Darwin
and the Intelligent Design Brigade
Evolution
is perhaps the strongest theory in modern science, but still the most
controversial. Why after all this time does it still generate such
ferocious opposition?
“Christian Right Lobbies To Overturn Second Law Of
Thermodynamics
The second law of thermodynamics, a fundamental scientific principle
stating that entropy increases over time as organized forms decay into
greater states of randomness, has come under fire from conservative
Christian groups, who are demanding that the law be repealed.
Calling
the second law of thermodynamics "a deeply disturbing scientific
principle that threatens our children's understanding of God's universe
as a benevolent and loving place," they are spearheading a nationwide
grassroots campaign to have the law removed from high-school physics
textbooks. The plan has already met with significant support in the
state legislatures of Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Georgia,
and Mississippi.”
Before you start worrying, this was a satirical item from The
Onion, back in 2000, aimed at religious people who reject Darwinian
evolution. However it’s not really an exaggeration. Religious
fundamentalists who reject evolutionary theory are also rejecting
geology, astronomy, Einsteinian and Newtonian physics, in fact the
whole body of scientific knowledge going back to first principles, and
replacing it with a couple of anonymous books and a God who, as Bill
Hicks pointed out in relation to dinosaur fossils, must be a liar and a
practical joker.
Yet these religious people don’t choose to attack
Newton, or the theory of gravity, or light, or quantum physics. Why
evolution specifically? If you haven’t already seen it, try
watching Judgment Day: Intelligent Design on Trial (2007), which is
freely available online. This is an award-winning documentary
describing the headline-grabbing court case between parents and the
School Governors in Dover, Pennsylvania in which the governors were
trying to force creationist ideas into biology classes and the parents
were trying to stop them.
In the end the parents won, and the creationists were
humiliated. But as you follow the interviews with protagonists on both
sides of this celebrated case, you begin to see what it is
that motivates those on the religious side of the debate. It is fear.
They are afraid that without God as first cause there really
is no relevance to life. They fear that science is taking the heart out
of the human experience and replacing it with numbers. They fear that a
world with no meaning is a world with no mercy.
It was fear that originally incited the famous campaigning
reformer William Jennings Bryan to take the prosecution case in the
Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, fear that naked social darwinism would
rampage across any possibility of social justice, would justify the
worst excesses of unrestrained capitalism. This was the fear
– and the profound misunderstanding of Darwinism –
which drove Christians to break themselves against the juggernaut of
science, and continues to drive them today.
It would be, from a scientific or a socialist perspective, so
easy to laugh at these people as superstitious children. After all,
they cannot win. Despite the recent avalanche of anti-religious books
from the likes of Dawkins, Michael Shermer, Christopher Hitchens and
others, there is no real danger of a return to a religious Dark Age. Of
course they are wrong. Of course their arguments are ludicrous.
At the same time it is possible to feel some compassion for
the fear and the desperation these, mostly ignorant and uninformed,
people have, confronted with a world they don’t understand
and in which they feel utterly helpless. Science to them is gas
chambers, nuclear bombs, death rays, spy satellites and mind control.
Wild stories about Earth-eating black holes and
‘strangelets’ guaranteed front-page coverage
worldwide for the switching on of the Large Hadron Collider, an event
only normally of interest to particle physicists.
People fear what they don’t understand, and in
general society is scientifically illiterate, a situation many
scientists find worrying. In public surveys on the supposedly dangerous
substance Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO), which can corrode iron and kill
humans if inhaled, up to 90% of respondents voted that it should be
banned (DHMO = H20). (Source: New Scientist, 27 Sept 2008,
p.76).
Socialists should care about the religion versus science
debate because the theory of socialism is built on scientific
principles, and anything which threatens rationality and evidence-based
thinking must be anathema. However we should also be capable of seeing
the larger picture. This isn’t really about Darwin, or the
laws of physics.
This is about people who need to have a reason to go on
living, which capitalism isn’t giving them. It’s
about people’s need to believe in something, which capitalism
doesn’t supply or has taken away. And it’s about
having some hope for the future, of which capitalism has none. The
world really does need some intelligent design, but in its business of
living, not in its biology.
Socialists, as atheists, have to understand what some
scientists seem unable to grasp, that the battle of ideas is not just a
battle of the mind, it’s a battle for the heart. We can no
more win hearts with economic methodology than scientists can with
peer-reviewed research. If we scoff at notions of
‘spirit’ or ‘soul’ because
these things are not measurable in laboratory experiments, we utterly
miss the point. The desperate argument of creationism is at one level a
comedy of human stupidity. But at a deeper level it is a tragedy, the
pathos of a human condition adrift and desolate in a world which cares
only about money and believes in nothing at all. This is what Moslems
and Christians despair about, and this is something with which we can
surely empathise. This is the ‘sigh of the
oppressed’ in the heartless world of the 21st century.
Despite appearances to the contrary, capitalism is slowly and
methodically destroying religion. What we need to do, as socialists, is
recognise the emotional vacuum this is creating, and strive to fill it,
before something infinitely worse does.
PADDY
SHANNON
|