Sunday, April 13, 2008

Freedom Of Thought

There's a new movie opening this week across the USA that stirs up some very important soup.

Ben Stein's "Expelled" is a doco about the politics of science, and the lack of freedom of academic thought. Specifically, Ben's got himself in a lather over the Darwinism v Intelligent Design debate, a real with-us-or-agin-us stoush where "mainstream science" accepts one view as fact and villifies anyone who promotes or even contemplates the other.

If you haven't been following it, Darwinism states that life evolved by trial and error. Who or what we are is the product of a series of accidents, starting from the very moment life appeared on earth. Intelligent Design proponents believe there's a greater hand in there somewhere. They don't dispute evolution per se, they simply say "maybe the evolution is the result of some intervention somewhere".

Intelligent Designists point to the one question Darwinists can't answer, which is "how was life created?"

Now I don't want to get bogged down here in any creationism v evolution debate. Intelligent Designists don't believe the world was created in 6 days, after which God went off for a beer. All they say is "maybe there was a Hand of God in the evolution of life somewhere".

I don't mind that view. I really have no opinion one way or another, and if they're right, they certainly answer a few hitherto unanswerable questions without challenging a core, scientifically provable fact, which is that life has built within it, a magnificent self replicating, self programming structure called DNA with which it can change (or be changed?) to suit whatever is happening to it.

What does concern me is that, once again, one view, in this case Darwinism, is accepted as unimpeachable truth such that anyone holding an opposing or questioning view is labelled a heretic and figutatively burned at the stake. Don't take this the wrong way. Darwin was a brilliant thinker, and he's on my hero list because he observed and spoke out against the mainstream.

However, what the mainstream Darwinists are now doing to their Intelligent Design colleagues would make Darwin spin in his proverbial grave.

There is a saying in science... "first they ridicule you, then they revile you... and then they adopt your ideas as though they are their own."

Science has no room for dogma. Webster defines this as "A doctrinal notion asserted without regard to evidence or truth; an arbitrary dictum". Yet isn't this what we now see in mainstream academia?

Ask yourself... is "Humans-Did-It Climate Change" provable science or politically motivated dogma?

Is "High Cholesterol Is Bad For You" the mantra of a vested interest, or is it also just more dogma?

None of this is new, of course. Medicine use to think washing hands before surgery was quackery. Physicists used to think matter was made up of solid stuff. And Astronomers used to think the Sun revolved around the Earth

I don't care what the issue is. No Thought Police State is acceptable under any circumstance. Scientists must be free to follow the evidence, and not the money, fashion or vested interest.

To watch the trailer, click HERE to go to the Expelled website.

7 comments:

Ms Brown Mouse said...

I'll probably watch it - I don't suppose I'll agree with a lot of what's said but I don't belive in refusing to listen to the other side either.

Robert Vollman said...

If you assume that we have souls, sometimes I wonder who got the first one. And how.

I mean his/her parents were both soulless primates, and s/he wasn't.

Chester The Bear said...

Maybe they're not soulless.

e said...

Over here in the Excited States, that's not the debate at all. The debate actually is evolution vs. the world was created as is in 6 days. I'm not sure if intelligent design means something else in Oz, but that's what it means here. The term intelligent design masks what it really is, a literal interpretation of an allegorical scripture.

Many scientists have no issue with the existence of god. What they have issue with is that for a while there was a big push (and to some extent there may still be) to not teach evolution in school but to teach intelligent design instead. The big argument against evolution was that there is no evidence of it. Of course, in the last couple of years DNA evidence has shown up, so that argument is pretty much out of the water.

I personally know more than one person who believes in the 6 day theory, and continues steadfastly to claim that there is no evidence of evolution.

The existence (or not) of god is just not that big of a debate for the folks who know that evolution takes place. Some people believe, and some don't.

Urban Koda said...

At some point, I think religious ideas and science will diverge onto the same path. The largest obstacle however is the people involved in each are more convinced that the other side is wrong than about anything they think they know.

Ms Brown Mouse said...

My my once asked a (Catholic) priest about the souls of animals - you know, if they had them. His answer was animals only had "material souls". Our family now imagines just what type of "material" the souls of our pets would be made out of. The seal point siamese cats, brown velvelt of course. The Irish setter, bright red satin. So I'm guessing those "soulless primates" had material souls of, let's say, lovely brown corduroy. (If there is any such thing at all of course.)

Ms Brown Mouse said...

that second my, should be Mum!