What Are the Darwinists Afraid Of?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
In
the "Monkey Trial," 80 years ago, the issue was: Did John
Scopes violate Tennessee law forbidding the teaching of evolution?
Indeed he had. Scopes was convicted and fined $100.
But
because a cheerleader press favored Clarence Darrow, the agnostic
who defended Scopes, Christian fundamentalism and the reputation
of William Jennings Bryan, who was put on the stand and made to
defend the literal truth of every Bible story from Jonah and the
whale to the six days of creation took a pounding.
The
aim of his defenders was not to prove Scopes innocent, but to humiliate
the fundamentalists and persuade a higher court to throw out the
Tennessee law. But today, Darwinism is in the dock. Dogmatic believers
in evolution are facing challenges to the claim that their doctrine
is established truth, scientifically proven.
"Intelligent
design" is the banner under which evolution is being put under
siege, and the methodology of attack is the one Darrow used on Bryan:
Prove to us that your theory is true, because it seems to contradict
common sense.
If,
for example, we are told a forest is uninhabited and, while walking
in it, come across a garden, with plots of tomatoes, beans, corn
and cabbage, reason tells us someone lives here. The garden presupposes
the existence of a gardener, for it reflects intelligent design.
As does Stonehenge, that millennia-old marvel of gigantic stones
placed one upon the other in a fashion that is not accidental. Though
we know not how it was done, an intelligent being did it.
The
same is true of our universe. Not until recent centuries did we
discover that the Earth is not its center but, with the other planets,
revolves with mathematical precision around the sun. As a watch
presupposes a watchmaker, an ordered universe argues for an ordered
intelligence. Call it the First Cause, the Prime Mover, the Great
Watchmaker, but this world appears to be no accident.
Our
ordered universe was created out of chaos. Who or what created it?
The latest theory of the evolutionists is the "Big Bang,"
a gigantic explosion, eons ago, did it.
But
from common sense and experience, when ever has an
explosion created order? Explosions destroy. And if the Big Bang
was due to an explosion, where did the chemicals come from? And
who lit the firecracker that caused the Big Bang?
As
a wag has put it, to believe an explosion created an ordered universe
is like believing a hurricane roaring through a junkyard can create
a fifth-generation computer.
And
there are gaps in human evolution. Where are the missing links between
lower and higher forms? Where are the intermediate forms? Why are
they not everywhere? As for that picture on the wall of the biology
class, showing a reptile crawling ashore, then moving on four legs,
then dragging his knuckles, then straightening up, then walking
on two legs, then becoming the man of today is that really
how it happened? Or is that a theory, a belief, an act of faith
of the Darwinists? Is there really all that much difference between
that picture and one of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden?
Science
itself points to intelligent design. For most of man's existence,
we did not understand the laws of gravity, the laws of physics,
the laws of chemistry. But applying those laws today, we can send
a rocket millions of miles and strike a distant planet, predicting
impact to the minute. But does not the existence of these natural
laws imply the existence of a lawmaker?
How
can evolution explain the creation of that extraordinary instrument,
the human eye? How can it explain DNA? Only in the last century
did we understand that molecules can be broken down into atoms and
subatomic particles, and the force that holds them together. Did
all this come out of nothing? If it all came from something, where
did the something come from?
What
causes a disbelief in Darwinian fundamentalism, the Genesis of our
secular elite, is not only Christian faith, but reason.
In
an editorial, "But Is It Intelligent?" the Washington
Post accuses President Bush, who spoke warmly of intelligent
design, of "indulging quackery." "To pretend that
the existence of evolution is still an open question," sniffed
the Post, "is to misunderstand the intellectual and scientific
history of the past century."
The
Post notwithstanding, we are not pretending. Evolution fails
to answer the arguments of reason. And parents have a right not
to have their children indoctrinated in an unproven belief system,
one purpose of which is to destroy their faith.
A
Solomonic solution. Let parents choose between having their kids
spend a year in biology class cutting up those poor frogs and being
indoctrinated in evolution ideology or a year studying the
Old and New Testaments as the greatest book of Western Civilization
and literature, and the basis of morality and ethics. As they say,
freedom of choice.
August
10, 2005
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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