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Louisiana Confounds the Science Thought Police - Neo-Darwinism is no longer a protected orthodoxy...
National Review Online ^ | July 08, 2008 | John G. West

Posted on 07/08/2008 11:48:40 AM PDT by neverdem









Louisiana Confounds the Science Thought Police
Neo-Darwinism is no longer a protected orthodoxy in the Bayou State's pedagogy.

By John G. West

To the chagrin of the science thought police, Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal has signed into law an act to protect teachers who want to encourage critical thinking about hot-button science issues such as global warming, human cloning, and yes, evolution and the origin of life.

Opponents allege that the Louisiana Science Education Act is “anti-science.” In reality, the opposition’s efforts to silence anyone who disagrees with them is the true affront to scientific inquiry.

Students need to know about the current scientific consensus on a given issue, but they also need to be able to evaluate critically the evidence on which that consensus rests. They need to learn about competing interpretations of the evidence offered by scientists, as well as anomalies that aren’t well explained by existing theories.

Yet in many schools today, instruction about controversial scientific issues is closer to propaganda than education. Teaching about global warming is about as nuanced as Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth. Discussions about human sexuality recycle the junk science of biologist Alfred Kinsey and other ideologically driven researchers. And lessons about evolution present a caricature of modern evolutionary theory that papers over problems and fails to distinguish between fact and speculation. In these areas, the “scientific” view is increasingly offered to students as a neat package of dogmatic assertions that just happens to parallel the political and cultural agenda of the Left.

Real science, however, is a lot more messy — and interesting — than a set of ideological talking points. Most conservatives recognize this truth already when it comes to global warming. They know that whatever consensus exists among scientists about global warming, legitimate questions remain about its future impact on the environment, its various causes, and the best policies to combat it. They realize that efforts to suppress conflicting evidence and dissenting interpretations related to global warming actually compromise the cause of good science education rather than promote it.

The effort to suppress dissenting views on global warming is a part of a broader campaign to demonize any questioning of the “consensus” view on a whole range of controversial scientific issues — from embryonic stem-cell research to Darwinian evolution — and to brand such interest in healthy debate as a “war on science.”

In this environment of politically correct science, thoughtful teachers who want to acquaint their students with dissenting views and conflicting evidence can expect to run afoul of the science thought police.

The Louisiana Science Education Act offers such teachers a modest measure of protection. Under the law, school districts may permit teachers to “use supplementary textbooks and other instructional materials to help students understand, analyze, critique, and review scientific theories in an objective manner.” The act is not a license for teachers to do anything they want. Instruction must be “objective,” inappropriate materials may be vetoed by the state board of education, and the law explicitly prohibits teaching religion in the name of science, stating that its provisions “shall not be construed to promote any religious doctrine.”

The law was so carefully framed that even the head of the Louisiana ACLU has had to concede that it is constitutional as written.

Of course, that hasn’t stopped the usual suspects from denouncing the bill as a nefarious plot to sneak religion into the classroom. The good news is that the disinformation campaign proved a massive failure in Louisiana. Only three members of the state legislature voted against the measure, which attracted nearly universal support from both political parties. Efforts to prevent local scientists from supporting the bill also failed. At a legislative hearing in May, three college professors (two biologists and one chemist) testified in favor of the bill, specifically challenging the claim that there are no legitimate scientific criticisms of Neo-Darwinism, the modern theory of evolution that accounts for biological complexity through an undirected process of natural selection acting on random mutations.

Fearful of being branded “anti-science,” some conservatives are skittish about such efforts to allow challenges to the consensus view of science. They insist that conservatives should not question currently accepted “facts” of science, only the supposedly misguided application of those facts by scientists to politics, morality, and religion. Such conservatives assume that we can safely cede to scientists the authority to determine the “facts,” so long as we retain the right to challenge their application of the facts to the rest of culture.

But there are significant problems with this view.



First, the idea that a firewall exists between scientific “facts” and their implications for society is not sustainable. Facts have implications. If it really is a “fact” that the evolution of life was an unplanned process of chance and necessity (as Neo-Darwinism asserts), then that fact has consequences for how we view life. It does not lead necessarily to Richard Dawkins’s militant atheism, but it certainly makes less plausible the idea of a God who intentionally directs the development of life toward a specific end. In a Darwinian worldview, even God himself cannot know how evolution will turn out — which is why theistic evolutionist Kenneth Miller argues that human beings are a mere “happenstance” of evolutionary history, and that if evolution played over again it might produce thinking mollusks rather than us.

Second, the idea that the current scientific consensus on any topic deserves slavish deference betrays stunning ignorance of the history of science. Time and again, scientists have shown themselves just as capable of being blinded by fanaticism, prejudice, and error as anyone else. Perhaps the most egregious example in American history was the eugenics movement, the ill-considered crusade to breed better human beings.

During the first decades of the 20th century, the nation’s leading biologists at Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and Stanford, as well by members of America’s leading scientific organizations such as the National Academy of Sciences, the American Museum of Natural History, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science were all devoted eugenicists. By the time the crusade had run its course, some 60,000 Americans had been sterilized against their will in an effort to keep us from sinning against Darwin’s law of natural selection, which Princeton biologist Edwin Conklin dubbed “the great law of evolution and progress.”

Today, science is typically portrayed as self-correcting, but it took decades for most evolutionary biologists to disassociate themselves from the junk science of eugenics. For years, the most consistent critics of eugenics were traditionalist Roman Catholics, who were denounced by scientists for letting their religion stand in the way of scientific progress. The implication was that religious people had no right to speak out on public issues involving science.

The same argument can be heard today, not only in Louisiana, but around the country. Whether the issue is sex education, embryonic stem-cell research, or evolution, groups claiming to speak for “science” assert that it violates the Constitution for religious citizens to speak out on science-related issues. Really?

America is a deeply religious country, and no doubt many citizens interested in certain hot-button science issues are motivated in part by their religious beliefs. So what? Many opponents of slavery were motivated by their religious beliefs, and many leaders of the civil-rights movement were members of the clergy. Regardless of their motivations, religious citizens have just as much a right to raise their voices in public debates as their secular compatriots, including in debates about science. To suggest otherwise plainly offends the First Amendment’s guarantees of freedom of speech and freedom of religion.

It is also short-sighted. The history of the eugenics crusade shows that religiously motivated citizens can play a useful role in evaluating the public claims of the scientific community. It is worth pointing out that unlike such “progressive” states as California, Louisiana was spared a eugenics-inspired forced-sterilization statute largely because of the implacable opposition of its Roman Catholic clergy.

So long as religious citizens offer arguments in the public square based on evidence, logic, and appeals to the moral common ground, they have every right to demand that their ideas be judged on the merits, regardless of their religious views.

This is especially true when the concern over religious motives is so obviously hypocritical. In Louisiana, for example, the person leading the charge against the Science Education Act was Barbara Forrest, herself a militant atheist and a long-time board member of the New Orleans Secular Humanist Association. At the same time she was denouncing the supposed religious motivations of supporters of the bill, Forrest was seeking grassroots support to lobby against the bill on the official website of Oxford atheist Richard Dawkins.

Conservatives should not support such anti-religious bigotry. Neither should they lend credence to the idea that it is anti-science to encourage critical thinking. In truth, the effort to promote thoughtful discussion of competing scientific views is pro-science. As Charles Darwin himself acknowledged, “a fair result can be obtained only by fully stating and balancing the facts and arguments on both sides of each question.”

— John G. West is the author of Darwin Day in America: How Our Politics and Culture Have Been Dehumanized in the Name of Science and a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute.

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TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: bobbyjindal; crevo; education; evolution; jindal; neodarwinism; rageagainstthejindal; science; scienceeducation; sciencethoughtpolice
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To: onewhowatches

Huh?????? A woman changing her name is a behavioral activity. One species evolving into another is biological, for want of a better word. Talk about your apples and oranges-thus my “huh?”


161 posted on 07/10/2008 4:04:41 PM PDT by TexasKate
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To: TexasKate

I’ll keep it simple then. Some of the apes evolved down the path that became humans. Others evolved into modern apes. Others probably evolved down other paths or died out.

The point is species don’t evolve en masse.


162 posted on 07/10/2008 5:27:34 PM PDT by onewhowatches
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To: onewhowatches
I’ll keep it simple then. Some of the apes evolved down the path that became humans. Others evolved into modern apes. Others probably evolved down other paths or died out.

The point is species don’t evolve en masse.

The point is you cannot prove that or even show it as a reasonable probability.

 

163 posted on 07/10/2008 5:50:28 PM PDT by gscc
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To: onewhowatches

Why? What caused some to evolve but not others. And what is the scientific proof for why this happened?


164 posted on 07/10/2008 5:57:37 PM PDT by TexasKate
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To: TexasKate
Why? What caused some to evolve but not others. And what is the scientific proof for why this happened?

This occurred during a time of changing conditions in Africa. Some 6 million years ago, the forests were shrinking and the grasslands expanding. That put selection pressure on the ape-like critters living nearest the edges of the forests; some had to adapt to the grasslands. The critters in the main forest areas were doing just fine and needed to change little.

Given time, and continued shrinkage of the forests, the groups along the edges needed to adapt to the grasslands or die out. At least one group, from which we are descended, did adapt.

So, the groups that remained in the forest evolved slowly, becoming the apes we know today. The groups at the edges were forced to adapt to new conditions and eventually, after many adventures, became modern humans.

By the way, science does not deal in proof, but in evidence. This is what the evidence currently suggests. If more evidence is found which suggests some changes in current theories, science will make those changes. This is the exact opposite of religion, which adheres to dogma in spite of evidence to the contrary.

If you have any other questions about this let me know. I studied it pretty intensely in graduate school and still remember a few of the details.

165 posted on 07/10/2008 6:13:40 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: Coyoteman

Do you just make stuff up or what? Its hard to take you seriously. My kids and I got quite a laugh out of it though.

If you learned this at graduate school, God help us all.


166 posted on 07/10/2008 9:44:31 PM PDT by TexasKate
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To: TexasKate
Do you just make stuff up or what? Its hard to take you seriously. My kids and I got quite a laugh out of it though.

I don't know why you would consider this a laughing matter. The information I provided summarizes the results of research in a number of different fields, obtained over many decades, by a large number of dedicated scientists.

You asked a question, perhaps thinking you had a magic bullet to prove the theory of evolution false. I took the time to provide a serious answer, and all you can do is laugh?

If you learned this at graduate school, God help us all.

Perhaps you should read and take to heart this post from last May.

167 posted on 07/10/2008 10:07:09 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: Coyoteman

“I don’t know why you would consider this a laughing matter. The information I provided summarizes the results of research in a number of different fields, obtained over many decades, by a large number of dedicated scientists. You asked a question, perhaps thinking you had a magic bullet to prove the theory of evolution false. I took the time to provide a serious answer, and all you can do is laugh?”
+++++++++++++
Just so you aren’t completely discouraged, He-Whose-Totem-Howls-at-the-Moon, I appreciated the time you took to provide an answer and even learned something from it. Maybe you were just a touch too light and humorous, though, using the word “critter” and all, and Line Star Lil missed the point under the jocularity.

Anyway, it seemed to me like a perfectly fine summarization of current scientific opinion on human origins.


168 posted on 07/12/2008 5:31:20 PM PDT by Deklane
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To: Deklane

It looks like my own attempts at humor could use a little more work. That should be “Lone Star Lil.”


169 posted on 07/12/2008 5:37:54 PM PDT by Deklane
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To: Deklane
Anyway, it seemed to me like a perfectly fine summarization of current scientific opinion on human origins.

At least when I was in graduate school.

And its science, not fiction. Nor is it dogma.

170 posted on 07/12/2008 6:51:00 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: Non-Sequitur

Common sense IS evidence, IMO! Bob


171 posted on 07/13/2008 12:20:43 PM PDT by alstewartfan
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To: alstewartfan
Common sense IS evidence, IMO! Bob

Which is one of the reasons why evolution makes more sense than ID. Where is the sense in developing multiple iterations of man only to have them die out? Why not do it right the first time?

172 posted on 07/13/2008 4:06:48 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: TexasKate
Answer this question-if man evolved from apes, why are there still apes? I don’t believe scientists have been able to give an answer to this, and indeed, since there still are apes this would seem to disprove the theory of man’s evolution anyway.

TexasKate: Statements like this are what demonstrate that "Creationists" have absolutely no clue what they're talking about. If you had ever bothered to simply read a book on the topic, you would see how silly this question is. Do you even have a high-school level science education? It does not appear that you do.

You should take some advice that my parents raised me with: It's never a good idea to talk about something you know nothing about.
And, try reading a book every now and then, it will save you from embarrassing yourself with such inane statements.

173 posted on 07/17/2008 9:34:12 AM PDT by protectamericanow
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To: protectamericanow

You provide no facts to back up any statements you make. Just ridicule and name calling-which is typical of those who don’t have facts to support them.

By the way, I have a Bachelor’s Degree in education and presently am teaching 5th grade science! So I guess I know a little bit about the subject.


174 posted on 07/17/2008 11:42:46 AM PDT by TexasKate
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To: TexasKate
Regarding your questions on apes and humans: The other apes that exist today are not the apes that we evolved from- humans did not evolve from existing chimps or gorrillas. Rather, we share a common ancestor with the other great apes. Some millions of years ago, the "proto-ape" line split into two- one became gorillas, while the other was the line that would lead to humans. That second line also split one more time, into the species that would eventually become humans, and the species that would eventually become chimps.

The common ancestor of humans, chimps, gorillas and the other great ape species is extinct. But keep in mind that the theory of evolution does not require the parent species to go extinct. A sub-population of an existing species can be separated geographically (say, by the collapse of a land bridge) and gradually evolve into a new species, while the rest of the population of that species continues to exist.

175 posted on 07/17/2008 11:50:25 AM PDT by Citizen Blade
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To: Citizen Blade

Proof please. Everything you state is just conjecture. In order to believe it, one must have faith that such a thing is true. Hmm, ok to teach evolution which requires faith but not ID? Double standard????

Please no more comments unless you provide me with scientific proof. Otherwise ID is just as possible as any of you or anybody else’s theories. The one that makes the most SENSE, however, would be ID, hands down. That’s why so many of you evolutionists are fighting tooth and nail to keep it out of the schools. And your intolerance for other theories is quite tiresome.


176 posted on 07/17/2008 1:53:53 PM PDT by TexasKate
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To: TexasKate
Proof please. Everything you state is just conjecture. In order to believe it, one must have faith that such a thing is true. Hmm, ok to teach evolution which requires faith but not ID? Double standard????

You asked why, if we evolved from apes, apes still exist. I explained that to you. What more are you looking for, or do you not understand the explanation? What about that explanation does not make sense?

177 posted on 07/17/2008 2:05:10 PM PDT by Citizen Blade
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To: TexasKate
You provide no facts to back up any statements you make. Just ridicule and name calling-which is typical of those who don’t have facts to support them. By the way, I have a Bachelor’s Degree in education and presently am teaching 5th grade science! So I guess I know a little bit about the subject.

It's not my job to provide you with facts that you are obviously ignorant of. Like I said, if you had ever bothered to learn something about evolution, you would know the answer to your earlier question.

The fact that you would even ask why there are still "apes" reveals that you are seriously misinformed about the theory of evolution. I'm not trying to sound harsh here, but you must realize that this is simply a fact, and your statements reveal your lack of a basic science education on this topic.

Of course, I'm sure you'll try to dispute this, but you must understand that I am NOT a person who believes in truth relativism. When you statement is factually incorrect, it is incorrect - There are no two ways about it. You might as well try to argue with me over whether the Pope is Catholic.

As for your claim to be a 5th grade science teacher (of which I am skeptical), if my children were in your class, I would have them pulled from it. We have a serious problem in our schools these days of math and science teachers who are not qualified to be teaching their subjects, and you would clearly be an example.

When I send my children to school, I want them to attend a science class where the teacher is actually interested in teaching science, rather than promoting political agendas.

178 posted on 07/17/2008 7:01:43 PM PDT by protectamericanow
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To: Citizen Blade
Citizen Blade: TexasKate is pretty typical of Creationists- she clearly reveals that she knows very little about evolution by asking high-school level questions about it. Yet when someone provides an answer, she immediately dismisses the answer and continues to ask the question.

The strategy that she is using is a variant of the Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels' dictum that "If you tell a lie often enough, it will eventually become the truth."

For TexasKate, however, she has altered the Goebbels strategy to more along the lines of "If you keep asking basic questions about evolution (even after they've been easily answered), people will eventually doubt the entire theory."

This strategy is also referred to as "manufactroversy," or the manufacturing of controversy, where someone simply creates controversy where there is none, in order to cast doubt on the topic. The tobacco companies were notorious for doing this starting in the 1960s when scientists realized how bad smoking is for people's health. Yet, the cigarrette makers would always find some "expert" somewhere who would claim they weren't. Likewise, creationsists trot out some so-called "experts" who repeatedly ask very basic questions about the theory and generate false-controversy which, in turn, leads less knowledgeable people to believe that major controversy exists on the issue.

179 posted on 07/17/2008 7:28:27 PM PDT by protectamericanow
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To: TexasKate
That’s why so many of you evolutionists are fighting tooth and nail to keep it out of the schools. And your intolerance for other theories is quite tiresome.

No, the real question at stake here is why YOU are fighting tooth and nail to insert your religious and political agendas into science education. If you want to teach religion and spout politics, you need to keep it out of the science classroom.

As a professional who works in the science and engineering fields, I see first hand every day how the U.S. if falling behind other countries in the teaching of math and science. So many American kids graduate from high school without even the most basic understanding of science. A major reason for this is people like yourself, who want to turn science classes into vehicles for promoting your political ideology.

Because of people like yourself, I decided several years ago to send my children specifically to a math and science oriented school where they receive rigorous education in math, chemistry, physics, and, of course, biology classes that are not afraid of a heavy dose of evolution.

In the long run, my kids will be better prepared to be the scientists and engineers of tomorrow. Their skills will be in high demand and they will be the engine driving America's future economy. Already, my daughter has taken a strong interest in biology, and is looking at colleges with strong bio-tech programs, which will prepare her for a rapidly growing job market in the biotech sector. She is specifically interested in pursuing a career in developing treatments for disease or developing ways to treat people with disabilities. These areas rely heavily on evolution to understand why disease and birth defects occur.

Of course, this wouldn't be possible if she had science teachers who spent time teaching religion instead of evolution, now would it?

You might be tempted to answer "no", but you need to ask yourself several questions:
Have you ever taken antibiotics?
Have you been vaccinated against Polio, measles, mumps, etc.?
Have you or anyone in your family been treated for any sort of genetic disorders?

I hate to break it to you, but if you answered "yes" to any of the above questions, you need to stop bashing scientists who work with evolution and start thanking them! These, and many other developments in the bio-medical fields are dependant upon the theory of evolution. Without an understanding of evolution, our health would be comparable to people's health prior to the 20th century, where 40-50% of kids died from childhood disease and many people routinely died from infections that would be considered minor today.

What I am telling you here is true. Creationists have a tendency to claim that truth is simply whatever they want it to be, and therefore I have a feeling you're simply going to dismiss it. But, you need to remember that if something is true, but you don't believe it, it's still true. There are no two ways about it.

180 posted on 07/17/2008 8:20:03 PM PDT by protectamericanow
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