Creationism By Any Other Name
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
I was surprised
by the furor about Intelligent Design. Decades ago I was introduced
to Thomas Aquinas’s proofs, from reason, of the existence of God,
and Intelligent Design seems to be a rather mild variation on his
theme of causality. The difference is that Aquinas, reasoning to
the necessity of an ultimate uncaused cause, did not, over 700 years
ago, hesitate to call it God. The advocates of Intelligent Design,
however, seem to have found a door, but deny that there is anything
beyond it; or, having filled a glass from the kitchen faucet, declare
the liquid within to be tasteless, odorless, colorless, with a formula
of HOH, and a specific gravity of exactly 1.00, but shrink from
admitting it’s water, although everybody knows it is. Did they think
they would fool someone by insisting that Intelligent Design was
not a religious belief?
Certainly they
did not fool judge John Jones. Regardless of the unconstitutionality,
even absurdity, of a federal judge deciding what is or isn’t appropriate
to a school curriculum, Jones was absolutely right about one thing:
he called ID "creationism in disguise." (He also warned
that ID was not science, as though truth could only be learned via
the scientific method. Well, the law is not science, either!)
Had the proponents
of ID boldly asserted a belief in Creationism, they would hardly
have been alone. Many scientists have found that the ultimate truth
of their investigations is Theism. Kurt Gödel, a friend of Einstein,
and author of Gödel’s incompleteness theorem, found that the more
he discovered about the physical universe, the greater his belief
in God as its creator. Sir John Eccles, Nobel laureate in medicine,
is resolutely Christian, and sees no impediment to his beliefs posed
by science. The same can be said of Henry Schaefer III, author of
Science and Christianity: Conflict or Coherence? His
answer is unequivocal: coherence! Sir John Polkinghorne gave up
his career as a physicist at Cambridge and took holy orders, working
as a parish priest, declaring no conflict between quantum physics
and Christianity. Sir Anthony Flew, one of England’s most outspoken
atheists of the 20th century, acknowledged a belief in
God about a year ago, pointing out that the order found throughout
the universe simply could not have arisen from chance.
It is ironic
that non-believers, not believers, were the ones who, by rejecting
it, affirmed where ID was leading. Their rejection was absolutely
necessary, lest they set foot on a path that would, inevitably,
lead where they didn’t want to go. Having reached a verdict, they
could not acknowledge the worth of any contradictory evidence.
It could be
said of believers, as well, that, having reached their own verdict,
they would support it with whatever evidence lent affirmation; but
there’s a difference. If I know of a place called Chicago, want
to go there, and follow the correct route, I’ll end up in – Chicago.
If, on the other hand, I’ve never heard of Chicago, or deny its
existence, and have no desire to go there at all, if I somehow find
myself there, I’ll be in – Chicago. Know of it, believe it, desire
it – or not – Chicago IS. And you can find yourself there, even
if by accident.
An argument
from intelligent design, in one form or another, has been around
since the thirteenth century, and probably earlier than that. It
didn’t convince unbelievers then, or now. So be it. But if you don’t
believe, don’t justify that position by claiming that your breakfast
appeared on the table when the eggs somehow scrambled themselves
and climbed onto your plate.
And, in any
event, have a blessed and happy new year!
December
29, 2005
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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