From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intelligent design (ID) is a pseudoscientific argument for the existence of God, presented by its proponents as "an evidence-based scientific theory about life's origins".
Proponents claim that "certain features of the universe and of living
things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected
process such as natural selection." ID is a form of creationism that lacks empirical support and offers no testable or tenable hypotheses, and is therefore not science. The leading proponents of ID are associated with the Discovery Institute, a Christian, politically conservative think tank based in the United States.
Though the phrase intelligent design had featured previously in theological discussions of the argument from design, its first publication in its present use as an alternative term for creationism was in Of Pandas and People,
a 1989 creationist textbook intended for high school biology classes.
The term was substituted into drafts of the book, directly replacing
references to creation science and creationism, after the 1987 Supreme Court's Edwards v. Aguillard decision barred the teaching of creation science in public schools on constitutional grounds. From the mid-1990s, the intelligent design movement (IDM), supported by the Discovery Institute, advocated inclusion of intelligent design in public school biology curricula. This led to the 2005 Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District
trial, which found that intelligent design was not science, that it
"cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious,
antecedents," and that the public school district's promotion of it
therefore violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
ID presents two main arguments against evolutionary explanations: irreducible complexity and specified complexity,
asserting that certain biological and informational features of living
things are too complex to be the result of natural selection. Detailed
scientific examination has rebutted several examples for which
evolutionary explanations are claimed to be impossible.
ID seeks to challenge the methodological naturalism inherent in modern science, though proponents concede that they have yet to produce a scientific theory. As a positive argument against evolution, ID proposes an analogy between natural systems and human artifacts, a version of the theological argument from design for the existence of God. ID proponents then conclude by analogy that the complex features, as defined by ID, are evidence of design. Critics of ID find a false dichotomy in the premise that evidence against evolution constitutes evidence for design.
History
Origin of the concept
In 1910, evolution was not a topic of major religious controversy in America, but in the 1920s, the Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy in theology resulted in Fundamentalist Christian opposition to teaching evolution, and the origins of modern creationism.
Teaching of evolution was effectively suspended in U.S. public schools
until the 1960s, and when evolution was then reintroduced into the
curriculum, there was a series of court cases in which attempts were
made to get creationism taught alongside evolution in science classes. Young Earth creationists
(YEC) promoted creation science as "an alternative scientific
explanation of the world in which we live". This frequently invoked the argument from design to explain complexity in nature as demonstrating the existence of God.
The argument from design, also known as the teleological argument
or "argument from intelligent design", has been advanced in theology
for centuries.
It can be summarised briefly as "Wherever complex design exists, there
must have been a designer; nature is complex; therefore nature must have
had an intelligent designer." Thomas Aquinas presented it in his fifth proof of God's existence as a syllogism. In 1802, William Paley's Natural Theology presented examples of intricate purpose in organisms. His version of the watchmaker analogy argued that, in the same way that a watch has evidently been designed by a craftsman, complexity and adaptation
seen in nature must have been designed, and the perfection and
diversity of these designs shows the designer to be omnipotent, the Christian God. Like creation science, intelligent design centers on Paley's religious argument from design, but while Paley's natural theology was open to deistic
design through God-given laws, intelligent design seeks scientific
confirmation of repeated miraculous interventions in the history of
life. Creation science prefigured the intelligent design arguments of irreducible complexity, even featuring the bacterial flagellum.
In the United States, attempts to introduce creation science in schools
led to court rulings that it is religious in nature, and thus cannot be
taught in public school science classrooms. Intelligent design is also
presented as science, and shares other arguments with creation science
but avoids literal Biblical references to such things as the Flood story from the Book of Genesis or using Bible verses to age the Earth.
Barbara Forrest writes that the intelligent design movement began in 1984 with the book The Mystery of Life's Origin: Reassessing Current Theories, co-written by creationist Charles B. Thaxton, a chemist, with two other authors, and published by Jon A. Buell's Foundation for Thought and Ethics.
In March 1986, Stephen C. Meyer published a review of the book, discussing how information theory could suggest that messages transmitted by DNA in the cell show "specified complexity" specified by intelligence, and must have originated with an intelligent agent.
He also argued that science is based upon "foundational assumptions" of
naturalism which were as much a matter of faith as those of "creation
theory". In November of that year, Thaxton described his reasoning as a more sophisticated form of Paley's argument from design.
At the "Sources of Information Content in DNA" conference which Thaxton
held in 1988, he said that his intelligent cause view was compatible
with both metaphysical naturalism and supernaturalism.
Intelligent design avoids identifying or naming the intelligent designer—it merely states that one (or more) must exist—but leaders of the movement have said the designer is the Christian God. Whether this lack of specificity about the designer's identity in
public discussions is a genuine feature of the concept, or just a
posture taken to avoid alienating those who would separate religion from
the teaching of science, has been a matter of great debate between
supporters and critics of intelligent design. The Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District court ruling held the latter to be the case.
Origin of the term
Since the Middle Ages,
discussion of the religious "argument from design" or "teleological
argument" in theology, with its concept of "intelligent design", has
persistently referred to the theistic Creator God. Although ID
proponents chose this provocative label for their proposed alternative
to evolutionary explanations, they have de-emphasized their religious
antecedents and denied that ID is natural theology, while still presenting ID as supporting the argument for the existence of God.
While intelligent design proponents have pointed out past examples of the phrase intelligent design
that they said were not creationist and faith-based, they have failed
to show that these usages had any influence on those who introduced the
label in the intelligent design movement.
Variations on the phrase appeared in Young Earth creationist publications: a 1967 book co-written by Percival Davis referred to "design according to which basic organisms were created". In 1970, A. E. Wilder-Smith published The Creation of Life: A Cybernetic Approach to Evolution
which defended Paley's design argument with computer calculations of
the improbability of genetic sequences, which he said could not be
explained by evolution but required "the abhorred necessity of divine
intelligent activity behind nature", and that "the same problem would be
expected to beset the relationship between the designer behind nature
and the intelligently designed part of nature known as man." In a 1984
article as well as in his affidavit to Edwards v. Aguillard, Dean H. Kenyon
defended creation science by stating that "biomolecular systems require
intelligent design and engineering know-how", citing Wilder-Smith.
Creationist Richard B. Bliss used the phrase "creative design" in Origins: Two Models: Evolution, Creation (1976), and in Origins: Creation or Evolution
(1988) wrote that "while evolutionists are trying to find
non-intelligent ways for life to occur, the creationist insists that an
intelligent design must have been there in the first place." The first systematic use of the term, defined in a glossary and claimed to be other than creationism, was in Of Pandas and People, co-authored by Davis and Kenyon.
Of Pandas and People
Use of the terms "creationism" versus "intelligent design" in sequential drafts of the book Of Pandas and People.
The most common modern use of the words "intelligent design" as a
term intended to describe a field of inquiry began after the United
States Supreme Court ruled in June 1987 in the case of Edwards v. Aguillard that it is unconstitutional for a state to require the teaching of creationism in public school science curricula.
A Discovery Institute report says that Charles B. Thaxton, editor of Pandas, had picked the phrase up from a NASA scientist, and thought, "That's just what I need, it's a good engineering term."
In two successive 1987 drafts of the book, over one hundred uses of the
root word "creation", such as "creationism" and "Creation Science",
were changed, almost without exception, to "intelligent design", while "creationists" was changed to "design proponents" or, in one instance, "cdesign proponentsists" [sic]. In June 1988, Thaxton held a conference titled "Sources of Information Content in DNA" in Tacoma, Washington. Stephen C. Meyer was at the conference, and later recalled that "The term intelligent design came up..." In December 1988 Thaxton decided to use the label "intelligent design" for his new creationist movement.
Of Pandas and People was published in 1989, and in
addition to including all the current arguments for ID, was the first
book to make systematic use of the terms "intelligent design" and
"design proponents" as well as the phrase "design theory", defining the
term intelligent design in a glossary and representing it as not being creationism. It thus represents the start of the modern intelligent design movement.
"Intelligent design" was the most prominent of around fifteen new terms
it introduced as a new lexicon of creationist terminology to oppose
evolution without using religious language.
It was the first place where the phrase "intelligent design" appeared
in its primary present use, as stated both by its publisher Jon A.
Buell, and by William A. Dembski in his expert witness report for Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District.
The National Center for Science Education
(NCSE) has criticized the book for presenting all of the basic
arguments of intelligent design proponents and being actively promoted
for use in public schools before any research had been done to support
these arguments. Although presented as a scientific textbook, philosopher of science Michael Ruse considers the contents "worthless and dishonest". An American Civil Liberties Union
lawyer described it as a political tool aimed at students who did not
"know science or understand the controversy over evolution and
creationism". One of the authors of the science framework used by
California schools, Kevin Padian, condemned it for its "sub-text", "intolerance for honest science" and "incompetence".
Concepts
Irreducible complexity
The term "irreducible complexity" was introduced by biochemist Michael Behe in his 1996 book Darwin's Black Box, though he had already described the concept in his contributions to the 1993 revised edition of Of Pandas and People.
Behe defines it as "a single system which is composed of several
well-matched interacting parts that contribute to the basic function,
wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to
effectively cease functioning".
Behe uses the analogy of a mousetrap to illustrate this concept. A
mousetrap consists of several interacting pieces—the base, the catch,
the spring and the hammer—all of which must be in place for the
mousetrap to work. Removal of any one piece destroys the function of the
mousetrap. Intelligent design advocates assert that natural selection
could not create irreducibly complex systems, because the selectable
function is present only when all parts are assembled. Behe argued that
irreducibly complex biological mechanisms include the bacterial
flagellum of E. coli, the blood clotting cascade, cilia, and the adaptive immune system.
Critics point out that the irreducible complexity argument
assumes that the necessary parts of a system have always been necessary
and therefore could not have been added sequentially.
They argue that something that is at first merely advantageous can
later become necessary as other components change. Furthermore, they
argue, evolution often proceeds by altering preexisting parts or by
removing them from a system, rather than by adding them. This is
sometimes called the "scaffolding objection" by an analogy with
scaffolding, which can support an "irreducibly complex" building until
it is complete and able to stand on its own.
Behe has acknowledged using "sloppy prose", and that his "argument against Darwinism does not add up to a logical proof." Irreducible complexity has remained a popular argument among advocates of intelligent design; in the Dover trial, the court held that "Professor Behe's claim for irreducible complexity has been refuted in peer-reviewed research papers and has been rejected by the scientific community at large."
Specified complexity
In 1986, Charles B. Thaxton, a physical chemist and creationist, used the term "specified complexity" from information theory
when claiming that messages transmitted by DNA in the cell were
specified by intelligence, and must have originated with an intelligent
agent.
The intelligent design concept of "specified complexity" was developed
in the 1990s by mathematician, philosopher, and theologian William A. Dembski.
Dembski states that when something exhibits specified complexity (i.e.,
is both complex and "specified", simultaneously), one can infer that it
was produced by an intelligent cause (i.e., that it was designed)
rather than being the result of natural processes. He provides the
following examples: "A single letter of the alphabet is specified
without being complex. A long sentence of random letters is complex
without being specified. A Shakespearean sonnet is both complex and specified."
He states that details of living things can be similarly characterized,
especially the "patterns" of molecular sequences in functional
biological molecules such as DNA.
Dembski defines complex specified information (CSI) as anything with a less than 1 in 10150 chance of occurring by (natural) chance. Critics say that this renders the argument a tautology:
complex specified information cannot occur naturally because Dembski
has defined it thus, so the real question becomes whether or not CSI
actually exists in nature.
The conceptual soundness of Dembski's specified complexity/CSI
argument has been discredited in the scientific and mathematical
communities. Specified complexity has yet to be shown to have wide applications in other fields, as Dembski asserts. John Wilkins and Wesley R. Elsberry characterize Dembski's "explanatory filter" as eliminative
because it eliminates explanations sequentially: first regularity, then
chance, finally defaulting to design. They argue that this procedure is
flawed as a model for scientific inference because the asymmetric way
it treats the different possible explanations renders it prone to making
false conclusions.
Richard Dawkins, another critic of intelligent design, argues in The God Delusion
(2006) that allowing for an intelligent designer to account for
unlikely complexity only postpones the problem, as such a designer would
need to be at least as complex.
Other scientists have argued that evolution through selection is better
able to explain the observed complexity, as is evident from the use of
selective evolution to design certain electronic, aeronautic and
automotive systems that are considered problems too complex for human
"intelligent designers".
Fine-tuned universe
Intelligent design proponents have also occasionally appealed to
broader teleological arguments outside of biology, most notably an
argument based on the fine-tuning of universal constants that make matter and life possible and which are argued not to be solely attributable to chance. These include the values of fundamental physical constants, the relative strength of nuclear forces, electromagnetism, and gravity between fundamental particles, as well as the ratios of masses of such particles. Intelligent design proponent and Center for Science and Culture fellow Guillermo Gonzalez
argues that if any of these values were even slightly different, the
universe would be dramatically different, making it impossible for many chemical elements and features of the Universe, such as galaxies, to form.
Thus, proponents argue, an intelligent designer of life was needed to
ensure that the requisite features were present to achieve that
particular outcome.
Scientists have generally responded that these arguments are poorly supported by existing evidence. Victor J. Stenger and other critics say both intelligent design and the weak form of the anthropic principle are essentially a tautology; in his view, these arguments amount to the claim that life is able to exist because the Universe is able to support life. The claim of the improbability of a life-supporting universe has also been criticized as an argument by lack of imagination
for assuming no other forms of life are possible. Life as we know it
might not exist if things were different, but a different sort of life
might exist in its place. A number of critics also suggest that many of
the stated variables appear to be interconnected and that calculations
made by mathematicians and physicists suggest that the emergence of a
universe similar to ours is quite probable.
Intelligent designer
The contemporary intelligent design movement formulates its arguments in secular
terms and intentionally avoids identifying the intelligent agent (or
agents) they posit. Although they do not state that God is the designer,
the designer is often implicitly hypothesized to have intervened in a
way that only a god could intervene. Dembski, in The Design Inference (1998), speculates that an alien culture could fulfill these requirements. Of Pandas and People proposes that SETI illustrates an appeal to intelligent design in science. In 2000, philosopher of science Robert T. Pennock suggested the Raëlian UFO
religion as a real-life example of an extraterrestrial intelligent
designer view that "make[s] many of the same bad arguments against
evolutionary theory as creationists". The authoritative description of intelligent design, however, explicitly states that the Universe displays features of having been designed. Acknowledging the paradox,
Dembski concludes that "no intelligent agent who is strictly physical
could have presided over the origin of the universe or the origin of
life."
The leading proponents have made statements to their supporters that
they believe the designer to be the Christian God, to the exclusion of
all other religions.
Beyond the debate over whether intelligent design is scientific, a
number of critics argue that existing evidence makes the design
hypothesis appear unlikely, irrespective of its status in the world of
science. For example, Jerry Coyne asks why a designer would "give us a pathway for making vitamin C, but then destroy it by disabling one of its enzymes" (see pseudogene)
and why a designer would not "stock oceanic islands with reptiles,
mammals, amphibians, and freshwater fish, despite the suitability of
such islands for these species". Coyne also points to the fact that "the
flora and fauna on those islands resemble that of the nearest mainland,
even when the environments are very different" as evidence that species
were not placed there by a designer. Previously, in Darwin's Black Box,
Behe had argued that we are simply incapable of understanding the
designer's motives, so such questions cannot be answered definitively.
Odd designs could, for example, "...have been placed there by the
designer for a reason—for artistic reasons, for variety, to show off,
for some as-yet-undetected practical purpose, or for some unguessable
reason—or they might not."
Coyne responds that in light of the evidence, "either life resulted not
from intelligent design, but from evolution; or the intelligent
designer is a cosmic prankster who designed everything to make it look
as though it had evolved."
Intelligent design proponents such as Paul Nelson avoid the problem of poor design in nature
by insisting that we have simply failed to understand the perfection of
the design. Behe cites Paley as his inspiration, but he differs from
Paley's expectation of a perfect Creation and proposes that designers do
not necessarily produce the best design they can. Behe suggests that,
like a parent not wanting to spoil a child with extravagant toys, the
designer can have multiple motives for not giving priority to excellence
in engineering. He says that "Another problem with the argument from
imperfection is that it critically depends on a psychoanalysis of the
unidentified designer. Yet the reasons that a designer would or would
not do anything are virtually impossible to know unless the designer
tells you specifically what those reasons are." This reliance on inexplicable motives of the designer makes intelligent design scientifically untestable. Retired UC Berkeley law professor, author and intelligent design advocate Phillip E. Johnson puts forward a core definition that the designer creates for a purpose, giving the example that in his view AIDS was created to punish immorality and is not caused by HIV, but such motives cannot be tested by scientific methods.
Asserting the need for a designer of complexity also raises the question "What designed the designer?" Intelligent design proponents say that the question is irrelevant to or outside the scope of intelligent design.
Richard Wein counters that "...scientific explanations often create new
unanswered questions.
But, in assessing the value of an explanation,
these questions are not irrelevant. They must be balanced against the
improvements in our understanding which the explanation provides.
Invoking an unexplained being to explain the origin of other beings
(ourselves) is little more than question-begging. The new question raised by the explanation is as problematic as the question which the explanation purports to answer." Richard Dawkins sees the assertion that the designer does not need to be explained as a thought-terminating cliché. In the absence of observable, measurable evidence, the very question "What designed the designer?" leads to an infinite regression from which intelligent design proponents can only escape by resorting to religious creationism or logical contradiction.
Movement
The intelligent design movement is a direct outgrowth of the creationism of the 1980s.
The scientific and academic communities, along with a U.S. federal
court, view intelligent design as either a form of creationism or as a
direct descendant that is closely intertwined with traditional
creationism; and several authors explicitly refer to it as "intelligent design creationism".
The movement is headquartered in the Center for Science and Culture, established in 1996 as the creationist wing of the Discovery Institute to promote a religious agenda calling for broad social, academic and political changes. The Discovery Institute's intelligent design campaigns
have been staged primarily in the United States, although efforts have
been made in other countries to promote intelligent design. Leaders of
the movement say intelligent design exposes the limitations of
scientific orthodoxy and of the secular philosophy of naturalism.
Intelligent design proponents allege that science should not be limited
to naturalism and should not demand the adoption of a naturalistic
philosophy that dismisses out-of-hand any explanation that includes a supernatural cause. The overall goal of the movement is to "reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist worldview" represented by the theory of evolution in favor of "a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions".
Phillip E. Johnson stated that the goal of intelligent design is to cast creationism as a scientific concept.
All leading intelligent design proponents are fellows or staff of the
Discovery Institute and its Center for Science and Culture.
Nearly all intelligent design concepts and the associated movement are
the products of the Discovery Institute, which guides the movement and
follows its wedge strategy while conducting its "Teach the Controversy" campaign and their other related programs.
Leading intelligent design proponents have made conflicting
statements regarding intelligent design. In statements directed at the
general public, they say intelligent design is not religious; when
addressing conservative Christian supporters, they state that
intelligent design has its foundation in the Bible. Recognizing the need for support, the Institute affirms its Christian, evangelistic orientation:
Alongside a focus on influential
opinion-makers, we also seek to build up a popular base of support among
our natural constituency, namely, Christians. We will do this primarily
through apologetics seminars. We intend these to encourage and equip
believers with new scientific evidences that support the faith, as well
as to "popularize" our ideas in the broader culture.
Barbara Forrest,
an expert who has written extensively on the movement, describes this
as being due to the Discovery Institute's obfuscating its agenda as a
matter of policy. She has written that the movement's "activities betray
an aggressive, systematic agenda for promoting not only intelligent
design creationism, but the religious worldview that undergirds it."
Religion and leading proponents
Although arguments for intelligent design by the intelligent design
movement are formulated in secular terms and intentionally avoid
positing the identity of the designer,
the majority of principal intelligent design advocates are publicly
religious Christians who have stated that, in their view, the designer
proposed in intelligent design is the Christian conception of God. Stuart Burgess, Phillip E. Johnson, William A. Dembski, and Stephen C. Meyer are evangelical Protestants; Michael Behe is a Roman Catholic; Paul Nelson supports young Earth creationism; and Jonathan Wells is a member of the Unification Church. Non-Christian proponents include David Klinghoffer, who is Jewish, Michael Denton and David Berlinski, who are agnostic, and Muzaffar Iqbal, a Pakistani-Canadian Muslim.
Phillip E. Johnson has stated that cultivating ambiguity by employing
secular language in arguments that are carefully crafted to avoid
overtones of theistic creationism
is a necessary first step for ultimately reintroducing the Christian
concept of God as the designer. Johnson explicitly calls for intelligent
design proponents to obfuscate their religious motivations so as to
avoid having intelligent design identified "as just another way of
packaging the Christian evangelical message."
Johnson emphasizes that "...the first thing that has to be done is to
get the Bible out of the discussion. ...This is not to say that the
biblical issues are unimportant; the point is rather that the time to
address them will be after we have separated materialist prejudice from
scientific fact."
The strategy of deliberately disguising the religious intent of intelligent design has been described by William A. Dembski in The Design Inference. In this work, Dembski lists a god or an "alien life force" as two possible options for the identity of the designer; however, in his book Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Science and Theology (1999), Dembski states:
Christ is indispensable to any
scientific theory, even if its practitioners don't have a clue about
him. The pragmatics of a scientific theory can, to be sure, be pursued
without recourse to Christ. But the conceptual soundness of the theory
can in the end only be located in Christ.
Dembski also stated, "ID is part of God's general revelation [...] Not only does intelligent design rid us of this ideology [ materialism
], which suffocates the human spirit, but, in my personal experience,
I've found that it opens the path for people to come to Christ." Both Johnson and Dembski cite the Bible's Gospel of John as the foundation of intelligent design.
Barbara Forrest contends such statements reveal that leading
proponents see intelligent design as essentially religious in nature,
not merely a scientific concept that has implications with which their
personal religious beliefs happen to coincide. She writes that the leading proponents of intelligent design are closely allied with the ultra-conservative Christian Reconstructionism
movement. She lists connections of (current and former) Discovery
Institute Fellows Phillip E. Johnson, Charles B. Thaxton, Michael Behe, Richard Weikart, Jonathan Wells and Francis J. Beckwith to leading Christian Reconstructionist organizations, and the extent of the funding provided the Institute by Howard Ahmanson, Jr., a leading figure in the Reconstructionist movement.
Reaction from other creationist groups
Not all creationist organizations have embraced the intelligent
design movement. According to Thomas Dixon, "Religious leaders have come
out against ID too. An open letter affirming the compatibility of
Christian faith and the teaching of evolution, first produced in
response to controversies in Wisconsin in 2004, has now been signed by
over ten thousand clergy from different Christian denominations across
America." Hugh Ross of Reasons to Believe, a proponent of Old Earth creationism,
believes that the efforts of intelligent design proponents to divorce
the concept from Biblical Christianity make its hypothesis too vague. In
2002, he wrote: "Winning the argument for design without identifying
the designer yields, at best, a sketchy origins model. Such a model
makes little if any positive impact on the community of scientists and
other scholars. [...] ...the time is right for a direct approach, a
single leap into the origins fray. Introducing a biblically based,
scientifically verifiable creation model represents such a leap."
Likewise, two of the most prominent YEC organizations in the
world have attempted to distinguish their views from those of the
intelligent design movement. Henry M. Morris of the Institute for Creation Research
(ICR) wrote, in 1999, that ID, "even if well-meaning and effectively
articulated, will not work! It has often been tried in the past and has
failed, and it will fail today. The reason it won't work is because it
is not the Biblical method." According to Morris: "The evidence of
intelligent design ... must be either followed by or accompanied by a
sound presentation of true Biblical creationism if it is to be
meaningful and lasting." In 2002, Carl Wieland, then of Answers in Genesis
(AiG), criticized design advocates who, though well-intentioned, "'left
the Bible out of it'" and thereby unwittingly aided and abetted the
modern rejection of the Bible. Wieland explained that "AiG's major
'strategy' is to boldly, but humbly, call the church back to its
Biblical foundations ... [so] we neither count ourselves a part of this
movement nor campaign against it."
The unequivocal consensus in the scientific community is that intelligent design is not science and has no place in a science curriculum. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences
has stated that "creationism, intelligent design, and other claims of
supernatural intervention in the origin of life or of species are not
science because they are not testable by the methods of science." The U.S. National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science have termed it pseudoscience.[74]
Others in the scientific community have denounced its tactics, accusing
the ID movement of manufacturing false attacks against evolution, of
engaging in misinformation and misrepresentation about science, and
marginalizing those who teach it. More recently, in September 2012, Bill Nye warned that creationist views threaten science education and innovations in the United States.
In 2001, the Discovery Institute published advertisements under the heading "A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism", with the claim that listed scientists had signed this statement expressing skepticism:
We are skeptical of claims for the
ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the
complexity of life. Careful examination of the evidence for Darwinian
theory should be encouraged.
The ambiguous statement did not exclude other known evolutionary
mechanisms, and most signatories were not scientists in relevant fields,
but starting in 2004 the Institute claimed the increasing number of
signatures indicated mounting doubts about evolution among scientists. The statement formed a key component of Discovery Institute campaigns to present intelligent design as scientifically valid by claiming that evolution lacks broad scientific support, with Institute members continued to cite the list through at least 2011. As part of a strategy to counter these claims, scientists organised Project Steve, which gained more signatories named Steve (or variants) than the Institute's petition, and a counter-petition, "A Scientific Support for Darwinism", which quickly gained similar numbers of signatories.
Polls
Several surveys were conducted prior to the December 2005 decision in Kitzmiller v. Dover School District, which sought to determine the level of support for intelligent design among certain groups. According to a 2005 Harris poll,
10% of adults in the United States viewed human beings as "so complex
that they required a powerful force or intelligent being to help create
them." Although Zogby polls
commissioned by the Discovery Institute show more support, these polls
suffer from considerable flaws, such as having a very low response rate
(248 out of 16,000), being conducted on behalf of an organization with
an expressed interest in the outcome of the poll, and containing leading questions.
The 2017 Gallup
creationism survey found that 38% of adults in the United States hold
the view that "God created humans in their present form at one time
within the last 10,000 years" when asked for their views on the origin
and development of human beings, which was noted as being at the lowest
level in 35 years.
Previously, a series of Gallup polls in the United States from 1982
through 2014 on "Evolution, Creationism, Intelligent Design" found
support for "human beings have developed over millions of years from
less advanced formed of life, but God guided the process" of between 31%
and 40%, support for "God created human beings in pretty much their
present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so" varied from
40% to 47%, and support for "human beings have developed over millions
of years from less advanced forms of life, but God had no part in the
process" varied from 9% to 19%. The polls also noted answers to a series
of more detailed questions.
Allegations of discrimination against ID proponents
There have been allegations that ID proponents have met
discrimination, such as being refused tenure or being harshly criticized
on the Internet. In the documentary film Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, released in 2008, host Ben Stein
presents five such cases. The film contends that the mainstream science
establishment, in a "scientific conspiracy to keep God out of the
nation's laboratories and classrooms", suppresses academics who believe
they see evidence of intelligent design in nature or criticize evidence
of evolution. Investigation into these allegations turned up alternative explanations for perceived persecution.
The film portrays intelligent design as motivated by science,
rather than religion, though it does not give a detailed definition of
the phrase or attempt to explain it on a scientific level. Other than
briefly addressing issues of irreducible complexity, Expelled examines it as a political issue. The scientific theory of evolution is portrayed by the film as contributing to fascism, the Holocaust, communism, atheism, and eugenics.
Expelled has been used in private screenings to legislators as part of the Discovery Institute intelligent design campaign for Academic Freedom bills.
Review screenings were restricted to churches and Christian groups, and
at a special pre-release showing, one of the interviewees, PZ Myers,
was refused admission. The American Association for the Advancement of
Science describes the film as dishonest and divisive propaganda aimed at
introducing religious ideas into public school science classrooms, and the Anti-Defamation League has denounced the film's allegation that evolutionary theory influenced the Holocaust.
The film includes interviews with scientists and academics who were
misled into taking part by misrepresentation of the topic and title of
the film. Skeptic Michael Shermer describes his experience of being repeatedly asked the same question without context as "surreal".
Criticism
Scientific criticism
Advocates of intelligent design seek to keep God and the Bible out of
the discussion, and present intelligent design in the language of
science as though it were a scientific hypothesis. For a theory to qualify as scientific, it is expected to be:
- Consistent
- Parsimonious (sparing in its proposed entities or explanations; see Occam's razor)
- Useful (describes and explains observed phenomena, and can be used in a predictive manner)
- Empirically testable and falsifiable (potentially confirmable or disprovable by experiment or observation)
- Based on multiple observations (often in the form of controlled, repeated experiments)
- Correctable and dynamic (modified in the light of observations that do not support it)
- Progressive (refines previous theories)
- Provisional or tentative (is open to experimental checking, and does not assert certainty)
For any theory, hypothesis, or conjecture to be considered
scientific, it must meet most, and ideally all, of these criteria. The
fewer criteria are met, the less scientific it is; if it meets only a
few or none at all, then it cannot be treated as scientific in any
meaningful sense of the word. Typical objections to defining intelligent
design as science are that it lacks consistency, violates the principle of parsimony, is not scientifically useful, is not falsifiable, is not empirically testable, and is not correctable, dynamic, progressive, or provisional.
Intelligent design proponents seek to change this fundamental basis of science by eliminating "methodological naturalism" from science and replacing it with what the leader of the intelligent design movement, Phillip E. Johnson, calls "theistic realism".
Intelligent design proponents argue that naturalistic explanations fail
to explain certain phenomena and that supernatural explanations provide
a very simple and intuitive explanation for the origins of life and the
universe. Many intelligent design followers believe that "scientism" is itself a religion that promotes secularism and materialism in an attempt to erase theism
from public life, and they view their work in the promotion of
intelligent design as a way to return religion to a central role in
education and other public spheres.
It has been argued that methodological naturalism is not an assumption of science, but a result of science well done: the God explanation is the least parsimonious, so according to Occam's razor, it cannot be a scientific explanation.
The failure to follow the procedures of scientific discourse and
the failure to submit work to the scientific community that withstands
scrutiny have weighed against intelligent design being accepted as valid
science.
The intelligent design movement has not published a properly
peer-reviewed article supporting ID in a scientific journal, and has
failed to publish supporting peer-reviewed research or data. The only article published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal that made a case for intelligent design was quickly withdrawn by the publisher for having circumvented the journal's peer-review standards. The Discovery Institute says that a number of intelligent design articles have been published in peer-reviewed journals,
but critics, largely members of the scientific community, reject this
claim and state intelligent design proponents have set up their own
journals with peer review that lack impartiality and rigor, consisting entirely of intelligent design supporters.
Further criticism stems from the fact that the phrase intelligent design makes use of an assumption of the quality of an observable intelligence, a concept that has no scientific consensus
definition. The characteristics of intelligence are assumed by
intelligent design proponents to be observable without specifying what
the criteria for the measurement of intelligence should be. Critics say
that the design detection methods proposed by intelligent design
proponents are radically different from conventional design detection,
undermining the key elements that make it possible as legitimate
science. Intelligent design proponents, they say, are proposing both
searching for a designer without knowing anything about that designer's
abilities, parameters, or intentions (which scientists do know when
searching for the results of human intelligence), as well as denying the
very distinction between natural/artificial design that allows
scientists to compare complex designed artifacts against the background
of the sorts of complexity found in nature.
Among a significant proportion of the general public in the
United States, the major concern is whether conventional evolutionary
biology is compatible with belief in God and in the Bible, and how this
issue is taught in schools.
The Discovery Institute's "Teach the Controversy" campaign promotes
intelligent design while attempting to discredit evolution in United
States public high school science courses.
The scientific community and science education organizations have
replied that there is no scientific controversy regarding the validity
of evolution and that the controversy exists solely in terms of religion
and politics.
Arguments from ignorance
Eugenie C. Scott, along with Glenn Branch and other critics, has argued that many points raised by intelligent design proponents are arguments from ignorance.
In the argument from ignorance, a lack of evidence for one view is
erroneously argued to constitute proof of the correctness of another
view. Scott and Branch say that intelligent design is an argument from
ignorance because it relies on a lack of knowledge for its conclusion:
lacking a natural explanation for certain specific aspects of evolution,
we assume intelligent cause. They contend most scientists would reply
that the unexplained is not unexplainable, and that "we don't know yet"
is a more appropriate response than invoking a cause outside science.
Particularly, Michael Behe's demands for ever more detailed explanations
of the historical evolution of molecular systems seem to assume a false
dichotomy, where either evolution or design is the proper explanation,
and any perceived failure of evolution becomes a victory for design.
Scott and Branch also contend that the supposedly novel contributions
proposed by intelligent design proponents have not served as the basis
for any productive scientific research.
In his conclusion to the Kitzmiller trial, Judge John E. Jones
III wrote that "ID is at bottom premised upon a false dichotomy, namely,
that to the extent evolutionary theory is discredited, ID is
confirmed." This same argument had been put forward to support creation
science at the McLean v. Arkansas
(1982) trial, which found it was "contrived dualism", the false premise
of a "two model approach". Behe's argument of irreducible complexity
puts forward negative arguments against evolution but does not make any
positive scientific case for intelligent design. It fails to allow for
scientific explanations continuing to be found, as has been the case
with several examples previously put forward as supposed cases of
irreducible complexity.
Possible theological implications
Intelligent design proponents often insist that their claims do not require a religious component. However, various philosophical and theological issues are naturally raised by the claims of intelligent design.
Intelligent design proponents attempt to demonstrate
scientifically that features such as irreducible complexity and
specified complexity could not arise through natural processes, and
therefore required repeated direct miraculous interventions by a
Designer (often a Christian concept of God). They reject the possibility
of a Designer who works merely through setting natural laws in motion
at the outset, in contrast to theistic evolution (to which even Charles Darwin was open).
Intelligent design is distinct because it asserts repeated miraculous
interventions in addition to designed laws. This contrasts with other
major religious traditions of a created world in which God's
interactions and influences do not work in the same way as physical
causes. The Roman Catholic tradition makes a careful distinction between
ultimate metaphysical explanations and secondary, natural causes.
The concept of direct miraculous intervention raises other
potential theological implications. If such a Designer does not
intervene to alleviate suffering even though capable of intervening for
other reasons, some imply the designer is not omnibenevolent (see problem of evil and related theodicy).
Further, repeated interventions imply that the original design
was not perfect and final, and thus pose a problem for any who believe
that the Creator's work had been both perfect and final. Intelligent design proponents seek to explain the problem of poor design in nature by insisting that we have simply failed to understand the perfection of the design (for example, proposing that vestigial organs
have unknown purposes), or by proposing that designers do not
necessarily produce the best design they can, and may have unknowable
motives for their actions.
In 2005 the director of the Vatican Observatory, the Jesuit astronomer George Coyne, set out theological reasons for accepting evolution in an August 2005 article in The Tablet,
and said that "Intelligent design isn't science even though it pretends
to be". It should not be included in the science curriculum for public
schools. "If you want to teach it in schools, intelligent design should
be taught when religion or cultural history is taught, not science." In 2006, he "condemned ID as a kind of ‘crude creationism’ which reduced God to a mere engineer."
God of the gaps
Intelligent design has also been characterized as a God-of-the-gaps argument, which has the following form:
- There is a gap in scientific knowledge.
- The gap is filled with acts of God (or intelligent designer) and
therefore proves the existence of God (or intelligent designer).
A God-of-the-gaps argument is the theological version of an argument from ignorance.
A key feature of this type of argument is that it merely answers
outstanding questions with explanations (often supernatural) that are
unverifiable and ultimately themselves subject to unanswerable
questions.
Historians of science observe that the astronomy of the earliest civilizations, although astonishing and incorporating mathematical constructions
far in excess of any practical value, proved to be misdirected and of
little importance to the development of science because they failed to
inquire more carefully into the mechanisms that drove the heavenly bodies across the sky. It was the Greek civilization
that first practiced science, although not yet as a formally defined
experimental science, but nevertheless an attempt to rationalize the
world of natural experience without recourse to divine intervention.
In this historically motivated definition of science any appeal to an
intelligent creator is explicitly excluded for the paralysing effect it
may have on scientific progress.
Legal challenges in the United States
Kitzmiller trial
Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District was the first direct challenge brought in the United States federal courts
against a public school district that required the presentation of
intelligent design as an alternative to evolution. The plaintiffs
successfully argued that intelligent design is a form of creationism,
and that the school board policy thus violated the Establishment Clause
of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Eleven parents of students in Dover, Pennsylvania, sued the Dover Area School District
over a statement that the school board required be read aloud in
ninth-grade science classes when evolution was taught. The plaintiffs
were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) and Pepper Hamilton LLP. The National Center for Science Education acted as consultants for the plaintiffs. The defendants were represented by the Thomas More Law Center. The suit was tried in a bench trial from September 26 to November 4, 2005, before Judge John E. Jones III. Kenneth R. Miller, Kevin Padian, Brian Alters, Robert T. Pennock, Barbara Forrest and John F. Haught served as expert witnesses for the plaintiffs. Michael Behe, Steve Fuller and Scott Minnich served as expert witnesses for the defense.
On December 20, 2005, Judge Jones issued his 139-page findings of fact
and decision, ruling that the Dover mandate was unconstitutional, and
barring intelligent design from being taught in Pennsylvania's Middle
District public school science classrooms. On November 8, 2005, there
had been an election in which the eight Dover school board members who
voted for the intelligent design requirement were all defeated by
challengers who opposed the teaching of intelligent design in a science
class, and the current school board president stated that the board did
not intend to appeal the ruling.
In his finding of facts, Judge Jones made the following condemnation of the "Teach the Controversy" strategy:
Moreover, ID's backers have sought
to avoid the scientific scrutiny which we have now determined that it
cannot withstand by advocating that the controversy, but not ID itself, should be taught in science class. This tactic is at best disingenuous, and at worst a canard.
The goal of the IDM is not to encourage critical thought, but to foment
a revolution which would supplant evolutionary theory with ID.
Reaction to Kitzmiller ruling
Judge Jones himself anticipated that his ruling would be criticized, saying in his decision that:
Those who disagree with our holding
will likely mark it as the product of an activist judge. If so, they
will have erred as this is manifestly not an activist Court.
Rather, this case came to us as the result of the activism of an
ill-informed faction on a school board, aided by a national public
interest law firm eager to find a constitutional test case on ID, who in
combination drove the Board to adopt an imprudent and ultimately
unconstitutional policy. The breathtaking inanity of the Board's
decision is evident when considered against the factual backdrop which
has now been fully revealed through this trial. The students, parents,
and teachers of the Dover Area School District deserved better than to
be dragged into this legal maelstrom, with its resulting utter waste of
monetary and personal resources.
As Jones had predicted, John G. West, Associate Director of the Center for Science and Culture, said:
The Dover decision is an attempt by
an activist federal judge to stop the spread of a scientific idea and
even to prevent criticism of Darwinian evolution through
government-imposed censorship rather than open debate, and it won't
work. He has conflated Discovery Institute's position with that of the
Dover school board, and he totally misrepresents intelligent design and
the motivations of the scientists who research it.
Newspapers have noted that the judge is "a Republican and a churchgoer".
The decision has been examined in a search for flaws and
conclusions, partly by intelligent design supporters aiming to avoid
future defeats in court. In its Winter issue of 2007, the Montana Law Review published three articles.
In the first, David K. DeWolf, John G. West and Casey Luskin, all of the
Discovery Institute, argued that intelligent design is a valid
scientific theory, the Jones court should not have addressed the
question of whether it was a scientific theory, and that the Kitzmiller
decision will have no effect at all on the development and adoption of
intelligent design as an alternative to standard evolutionary theory. In the second Peter H. Irons
responded, arguing that the decision was extremely well reasoned and
spells the death knell for the intelligent design efforts to introduce
creationism in public schools, while in the third, DeWolf, et al., answer the points made by Irons.
However, fear of a similar lawsuit has resulted in other school boards
abandoning intelligent design "teach the controversy" proposals.
Anti-evolution legislation
A number of anti-evolution bills have been introduced in the United States Congress and State legislatures since 2001, based largely upon language drafted by the Discovery Institute for the Santorum Amendment.
Their aim has been to expose more students to articles and videos
produced by advocates of intelligent design that criticise evolution.
They have been presented as supporting "academic freedom",
on the supposition that teachers, students, and college professors face
intimidation and retaliation when discussing scientific criticisms of
evolution, and therefore require protection. Critics of the legislation
have pointed out that there are no credible scientific critiques of
evolution, and an investigation in Florida
of allegations of intimidation and retaliation found no evidence that
it had occurred. The vast majority of the bills have been unsuccessful,
with the one exception being Louisiana's Louisiana Science Education Act, which was enacted in 2008.
In April 2010, the American Academy of Religion issued Guidelines for Teaching About Religion in K‐12 Public Schools in the United States,
which included guidance that creation science or intelligent design
should not be taught in science classes, as "Creation science and
intelligent design represent worldviews that fall outside of the realm
of science that is defined as (and limited to) a method of inquiry based
on gathering observable and measurable evidence subject to specific
principles of reasoning." However, these worldviews as well as others
"that focus on speculation regarding the origins of life represent
another important and relevant form of human inquiry that is
appropriately studied in literature or social sciences courses. Such
study, however, must include a diversity of worldviews representing a
variety of religious and philosophical perspectives and must avoid
privileging one view as more legitimate than others."
Status outside the United States
Europe
In June 2007, the Council of Europe's Committee on Culture, Science and Education issued a report, The dangers of creationism in education,
which states "Creationism in any of its forms, such as 'intelligent
design', is not based on facts, does not use any scientific reasoning
and its contents are pathetically inadequate for science classes."
In describing the dangers posed to education by teaching creationism,
it described intelligent design as "anti-science" and involving "blatant
scientific fraud" and "intellectual deception" that "blurs the nature,
objectives and limits of science" and links it and other forms of
creationism to denialism.
On October 4, 2007, the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly
approved a resolution stating that schools should "resist presentation
of creationist ideas in any discipline other than religion", including
"intelligent design", which it described as "the latest, more refined
version of creationism", "presented in a more subtle way". The
resolution emphasises that the aim of the report is not to question or
to fight a belief, but to "warn against certain tendencies to pass off a
belief as science".
In the United Kingdom, public education includes religious education as a compulsory subject, and there are many faith schools that teach the ethos of particular denominations. When it was revealed that a group called Truth in Science had distributed DVDs produced by Illustra Media featuring Discovery Institute fellows making the case for design in nature, and claimed they were being used by 59 schools, the Department for Education and Skills
(DfES) stated that "Neither creationism nor intelligent design are
taught as a subject in schools, and are not specified in the science
curriculum" (part of the National Curriculum, which does not apply to independent schools or to education in Scotland).
The DfES subsequently stated that "Intelligent design is not a
recognised scientific theory; therefore, it is not included in the
science curriculum", but left the way open for it to be explored in
religious education in relation to different beliefs, as part of a
syllabus set by a local Standing Advisory Council on Religious Education. In 2006, the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority produced a "Religious Education" model unit in which pupils can learn about religious and nonreligious
views about creationism, intelligent design and evolution by natural selection.
On June 25, 2007, the UK Government responded to an e-petition by
saying that creationism and intelligent design should not be taught as
science, though teachers would be expected to answer pupils' questions
within the standard framework of established scientific theories.
Detailed government "Creationism teaching guidance" for schools in
England was published on September 18, 2007. It states that "Intelligent
design lies wholly outside of science", has no underpinning scientific
principles, or explanations, and is not accepted by the science
community as a whole. Though it should not be taught as science, "Any
questions about creationism and intelligent design which arise in
science lessons, for example as a result of media coverage, could
provide the opportunity to explain or explore why they are not
considered to be scientific theories and, in the right context, why
evolution is considered to be a scientific theory." However, "Teachers
of subjects such as RE, history or citizenship may deal with creationism
and intelligent design in their lessons."
The British Centre for Science Education
lobbying group has the goal of "countering creationism within the UK"
and has been involved in government lobbying in the UK in this regard. Northern Ireland's Department for Education says that the curriculum provides an opportunity for alternative theories to be taught. The Democratic Unionist Party
(DUP)—which has links to fundamentalist Christianity—has been
campaigning to have intelligent design taught in science classes. A DUP
former Member of Parliament, David Simpson,
has sought assurances from the education minister that pupils will not
lose marks if they give creationist or intelligent design answers to
science questions. In 2007, Lisburn
city council voted in favor of a DUP recommendation to write to
post-primary schools asking what their plans are to develop teaching
material in relation to "creation, intelligent design and other theories
of origin".
Plans by Dutch Education Minister Maria van der Hoeven to "stimulate an academic debate" on the subject in 2005 caused a severe public backlash. After the 2006 elections, she was succeeded by Ronald Plasterk, described as a "molecular geneticist, staunch atheist and opponent of intelligent design". As a reaction on this situation in the Netherlands, the Director General of the Flemish Secretariat of Catholic Education (VSKO [nl]) in Belgium, Mieke Van Hecke [nl],
declared that: "Catholic scientists already accepted the theory of
evolution for a long time and that intelligent design and creationism
doesn't belong in Flemish Catholic schools. It's not the tasks of the
politics to introduce new ideas, that's task and goal of science."
Australia
The status of intelligent design in Australia is somewhat similar to that in the UK (see Education in Australia). In 2005, the Australian Minister for Education, Science and Training, Brendan Nelson,
raised the notion of intelligent design being taught in science
classes. The public outcry caused the minister to quickly concede that
the correct forum for intelligent design, if it were to be taught, is in
religion or philosophy classes. The Australian chapter of Campus Crusade for Christ distributed a DVD of the Discovery Institute's documentary Unlocking the Mystery of Life (2002) to Australian secondary schools. Tim Hawkes, the head of The King's School,
one of Australia's leading private schools, supported use of the DVD in
the classroom at the discretion of teachers and principals.
Relation to Islam
Muzaffar Iqbal, a notable Pakistani-Canadian Muslim, signed "A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism", a petition from the Discovery Institute. Ideas similar to intelligent design have been considered respected intellectual options among Muslims, and in Turkey many intelligent design books have been translated. In Istanbul in 2007, public meetings promoting intelligent design were sponsored by the local government, and David Berlinski of the Discovery Institute was the keynote speaker at a meeting in May 2007.
Relation to ISKCON
In 2011, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) Bhaktivedanta Book Trust published an intelligent design book titled Rethinking Darwin: A Vedic Study of Darwinism and Intelligent Design.
The book included contributions from intelligent design advocates
William A. Dembski, Jonathan Wells and Michael Behe as well as from
Hindu creationists Leif A. Jensen and Michael Cremo.