Dover has no newspaper of its own, but the closest city
papers - the York Daily Record, the York Dispatch, and the
Harrisburg Patriot-News - were represented throughout the proceedings.
Among the regular journalistic attendees were reporters from several
national papers and international science magazines, including Science,
Nature, and New Scientist. (Cover stories were devoted to Dover
and ID by Nature April 28, Time August 15, and Newsweek
November 28.)
Why so much attention? After the 2004 presidential election,
newspaper coverage of ID more than tripled, suggesting that the theory had
come to be seen by journalists as a central preoccupation of the "moral
values" coalition that helped to re-elect President Bush, and that
with the election over, ID had become a central front in the ongoing culture
war. That impression was strengthened at the beginning of August, when the
president told a group of reporters that he thought ID should be taught in
the public schools along with evolution.
It is important to recognize, however, that ID was not part
of the conversation on the Dover school board until certain members were
persuaded to substitute a short statement mentioning ID for their own plan
to require equal instructional time for "creationism." It's even more
important not to confuse ID as such with garden-variety creationism.
Despite efforts to paint it with that brush, and despite the ID movement's
own refusal to disown garden-variety creationists as their political allies,
ID is not (as the Pittsburgh Post Gazette put it in an April 10, 2005
editorial) "creationism by a more politic name."
To most of its adherents, creationism means what is usually
called "young-earth creationism," a term in which the first term is no less
important than the second. Adherents believe, based on a literal reading of
Genesis, that God created all things in less than one week, just a few
thousand years ago, before taking a day off. They also believe that God
would not have allowed sentient beings (animals capable of feeling pain) to
suffer before sin entered the world - before, that is, humanity "fell" as a
result of Adam and Eve disobeying God in the garden of Eden.
No suffering, for them, means that no animal died from
disease or carnivorous activity in the original creation, which in turn
leads them to conclude that animal anatomy and behavior, along with some
aspects of physical nature, changed fundamentally after the Fall. And since
there was no animal death prior to Adam and Eve, fossils cannot be the
remains of creatures that lived and died before humans existed. Instead,
young-earth creationists claim that virtually all fossils were formed by a
single event: Noah's flood. Extinct creatures bear witness not to the
evolution of life on earth but to the Flood, and thereby to the truth of the
Bible (as the creationists interpret it).
The young-earth creationist position is driven entirely by
religious concerns and was properly ruled to be a form of religion, not
science, by the late Judge William Overton in McLean v. Arkansas
Board of Education, a case challenging an Arkansas law requiring
"balanced treatment" for "creation science" and evolution nearly a
quarter-century ago. A key witness who helped the judge reach this
conclusion was philosopher Michael Ruse, who argued that creationism isn't
science because it's just a set of religious beliefs that can't be tested
observationally, and science must be capable of observational tests.
Ironically, right after the trial, several other
philosophers of science "took immediate umbrage at the suggestion that one
can draw a sharp line between science and the rest of human activity," as
Ruse puts it in his latest book, The Evolution-Creation Struggle.
Creationism is testable, his philosophical critics said, and it has
failed those tests. It is science, just bad science and therefore
should not be taught. Although McLean is based partly on
Ruse's debatable proposition, the precedent was established. Indeed, in his
ruling, Judge Jones cites the very part of Judge Overton's decision in
question.
But Ruse's critics were onto something important.
Creationism is seen by its adherents as a "theory" on the same level with
evolution - an unproved explanation for the origin of the universe and every
living thing. ID, by contrast, does not purport to be such a theory. It does
not, for example, offer an answer to such questions as how and when
dinosaurs came into existence.
Most ID thinkers actually believe that the earth and the
universe are billions of years old and that the big bang theory of cosmology
is true. At least a few of them - most notably biochemist Michael Behe, who
testified at the Dover trial - even believe that humans and other primates
share a common ancestor, which has always been the ultimate sticking point
for creationists. (It is thus ironic, as well as ridiculous, that Behe
should be considered by some of his scientific colleagues to be a
"creationist.")
It is not a strength of ID that it avoids offering a grand
narrative. As the late Thomas Kuhn argued, scientists do not abandon an
existing paradigm unless or until they see a better paradigm out there to
embrace. I am convinced that, without such a paradigm, ID will never
be regarded as science, not even bad science, by the scientific community.
But in order for ID to provide a plausible alternative to
evolution, its proponents would have to address the one issue they least
want to face: the age of the earth and the universe. Their refusal to
discuss this issue directly and publicly has less to do with science than
with movement politics.
Currently, the ID movement is, to use its own language, a
"big tent" under whose sprawling canvas there is plenty of room for
differences of opinion about theological and biblical issues related to the
age of the earth. A full public discussion of these issues would not disturb
most of the intellectual leaders of the movement. But it would
alienate the many grass-roots creationists who support ID - and who provide
it with much of its political support. So while ID is not creationism,
creationism remains the elephant in the room. Judge Jones evidently smelled
the elephant quite distinctly.
At this point, there simply is no ID "theory" to teach - or
even to practice in the laboratory, let alone to place at the center of a
new scientific paradigm. ID currently consists only of an interesting
philosophical critique of the explanatory efficacy of Darwinian evolution,
combined with an appeal for scientists to add "design" to the set of
explanatory principles they employ in biology and other sciences.
When ID advocates say, "teach the controversy," they do not
mean that ID should be taught as an alternative to evolution, in the same
sense in which the authors of the Arkansas bill wanted creationism taught as
another theory of equal merit to evolution. Rather, they are referring
mainly to ID's criticism of evolution as it is presented in textbooks: They
want students to learn that some scientists do not accept important aspects
of the standard picture of evolution.
After hearing all the testimony about ID, the Judge
concluded that the "tactic" of teaching the controversy "is at best
disingenuous, and at worst a canard. The goal of the [ID Movement] is not to
encourage critical thought, but to foment a revolution which would supplant
evolutionary theory with ID." While I agree with the latter part of the
Judge's second sentence, I must dissent from the rest.
Having taught courses on aspects of the "origins"
controversy at high school and college levels for almost 25 years, I am
convinced that it enhances critical thinking and the understanding of
science for students to be taught about various objections to evolution. As
I tell my students, scientific knowledge is determined not only by
observations and experiments, but also by the outcome of debates about how
to interpret observations and experiments; and these debates involve a
variety of factors. Where religious belief is one of those factors, it
serves a secular academic purpose to talk about it in a biology class.
A crucial ID claim, advanced by Behe in Darwin's Black
Box (1996), is that a few biological structures are "irreducibly
complex." This refers to the idea that a given structure has too many
closely interrelated parts for its first appearance on the scene to be
explained by unsupervised Darwinian mechanisms that could not have foreseen
its function and planned accordingly.
The centerpiece for this argument is the bacterial
flagellum, a cellular version of the outboard motor that Behe likes to
compare with the mousetrap: If the parts aren't all present and working
properly, no useful function results that will have evolutionary survival
value. It had to be assembled all at once under the influence of a guiding
intelligence, rather than piecemeal as Darwinism claims. While ID cannot say
precisely how an "irreducibly complex" structure or organism
appeared, it is prepared to claim that it must have involved "intelligent
design."
This is where religion comes explicitly into the
controversy. Because ID advocates decline to spell out a specific
alternative to naturalistic assembly by Darwinian mechanisms, the scent of
miraculous divine activity is always in the air - and at the Dover trial,
biologist Kenneth Miller did his best to concentrate it into an essence.
The first witness for the plaintiffs, Miller is an author of
the textbook used in Dover High School and thousands of other schools
nationally. Calling upon arguments he made at length in his 1999 book,
Finding Darwin's God, Miller made it clear that ID is not creationism in
the ordinary sense, it is nevertheless a type of special creationism,
because it strongly implies that some biological structures or even entire
organisms have been miraculously assembled. (I said the same thing myself in
an article in Christian Century in 1998, and I still think so.) Judge
Jones was persuaded.
This, however, only begs the question of whether or not ID
advocates are right about the inadequacy of Darwinian mechanisms to explain
things like the bacterial flagellum. If they are, let us hope that the truth
can be taught in biology classes, whether or not it has religious
implications. Behe and Miller are both genuine experts on aspects of cell
biology, and they simply do not agree about how to interpret the evidence.
They did not agree when they both spoke on my campus several
years ago, they have not agreed when I have heard them speak at the same
academic conferences, they do not agree in their essays in the recent volume
Debating Design, and they certainly did not agree when testifying in
Harrisburg. For me, this has become a case of "he said, he said" that will
not be settled by listening to either of them one more time. I lack the
competence in the relevant science to sort it out. I doubt that Judge Jones
knows any more biochemistry than I do, but he obviously found Miller a more
persuasive witness.
In thinking about the larger cultural issues, however, I am
reminded of something that philosopher Niall Shanks said at a symposium on
ID last spring. The ID advocates and the mainstream scientists are looking
at a glass that is either half full (mainstream science) or half empty (ID).
Each side is placing their bets on a different outcome, once all the facts
are in. Shanks is no friend of ID, and I take his description as a tacit
admission that Behe and company are making some valid points about the
present state of knowledge. At the same time, it does seem a little
imprudent for ID advocates to float an enormous, wide-ranging program of
cultural renewal on half a glass of water.
No doubt about it, cultural renewal is a large part of the
ID agenda. Philosopher Barbara Forrest, another key witness at the trial,
has documented this thoroughly in her book, Creationism's Trojan Horse,
which calls attention to a document lifted from a computer owned by The
Discovery Institute, the Seattle think tank that funds most of the work done
on ID.
This "Wedge" document, as it is called, was probably an
internal white paper circulated to potential donors to garner support for ID
projects. It explains more succinctly the same strategy that is presented in
The Wedge of Truth: Splitting the Foundations of Naturalism, one of
several books on ID by retired law professor Philip Johnson, the leading ID
strategist. Most ID advocates are conservative Christians (some like Johnson
are Protestants, others like Behe are Roman Catholics), and many of them do
see ID as the key to unlock the stranglehold of an atheistic naturalism on
modern America.
Mathematician and philosopher William Dembski, whose book
The Design Inference is perhaps the most original contribution to ID,
believes that ID's challenge to evolution and naturalism is "ground zero of
the culture war." Judge Jones was impressed with the evidence linking ID to
openly Christian efforts to influence the larger culture.
Culture wars are inherently political, and in the politics
of science the politics usually drives the science. Creationists routinely
depict "evolutionists" (the word itself has a derogatory connotation for
many conservative Christians) as "atheists" and literally blame evolution
for being the root cause of racism, Nazism, communism, homosexuality, and
sexual promiscuity. (Let me add that ID authors do not typically do this.)
Nor it is hard to find equally disparaging remarks from the
other side, as a brief perusal of the blog, pandasthumb.org, will show. One
might fairly lay the blame for setting the tone for this whole conversation
on Richard Dawkins, an Oxford biologist who preaches the gospel of
scientific atheism in works like The Blind Watchmaker (1986), the
book that more than anything else got Johnson angry enough to get the ID
movement off the ground. "It is absolutely safe to say," Dawkins wrote in
his bestseller, "that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in
evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid, or insaneŠor wicked, but I'd
rather not consider that."
Ironically, some of the biggest insults have been directed
by Christians against those Christians scientists and other thinkers who do
not find ID sufficiently persuasive. Years ago, for example, Johnson
referred to them as "mushy accommodationists."
I doubt that the rhetoric will cool anytime soon, despite
the fact that the Dover case is now over. Certainly, in the wake of the
judge's decision, ID advocates promised to continue the fight across the
land.
But the decision itself is hard, for me at least, to
dispute. Given the evidence, the judge really had no choice but to rule that
the school board tried to inject a reference to ID for religious reasons,
and that it had no clear secular purpose for doing so. "The evidence at
trial demonstrates that ID is nothing less than the progeny of creationism,"
the Judge wrote, and in this particular instance I can't blame him. As a
result, "it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution
in a public school science classroom."
Does this leave open the possibility that a science teacher
might still be allowed to discuss aspects of ID? If not, it would be
unfortunate.
It is true that ID ideas are not now getting space in
science journals, with rare and highly controversial exceptions, such as
when philosopher Steven Meyer published an article advocating "design" in
2004 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, an action
that was soon repudiated by the scientific society that owns the journal.
(The whole affair, including the denunciation of the journal's former editor
Richard Sternberg, amounted to a mirror image of Galileo's trial by
the Inquisition.)
Yet - and this is critical to bear in mind -
ideas associated with ID are being advocated in some refereed
professional literature related to the philosophy of science, including the
journal Biology and Philosophy and several recent books from academic
publishers. Some of this literature was mentioned by witnesses for both
sides in the trial, but curiously neither side made much of it.
Pennsylvania science standards call for teachers to discuss
the "nature of science" - which in the language of science education is a
reference to aspects of the philosophy of science. The existence of refereed
professional literature on ID in the philosophy of science suggests that the
approach is relevant to questions regarding the interpretation of data and
the formulation of hypotheses.
The magazine Nature went even further in an April 28
editorial headed "Dealing with Design," which stated that scientists in the
lecture hall "should be prepared to talk about what science can and cannot
do, and how it fits in with different religious beliefs." Similarly, public
school science teachers have a legitimate secular purpose in discussing
various philosophical objections to aspects of evolution that have been
raised by scientists in the 147 years since Darwin's book was published. The
general education of a science student is well served when such topics are
introduced.
Still, I cannot criticize the judge for overlooking this
possibility, because the defense did not make a case for it. Rather, the
defense kept insisting that ID is science, not philosophy of science,
despite the near total lack of backing for that claim in the
scientific literature.
It is worth noting that, in contrast to Scopes, the
news media did a more than respectable job in covering the issues at hand. A
three-part series in the New York Times in late August stands out in
this regard. Jodi Wilgoren's lead article in the August 21 New York Times
was especially well done for its coverage of the politics of science, and
all three stories allowed advocates of ID to describe their ideas fairly and
clearly in their own words. Cornelia Dean's August 23 article effectively
highlighted various other ways in which American scientists have provided
religious (and irreligious) interpretations of science.
As for the local newspapers, I found their coverage of the
trial and the local circumstances surrounding it to be thorough, accurate,
and unbiased. From time to time, the correspondents for these papers
consulted me on points raised by the experts, but they invariably knew much
more than I did about what took place in Dover before as well as during the
trial.
Their coverage in the months leading up it was so
comprehensive, in fact, that two of the reporters, Heidi Bernhard-Bubb of
the York Dispatch and Joseph Maldonado of the York Daily Record,
appeared as witnesses for the plaintiffs concerning the intentions of the
school board. In his opinion, the judge called them "credible and
convincing."
Although certain defendants frequently claimed that
they had been misquoted or misrepresented by the local press, the trial left
the shoe on the other foot: The judge declared that two of the school board
members, Alan Bonsell and William Buckingham, had lied in their depositions,
confirming my similar impression in court.
"Those who disagree with our holding," Jones wrote near the
end of his opinion, "will likely mark it as the product of an activist
judge." I make no such accusation, but The Discovery Institute did not
hesitate. Hardly had the decision been issued than John West, a politics
professor at Seattle Pacific University who is also a long-time fellow of
the institute, offered the following response on the institute's webpage (