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Chicago Sun Times, February 11, 2005
Creationists
Still Fighting Evolution
by Andrew Greeley
Slightly more than half of the American people
reject evolution. During the last decade, the
General Social Survey conducted by National
Opinion Research Center (and directed by my
colleague Dr. Tom M. Smith) has asked whether
a respondent thinks that humans are descended
from animals. Fifty-two percent said that either
this was definitely not true or probably not
true.
Ever since they won the battle but lost the war
in the Scopes trial of 1925, conservative Christians
have waged an intensive war against evolution.
Despite repeated court decisions insisting
that evolution must be taught in high school
classes, the conservative Christians have managed
to keep one form or another of "creationism"
alive and well as an alternative in the minds
of many Americans -- including 62 percent of
African-American Christians, 52 percent of
mainline Protestants, 42 percent of Catholics
and 26 percent of Jews. (Seventy-eight percent
of Conservative Christians reject evolution).
Evolution, they insist, is only a theory and
one that has a lot of holes in it. Moreover,
it is godless, indeed it is part of an assault
by a liberal elite on the beliefs of a god-fearing
people. Their assaults are especially effective
in smaller towns and rural areas where teachers
and school administrators are subject to strong
pressure from these God-fearing people. For
their own protection, many teachers, according
to a recent article in the New York Times,
skip over the chapters on evolution in the
biology textbook. In Cobb County Georgia, they
forced the schools to put a sticker on the
cover of a textbook asserting that "intelligent
design" was an equally valid theory.
"Theory" is not a good word because
it implies doubt. The Copernican theory about
the motion of planets around the sun and the
Big Bang theory of the origin of the universe
are models which in their broad outline are
simply true. However much remains to be explained
within the model, they fit the known data so
well that they are not in danger of rejection
-- especially when there is no alternative
theory that even begins to fit the data. So
too is evolution a model that fits the data,
even if there is still much exploration to
be done within the model. It does not follow
that there is any other model available that
fits the data.
"Intelligent design" as an alternative
to evolution implies that if one believes in
God, the evolutionary "theory" is
unacceptable no matter how powerful its explanatory
power. In fact, belief in "intelligent
design" is completely compatible with
scientific acceptance of evolution. The design
is inside the model, not something intruded
from the outside. It is not up to science to
validate such design. It merely reports what
it sees and leaves to the religion and the
religious believer to judge whether it was
a wise God who launched the process, just as
She launched the "Big Bang" with
the polymers and parameters for human life
on this planet built-in. Science can't say
whether God did that or not -- and moreover
shouldn't.
Bible Christians cannot accept such a perspective,
because they must necessarily believe the Book
of Genesis, word for word inspired by God,
is an accurate and literal book of science.
It is clear to the rest of us that Genesis
teaches that God created and established order
in the cosmos, religious truths indeed that
go beyond the realm of science but not against
it.
The evangelicals are entitled to their beliefs,
but they have no right to try to impose their
view of creation on the rest of us and to deprive
other people's children of an accurate picture
of how science models the emergence and development
of life -- or an alternative view of the literary
nature of the book of Genesis.
One can understand their effort to fight scientific
modernism. If literal interpretation of Genesis
is taken away from them, then their entire
religious edifice is shaken to its foundations.
However, when in their battle against modernism
they deprive other children of a proper education,
they violate our freedom of religion.
© 2005 Chicago Sun Times
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