on 05/25/2005 2:04:01 PM PDT by donh
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To: Junior
Apples to oranges. Anyone could go to the oracle, like plugging quarters into a machine, or paying the local psychic to tell your fortune. The Bible is completely different as its prophets were not at all as such. Also, from what I've read, the oracle was hardly absolute in its foretelling. From the following link -

Arguments over the correct interpretation of an oracle were common, but the oracle was always happy to give another prophecy if more gold was provided. A good example is the famous incident before the Battle of Salamis when the Pythia first predicted doom and later predicted that a 'wooden wall' (interpreted by the Athenians to mean their ships) would save them.

That kills her success rate right there.

You mentioned "writers" with regard to the oracle. The Bible is a compilation of 66 books written by over 40 different authors, some of them prophets, some of them not, but all commonly linked by their belief in YHWH, God of Israel, and their remarkably consistent message.

What is the Greek counterpart to that which lends support to the existence of the Greek gods, preserves their message and details the prophecies of those such as the oracle?

353 posted on 05/25/2005 2:05:25 PM PDT by agrace (All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen. - Ralph Waldo Emerson)
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To: Dinsdale
That amounts to hatred of science.

It's a matter of interpretation. It amounts to a hatred of being challenged by any means. What you would have to do to prove hatred of science is demonstrate that every scientific discovery of the time was condemned by the Church, or even that the Church forced laws to make scientific pursuits illegal. I don't know of any assertion. Instead, this one event, anecdotal evidence as it were, is used to prove a trend.

Shalom.

354 posted on 05/25/2005 2:06:03 PM PDT by ArGee (Why do we let the abnormal tell us what's normal?)
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To: ArGee
It was science that was being used as the excuse for the action on both sides. The scientific argument was the public face of the political battle. As so often happens in history, it was the official reason as opposed to the real one.

Good grief--are you still at this? Maybe you should be talking to the guy who thinks that 500 people observed christ's resurrection, and were tortured to death by a mysterious cabal of conspirators for it.

355 posted on 05/25/2005 2:08:10 PM PDT by donh
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To: js1138
So you would agree that it's a crime (or at least misbehavior) to question church doctrine?

I think it was, but that's beside the point.

I'm wondering what the moral equivalence is between someone publishing a theory, and a church imprisoning a person for disagreeing with them.

If I gave that impression, I'm sorry. What I was trying to say was that if Galileo had REALLY wanted to further the cause of science, he would not have used his discovery as a club to try to attack the Church.

I am not an apologist for the Church as a political power. People's politics can be motivated by their beliefs, but the Church, as an institution, should not be governing nor directing governments.

How is this behaviour of the church different from the behavior of the Taliban?

Conceptually, it is not.

Shalom.

356 posted on 05/25/2005 2:08:41 PM PDT by ArGee (Why do we let the abnormal tell us what's normal?)
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To: donh
Good grief. Galileo was a personal friend of the Pope, and hardly one for stirring a political pot.

This is not my understanding. I will go back to my sources and produce them for you. But it will not be this evening as I am about to leave and won't have any time to post any more on this topic tonight.

As for the bigotry accusation, it stands no matter what the rest of the conversation. To suggest that all creationists are bad and all biologists are good does not represent an open mind.

Shalom.

357 posted on 05/25/2005 2:11:17 PM PDT by ArGee (Why do we let the abnormal tell us what's normal?)
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To: L,TOWM
From the clues given in the Bible (1 Kings 6:1), the Pharaoh at the time of Exodus was probably Amenhotep II (1427 to 1400 BC).  However, it could have been Amenhotep's predecessor, Thutmose III (1458 to 1427 BC)(Exodus 7:7 and Acts 7:23).

In either case, each left pretty extensive records, especially of his military adventures.  Remember also, the Egyptians recorded literally everything, including the sales of slaves.  Hundreds of such sales records exist from this period, but none mention anything to do with Hebrew slaves.  Indeed, the entire historic record is mute on this point.

358 posted on 05/25/2005 2:16:07 PM PDT by Junior (“Even if you are one-in-a-million, there are still 6,000 others just like you.”)
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To: donh
Maybe you should be talking to the guy who thinks that 500 people observed christ's resurrection, and were tortured to death by a mysterious cabal of conspirators for it.

That's the account of Paul.

1 Corinthians 15: 1-8 (RSV)
Now I would remind you, brethren, in what terms I preached 
to you the gospel, which you received, in which you stand, 
by which you are saved, if you hold it fast--unless you 
believed in vain. For I delivered to you as of first 
importance what I also received, that Christ died for our 
sins in accordance with the scriptures, that he was buried, 
that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the 
scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the 
twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brethren 
at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have 
fallen asleep.  Then he appeared to James, then to all the 
apostles. Last of all, as to one untimely born, he appeared 
also to me.

You don't have to believe Paul's testimony if you don't want to. He was writing this letter to people who could have checked his story out. You and I can't do that, so we ahve to turn to other tests.

As for the gruesome deaths of the Apostles, those are a part of Church History. They are not well documented but have been handed down for nearly 2000 years.

Shalom.

359 posted on 05/25/2005 2:16:53 PM PDT by ArGee (Why do we let the abnormal tell us what's normal?)
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To: ArGee
If Galileo had merely presented his theory, instead of trying to club the Church with it, the results would have been very different. Many in the Church had already accepted the heliocentric (sp?) theory.

Ahhgh! More of this balony. The heliocentric theory of the universe was in direct conflict with central teachings of the catholic church, whether many in the church believed it or not was irrelevant. What was relevant, for the church, was that the heliocentric picture of the universe undermined the notion, amongst the illiterate, that the church spoke with the voice of God regarding the disposition of the earth, because it undermined the notion that the earth was the center of the universe, and therefore, God's special concern.

If Galileo had sung sweetly as an angel, or smelled like fresh cat dung, it would have made precisely 0 difference--the idea, not the man, was what was dangerous and offensive to the church.

This is so unbelievably out to lunch.

360 posted on 05/25/2005 2:18:43 PM PDT by donh
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