Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Donate to Christianity Today
login | my account
February 11, 2012

Home > 2010 > MayChristianity Today, May, 2010
The Village Green
Intelligent Design: Redefine the Question
Karl Giberson, Stephen C. Meyer, and Marcus Ross chart ways intelligent design can gain academic currency.




Karl Giberson, director of Gordon College's Forum on Faith and Science, Stephen C. Meyer, director of the Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture, and Marcus Ross, a professor of geology at Liberty University suggest the best ways the intelligent design movement can gain academic credibility.

Asking what advocates of intelligent design must do to gain credibility in the academy is a bit like asking a man when he stopped beating his wife. Such a question makes a prejudicial assumption.

When queried about his history of spousal abuse, an innocent man should say, "I don't concede the premise of your question." Similarly, I would suggest that behind the Village Green question lurk some false assumptions. Indeed, the question seems to presuppose three things: the scientific community is uniformly opposed to the theory of intelligent design; the theory needs majority support in the academy to be credible; and there is good reason—such as lack of supporting evidence—for hostility toward the theory within academia.

First, the scientific community is not uniformly opposed to ID. My recent book on the subject received enthusiastic endorsements from many scientists not previously known as advocates of ID, such as chemist Philip Skell, a National Academy of Sciences member, and Norman Nevin, one of Britain's top geneticists. Further, many longstanding advocates of intelligent design are themselves science professors at mainstream universities and, therefore, already part of the academy. Second, as the recent scandal surrounding global warming suggests, the "consensus" of scientists can often be wrong. What matters is not consensus but evidence. And the evidence for ID is strong. In Signature in the Cell, for example, I show how the information that runs the show in cells points decisively to intelligent design.

DNA stores instructions for life functions in the form of a four-character digital code. Based on our experience, we know that systems possessing such information invariably arise from minds, not material processes. We know that software comes from programmers. We know that information—whether inscribed in hieroglyphics, written in a book, or encoded in a radio signal—always comes from an intelligent source. So the discovery of a digital code in DNA provides compelling evidence of a prior designing intelligence.

Third, those who reject ID within the scientific community do so not because they have a better explanation of the relevant evidence, but because they affirm a definition of science that requires them to reject explanations involving intelligence—whatever the evidence shows. Imagine an archaeologist confronted with the inscriptions on the Rosetta stone, yet forced by some arbitrary convention to ignore the evidence for intelligent activity in the information those inscriptions contain. That is similar to the response of many evolutionary biologists who reflexively reject the theory of intelligent design as unscientific by definition, despite the evidence of intelligent activity in the information encoded in DNA.

Thus, to keep building a scientific research community, we ID advocates must expose the prejudicial rules of reasoning that preclude consideration of our theory, and keep explaining ID's strong foundation in evidence. We must also address our arguments to open-minded younger scientists and show how ID opens up many important research questions that Darwinian thought has long suppressed.





Christianity Today


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!

Displaying 1–5 of 65 comments

Tom Smith

June 02, 2010  12:51am

Marcus, I have no connection to the Discovery Institute. It is people like you who harm science. You do not know what you are talking about, yet you claim to know science. Can you tell me what an availability balance is? Can you perform an availability balance on a jet engine? Can you examine the genome and look at the probability associated with evolutionary advancement? I have presented both coherent and lucid arguments against evolution, which supports ID and Creationism. Many within the sciences agree with me and support Creationism and/or ID.

Marcus Kent

June 01, 2010  6:32pm

http://www.livescience.com/health/060810_evo_rank.html Thanks to people like Tom Smith, USA ranks 33 out of 34 in ignorance with Turkey dead last. So Tom?, what is your connection to Discovery institute?

Marcus Kent

May 31, 2010  12:53pm

(one more time) So you are rejecting common descent with modification over billions of years. Are you saying we did not evolve? Is that what you are trying to say?

Tom Smith

May 31, 2010  9:41am

Marcus, I keep presenting evidence and you keep ignoring it, yet you claim to be open minded. I put a challenge before you a few posts back to check out the Second Law of Thermodynamics to see how the talk origins site and other evolutionists distorts science. Did you ever check it out? You have not yet presented a coherent thought about science other than to appeal to bandwagon. The numbers you present are blatantly false about what people think in the sciences. Many do see problems with evolution and most are not atheists yet some define science in such a way to limit the investigation to exclude the possibility of God. I have already shown there are rational reasons to believe in God. One of my key points has been that evolution hijacks design. The robustness built into life is the product of design. This is observed in the lab. The evolutionary tree of life, however, cannot be proven from the lab. It is the product of imagination and faith! The emperor wears no clothes!

Marcus Kent

May 29, 2010  8:56am

Tom you just keep dancing around the issue with obscure views and at the same time not providing any proof. You seem to forget we are not debating God, or how life started. I think your plan is to muddy the waters rather than say what you mean and provide any real proof for what you say. I don’t. I very clear when I say the folks at the Discovery Institute are” lying sacks of crap” and I provide proof. So please tell us, Do you disagree with the biology departments of the words best universities, the vast majority of scientists and science educators by rejection common descent with modification over billions of years? Are you saying we did not evolve? Is that what you are trying to say?

You must be a Christianity Today subscriber or have created a FREE registration to post comments
[Browse More Christianity Today]



Search
Search
Search
Scripture Search
Go Deeper

Books & Culture
Christianity Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Finance Today
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Kyria.com
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
PreachingToday.com