Compulsory Evolutionism
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
I
read with what would be despair if I cared enough that the courts,
this time in Pennsylvania, are again getting their knickers in a
knot over Evolution. Oh help. There must be another planet somewhere
upon which to hide. Oprah, Rush Limbaugh, singing commercials, delayed
flights, and Evolution. Anyway:
Why,
oh why, are the curricula of the schools the business of the courts?
If Pennsylvania wants to mention Creationism, or to require three
years of French for graduation, it seems mightily to me that these
things are the business of parents in Pennsylvania. Yes, I know:
In practice, both freedom of expression and local government are
regarded as ideals greatly to be avoided. The desire to centralize
government, impose doctrine, and punish doubt is never far below
the surface, anywhere. Thus our highly controlled media, our hate-speech
laws, our political correctness and, now, Evolutionary Prohibition.
The Catholic Church once burned heretics. The Church of Evolution
savages them in obscure journals and denies them tenure and publication.
As a heretic I believe that I would prefer the latter, but the intolerance
is the same.
I
note that Compulsory Evolutionists are fellow travelers of the regnant
cultural Marxism, though I dont think that they are aware
of it. They display the same hermetic materialism, the same desire
to suppress dissent by the application of centralized governmental
power, the same weird hostility to religion. They do not say, I
think Christianity is nonsense and will therefore ignore it,
but rather These ideas shall not be permitted. The justification
often is pseudo-constitutional: the separation of church and
state. Neither the phrase nor the idea is found in the Constitution.
If, for example, it is unconstitutional to have a nativity scene
on a town square, why did no one notice this, certainly to include
the Founding fathers, until at least 1950? One might point out,
fruitlessly, that Creationism, communism, Christianity, and capitalism
are all major intellectual currents and therefore ought to be explained
to the young. Not likely. The free market of ideas applies only
to ones own ideas.
Now,
what grave consequences are thought to await if children hear briefly
in school an argument that they have heard a dozen times in the
course of ordinary life? Will the foundations of civilization crack?
The birds of the air plunge, appalled, to earth? The planets shudder
in their orbits and fall inward in dismay? Surely everyone short
of the anencephalic knows of Creationism.
Or
is it thought that kids attracted to the sciences will abruptly
change their course through life and enter the clergy? That applications
to graduate school in biochemistry will cease? Children learn (or
did) of the Greek gods and goddesses, and that ancient people believed
that the earth rode on the back of a giant turtle. I have not heard
that they now sacrifice oxen to Athena.
One
plausible explanation for this rigid evolutionary monotheism, though
I think an incorrect one, is a fear that the children might come
to believe in Creationism. Unlikely, but again, so what? A belief
in Creationism does not prevent one from working in the sciences.
A goodly number of scientists, to include biochemists, are in fact
Christian and, some of them, Creationists. Others presumably are
Buddhists or Hindus. The only thing for which acceptance of Creationism
renders one unsuitable is
Evolutionism.
A
more likely explanation is a fear that children might realize that
a great deal of Evolution, not having been established, must be
accepted on faith, and that a fair amount of it doesnt make
a lot of sense. While Creationism is unlikely to convert children
into snake-handlers, it does suggest that orthodox Evolution can
be examined critically. Bad juju, that.
Now
(and I hope this doesnt bore those who have read me before
on the matter), an entertaining way to study the politics is to
ask the Evolutionists questions that a scientist would answer (since
scientists are not ashamed not to know things), but that an ideologue
cant afford to. They are simple. (1) Has the chance occurrence
of life been demonstrated in the laboratory? Yes or no. (2) Do we
really know, as distinct from guess, hope, or imagine, of what the
primeval seas consisted? Yes or no. (3) Do we know, as distinct
from guess, pray, wave our arms, and hold our breath and turn blue,
what seas would be needed for the chance formation of life? Yes
or no. (4) Can we show mathematically, without crafted and unsupportable
assumptions, that the formation of life would be probable in any
soup whatever? Yes or no.
I
once posed these questions in a
column and, in another place, to a group of committed evangelicals
of Evolution. A tremendous influx of email resulted. Much of it
was predictable. Many Christians congratulated me on having disproved
Evolution, which I had not done. The intelligent and independent-minded
wrote thoughtfully. Of the Knights Templar of Evolution, none
not one answered the foregoing yes-or-no questions. They
ducked. They dodged. They waxed wroth. They called names.
This
is the behavior not of scientists but of true believers. I have
spent countless hours as a reporter talking to scientists, as distinct
from zealots with a scientific background. Without exception that
I can remember, they were rational, honest, and forthcoming. Yes,
they were often trying to establish a pet theory. But they said,
I think this is so, and heres the evidence, and I think
its pretty solid, but I still need to show this or that, and
no, we havent, but I hope we will. If I expressed doubts,
they either showed me clearly and civilly why I was wrong, or said,
Good point. Heres what we think. Parenthetically,
my impression, based on a small sample, is that the more incensed
of the Evolutionists tend to be either of the hard Right or the
hard Left: those who need to believe one thing categorically seem
to need to believe other things categorically. Which means that
if they are wrong, they are unlikely to notice it.
And
this is what disturbs me about them. I do not object to the content
of Evolutionism. Some, all, or part of it may be correct. I would
like to know. A more fascinating question does not readily come
to mind. But dispassionate discussion with them is not possible,
anymore than it is with Gloria Steinem or Herbert Marcuse or Cornell
West, and for exactly the same reasons. They are the same people.
How sad.
October
17, 2005
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2005 Fred Reed
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