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- <text id=90TT0159>
- <title>
- Jan. 15, 1990: Dissent, Dogma And Darwin's Dog
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 84
- Dissent, Dogma and Darwin's Dog
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Philip Dunne
- </p>
- <p> The welfare of any modern nation depends on its science and
- technology. U.S. industry, national defense, even health, rely
- on progress in fields such as geology, physics and genetics.
- Science implies scientists, who must be accurately taught. In
- schools and colleges, there can be no contamination of the
- teaching of science by irrelevant philosophies or prejudices,
- no matter how time honored these may be.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier in this century, Soviet geneticist Trofim Lysenko
- severely damaged Soviet agriculture by forcing on his
- colleagues a pseudoscientific theory of heredity that was
- ideologically pleasing to the ruling Stalinists. Dissenters
- were dismissed, disgraced and even sent to the Gulags.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S. last November, the California board of education
- faltered under pressure from religious right-wingers and
- overruled the state's curriculum commission to alter a
- guideline for the teaching of evolution in California's
- schools. Darwinian evolution will no longer be presented as
- fact, but as both fact and theory, an equivocation pleasing to
- the religious right because few understand that to scientists
- "theory" is not a synonym for mere "hypothesis." Among other
- concessions, mention of a 1987 Supreme Court decision denying
- scientific status to so-called creation science will be
- deleted.
- </p>
- <p> Right-wingers may be correct in claiming "a very significant
- victory." In a pale but disturbing analogue of the Lysenko
- affair, scientific judgments have been alloyed, if only
- slightly, with politico-religious dogma, creating an unwelcome
- precedent for a nation that needs to stay even--in some cases
- to catch up--with its competitors. The camel's nose is now
- in the tent.
- </p>
- <p> Since California is the leading purchaser of textbooks in
- the U.S., publishers could be economically motivated to spread
- these slippery equivocations nationwide, while extremists will
- be encouraged to increase pressures on educational authorities,
- including individual science teachers.
- </p>
- <p> As a college freshman in 1925, I was sure that the Scopes
- trial, in which Clarence Darrow in effect made a monkey of
- William Jennings Bryan, had put an end to any serious debate.
- Even earlier, President Woodrow Wilson had confidently declared
- as much, and no important politician contradicted him, until,
- in 1980, presidential candidate Ronald Reagan won cheers from
- the religious right by announcing, "Evolution is only a theory"--meaning, of course, a mere hypothesis.
- </p>
- <p> Soon the argument attained a higher judicial level. Supreme
- Court Justice Antonin Scalia with Chief Justice William
- Rehnquist, joining in dissent from the 1987 decision, cited
- testimony that "creation science" merits equal class time with
- Darwinian evolution as a competing theory of the origin of
- life.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the testimony cited by the learned Justice
- and his Chief was in error, and this error has been allowed to
- skew the entire debate on the subject. There is no theory of
- life's origin in Darwin's work. True to his title, On the
- Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, Darwin
- confined himself to describing the process by which new
- species, including our own, have evolved from the old. In a
- letter to American botanist Asa Gray, he dismissed all
- theological pretensions on his part with the words: "A dog
- might as well speculate on the mind of Newton."
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the right-wingers' argument is their
- lingering hope that, as other generations believed, our species
- was singled out for a special creation in God's own image. They
- continue to insist that there are no transitional forms in the
- fossil record, no "missing links," though the Olduvai Gorge,
- along with other African sites, provides a procession of
- evolving hominids, mute but eloquent witnesses to our Darwinian
- past, including those children of the dawn, the
- australopithecines, the little "southern apes" who walked like
- men.
- </p>
- <p> But none of that, pro or con, has a thing to do with
- theories of creation, or the origin of life on earth. In a
- sense, we are all creationists. We differ only on the
- specifics. The idea of linear time is so embedded in our
- consciousness that we instinctively believe there must have
- been a beginning, a creation, a genesis. But on what impulse,
- whose design? That we can never know.
- </p>
- <p> The mystery of creation, as every real scientist is quick
- to admit, is not one that science is capable of solving. To
- some extent, we may learn how it happened, when it happened,
- but never why, any more than we can bound infinity or clock
- eternity. Neither scientists nor religious folk can know why
- the miracle we call life happened, how it acquired such
- characteristics as thought, a sense of beauty, hope,
- conscience, love, piety and speculation about itself and God.
- </p>
- <p> We can neither prove God nor disprove him, whether he be
- Einstein's Old One, the architect of the cosmos, or
- Michelangelo's stern anthropomorphic censor of our morals. Many
- of us, including clerics of all faiths, think it unlikely that
- an all-wise creator would choose for himself the male form of
- a primate so close genetically to a chimpanzee that some
- taxonomists would include the pair in the same genus.
- </p>
- <p> Models of creation--the how but never the why--abound
- among cosmologists, the most widely accepted being the Big
- Bang, which in no way forbids the existence of a creator who
- might have touched it off. One recent hypothesis holds that our
- universe was born as a microscopic ripple in a perfect vacuum,
- not so very new an idea, since Thomas Aquinas proposed
- something similar seven centuries ago. Although the good saint
- was never excommunicated for such heretical views, he was under
- constant fire from zealots as a sort of premature secular
- humanist.
- </p>
- <p> And even if he were proved right, the next question that
- would occur to scientists and theologians alike--and perhaps
- even to Darwin's dog--would be: Who or what created that
- fruitful vacuum?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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