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Science in Classrooms Under Threat From Intelligent Design

posted April 16, 2008 - 12:38pm
Science in Classrooms Under Threat From Intelligent Design

The Florida legislature is attempting to allow schools to teach alternatives to the theory of evolution. Other states are also considering this. It's easy to see why people might not see anything wrong with teaching Intelligent Design alongside evolution. I mean, doesn't a democracy mean allowing all points of view? Shouldn't students be presented with both sides of a story or theory or argument?

In this case the answer is no. For good reason. First of all, the alternative being presented by religious groups is creationism or its resurrection Intelligent Design (ID). The concept here is that only an intelligent designer (God. ID proponents say that's not necessarily the case but it's hard to see where they're thinking of anything different) could have created all the complex things in the world such as eyes. The point here is that the alternative that's being proposed for evolution is a religious alternative based solely on the Bible.

That in itself isn't necessarily enough to dismiss its being taught (except perhaps on constitutional grounds). Where things run into trouble is how ID proponents back up their ideas and how they attack evolution. The problem has to do with evidence, and it's on this that the idea of teaching ID fails.

ID proponents really have no evidence whereas evidence for evolution is deep. The ID crowd really doesn't like evolution because it isn't compatible with their beliefs, and that's not good enough. What they call evidence against evolution is mostly extracting out of contect sentences from the writings of scientists that seem to question evolution or finding what appear to be flaws that have no basis in fact. Scientists themselves believe whole-heartedly in evolution but always want to dig deeper. Evolution is never going to be proven to the point where we can say that is exactly the way it happens. Few if any science ideas are considered the absolute truth whereas ID feels thre's only one answer to life on Earth. No more checking needed.

Evidence is really the key element here. ID proponents dismiss anything that doesn't fit their belief system. That's the antithesis of science. To them God created every kind of creature and those creatures never came from anything different from themselves. They may change over time, but never come from anything unlike themselves. Elephants may have had longer or shorter trunks, but they were always elephants. The main ID argument is that we don't see any transitional fossils to show animals evolved from somethng different. And here they are simply throwing out falsehoods either from ignorance of the fossil record, to sway people by telling a lie over and over, or both. There are fossil transitions, plenty of them. ID people refuse to see the immense amount of time since life first formed on Earth, plenty of time for organisms to change from one species to another.

On the most basic level, if we were to treat all science this way we'd need to teach such things as magic alongside gravity and astrology alongside astronomy. Both gravity and astronomy don't have completely proven facts, so does that mean we need to go off the deep end to satisfy ignorant people?

In science classes we need to be teaching science. Intelligent Design isn't science. No science methods are used in ID. There's no attempt at falsification or any other science principles. Science has a methodology that defines what it is. ID is the polar opposite. Science deals with the natural world. ID deals with the supernatural. Neither can explain the other. If you want ID in schools then teach it in a course on religion or alternative thinking about the world.

Intelligent Design explains nothing and builds nothing. Evolution explains much about the natural world and helps us in areas such as medicine. Seeing the age of the Earth for what it really is allows us to ascertain where oil may be. I'm sure there are many more areas where understanding evolution has made or lives better.

Teaching alternatives to evolution in science classrooms is simply wrong. I'm not sure real science teachers could being themselves to do it. How could someone steeped in science start spouting an idea they know they can't defend? And those who would teach it, well, I'd be leery of their credentials.

There are plenty of books on evolution but I found one that does a very good job of looking at the fossil record. It's called: Evolution - What the Fossils Say and Why it Matters by Donald R. Prothero. Published in 2007, it has up-to-date information on the latest fossil finds. At times all the technical names of organisms can tend to blur into an alphabet soup of letters, but the writing is clear and the point the author (a scientist) makes is unmistakeable - evolution is a fact of life.

Wasting valuable class time teaching Intelligent Design alongside evolution would be an abrogation of responsibility by school officials and help lead our students farther down the road to scientific illiteracy.

Please click here www.xomba.com/xombyte/centauri to read the rest of my articles.



Comments

Of Course I'm Hard to Follow; I'm On Both Sides

On one side, I agree that children should be taught to side with 'proof' over 'traditional testament'; on the other, 'because I said so' is so much easier than the reason-why that starts, "Let's look at the evidence ..." Earn love above, either there or Here!

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So Psychology is a science?

I'm not sure I follow? Anyway, as you point out, ID has nothing to do with science , it belongs to religion and should therefore be taught as such if at all. ID represents a belief with an infinite number of different variations possible, but basically what all religions have in common is the belief in ID in some variation.

So Psychology Is Not a Science?

Because that's what the Bible works on. It's not, "This is what we can prove with evidence," it's "These are our stories: the way we used to say stuff was (Old Testament), and the way we say stuff was now (New Testament)." Disagree? Join Here, Be Heard!

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Catholic Buddhism (Translat.: Universal Awakening): I Don't Care

When I was confirmed a Catholic, my godfather taught me that 'I don't care' is the answer to everything. Of course, one adds the gentlemen's 'of course!' if one knows who's asking ... e.g. a science-teacher asks if God created the universe, "Of course not! I don't care;" a preacher asks if Jesus fought with the devil, "Of course! I don't care;" etc. Disagree? Join Here, Be Heard!

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I totally agree

"Lastly, students don't need to be taught both sides. In science class it's evidence, that's all that matters. Come up with better evidence and what's taught will change. Anything else can only degrade science.2 I totally agree. I hear some defenders of ID argue that students should learn about other possibilities. The problem with that is that since there's nothing specific to back up the claims of ID there exists an infinite number of possibilities. How would you even know what to teach?

Boo-Boo

The spelling was a boo-boo. I obviously skipped a letter and the word must have looked right for some reason, but thanks for bringing it to my attention. Little things like that can diminish an argument. In reply to Djlev there really is no evidence for ID while there is some for the Big Bang. Based on calculations about the Big Bang, George Gamow predicted there should be left-over radiation from the early hot phase of the Big Bang corresponding to a temperature of a few degrees absolute. In 1965 two scientists, Penzias and Wilson, discovered a radiation field corresponding closely to Gamow's prediction. The point is, and the main point of my article, is that science works by evidence, not belief. And belief is what ID is. ID has never come close to being a theory because no science is involved. The arument for ID is that the Bible is true because it's in the Bible. It can't be tested, falsified, or anything. I'd also like to reiterate that evolution is its own topic. How it all began is one thing. How it evolved is another. Lastly, students don't need to be taught both sides. In science class it's evidence, that's all that matters. Come up with better evidence and what's taught will change. Anything else can only degrade science.

Equal amount of evidence

"1. Nothing happens in nature randomly, as the explanation for things randomly happening are better summarised by infinite complexity. 2. If the slightest variable was changed during the creation process (process of the big bang) eg the percentage of anti matter to matter, chances are that the universe would not exist" There is by no means equal amounts of evidence. What I also wonder is how you twist the statement nr 1 to be even close to evidence of intelligent design. (by the way random events happen in nature all the time) statement 2: may be so, but how do you make the giant leap from this statement to intelligent design? Chances are also that the universe would indeed exist in slightly different form.

things had to begin somewhere?

Why is that? the universe might have just as easily always existed for all we know? but if so, Where did god begin? how did he come about? This doesn't solve anything Check this out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_the_gaps

Intentional irony, or just a boo-boo?

I know I'm not supposed to mention this, but I found it ironic that the word "intelligent" was misspelled in big type in the title!

Uneducated ignorant article

First I want to make very clear that there is no contradictions with the beliefs of christians and the theory of evolution and to be honest most religious people accept it as a possibility/believe in it, although you might refer to Geniuses where "the world was made in seven days", as a educated christian you must also accept that other things were potentially being conveyed as the book its self is not a science book on "how to make your own universe for dummies" as that is not its desired purpose (and if it was we would not need god). Secondly The big bang theory is not directly linked to evolution and should be treated as different topics, this is also referring to the previous point as many christians believe in the theory of evolution but some object to the big bang theory, and so far there is as much evidence (if not much more) supporting the theory of Intelligent Designer (ID) as to the theory of the big bang ignoring the fact that the big bang theory fits in nicely with that idea of a ID and most christians believe that the big bang was the way in which the universe was created. So what I'm trying to say is that most people in the religious community (christians in particular) don't have a problem with either the big bang theory or the theory of evolution the thing that they do have a objection to is the emphases in the science class room on the possibility that of the universe and the world we know today came about from random chance, and this is the thing that we want taught to kids in the science class room that chances are going off the evidence that life might not have come about from random chance that a ID was actually so far the most plausible reason for the world being as we know it today, some of that evidence being: 1. Nothing happens in nature randomly, as the explanation for things randomly happening are better summarised by infinite complexity. 2. If the slightest variable was changed during the creation process (process of the big bang) eg the percentage of anti matter to matter, chances are that the universe would not exist. In conclusion the thing that we want to try and teach kids is not to particularly “brain wash” them with religious ideas but more open their minds to the possibility of the fact that there might be a ID out there and that’s how the universe came about and seeing that there is equal amounts of evidence for a ID as there is for any other theory. Even though these theories are only theory’s kids in general hear, believe and accept them. Presenting the possibilities merely gets them to think one way or another as that is what schools are trying to do(get the kids thinking for themselves). Is this something that we can afford to be wrong on? If we present both sides of the arguments then the choice of which one they believe is laid upon them and that should be human rights regardless of age. Bob Marly: “Tell the children the truth.”

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