By James Haught
James Haught is editor of West Virginia’s largest newspaper, The Charleston Gazette, and a senior editor of Free Inquiry. He is 87-years-old and would like to help secular causes more. This series is a way of giving back.
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Public schools in my state suffered a Bible Belt attack on evolution. In my newspaper, The Charleston Gazette-Mail, I supported teaching of natural selection, the scientific bedrock of biology. A visiting “creation scientist” from California came to town and repeatedly challenged me to debate. A talk radio host blistered me on the air because I wouldn’t come on his show and quarrel with the creationist professor. But I felt it would be silly for me to argue about his supernatural beliefs.
After all, I wouldn’t debate a Scientologist who asserts that all human souls are “thetans” from another planet. And I wouldn’t quarrel with a Unification Church member’s claim that Jesus appeared to Master Moon and told him to convert all people as “Moonies.” And I wouldn’t dispute a Mormon’s belief that Jesus visited prehistoric America. Etc., etc.
Let them all believe whatever they want. It’s pointless to go on radio shows and wrangle over mystical claims.
However, such claims mustn’t be imposed on captive children in government-owned schools. That’s prohibited by the separation of church and state, a core principle in the First Amendment in America’s Bill of Rights.
America’s time-tested freedom of religion means that every group may worship however it wishes in its own private church, but it cannot use the power of government to push its beliefs on others.
Therefore, it was gratifying that our local school board overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to let creationist teachers denounce evolution in class. Educated families owe thanks to four brave board members who withstood heavy pressure from fundamentalists.
To me, the whole issue hinges on honesty. Let me explain:
Science, from a Latin word meaning knowledge, is simply a search for trustworthy facts. It’s human intelligence at work. The process is honest, because every researcher’s claim is challenged by other researchers. They test and retest by many methods, until a new idea fails or holds firm. (A researcher who falsifies data is a loathsome criminal in the eyes of fellow scientists.)
While some individual scientists are pig-headed, an entire field cannot be. Science goes where the evidence leads. Science is honest enough to admit mistakes. When new evidence shatters a previous assertion, the old belief is dropped or modified.
No such setbacks have hit the theory of evolution. After 140 years of research, virtually the entire scientific world now agrees that evolution is a fundamental aspect of nature. Complex animals and plants arose from earlier, simpler ones, over hundreds of millions of years. The fossil record shows it. Geological strata show it. Radioactive dating shows it. The incredible diversity of species, with variations in different locales, shows it. The uncanny similarity of organs, bones, fluids and nerves in many animals shows it.
Evolution was proved when skimpy Indian maize was improved into today’s nutritious corn. It was proved when drug-resistant bacteria grew from survivors of antibiotic treatment (survival of the fittest). It was proved when England’s white moths were gobbled from soot-covered trees by birds, while less-visible black variations survived. It was proved by the clear fossil record that today’s horse grew from a tiny precursor.
College biology books are filled with many more examples. All this is why evolution should be taught in public school classes along with astronomy, physics, chemistry and other established sciences.
However, a fringe of “creation scientists” – rigid religious zealots – contend that evolution never happened, because they think it disagrees with their literal reading of the Book of Genesis. These people aren’t objective about evidence; they reject anything that supports evolution, and exaggerate anything that might concur with the Old Testament.
The visitor who challenged me to debate holds a doctorate in physical education and is listed as “an adjunct professor of physiology for the Institute for Creation Research” at Santee, Calif. He implied that he’s motivated only by scientific interest – but his group’s Web site (www.icr.org) is that of a church. It proclaims:
“We believe God has raised up ICR to spearhead Biblical Christianity’s defense against the godless dogma of evolutionary humanism…. ICR is funded by God’s people… to proclaim God’s truth about origins.”
The Institute for Creation Research calls itself “a Christ-focused creation ministry.” It says humans were made fully developed “in the six literal days of the creation week described in Genesis.” It says this was a “relatively recent” event, and that fossils were formed during Noah’s flood.
It says anyone not saved “solely” by Jesus will “be consigned to the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels.” In other words, a billion Muslims, a billion Hindus and hundreds of millions of Buddhists, Jews, Bahais, Shintoists, etc., are doomed to fry forever, according to the ICR.
Well, all this is standard fundamentalism – but it isn’t science, and it would be illegal to teach it in public school science classes, especially in cosmopolitan Charleston schools containing Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist and Baha’i children. Maybe you can see why I chose not to debate this mentality.
Incidentally, the visiting professor offered $250,000 to anyone who can prove evolution. If this column wins the reward, I’ll donate it to a real science institute.
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This essay appeared his newspaper on Dec. 21, 1999, and was reprinted in the May-June 2000 issue of NCSE Reports of the National Center for Science Education.
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Canadian Atheist Associates: Godless Mom, Nice Mangoes, Sandwalk, Brainstorm Podcast, Left at the Valley, Life, the Universe & Everything Else, The Reality Check, Bad Science Watch, British Columbia Humanist Association, Dying With Dignity Canada, Canadian Secular Alliance, Centre for Inquiry Canada, Kelowna Atheists, Skeptics, and Humanists Association.
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Other National/Local Resources: Association humaniste du Québec, Atheist Freethinkers, Central Ontario Humanist Association, Comox Valley Humanists, Grey Bruce Humanists, Halton-Peel Humanist Community, Hamilton Humanists, Humanist Association of London, Humanist Association of Ottawa, Humanist Association of Toronto, Humanists, Atheists and Agnostics of Manitoba, Ontario Humanist Society, Secular Connextions Seculaire, Secular Humanists in Calgary, Society of Free Thinkers (Kitchener-Waterloo/Cambridge/Guelph), Thunder Bay Humanists, Toronto Oasis, Victoria Secular Humanist Association.
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Other International/Outside Canada Resources: Allianz vun Humanisten, Atheisten an Agnostiker, American Atheists,American Humanist Association, Associação Brasileira de Ateus e Agnósticos/Brazilian Association of Atheists and Agnostics, Atheist Alliance International, Atheist Alliance of America, Atheist Centre, Atheist Foundation of Australia, The Brights Movement, Center for Inquiry (including Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science), Atheist Ireland, Camp Quest, Inc., Council for Secular Humanism, De Vrije Gedachte, European Humanist Federation, Federation of Indian Rationalist Associations, Foundation Beyond Belief, Freedom From Religion Foundation, Humanist Association of Ireland, Humanist International, Humanist Association of Germany, Humanist Association of Ireland, Humanist Society of Scotland, Humanists UK, Humanisterna/Humanists Sweden, Internet Infidels, International League of Non-Religious and Atheists, James Randi Educational Foundation, League of Militant Atheists, Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, National Secular Society, Rationalist International, Recovering From Religion, Religion News Service, Secular Coalition for America, Secular Student Alliance, The Clergy Project, The Rational Response Squad, The Satanic Temple, The Sunday Assembly, United Coalition of Reason, Union of Rationalist Atheists and Agnostics.
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Image Credit: James Haught.