12-11-02 Press Release

December 11, 2002

NEWS RELEASE:
Contact: Intelligent Design network, inc.
John Calvert, Managing Director,  913-268-0852
Jody Sjogren,  614-485-8000


Ohio State Board Adopts Science Standards that Permit the Discussion of Intelligent Design

Shawnee Mission, KS – IDnet congratulates the Ohio State Board of Education on its handling of a major scientific controversy about teaching biological origins in public schools.

The issue has been watched by the world because of the profound implications for science, philosophy, and religion, which are inherent in the study of biological evolution and the origin of life.

The key controversy was whether state standards should, on the one hand, promote an “Evolution Only” concept that would restrict criticisms of evolution and censor the discussion of competing scientific theories of origins. Or, whether the standards should take a more objective approach
that would permit schools to teach, rather than to suppress, the controversy.

On December 11, 2002, the Board voted 18 – 0 for objectivity and academic freedom and against censorship of competing scientific views. This action followed over a year of deliberations and important fact finding.

The key action taken by the Board involved the replacement of a naturalistic definition of science with a logical definition that is consistent with the scientific method.

The definition adopted was: “Recognize that science is a systematic method of continuing investigation, based on observation, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, and theory building, which leads to more adequate explanations of natural phenomena.”

The naturalistic definition that IDnet had opposed, that was offered by the Ohio Science Writing Team and that was rejected by the Board was: “Recognize that scientific knowledge is limited to natural explanations for natural phenomena based on evidence from our senses or technological extensions.”

The second positive action taken was the Board’s adoption of a new Life Sciences indicator and benchmark that states: “Describe how scientists continue to investigate and critically analyze aspects of evolutionary theory.” This necessarily challenges students and teachers to confront and openly discuss the scientific controversies that surround biological evolution. This is designed to open rather than to shut minds about an issue that is important to science, religion and culture.

The Board also added the following clarifying statement to the benchmark and indicator: “The intent of this indicator does not mandate the teaching or testing of Intelligent Design.” This has major significance since the implication of the statement is that the “teaching or testing of intelligent design,” is permitted.

While commending the State Board for substantially implementing an objective, teach-the-scientific-controversy proposal, we also note that the language in the evolutionary theory sections is still problematic in numerous places. In many cases aspects of evolutionary theory that are in fact controversial are presented as factual or as the only viable explanation. Also, we believe it is critical that standards and curricula explicitly require an appropriate disclosure of material assumptions and a discussion of the subjectivity that is inherent in origins science due to its historical character.


Intelligent Design network, inc. is a member based nonprofit organization. IDnet promotes evidence-based science education with regard to the origin of the universe and of life and its diversity. It also seeks to increase public awareness of the scientific evidence of intelligent design in the universe and living systems.

Intelligent Design is a scientific theory that intelligent causes are responsible for the origin of the universe and of life and its diversity. It holds that design is empirically detectable in nature, and particularly in living systems. Intelligent Design is an intellectual movement that includes a scientific research program for investigating intelligent causes and that challenges naturalistic explanations of origins which currently drive science education and research.

Response to Ohio Academy of Science Resolution

Response of the Intelligent Design Network, Inc. to:

A Resolution by The Ohio Academy of Science Advocating the Teaching of Cosmic, Geological and Biological Evolution and the Censorship of “Intelligent Design” in Public School Science Education

Those seeking to suppress the evidence of design have been promoting a resolution adopted by The Ohio Academy of Science on February 28, 2000. The resolution urges Ohio educators and legislators to censor Intelligent Design and promote evolution as the only permitted explanation for the origin of life and the “cosmos.” The resolution is attached.

The purpose of the OAS to censor any theory of origins other than Darwinian evolution is consistent with its undisclosed adherence to methodological naturalism. Methodological naturalism assumes, without objective consideration of the evidence, that the known laws of chemistry and physics are adequate to account for life and its diversity and that design conceptions of nature are invalid. Rather than disclose that design is merely assumed to be invalid, the resolution would lead one to believe that design has been rejected on its merits and is nothing more than a faith-based religious belief. Due to this non-disclosure and its misleading characterization of design theory, the Academy is actually promoting philosophical naturalism rather than science. Rather than acting as an unbiased investigator of origins, it has become an advocate for a naturalistic world view. It seeks to impose that view on the children of Ohio through the use of state facilities funded with the tax dollars of Ohioans.

We agree that religious beliefs should not be taught in science, however, neither should a “nonreligious” or naturalistic “belief” that life is the product of an unguided and purposeless process. By censoring the only hypothesis competitive with Darwinian evolution the Academy seeks to impose its own belief system and world view on our culture.

The Academy’s statement that the “theory of evolution, as presently defined, fully satisfies” stated criteria of “hypothesis testing,” “experimentation,” “explanations that are open to further testing, revision, and falsification” and that may be “accepted or rejected on the basis of evidence,” is belied by the purpose of the statement itself. The only way evolution can ever have scientific validity is by allowing its claims to be tested against the competing claims and evidence of design. However, the resolution seeks to protect evolution from that test. The only way evolution can ever be falsified is by allowing its claims to be falsified by evidence that life is the product of a guided process. The only way the evidence of evolution can be eligible for acceptance or rejection “on the basis of evidence” is to allow objective consideration of the evidence which would cause one to reject it. If we are only shown the evidence which will cause us to accept it, then evolution indeed becomes nothing more than a “faith.”

The resolution also implies incorrectly that evolution has been tested by experiment and is “falsifiable.” That is not necessarily the case. As the eminent evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr has stated, “evolutionary biology is a historical science – the evolutionist attempts to explain events and processes that have already taken place. Laws and experiments are inappropriate techniques for the explication of such events and processes. Instead one constructs a historical narrative, consisting of a tentative reconstruction of the particular scenario that led to the events one is trying to explain.” In the same article in the July 2000 issue of Scientific American, Mayr also said that “Karl Popper’s famous test of falsification” could not be applied to evolutionary biology. Even worse, falsification becomes practically impossible when the Academy uses a naturalistic assumption that excludes a priori the competing evidence of design. This assumption allows only one story – only a “historical narrative” that fits within the undisclosed naturalistic assumption. Thus evolutionary biology becomes nothing more than “story telling” in the name of science, not science.

The Academy would have us believe that “it respects the right of people to hold diverse beliefs about creation that do not come within the definition of science.” This is inconsistent with the Academy’s use of an undisclosed assumption that rules out evidence that supports beliefs about creation. The office of science is not to suppress evidence because of its implications. The office of science is to show it in spite of its implications. Just as it is appropriate for science to show evidence that supports the naturalistic notion of nature being driven by a purposeless and unguided Darwinian process, so to is it appropriate, indeed even necessary, for it to show evidence that contradicts that view.

The advocacy of the Academy for a Naturalistic world view becomes even more clear when it charges those in the Intelligent Design movement with a hidden agenda to impose “religious beliefs” upon teachers and students. The Academy should know that an inference of design from the data is not a religion, just as an inference of no design from the data is not a religion. Although both have religious implications, neither standing alone is a religion. The only hidden agenda presently operative is that of the Academy in its failure to disclose the fact that its conclusions are based on the hidden assumption of methodological naturalism. The promotion of this naturalistic world view, which is the foundation of secular humanism, is a practice that has the real effect of “imposing religious beliefs upon teachers and students.”

The statement that “intelligent design” has no scientific validity, is a disingenuous claim that is based not on an observation of the evidence, but on the Academy’s naturalistic assumption against design that is not disclosed in its quoted definition of science. The Academy’s resolution expressly defines science as “a systematic method of continuing investigation, based on observation, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, and theory building, which leads to more adequate explanations of natural phenomena, explanations that are open to further testing, revision, and falsification, and while not “believed in” through faith may be accepted or rejected on the basis of evidence.” The design hypothesis fits squarely within this definition. It is subject to testing and falsification – even more so than the claims of evolutionary biology. The principal difference is that design welcomes the challenge of evolution, while evolution seeks to be protected from the test of the evidence of design. Until evolution welcomes the challenge of design, it will not have been tested, it will not have subjected itself to falsification and it will have no scientific validity.

IDnet agrees that the state should not impose on the curriculum through legislation or otherwise “religious beliefs that are not amenable to the process of scrutiny, testing, and revision that is indispensable to science.” However, it is also true that the state should avoid the imposition of “naturalistic beliefs that are not amenable to the process of scrutiny, testing, and revision that is indispensable to science.” We are not promoting the former, but we do seek to stop the latter. The best example of this may be found in HB 481 which encourages schools to present explanations of our origins objectively and without religious, naturalistic or philosophic bias or assumption. Where assumptions are used they must be appropriately disclosed. The Academy seeks to discourage HB 481 and its required disclosure of the Academy’s hidden assumption. It seeks to perpetuate that hidden naturalistic agenda and thereby promote “beliefs that are not amenable to the process of scrutiny, testing and revision that is indispensable to science.”

The Academy’s true objective is reflected in the final operative clause of its resolution which, like a campaign slogan, seeks to promote evolution, not as a scientific concept that is subject to criticism, but as a world view that allows no contradiction.

Thomas Huxley said: “Science commits suicide when it adopts a creed.” The Academy has adopted a creed. Science is not a democracy, but it is a trust. The Academy is not promoting that trust with its resolution.

William S. Harris, Ph.D
John H. Calvert, J.D.
Jody F. Sjogren, M.S., CMI
Intelligent Design network, inc.
June 7, 2002


TOP

[Logo of the Ohio Academy of Science]
A Resolution
by The Ohio Academy of Science
Advocacy for Teaching Cosmic, Geological and Biological Evolution

and Opposition to Forced Teaching of Creationist Beliefs such as “Intelligent Design”
in Public School Science Education
WHEREAS, is a responsibility of The Ohio Academy of Science to preserve the integrity of science, and

WHEREAS, science is a systematic method of continuing investigation, based on observation, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, and theory building, which leads to more adequate explanations of natural phenomena, explanations that are open to further testing, revision, and falsification, and while not “believed in” through faith may be accepted or rejected on the basis of evidence; and

WHEREAS, the theory of evolution, as presently defined, fully satisfies these criteria, especially when its teaching considers the remaining debates concerning its detailed mechanisms; and

WHEREAS, the Academy respects the right of people to hold diverse beliefs about creation that do not come within the definition of science; and

WHEREAS, some Creationist groups are intent on imposing religious beliefs disguised as science upon teachers and students to the detriment and distortion of public education in the United States;

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that because “Creation Science” and “Intelligent Design” have no scientific validity, they should not be taught as science, and further that the OAS views legislation requiring such religious views to be taught in public schools, as though these were legitimate arguments against evolution that should be included as part of a so-called balanced treatment approach, to be a real and present threat to the integrity of education and the teaching of science; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the OAS urges citizens, educational authorities, and legislators to oppose the compulsory inclusion in the curricula, the state competencies or proficiency tests for science education of religious beliefs that are not amenable to the process of scrutiny, testing, and revision that is indispensable to science.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the OAS urges citizens, educational authorities, and legislators to include, explicitly, cosmic, geological and biological evolution in the curricula, state competencies and proficiency tests for science education.

 


Revised and Approved February 28, 2000 by the Executive Committee of The Ohio Academy of Science, based on a similar resolution adopted by the Academy on April 23, 1982.

Ohio Zogby Poll

Poll of Ohio Backs Teaching the Controversy over Darwin

Press Release Issued by The Discovery Institute:

May 10th, 2002

Contact: Mark Edwards, Discovery Institute, 206.292.0401 x107, medwards@discovery.org

A Zogby International poll conducted this week shows strong agreement (65 percent) among Ohioans for an educational policy that “Biology teachers should teach Darwin’s theory of evolution, but also the scientific evidence against it.” Nineteen percent believe that “Biology teachers should teach only Darwin’s theory of evolution and the scientific evidence that supports it.” Sixteen percent back “Neither/Not Sure.” The issue is under consideration by Ohio’s State Board of Education as it prepares new science standards.

Particularly strong support for teaching both the evidence for and against Darwin’s theory exists in the 18-49 age group (74 percent), as well as in middle-income adults (74 percent). Ohioans with some college training (70 percent) and college graduates (67 percent) gave stronger support than did Ohioans who had not finished high school (64 percent) and those who had completed only high school (59 percent).

In a follow-up question, 78 percent of Ohioans polled agreed with the statement: “When Darwin’s theory of evolution is taught in school, students should also be able to learn about scientific evidence that points to an intelligent design of life.” Thirteen percent disagree and 9 percent are unsure.

Echoing the sentiment of the majority of Ohioans, Discovery Institute has proposed that Ohio teachers be encouraged to teach the evidence for and against Darwin’s theory, and allowed, but not required, to teach about the scientific evidence for intelligent design.

The poll is not intended to determine the validity of Darwin’s theory of evolution. Its purpose is to gauge popular support for a particular educational policy, which is subject to democratic consideration.

“This is not a poll on creationism,” said Discovery Institute President Bruce Chapman. “Instead it poses the real issue before Ohio and other states: Do you allow students to know the scientific case for and against Darwinian theory?”

Discovery Institute commissioned Zogby International to do the Ohio poll. It was conducted May 7th & 8th, 2002. Click here for a pdf version of the poll results.

52 Ohio Scientists

Fifty-two Ohio Scientists Call for Academic Freedom on Darwin’s Theory

PRESS RELEASE:  March 20, 2002
Contact: Jody Sjogren (614) 485-8000 metstudios@mindspring.com,
Robert DiSilvestro (614) 292-6848 disilvestro.1@osu.edu

Fifty-two Ohio scientists have issued a statement supporting academic freedom to teach the scientific arguments for and against Darwin’s theory of evolution. The statement comes at a time when the Ohio State Board of Education is considering new state science standards. The Ohio scientists represent a wide range of scientific disciplines, from entomology (insect zoology) to toxicology, from nuclear chemistry to engineering, from biochemistry to medicine and surgery. Some of the scientists are employed in business, industry, and research, but most teach at state and private universities. A third of the scientists on this list are at The Ohio State University in Columbus.Robert DiSilvestro, one of the statement signers and a professor at The Ohio State University, commented that, “As a scientist who has been following this debate closely, I think that a valid scientific challenge has been mounted to Darwinian orthodoxy on evolution. There are good scientific reasons to question many currently accepted ideas in this area.”During a public presentation to the Ohio School Board on March 11, two experts on evolution opposed allowing the arguments against Darwin’s theory to be taught, while two other experts – advocates of “intelligent design” – supported the inclusion of scientific arguments for and against Darwin’s theory in the new standards.Since the recent publication of several best-selling books that address the scientific challenges to Darwin’s theory, including ‘Darwin’s Black Box’ by biochemist Michael Behe and ‘Icons of Evolution’ by biologist Jonathan Wells, attention has focused increasingly on problems with the theory of evolution.”The more this controversy rages, the more our colleagues start to investigate the scientific issues,” said DiSilvestro. “This has caused more scientists to publicly support our statement.” He noted that several on the list had signed after the March 11 presentation to the Ohio State Board of Education in Columbus, Ohio.The Ohio scientists’ statement on behalf of teaching the controversy over evolution echoes similar language in the recently passed federal education law, the “No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.” The report language interpreting this legislation explains that on controversial issues such as biological evolution “the curriculum should help students to understand the full range of scientific views that exist.” In a March 15 letter to the Ohio Board of Education, U.S. Rep. John Boehner, Chair of the House Education and Workforce Committee, and Rep. Steve Chabot, Chair of the House Constitution Subcommittee, made it clear that this admonition is “part of the law” and affects Ohio’s consideration of science standards. “It is important,” they wrote, “that the implementation of these science standards not be used to censor debate on controversial issues in science, including Darwin’s theory of evolution.”


:: Following is the text of the statement, with the fifty-two Ohio scientists who have endorsed it.


To Enhance the Effectiveness of Ohio Science Education, as Scientists …We Affirm:

    • That biological evolution is an important scientific theory that should be taught in the classroom;
    • That a quality science education should prepare students to distinguish the data and testable theories of science from religious or philosophical claims that are made in the name of science;
    • That a science curriculum should help students understand why the subject of biological evolution generates controversy;
    • That where alternative scientific theories exist in any area of inquiry (such as wave vs. particle theories of light, biological evolution vs. intelligent design, etc.), students should be permitted to learn the evidence for and against them;
    • That a science curriculum should encourage critical thinking and informed participation in public discussions about biological origins.

We Oppose:

    • Religious or anti-religious indoctrination in a class specifically dedicated to teaching within the discipline of science;
    • The censorship of scientific views that may challenge current theories of origins.

Robert DiSilvestro, Ph.D., Biochemistry, Professor, Human Nutrition, The Ohio State University
David Zartman, Ph.D., Genetics & Animal Breeding, The Ohio State University
Dale W. Schaefer, Ph.D., Physical Chemistry, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Cincinnati
Daniel Kuebler, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology, Franciscan University of Steubenville
Karl A. Weber, Ph.D., Physical & Theoretical Organic Chemistry
Paul Madtes, Jr., Ph.D., Chairman, Biology Department, Mount Vernon Nazarene College
W. John Durfee, D.V.M., DACLAM, Director, Veterinary Research Resources, Case Western Reserve University Medical School
Stanley A. Watson, Ph.D., Cereal Chemistry, Ohio Agricultural Research & Development Center, The Ohio State University, Retired
Mark B. Swanson, Ph.D., Biochemistry
Jerry Bergman, Ph.D., M.S., Ph.D., M.S.B.S., M.P.H., Department of Biology, Northwest State College, Archbold, Ohio
Walter L. Starkey, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State University
Timothy W. Schenz, Ph.D., Physical Chemistry
William V. Everson, Ph.D., Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education Fellow, Cincinnati, Ohio
Steven Gollmer, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics, Cedarville College
Georgia Purdom, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology, Mount Vernon Nazarene College
David H. Ives, Ph.D., Biochemistry, The Ohio State University
Drazen Petrinec, M.D., F.A.C.S., Northeastern Ohio University College of Medicine
James Menart, Ph.D., Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Wright State University
Jeffrey Weiland, M.D., College of Medicine, The Ohio State University
Rudolf Brits, Ph.D., Nuclear Chemistry
David A. Johnston, Ph.D., Research Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Wright State University
George F. Martin, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Anatomy and Neuroscience, The Ohio State University
Melody L. Davis, Ph.D., Chemistry
Gregory Ness, DDS, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Ohio State University
Leroy Eimers, Ph.D., Professor of Physics and Mathematics, Cedarville College
Glen R. Needham, Ph.D., Entomology, The Ohio State University
Sherwood G. Talbert, P.E., MSME, Mechanical Engineering
Joseph R. McShannic, M.D., F.A.C.S., Northeastern Ohio University College of Medicine
Jerry D. Johnson, Ph.D., Diplomat A.B.T., Toxicology
Mitch Wolff, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Wright State University
Gerald S. Wegner, Ph.D., B.C.E., Entomology
Robert Lattimer, Ph.D., Chemistry
John A. Fink, M.D., F.A.C.S., Associate Professor of Surgery, Northeastern Ohio College of Medicine
Don Mahan, Ph.D., Professor, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Department of Animal Sciences, The Ohio State University
Pavi Thomas, Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering
Donal P. O’Mathuna, Ph.D., Professor of Bioethics and Chemistry, Mount Carmel College of Nursing, Columbus
Kimberly Kinateder, Ph.D., Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Wright State University
Ron Neiswander, M.S., Chemistry, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Department of Animal Sciences, The Ohio State University
Gerald P. Chubb, P.E., Ph.D., Associate Professor, Dept. of Aerospace Engineering and Aviation, The Ohio State University
Mark D. Foster, Ph.D., Chemical Engineering, The University of Akron
Kenneth S. Cada, M.S., Inorganic Chemistry
Arthur Dalton, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery, Northeastern Ohio University College of Medicine
William Notz, Ph.D., Statistics, The Ohio State University
Patrick H. Young, Ph.D., Chemistry
William Shulaw, DVM, Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University
Robert E. Bailey, Ph.D., Nuclear Engineering, Prof. Emeritus Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State University
Alfred Ciraldo, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery, Northeastern Ohio University College of Medicine
Kim Laurell, DDS, MSD, former Assistant Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry, The Ohio State University
K. David Monson, Ph.D., Analytical Chemistry
Henry R. Busby, Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State University
Christopher Boshkos, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, Northeastern Ohio University College of Medicine
Richard Slemons, DVM, Ph.D., Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University


NOTE: The scientists listed above are from Ohio institutions and companies. In some cases, company policy prohibits them from listing their affiliation here in conjunction with personal and professional opinion.

Boehner and Chabot Letter

Press Release from the Discovery Institute – March 19, 2002

New Federal Law Applies to Ohio’s Evolution Debate, Congressional Leaders Say

To: Ohio Circuit: Education, Science, and Statehouse Reporters
Contact: Mark Edwards / 206.292.0401 x107 / medwards@discovery.org

Two Ohio Congressmen who helped craft the new federal education act (“No Child Left Behind Act of 2001”) have written to the Ohio Board of Education to contradict claims made by defenders of a Darwin-only approach to high school biology teaching.

In the letter (click here to open a pdf copy of letter in a new window), sent Friday, March 15, Rep. John Boehner, Chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, and Rep. Steven Chabot, hairman of the House Constitution Committee, state that the “Santorum language” in the report of the act “is part of the law.” The new act, they say, calls for science standards in each state, and its report language “clarifies that public school students are entitled to learn that there are differing scientific views on issues such a biological evolution.”

Ohio is the first state to consider new science standards since the enactment of the new federal education act. The Santorum language in the act says that in science teaching on controversial subject such as biological evolution, “the curriculum should help students to understand
the full range of scientific views that exist.”

The question of the applicability of the Santorum language came up at a presentation to the state board by intelligent design theorists, biologist Jonathan Wells and philosopher of science Steven Meyer. Both are affiliated with Discovery Institute in Seattle. They urged that state science standards assure that students are aware of increasing scientific arguments against, as well as for, Darwin’s theory of evolution.
Darwinian biologist Ken Miller and physicist Laurence Krauss argued, in reply, that the “Santorum language” is not part of the new education act. In front of an audience of over 1000, Miller ran a simulated “word search” on an overhead projector to support his claim that the language is not in the act. Krauss compared the language to a private “comment” appended to the act.

In fact, the letter from Congressmen Boehner and Chabot, states, “It’s important that the implementation of the science standards not be used to censor debate on controversial issues in science, including Darwin’s theory of evolution.” Meyer and Wells have stated that they do not advocate teaching the creationist account of the Bible in science classroom. “We don’t support having either religious or anti-religious teaching in science classes,” Meyer stated.

“Science is neither religion nor philosophy,” Representatives Boehner and Chabot wrote education board president Jennifer L. Sheets and vice president Cyrus B. Richardson, Jr. “Many people may draw religious or philosophical implications from science, but those implications are best drawn outside the science classroom. Students should be allowed to hear the scientific arguments on more than one side of a controversial topic. Censorship of opposing points of view retards true scholarship and presents students from developing their critical thinking skills.”
Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania initially introduced the act’s actual language on academic freedom. It passed 91-8 as a resolution of the Senate. Later the Conference Committee of the House and Senate that presented the final bill for passage embraced it. Boehner, of Cincinnati, co-chaired the Conference Committee with Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts.

“The Santorum language in the federal act is actually stronger than our compromise proposal,” Discovery Institute president Bruce Chapman stated. “We are especially happy to have this correction made to the widely reported and mis-leading remarks of professors Krauss and Miller.”

Haury Remarks Letter

John H. Calvert, Esq.
Attorney at Law

460 Lake Shore Drive West 913-268-3778
Lake Quivira, Kansas 66217 Fax: 268-0852
jcalvert@att.net

February 27, 2002

Thomas E. McClain, and
Joseph D. Roman
Co-Chairmen
Standards Committee
State Board of Education of Ohio
25 South Front Street
7th Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43215-4183


Gentlemen,

I attended the meeting of the Standards Committee on February 4 and listened with great interest to Dr. David Haury’s response to the remarks that I made on January 13 about what Ohio should tell students about the origin and diversity of life – origins science.

I commend you and the Committee for your approach to this difficult issue. You are doing exactly what should be done. You are carefully investigating in a reasonable and unbiased way both sides of the issue. You are listening to experts and you are allowing appropriate time for open discussion. This process of open investigation and deliberation is what makes all of us proud to be U.S. Citizens. It is a process that builds trustworthy intellectual infrastructure.

Dr. Haury indicated that he had listened to my talk on January 13 and I presume that he received a copy of Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools (March 21, 2002,) which was distributed to each member of the Committee and the State Board.

Dr. Haury did an excellent job of explaining the view of the “science community” about the issues. Certainly, what he said is consistent with my understanding of the position of that “community.” Although there is much of what he said that I can agree with, I do disagree with his ultimate conclusions. I also disagree that his views are representative of the actual thoughts of the real “science community.” Even with the intellectual discrimination that is practiced against those scientists who break the “Rule” of naturalism, the Report(1) shows a very large majority of highly credentialed scientists disagreeing with its use in origins science.

The effect of having two experts talk back to back about the same subject is that it tends to narrow the issues. The process is like a sieve. When the issues get narrowed, it becomes much easier for the decision maker to address core problems and “get to the bottom” of things.

This letter expresses my views about areas of agreement and disagreement between the position of objective origins science represented by my talk and naturalistic origins science as represented by the Dr. Haury’s talk. Next I discuss the conclusions one may reasonably draw from the two talks. Finally, I provide a set of suggestions which reasonably follow from those conclusions.

What is Objective Origins Science?

Before going further I would like to summarize again the essential goals of objective origins science. First, it defines origins science as the science which seeks to explain the origin of life and the origin of the diversity of life – biological origins. Next, it holds that this science should be conducted and taught with scrupulous objectivity and without religious, philosophic or naturalistic bias or assumption. To the extent that assumptions are used they should be fully and appropriately disclosed.

It is essential to distinguish between origins science and other kinds of science for two reasons. First, origins science is an historical science where explanations for the most part can not be tested by experiment. This renders it imperative that competing explanations not be censored. Competition is the only effective test for an historical hypothesis that can not be confirmed by experiment. Second, origins science unavoidably impacts religion. Any explanation will have either a positive or negative impact on it. That being the case, it is imperative that this science be conducted objectively. Otherwise the science community will be at odds with a large segment of the patrons for whom they work and the US Constitution.

The effect of objective origins science is to permit scientists to consider objectively all the evidence and to allow the evidence rather than assumptions guide the formation of explanations. This approach fosters critical thinking, academic freedom and a search for the truth. It allows consideration of evidence which suggests that phenomena in the natural world consist of more than purely physical and material entities that are directed only by the known laws of physics and chemistry and chance. It recognizes that nature may also be governed by non-physical causes or as yet unidentified laws. For example, the highly regarded theoretical physicist, Paul Davies has challenged the “science community” to explain the “semantic” quality of biological information. As he points out this is a pure intangible that can not be weighed, measured, or observed with any machine. He says:

“To explain life fully, it is not enough simply to identify a source of free energy, or negative entropy, to provide biological information. We also have to understand how semantic information comes into being. It is the quality, not the mere existence, of information that is important here.” [The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life, 60 (Simon & Schuster, 1999)]

The balance of this letter is intended to briefly discuss the following matters:

  • Summary of the position that I advocated on Jan 13
  • Summary of Dr. Haury’s response to that position
  • Conclusions that may be drawn from the combination of the two talks.
  • My suggestions given these conclusions.

Summary of my January 13 presentation: [It can be found at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/ohioboardtalk.htm]

The question I discussed was: WHAT SHOULD OHIO TELL CHILDREN ABOUT THEIR ORIGINS?

I advised you that the proposed standards would have the effect of telling children that they are derived only from natural processes without disclosing to them that credible scientific evidence exists that they may be the product of design. This will amount to state indoctrination in Naturalism – a “nonreligion.” Naturalism is defined by Webster’s Third New International Dictionary as “the doctrine that cause-and-effect laws (as of physics and chemistry) are adequate to account for all phenomena and that teleological [design] conceptions of nature are invalid.” This is consistent with Dr. Haury’s definition of metaphysical naturalism.

State sponsored naturalism is wrong because (a) the historical nature of origins science makes the use of epistemological naturalism(2) inconsistent with good science and (b) use of epistemological naturalism, particularly undisclosed epistemological naturalism, has the effect of metaphysical naturalism and is inconsistent with the establishment and speech clauses of the First Amendment to the US Constitution.

I urged you to abandon the use of naturalism [of whatever form] in Origins science and teach it objectively, and without philosophic, naturalistic or religious assumption or bias.

I urged you to give due consideration to the Modifications that are reflected in the Report that was distributed to you on Feb 4 reflecting endorsements by 77 of 82 persons holding doctoral degrees, including a member of the National Academy of Sciences and 39 holding doctoral degrees in the biological and life sciences.

2. Summary of Dr. Haury’s Views:

Dr. Haury’s February 4 response acknowledges that the standards apply a naturalistic definition of science, however, he claims that this definition does not seek to imbue a belief in naturalism because the naturalistic assumption is merely used as a method for doing science. He implicitly acknowledges that it is not appropriate for science to promote metaphysical naturalism. – to indoctrinate or “require acceptance” of a naturalistic explanation of our origins.

He implicitly recognizes that epistemological naturalism is essentially an assumption against design and that it is not based on an evidentiary finding. Thus, he should agree that it is an assumption derived from a philosophical view rather than an empirical scientific conclusion. In fact he acknowledges that there may be more to the world than its material aspects.

He did not explicitly discuss whether the proposed standards attempt to adequately disclose the use of the assumption against design to students. When questioned about this issue, his equivocal response was that he thought they did. As indicated below, the proposed standards not only fail to provide for disclosure, the writing team has rejected out of hand written proposals to make a disclosure.

As to this issue, Dr. Haury’s remarks seem to explicitly acknowledge that use of the assumption in origins science is problematic, both scientifically and legally. This is because he seems to deny that the proposed standards deal with “origins science.” He appears to attempt to make this claim by claiming that “evolution is [not] concerned with origins … or explaining past events.”

This raises an interesting, but crucial factual question: Do the standards contemplate the teaching of origins science, a historical science in Ohio public schools. If the answer is yes, then Dr. Haury’s remarks would seem to implicitly endorse the thesis of my argument – epistemological naturalism should not be used in origins science.

As to the legal issues, Dr. Haury seems to argue that because the standards do not deal with origins science but only with a narrow view of “evolution, they are perfectly OK, citing the court’s dictum in McLean v. Arkansas. Again, his conclusion is legally problematic if one views the proposed standards as encouraging, contemplating or permitting discussions about the origin of life and/or the origin of the diversity of life.

Although he did not deal directly with the issue of whether intelligent design is illegal, he implied that to be the case by referring the Board to the misleading summary of the Freiler case. As explained in my memo to you of February 4, 2002 relating to the Freiler case, there is no legal basis for that implication.

On February 8 Dr Haury gave a shorter version of his presentation to the Writing Team. After that presentation, the Life Sciences subgroup added a naturalistic definition of science to the proposed standards. That definition is:

“Scientific knowledge is limited to natural explanations for natural phenomena (material world perceived by our senses or technological extensions).”

This definition incorporates the assumption of epistemological naturalism that Ohio children (natural phenomena), along with the rest of us, result only from natural processes and not by design. According to Dr. Haury, use of a materialistic/naturalistic definition of science precludes any discussion of design theory in a science class that gets into a discussion of origins. I believe he would agree that this is consistent with the intended interpretation of the definition.

Summary of conclusions regarding factual and legal issues covered by the two presentations

1. The proposed standards do apply an irrebuttable assumption of “no design” (epistemological naturalism) by virtue of their use of a definition of science that permits only “natural explanations for natural phenomena.”

The two talks make this proposition clear. Indeed, it appears that the purpose of Dr. Haury’s talk was to validate the use of this limit on explanation,(3) at least as to science that “is [not] concerned with origins …. or explaining the past.” Our concern is with use of the assumption to limit what can be scientifically investigated and explained about where we come from – our origins.

2. It is inappropriate for the Standards to promote metaphysical naturalism.

Dr. Haury’s presentation implicitly recognizes that it is inappropriate for the State to be promoting metaphysical naturalism in a science class. Essentially the only difference between the two, and the only difference expressed by Dr. Haury, is that metaphysical naturalism “requires acceptance” of the proposition that all phenomena result only from natural causes and not by design, while epistemological naturalism “merely” assumes the truth of the proposition as a “method” of science. Hence he recognizes that it is inappropriate for the state to adopt a method of teaching that “requires acceptance” of the naturalistic proposition.

3. The Proposed Standards Will have the Effect of Promoting Metaphysical Naturalism!

It should be clear that the standards will promote metaphysical naturalism. This is a key conclusion. If the Board agrees that the effect of the Standards will be to promote metaphysical naturalism, then it must revise those standards to avoid that effect. It must do so for logical, pedagogical, scientific and legal reasons.

  • In practice there is no discernable difference between epistemological naturalism and metaphysical naturalism. Even Dr. Haury could not point to any discernable difference that board members could conceptualize. How can we expect youngsters to understand the difference, particularly when no discussion is contemplated. Furthermore, the Supreme Court has stated that its interest is in the “effect” of a practice and not just its intended purpose. Clearly the effect of the use of epistemological naturalism in origins science is the same as metaphysical naturalism. Its use can reasonably be expected to lead students to “accept” the naturalistic proposition. If it will have that effect, it makes no difference whether the result is or is not intended.
  • In fact, the standards do expressly and implicitly “require acceptance” of the naturalistic proposition because the assumption used is irrebuttable. The Standards do not permit any discussion of the contrary hypothesis and permit only a showing of evidence which supports the naturalistic proposition that is assumed to be true. If the standards used a traditional definition of science which does not limit explanation to only “natural explanations” then they would not “require acceptance” of the proposition.
  • Finally, providing only a naturalistic explanation of origins without disclosing that the explanation is based on an irrebuttable assumption against design, necessarily has the effect of “requiring acceptance” of the naturalistic explanation. If the assumption was disclosed along with an appropriate discussion of the design hypothesis that it censors, students would have the intellectual option to reject the naturalistic explanation and seek to become informed about the censored explanation. With only one explanation given, students will have no basis to even know of an alternative and the fact that credentialed scientists support that view. This then effectively requires acceptance of the naturalistic explanation.

This kind of misinformation is particularly problematic due to presentations in biology textbooks which will be the tools used to carry out the mandate of the Proposed Standards. Those textbooks first inform students that explanations they will read in the book have been tested via experiment per the scientific method without telling them that explanations regarding origins science are based on an irrebuttable naturalistic assumption in an area of science where “Laws and experiments are inappropriate techniques for the explication of such events and processes” [See page 17, Section 3.2 of Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools.]. This reminds one of Enron allegations that its financial statements were represented as fairly presenting its financial condition, while not disclosing a billion dollars of off balance sheet liabilities.

To avoid “required acceptance” of the assumption, it must be made rebuttable and it must be fully and appropriately disclosed and explained. Otherwise the standards will have the effect of State indoctrination in metaphysical naturalism.

To avoid this problem the proposed standards must be revised to make clear that teachers:

  • are free to show scientific criticisms of the naturalistic hypothesis and evidence that tends to rebut the naturalistic assumption against design; and
  • are required to make full and appropriate disclosure and explanation of the assumption whenever the assumption is used.

4. The proposed standards “are concerned with Origins.”

Although Dr. Haury did not explicitly claim that the proposed standards do not deal with origins science, he seemed to suggest that through his contention that “evolution is [not] concerned with origins….or with explaining the past.” This is a critical issue. If Ohio’s science standards discourage discussion with students about the origin of life and its diversity, then we can fold our tents and go home. The focus of this discussion is about what we should tell children about where they come from, not about how they work and what they are composed of. Since the proposed standards actually address both issues, the time is not ripe for folding tents and packing bags.

Any common understanding of “evolution,” its use in the proposed standards, and its use in currently available biology textbooks indicate that “evolution” is “concerned with origins …..and explaining the past.” Indeed, the effort of the scientific community has been to use chemical and biological evolution to explain everything, including the origin of the mind, consciousness and the origin of the universe itself. At best, it would appear that Dr. Haury’s notion of what “evolution” covers is simply a semantic construct used to avoid the significant legal issues that arise from the reality of what is actually happening – the reality of state involvement in teaching children about where they come from.

However, regardless of the semantics of the slippery word “evolution,” it is clear that the proposed standards “are concerned with origins and explaining the past.”

This is made clear from Proposed Indicators(4) #29 and 30, for tenth grade biology, and the definition of “scientific knowledge.” These items require Ohio children to:

“Analyze how natural selection and other evolutionary mechanisms (e.g., genetic drift, immigration, emigration, mutation) and their consequences provide a scientific explanation for the diversity and unity of all past life forms as depicted in the fossil record and present life forms.” (Proposed Indicator # 29) and

*******

Know life on earth is thought to have begun as simple, one-celled organisms about 4 billion years ago. During most of the history of earth, only single-celled micro-organisms existed, but once cells with nuclei developed about a billion years ago, increasingly complex multicellular organisms evolved.” (Proposed Indicator # 30)

The definition of science limits the permitted explanations of both origin of life and origin of diversity of life to only “natural explanations” by stating that:

“Scientific knowledge is limited to natural explanations for natural phenomena (material world perceived by our senses or technological extensions).”

Thus, it is clear that the proposed standards are “concerned with origins… and with explaining past events,ONLY in a naturalistic way.

It is also clear that currently available biology textbooks seek to show that life originates via chemical evolution and that it subsequently diversifies via – natural selection – Darwinian evolution.

Unit 5 of Biology, the Dynamics of Life, [Glencoe-McGraw-Hill, 2000], a tenth grade biology text used throughout the country deals with “Change Through Time.” Chapter 14 is called “The History of Life.” Its two subsections deal with “The Record of Life” and “The Origin of Life.” The origin of life discussion shows children naturalistic theories of origins without even mentioning the design hypothesis. The children have no real choice about what to believe.

The same is true with respect to the origin of the diversity of life. Chapter 15 of the text is titled “The Theory of Evolution.” The book states that the chapter is important because “Evolution explains the diversity of species and predicts changes.” Section 15.1 deals with “Natural Selection and the Evidence for Evolution” and chapter 15.2 deals with the “Mechanisms of Evolution.” With only a naturalistic mechanism shown – natural selection – children are led to believe that the only scientific explanation for the diversity of life is a purely naturalistic one. The competing hypothesis regarding the origin of the diversity of life, being censored by epistemological naturalism, is not disclosed or even mentioned.

This irrebuttable and misleading naturalistic account of our origins is cemented in the introductory portions of the textbooks where children are led to believe that science uses the scientific method to validate these historical explanations. This is misinformation. Those explanations, rather than being tested per the scientific method, are materially supported by use of the irrebuttable assumption against design and by censoring honest scientific criticisms of evolutionary theory. The censorship of design and criticism occurs at the textbook and class room levels. Censorship in the class room occurs when teachers such as Rodney LeVake, Roger DeHart, Professor William Dembski and others are fired, reassigned or otherwise discriminated against when they attempt to teach or investigate the subject “honestly” and critically.

Other biology textbooks, which are replete with misinformation about evolution, follow the same naturalistic approach as Biology, Dynamics of Life in teaching students about the origin of life and its diversity. The misinformation in nine additional textbooks is described in detail in Jonathan Wells book Icons of Evolution: Why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong (Regnery, 2000).

Accordingly, contrary to Dr. Haury’s implicit suggestion, the proposed standards are “concerned with origins….and explaining the past” and they propose to answer those questions with a predetermined explanation – a purely naturalistic one.

5. A number of options are available to the Board to correct the problems inherent in a naturalistic approach to origins science.

Although Dr. Haury provided a rehash of the “summaries” of the “eight cases” listed on Eugenie Scott’s web site, he provided no cases or legal authorities that contradict the opinions expressed in my January 13 talk, Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools and in the Freiler memorandum.(5)

His presentation was interestingly silent on issues such as: “is intelligent design” religion, and is it legally permissible for the state to use epistemological naturalism to censor the evidence relating to that hypothesis. From a legal standpoint, both questions yield a “no” answer. To avoid this discussion he resorted to the standard model of attempting to cast the debate as one of science vs. creation science. Using this tactic he avoided discussion of the real legal debate – whether the board should engage in biased origins science or objective origins science.

His presentation also did not discuss the following options that are clearly and legally available to the Board:

  • There is no legal reason why the Board can not encourage the teaching of origins science objectively and without religious, naturalistic or philosophic bias or assumption.

Although this position would not directly mandate the teaching of design theory, it certainly would permit its discussion. That necessarily follows, since the abandonment of assumptions against design would necessarily sanction discussions about it, assuming the discussions are limited to scientific views as opposed to religious views.

  • There is no legal reason why the Board can not require the disclosure of material assumptions used in the teaching of origins science, including the assumption of epistemological naturalism.

Clearly, there is no legal reason why the board can not accomplish this objective, particularly where it would appear logically, pedagogically, scientifically and legally problematic to not do so. Indeed the law would seem to mandate this result.

  • There is no legal reason why the Board may not permit students to consider the full range of scientific views about origins, including criticisms of evolutionary theory and why the subject generates so much controversy.

This merely reflects the recommendations of the House and Senate Conferees in urging adoption of the new Federal education act.

6. Dr. Haury does not deny the contention that “origins science” impacts religion. Nor does he deny that a materialistic assumption impacts religious views.

These are also fundamental assertions made in my talk on Jan 13. They are also key to an understanding of why the State must remain neutral in this religious arena. The fact that Dr. Haury did not respond to these key assertions also suggests either tacit agreement or a lack of any legal or factual basis for denying the assertions.

7. Dr. Haury did not explain any reason or purpose for using epistemological naturalism in origins science.

Dr Haury’s omission to discuss this issue may turn in part on his contention that “evolution is [not] concerned with origins.” However, as mentioned above, the proposed standards are clearly designed to discuss origins with students. His response therefore leaves uncontested my contention that there is no secular purpose for using epistemological naturalism in origins science. This issue is extremely important from a legal standpoint. The state must have a secular purpose for using a practice in matters touching religion. Origins science touches religion and a decision to use epistemological naturalism to censor explanation about our origins is a state practice that must therefore have a secular purpose. To date, Dr. Haury has not explained any purpose, much less a secular purpose for using that irrebuttable assumption in origins science.

8. Dr. Haury did not respond to my argument that State indoctrination in naturalism is unconstitutional.

This was the very thesis of my talk on Jan 13. However, his comments noticeably avoided any discussion of this issue. Presumably because he either tacitly agrees with the conclusion or because he has no legal basis to counter it. As indicated under the preceding point, state use of epistemological naturalism to limit explanation in origins science lacks secular purpose. It also violates that State’s constitutional obligation to remain neutral in an area that touches religion and amounts to viewpoint discrimination. He did not deny any of these assertions.

My Suggestions

Based on the above, my suggestions are as follows:

1. Recognize that this is a highly complex constitutional, educational and scientific issue. It is an issue that deals with the legal and proper way to educate children about a subject that significantly impacts religion. The decision about how to do that can not be answered only by the “science community.” It deals with fundamental school policy and it is clearly within the province of the Board to exercise an informed judgement about it. Indeed, it may be one of the most important policies the board has had to issue. Although input from the “science community” is important, the Board should recognize that the scientific community is divided over the issue (See the Report).

2. Carefully revise the definition of science so that, at least in the area of origins science, it does not use a naturalistic assumption. Indeed, legally, it appears to me that one must discard use of epistemological naturalism in origins science – a science that unavoidably takes the state into a religious arena. Epistemological naturalism robs the state of its required neutrality, lacks secular purpose and amounts to viewpoint discrimination.

3. Encourage schools to teach origins science objectively and without religious, naturalistic or philosophic bias or assumption. Adoption of the Modifications would go a long way towards the accomplishment of this goal. Look again at the modifications. They are appended to the Report. They reflect a very modest approach to the subject. They have been endorsed by a significant number of credentialed scientists, lawyers and Ohioans.

4. Adopt a statement that will encourage the development of curriculum that will help students think critically, understand the full range of scientific views that exist regarding the origins of life, and understand why origins science may generate controversy. In particular, make it perfectly clear that teachers and students are permitted to discuss scientific criticisms of evolutionary theory.

5. Do not adopt the Standards as currently proposed “as is.” I believe those proposals provide for state sponsored indoctrination in naturalism contrary to the establishment and speech clauses of the First Amendment. Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools, the Utah Law Review article by Professors David DeWolf and Stephen Meyer and my Feb 4, memo regarding the Freiler case provide the authority for this opinion.

In concluding this long letter I am reminded of Lance Armstrong’s inspiring battle with cancer. Lance is the American cyclist who twice won the Tour De France after winning that battle. He was successful in part because he sought second opinions about how to deal with a very severe case of the disease. Similarly, I strongly urge you to seek additional legal advice on these important issues. In doing so, it is particularly important that your counsel fully understand the issues presented by the proposed standards, the scientific bases for the design hypothesis, the manner in which a design inference is developed, the evidence upon which it is based, the historical nature of origins science and the effect of an undisclosed use of epistemological/methodological naturalism in that area of science. I assume you would also furnish them this letter, Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools, the February 4 memo on the Freiler case and the Utah Law Review article by Professors DeWolf and Meyer.

I would also welcome the opportunity to meet and discuss these issues with your counsel on a face-to-face basis. This kind of dialogue would promote a friendly and productive process.

Thanks for your kind consideration of these thoughts about an issue that has once again attracted the attention of the world.

     Very truly yours,

   John H. Calvert, Esq.

cc:
Richard E. Baker
Virgil E. Brown, Jr.
Michael Cochran
Deborah Owens Fink
Marlene R. Jennings
Sue Westendorf
Martha W. Wise
David Haury

1. Report on Comments on Proposed Modifications to Draft of Ohio Science Academic Content Standards, Tenth Grade, Life Sciences Section (indicators only), As of January 31, 2002 (Intelligent Design network, inc., February 4, 2002, at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/ohiopoll.htm). The Report was furnished to the Committee on February 4, 2002.

2. This is Dr. Haury ‘s term for “methodological naturalism” which is also known as scientific materialism. I will use Dr. Haury’s term to avoid confusion in this letter. In Teaching Origins Science and other writings I have referred to it as “methodological naturalism.” By same token, Dr. Haury refers to “philosophical naturalism” as “metaphysical naturalism.” Again , I will use his term in this letter. They mean the same thing.

3. Dr Haury used a definition of science that is limited to “gathering observational data about ‘natural events.'” Although this language would not expressly exclude events ordered by intelligence, his advocacy of the use of epistemological naturalism – the assumption against design and non-natural entities – would dictate that interpretation. Hence, his definition is essentially the same as the one that has been added to the proposed standards – the definition that permits only “natural explanations for natural phenomena.”

4. The indicators reflect revisions made on February 8 to Indicators 20 and 21, respectively that appear in the first draft and which are discussed in the Modifications.

5. Dr. Haury’s materials did include a suggestion that the District Court’s decision in the Freiler case had categorized design theory as impermissible “creation science.” However, my memo of February 4, 2002, clearly shows that Freiler rather than censoring design theory suggests schools should permit discussions of alternative theories.

Legal Opinion

Teaching Origins Science In Public Schools: Memorandum & Opinion


John H. Calvert, J.D.
William S. Harris, Ph.D.

Published by Intelligent Design network, inc
Copyright © 2001 by Intelligent Design network, inc..

Subject: Legal Opinion Regarding the Teaching of Origins Science in Public Schools


Ladies and Gentlemen,

The teaching of origins science in public schools involves constitutional as well as practical issues. Because this is of primary concern to persons interested in the intelligent design movement we requested and obtained the attached legal opinion that covers these issues in depth.

The author of the opinion, John H. Calvert. Esq., has engaged in the private practice of law for the past thirty-two years after having initially been trained as a geologist. He is a member of the Missouri Bar Association, the American Bar Association and an associate member of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America. Mr. Calvert is a retired member of Lathrop & Gage L.C. and a Managing Director of IDnet. Mr. Calvert has lectured and provided advice to school boards, school administrators, science teachers and the public about the constitutionality of censoring the evidence of design.

William S. Harris, PhD, has reviewed and endorsed the scientific and other non-legal matters contained in the opinion. Dr. Harris, received an undergraduate degree from Hanover College in Chemistry and a PhD in Nutritional Biochemistry from the University of Minnesota. He has been conducting scientific research for the last 20 years and has published over 70 scientific papers. Dr. Harris currently holds an endowed Chair in Metabolism and Vascular Biology and is a Professor of Medicine at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. In addition, he serves as the Director of the Lipoprotein Research Laboratory at Saint Luke’s Hospital.

Hopefully, you will find the information in this opinion helpful as you develop programs for teaching origins science in a way that will enhance science education in a constitutionally neutral way and that will be pleasing to teachers, students and their parents.

I remind you that the attached opinion is one that has been given to IDnet and may not be relied upon by others. If you would like to have a similar opinion addressed to your specific circumstances, we suggest that you contact Mr. Calvert.

Intelligent Design network, inc.

s/William S. Harris

William S. Harris, Ph.D.
Managing Director

cc: John H. Calvert
Jody F. Sjogren


Published by Intelligent Design network, inc.
Copyright © 2001 by Intelligent Design network, inc.

 

John H. Calvert, Esq. Attorney at Law

460 Lake Shore Drive West                                                                                                               913-268-3778
Lake Quivira, Kansas 66217                                                                                                       Fax: 913-268-0852

jcalvert@att.net March 21, 2001

Intelligent Design network, inc.
P.O. Box 14702,
Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66285-4702


Ladies and Gentlemen,

You have requested my opinion as to how public schools may develop science curriculum regarding the teaching of biological origins (the origin of life and the origin of the diversity of life) in a way that is consistent with the Constitution of the United States. I will refer to this area of science as “origins science.”

Fundamentally, there are two competing scientific hypotheses addressing the cause of life and its diversity. One hypothesis is that all phenomena, including living systems, result only from chance and necessity (natural law) and not by design. This is the Naturalistic Hypothesis. The other hypothesis is that life and its diversity result from a combination of chance, necessity and design. This is the Design Hypothesis.

One question which you have asked me to address is:

Is it legal for a school district to permit a science teacher to show students scientific evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis for the purpose of enhancing science education?

In my opinion, the answer is yes.

You have also asked me to address a second question. This question is perhaps the more important of the two questions. It is:

Is it legal for a school district to prohibit or censor science teachers from showing evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis and thereby promote only the evidence which supports the competing Naturalistic Hypothesis?

In my opinion, the answer is no. If the Design Hypothesis is censored so that only the Naturalistic Hypothesis is taught, then the effect of this practice will be to indoctrinate students in Naturalism.

Naturalism is “the doctrine that cause-and-effect laws (as of physics and chemistry) are adequate to account for all phenomena and that teleological(1) [design] conceptions of nature are invalid” (Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged, 1993). Naturalism is a philosophy and not a proven scientific theory or fact.(2)

A summary of this letter immediately follows the table of contents.

My opinions are based on the matters explained in the balance of this letter and are subject to any existing science standards that may apply to any particular school district that may conflict with or otherwise affect my opinions. I would be happy to review any such standards with the view to either removing this exception to my opinions or to provide further advice concerning the implementation of the suggestions contained in this letter.

I am licensed to practice within the State of Missouri and express no opinion on the laws of any jurisdiction other than the laws of the State of Missouri and the laws of the United States. For that reason, with respect to any other jurisdiction, I encourage you to consult with counsel licensed to practice in that jurisdiction to confirm the conclusions expressed in this letter to the extent that they may be affected by the laws of that jurisdiction and to otherwise advise you on the matter. I would be pleased to discuss my opinions with that counsel more fully and to provide additional information and advice.

Published by Intelligent Design network, inc.
Copyright © 2001 by Intelligent Design network, inc.

-2-

                                                                CONTENTS

  1. Summary ……………………………………………………………………………………………………..    4
    2. Background and Discussion of Key Factual Issues………………………………………………..    5
    2.1    The Three Causes for an Event …………………………………………………………………    5
    2.2    Evidence Which Supports the Naturalistic Hypothesis……………………………………    6
    2.3    Evidence Which Supports the Design Hypothesis………………………………………….    7
    2.31   Design is Empirically Detectable………………………………………………………..    7
    2.32   Methods of Design Detection……………………………………………………………    7
    2.33   Other Sciences Use Design Detection Methodology……………………………..    10
    2.34   Specific Items of Evidence……………………………………………………………….    11
    3. The Subject Matter and Historical Nature of Origins Science Impacts the Issues………    3
    3.1    The Nature of Origins Science ………………………………………………………………….    13
    3.2    Origins Science Demands Objectivity due to its Historical Nature…………………….    14
    3.3    Origins Science Generates Unavoidable Religious Implications…………………………    15
    4. Discussion of the Legal Issues……………………………………………………………………………    16
    4.1    Statement of the Issues…………………………………………………………………………….    16
    4.2    It is Legal to Show the Evidence of Design Since it is Not Religion……………………    16
    4.3    It is Not Legal to Censor the Evidence from a Science Class on the Ground
    that it is Not Science……………………………………………………………………………..    20
    4.31   Scientific Criticisms are Permissible……………………………………………………    20
    4.32   Design Detection, Analysis and Inference Fall Within Traditional Definitions
    of Science…………………………………………………………………………………..    21
    4.33   Censoring Design in Origins Science Lacks Secular Purpose…………………..    24
    4.331   Censoring the Evidence is Inconsistent with the Need to Know
    ……………………………………………………………    25
    4.332   Censoring the Evidence is Inconsistent with Logic
    and the Scientific Method…………………………………………………..    25
    4.333   Censoring the Evidence Precludes the Falsification of Darwinism…..    26
    4.334   Censoring the Evidence Results in Misinformation and Indoctrination   26
    4.335   Naturalistic limitations on the Explanation of Origins have been
    Criticized by Scientists and Philosophers…………………………………..    27
    4.336   A Naturalistic Definition is Inconsistent with the
    Supreme Court’s Definition of Science…………………………………..    27
    4.4    It is Not Legal To Censor the Evidence……………………………………………………….    29
    4.41   Censoring the Evidence Conflicts with the Establishment Clause………………    29
    4.42   Censoring the Evidence Conflicts with the Speech Clause………………………    33
    5.   Suggestions for Implementing Science Education Curriculum………………………………….    34

Policy Statement for Teaching About Origins ……………………………………………….    Appendix A

Notes…………………………………………………………………………………………………..    Appendix B

 

-3- 1. SUMMARY

Nature of Origins Science. Origins science and the teaching of origins science demands scrupulous objectivity. This is because it is a historical rather than an empirical science and because it has unavoidable religious implications. The Design Hypothesis supports theistic beliefs while the Naturalistic Hypothesis supports atheistic beliefs. Accordingly, when government seeks to teach origins science it enters a religious arena where it is constitutionally obligated to remain neutral. In my opinion, the best way to achieve constitutional neutrality is to teach the subject with scrupulous objectivity and without religious or philosophic bias.

The Design Hypothesis is supported by abundant evidence. The evidence is easily observed and can be empirically detected using the scientific method and logical analysis. The evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis directly contradicts and otherwise challenges the validity of the Naturalistic Hypothesis, including one of its principal theories that the diversity of life results from Darwinian mechanisms such as natural selection.

Teaching the Evidence is Necessary for Good Science Education and is Not Religion. It is perfectly permissible for a teacher to show the evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis to enhance the effectiveness of education regarding origins science. The Design Hypothesis is not a religion and the evidence and inferences which support it are not religion. The Design Hypothesis does not meet any dictionary or legal definition of religion. I am not aware of any decided case that has held that the Design Hypothesis is a religion or that it is unconstitutional or illegal to show the evidence which supports it in a science class in a public school. The cases which have proscribed the teaching of “creation science” are not relevant to the teaching of evidence that supports the Design Hypothesis. Creation science is science which seeks to prove origins accounts found in the book of Genesis. The Design Hypothesis does not seek to prove anything about any religion or religious text. The fact that the Design Hypothesis is consistent with and supportive of theism does not legally or otherwise render that Hypothesis a religion. In the same manner, the fact that the Naturalistic Hypothesis is consistent with and supportive of atheism does not legally or otherwise render that Hypothesis constitutionally anti-religious. The constitutional problem arises when government censors one hypothesis and thereby provides a monopoly to the religious or anti-religious implications of the competing hypothesis.

The Design Hypothesis is Scientific. Design detection, the evidence of design and logical inferences of design drawn from that evidence fall within traditional definitions of science. It is not logical or scientific to limit scientific explanation to only “natural explanations” in order to censor inquiry, evidence and inference that supports the design hypothesis.  Limiting science to only natural explanations of what we observe is inconsistent with traditional definitions of science and criteria provided by the U.S. Supreme Court. Censoring the evidence is also inconsistent with logic, the scientific method, the need of society to know about the evidence and the need of science to provide trustworthy and reliable explanations. The censorship that is presently being practiced results in misinformation and indoctrination.

Censorship Will Result in Violations of the First Amendment. Censorship by a school of the evidence of design in teaching origins science so that only natural explanations may be provided will result in violations of the neutrality required by the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution. This is because censorship of the Design Hypothesis while showing only the evidence which supports the Naturalistic Hypothesis will necessarily indoctrinate students in Naturalism. This strategy has no reasonable secular purpose. It will impermissibly promote atheistic beliefs while denigrating theistic beliefs contrary to the requirement that government remain neutral with regard to religion. It will also involve government in an excessive entanglement with religion. The censorship will also result in viewpoint discrimination prohibited by the Speech Clause of the Constitution. The only effective and legal way to promote good origins science is to permit teachers to show the evidence which supports both hypotheses.

-4-

Adopt a No-Censorship Policy. For all of the foregoing reasons and for those more particularly explained below, I suggest that schools adopt the attached no-censorship policy statement that attempts to enhance science education regarding origins. I believe implementation of this policy should be helpful to teachers and students, pleasing to parents and consistent with the legal requirements for this sensitive subject.

Other Helpful Materials. A more detailed analysis of a number of the issues covered in this opinion may be found in a briefing book for School Boards authored by David K. DeWolf, Stephen C. Meyer and Mark E. DeForrest, “Intelligent Design In Public School Science Curricula,” (Foundation for Thought and Ethics, 1999)]. The book is published on the Internet at: http://law.gonzaga.edu/people/dewolf/fte2.htm. A related Law Review article by the same authors may be found at “Teaching the Origins Controversy: Science or Religion or Speech, 2000 Utah Law Review 39 (February 9, 2001).

2. BACKGROUND AND DISCUSSION OF KEY FACTUAL ISSUES

2.1 The Three Possible Causes for an Event and Their Impact on the Two Origins Hypotheses.

General. The Design and Naturalistic hypotheses derive from an explanatory concept that an event may have only one of three causes. The three causes are chance, necessity and design. Patterns of events are arranged by one or a combination of two or more of the three causes. The Naturalistic hypothesis assumes that only chance and necessity have operated to arrange the patterns of events that generate life and the diversity of life. The Design Hypothesis postulates that all three causes may be involved.

Events Caused by Design. A designed event is one that is caused to occur by a mind or some form of intelligence. This document consists of a pattern of many events (letters, numbers, characters and punctuation marks) produced and arranged by my mind. The nest of a bird consists of a pattern of events arranged by the mind of a bird. Nature is filled with minds that arrange events by intent into known designs. The Design Hypothesis does not seek to attribute any design to that of a supernatural designer or God. For that matter, any design that is detected could be a product of an alien mind that is currently being searched for by the SETI program (Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence – See note 9).

-5-

Events Caused by Necessity – Law. Events and patterns of events can also be arranged by “necessity.” A necessary event is one that is required to happen due to the laws of chemistry and physics. A salt crystal is an example of a pattern of events arranged only by chance and necessity without any direct input from a mind. When a solution of sodium and chlorine ions becomes supersaturated, the positively charged sodium ions will be attracted to the negatively charged chlorine ions to form a very regular three dimensional crystal lattice in the form of a cube. The mineral that is produced is called halite. A block of sandstone is also a pattern of events arranged by necessity. The size of the grains found in the rock will vary with the strength of the current in which the grains were deposited. In this case the pattern reflects the operation of the law of gravity in an aquatic environment.

Events Caused by Chance. Events can also occur by chance. A chance event is one that (a) can not be predicted, and (b) is not controlled by intent or necessity/law. We all know what chance events are if we have gone to a casino. Assume I have a bag of 26 scrabble pieces, each of which bears a different letter of the alphabet. What are my chances of spelling the word “DESIGN” by blindly putting my hand in the bag and pulling out the correct letters in the correct sequence (assuming that I put each piece back after I have noted the letter pulled)? The chance of pulling the D is 1/26, the chance of pulling D and E in that sequence is 1/26 x 1/26 or 1/676, etc. Thus the chance of spelling DESIGN in sequence is 1/26×1/26×1/26×1/26×1/26×1/26 = 1/308,915,776. Thus, as the complexity of the pattern increases, the probability of its occurrence by chance decreases exponentially.

2.2 Evidence which Supports the Naturalistic Hypotheses

The Naturalistic Hypothesis has considerable difficulty in explaining the origin of the universe (3) and the origin of laws and constants.(4) It also has had no success in explaining the origin of life.(5) However, once a replicating first cell is established, there is some evidence that the diversity of life could naturally arise by Darwinian evolution. The Darwinian mechanism consists of (a) random mutations in (b) replicating populations that are affected by (c) environmental pressures in order to yield hypothesized increased cellular complexity and sophistication. When coupled with an assumed concept called “the principle of biological continuity,”(6) this hypothesis claims that all living things derive from a very large number of gradually accumulated “adaptations” to the descendants of a single common ancestral cell that somehow sprang into existence in a “primordial soup” of chemicals billions of years ago.

The Naturalistic Hypothesis regarding the diversity of life is supported by evidence showing that natural selection may be effective to produce change at the species level, by a fossil record which shows increased complexity in living systems over time and by evidence of enormous amounts of time for natural selection to operate. Science textbooks typically refer to other evidences of Darwinian evolution at work. The important thing to note is that Darwinian evolution has not been proved. This is because it attempts to explain past events that have occurred millions and billions of years ago. These events can not be observed, the fossil record is incomplete in very important respects, and the events can not be duplicated by experiment. Much of the evidence that is claimed to support Darwinian evolution is also consistent with the design hypothesis.(7) As Harvard evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr has recently noted, evolutionary biology is a historical rather than an empirical science.(8)

-6-

2.3 Evidence Which Supports the Design Hypothesis

        2.31 Design is Empirically Detectable

The competing hypothesis is that chance and necessity may be aided by the third of the only three possible causes – design. This hypothesis postulates that life and the diversity of life may be designed – may be the product of a mind or some sort of intelligence. This is the “Design Hypothesis.” The design hypothesis derives from observations of highly complex natural systems which appear to have purpose or meaning. Since purpose results only by design, the observer intuitively infers design upon observing complex natural systems that have apparent purpose such as the miracle of birth or the structure of proteins – the building blocks of life.

A mind is an exceedingly powerful means for the arrangement of events. It is the aspect of an information processing system that perceives, thinks, reasons, decides and directs action towards a target or object. By contrast, a natural mechanism, driven only by chance and necessity, such as natural selection, can not perceive, think, reason or decide and form a target or goal. It is a mechanism that, by definition, can not create purpose. As mentioned above, minds occur with abundance in nature. They are also postulated by scientists to exist outside our world and our range of observation. The search for extraterrestrial minds is being conducted by scientists based at the University of California at Berkeley.(9)

Designs are empirically detectable in nature and particularly in living systems. One can examine a pattern of events and reliably infer whether the events have been arranged by intent through the use of a mind or whether the pattern is more likely the result of only chance and necessity. An inference that something is designed is not a philosophy or a religion. The conclusion does not depend on religious texts or scriptures nor does it depend on philosophical assumptions. It is merely an inference based on observations and logical analysis of patterns of events that occur in nature, consistent with the scientific method.

2.32 Methods of Design Detection

Design detection involves three steps.

First: Examine a pattern of events to determine whether it carries a message or has some discernable function, structure or purpose – whether it reflects “specified complexity.”

Second: Rule out Necessity as a cause of the pattern.

Third: Rule out Chance as a cause of the pattern.

If you find a pattern that reflects function, structure or purpose and you conclude that it is not likely that it resulted from chance or necessity, then you should be able to reasonably infer that the pattern was designed. – i.e, the product of some mind. This method of design detection is outlined in considerable detail by William A. Dembski who holds Ph.Ds. in mathematics and philosophy in the “The Design Inference.”(10)

Step 1 – Finding Purpose. Lets look at the first step – determining whether the pattern reflects “specified complexity.” Although this may be an oversimplification of the detailed description in “The Design Inference,” generally specified complexity exists when the pattern conveys a message, consists of a direction or performs some function that is independent of the function of each of the events that make up the pattern. Specified complexity reflects an ordering of events by intention. Once function, structure or purpose is observed in a pattern of events, then we have evidence of intention that provides support for a design inference.

-7-

For example, assume that the pattern of events to be analyzed is the sequence of nucleotide bases that appear in the DNA sequence of the postulated first cell. Current science textbooks suggest that this sequence was arranged only by chance and necessity operating in a prebiotic soup containing the necessary chemical constituents.(11) The competing Design Hypothesis is that the pattern of events consisting of the DNA together with all the other machinery necessary to the existence of the first replicating cell, was arranged by design.

Using design detection, we would consult with biochemists and inquire whether the DNA sequence has structure, function or carries a message. The answer is that the sequence does all three. In fact the sequence reflects a language. This observation is reflected daily in the science literature. The apparent design exhibited by living organisms is reflected by the words used by modern science to describe cellular systems:

the genetic “code”
the “blueprint” of life
this biological mechanism was “invented”
this biological system uses this “strategy,”
“biological information”
“hardware and software” in the cell

Perhaps the most famous critic of design is Richard Dawkins. He admits that living organisms give the appearance of design:

“Biology is the study of complicated things that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.” [Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, at 1 (W.W. Norton & Company,1996)].

Accordingly, the first step in the design detection process is more or less acknowledged by modern science. No one seriously argues that living systems do not appear to be designed.

Step 2, Ruling Out Necessity. The next step is to rule out necessity (physical and chemical laws) as an explanation for the arrangement of the DNA sequence. Scientists interested in design detection note that there is no known chemical or physical characteristic that requires any particular arrangement of nucleotide bases along the sugar and phosphate backbones of the DNA strand.(12) Since there is no required arrangement, law or necessity does not appear to play a role in the arrangement of the precise instructions which provide one of the “blueprints” for the formation of the entire living organism. Scientists have also noted that if there was a law that would require a particular arrangement, it would be impossible for the DNA to have the capacity to effectively carry any biological information.(13) The purpose of this discussion is not to prove this point, but merely to show how design detection works and to also note that it involves observations that are guided by the use of physics, chemistry and biochemistry.

-8-

Step 3, Ruling Out Chance. The final step is to rule out chance as a mechanism for producing a pattern of events which appear to have been arranged by design. Without getting into the detail, the estimates of the probability of a simple DNA sequence coding for a single protein with 100 amino acids by chance has been set at effectively zero.(14) Recent scientific studies suggest that the first cell would have had DNA coding for at least 300 proteins, each consisting of 100 or more amino acids.

Thus, ruling out chance involves a knowledge and use of several scientific disciplines, including statistics, mathematics and probability theory as well as biochemistry. Because probability is affected by the amount of time involved and the number of trials that may be involved, the fossil record comes into play. Darwin postulated that his theory would not work if there were not enough time over which change could be effected gradually in a continuum of numerous small steps. Hence, a design theorist will examine the fossil record to determine the amount of time that exists between changes in the development of diversity. Sharp bursts of development with intervening periods of biological stasis support design theory, while gradualism tends to support chance based mechanisms. Contrary to the popular view that life had “billions” of years to arise on earth, current scientific research indicates that life first appeared on earth at approximately the time that the earth first became habitable to any form of life. This suggests insufficient time for the formation of life through a Darwinian mechanism or other naturalistic process.(15)

Design Detection – Showing Irreducible Complexity in Living Systems as A Direct Challenge to Natural Selection

Chance explanations are also rendered less likely in light of observations relating to the nature of complexity itself. Biochemist Michael Behe has shown that many biological mechanisms in living organisms are irreducibly complex. He uses as an example a bacterial flagellum that requires 40 moving parts. This biological machine is believed to have been a component of the most primitive cell. It will not work at all unless all of the parts are assembled at the same time. Dr. Behe contends that natural selection can not build such a machine because the individual parts have no selective value in isolation. They have selective value only when they become a part of a functional whole.(16) mechanisms of chance and necessity operate merely like sieves. As such, they have no apparent capacity to assemble these highly complex, well matched and interacting macro molecular complexes. Without the ability of a mind to perceive, think, decide and to direct the arrangement and coordination of future events, mechanisms of chance and necessity are creatively impotent in concept alone.

-9-

In summary, if a highly improbable pattern of events or object exhibits purpose, structure or function and can not be reasonably and rationally explained by the operation of the laws of physics and chemistry or some other regularity or law, then it is reasonable to infer that the pattern was designed. – the product of a mind. Based on the above it is reasonable to conclude that design is the best explanation for the complexity of the postulated ancestral cell.

2.33 Other Scientific Disciplines Use Design Detection Methodology

Design detection is not a new science. It is used in a number of other scientific disciplines.

* Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence where scientists examine radio waves from outer space in search of patterns of events arranged by a mind by design rather than by chance or necessity.(17)

* Forensic Sciences where scientists examine patterns of events surrounding death to determine whether the patterns were arranged by intent (i.e. murder) or by chance and necessity (i.e. an accident). It is also extensively used in arson investigations to determine whether fires were started by accident or by design.

* Cryptanalysis where scientists examine patterns of characters to determine whether they convey a message or whether the characters merely reflect random and meaningless sequences.

* Archaeology where scientists examine artifacts to determine whether they were fashioned by design or by chance and necessity. Is the rock just a rock or a tool?

* Copyright infringement, plagiarism and musicology where scientists examine patterns of events in writings to determine whether they have been copied from the work of others.

* Reverse engineering where scientists examine the structure of living systems to determine how its structure determines its function. William Harvey used design theory to hypothesize blood circulation in the human body based on the structure of veins and arteries. “The scientists who discovered the nature of the genetic code had coding analogy constantly in mind, as the vocabulary they used to describe their discoveries makes clear…..If, instead, the problem had been treated as one of the chemistry of protein-RNA interactions, we might still be waiting for an answer.”(18)

In summary design detection involves a logical and scientific analysis of patterns of presently observed events that occur in nature using accepted scientific knowledge, techniques and methodologies.

-10-

2.34 Specific Evidence Supporting the Design Hypothesis

Evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis includes:

Apparent Design. The apparent design that is observed in nature and particularly in living systems is the most abundant, best known and perhaps, the most compelling evidence of design. It is the evidence that we detect with our intuition when we see the miracle of birth. It is the evidence that convinced Aristotle, Socrates, Plato, Newton, Bacon, Boyle and even Einstein of design in the universe. Apparent design formed the foundation for science until very recently.(19) It is the evidence that leads Richard Dawkins to say: “Biology is the study of complicated things that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.”(20) A more recent example is reflected in a San Francisco Chronicle interview of one of the scientists working on the Human Genome project:

“Now, with the pressure off, this former University of Arizona professor waxed philosophical on the code his team had cracked.

“‘What really astounds me is the architecture of life,’ he said. ‘The system is extremely complex. It’s like it was designed.'”

“My ears perked up.

“Designed? Doesn’t that imply a designer, an intelligence, something more than the fortuitous bumping together of chemicals in the primordial slime?

“Myers thought before he replied. ‘There’s a huge intelligence there. I don’t see that as being unscientific. Others may, but not me.'”(21)

Failure of Law to Account for the Existence of Biological Information. As mentioned above, there is no known physical or chemical law or process that dictates the sequence of the nucleotide bases along the sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA. If a law did dictate the sequence, DNA would not be able to carry the code which specifies for the seemingly infinite variety of living systems that are apparent in nature.

Furthermore, the semantic or meaningful character of biological information does not appear to be reducible to matter or energy. The only thing known to produce meaning or purpose is a mind. Science has not been able to explain the origin of the semantic or meaningful character of biological information using only natural explanations. For example, the letter sequence SGIDNE conveys no meaning. However the same letters rearranged and having the same amount of matter and energy convey a message: DESIGN. The issue is explained by Paul Davies in “The Fifth Miracle – The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life,” at page 60 (Simon & Schuster, 1999) where he states:

-11-

“Snowflakes contain syntactic information in the specific arrangement of their hexagonal shapes, but these patterns have no semantic content, no meaning for anything beyond the structure itself. By contrast, the distinctive feature of biological information is that it is replete with meaning. DNA stores the instructions needed to build a functioning organism; it is a blueprint or an algorithm for a specified, predetermined product. Snowflakes don’t code for or symbolize anything, whereas genes most definitely do. To explain life fully, it is not enough simply to identify a source of free energy, or negative entropy, to provide biological information. We also have to understand how semantic information comes into being. It is the quality, not the mere existence, of information that is the real mystery here.”

The Irreducible Complexity of many biological systems. This is discussed above under “Design Detection.”

Statistical Studies. Statistical studies indicate the extreme improbability of complex biological systems arising by chance-based Darwinian mechanisms. This is discussed above under design detection. The statistical improbability of the synthesis of the genetic code is also discussed by Noam Lahav in his 1999 treatise “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” (22) and Dean Overman in “The Case Against Accident and Self Organization,” p. 101 (Rowman & Littlefield 1997).(23)

Comparisons of biological information systems with those that are human-made. Scientists are discovering that many biological systems have the same characteristics as human- made systems. One example is how the Morse code is conceptually similar to the genetic code. In fact the latter was discovered using human-made coding systems as an analogy.(24) A falcon is far more complex than the F-16 Fighting Falcon jet fighter that bears its name.(25) The similarity between complex human-made machines and systems and biomolecular machines and information processing systems is evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis but clearly is not a proof.

The abrupt appearance of phyla in the fossil record. Darwin’s theory of natural selection is based on the assumption that change in living systems occurs gradually over long periods of time through an accumulation of very small changes. However, the fossil record contradicts this in very important respects. To begin with, the first cell, an enormously complex organism complete with a language and DNA coding for hundreds of proteins through hundreds of thousands of nucleotide bases arranged in a specific sequence is predicted to have arisen at approximately the time the earth first became habitable to any kind of life. Noam Lahav indicated that scientists initially predicted that it would take hundreds of millions to billions of years for life to arise. The appearance of fossil bacteria very close to the point in time that the earth first became inhabitable suggests a sudden rather than gradual appearance of life.(26)

The sudden appearance of over 40 new and distinct life forms is also chronicled in the Cambrian explosion.(27) The abrupt appearance of these major body plans is contrary to the Darwinian theory which supports the Naturalistic Hypothesis on the assumption that changes occur gradually.

12-

The existence of laws, constants and forces essential to life that fall within statistically improbable ranges. Many astrophysicists and cosmologists have recognized for years that the Universe appears to be “fine tuned.” “Fine tuned” is simply another, but perhaps less controversial, phrase to describe “designed.” The latest discussion may be found in Martin Rees new book “Just Six Numbers – The Deep Forces That Shape the Universe,” [Basic Books, 2000]. Rees recognizes that the only two satisfying solutions to the observed fine tuning are either design or the very speculative possibility that our universe might just be one of an infinite number of multiple universes, thereby rendering the existence of our “fine tuned” universe quite probable. Apparently he prefers the more speculative solution since it provides the only “natural explanation.” Nevertheless, the evidence of the “fine tuning” that he details in his book is evidence of design in the Universe itself.

Failure of Science to Develop a Coherent Theory of the Origin of the First Cell and Biological Information. “The alarming number of speculations, models, theories, and controversies regarding every aspect of the origin of life seem to indicate that this scientific discipline is almost a hopeless situation” [Noam Lahav, “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” p 303 (Oxford University Press, 1999)].

Failure of Science to Develop a Working Model. Although numerous attempts have been made to develop computer models to simulate natural selection, none have been able to successfully show how natural selection, with no direction, foresight, planning or goal can generate the information processing systems found in nature.

Legitimate Criticisms of Darwinian Evolution. Criticisms of Darwinian Evolution abound. In 1986 Robert Shapiro, a Chemist, published “Origins – A Skeptics Guide to the Origin of Life.” Dr. Shapiro’s book explained many objections to natural selection as a mechanism for evolutionary change. A more recent work, Icons of Evolution(28) details many misleading teachings about evolution in textbooks used around the country. Although Icons is focused on misinformation, its rigorous analysis points out many significant problems with Darwinian evolutionary theory. A detailed summary of principal criticisms have also been recently catalogued and documented by David DeWolf, Stephen Meyer and Mark DeForrest in “Teaching the Origins Controversy.”(29)

Evidence contradicting the Darwinian theory is, by default, evidence that supports the Design Hypothesis. This is because design detection requires the elimination of chance and necessity as the explanatory cause.

Other Evidence. Other evidence of design and its empirical character is discussed by David DeWolf, Stephen Meyer and Mark DeForrest in “Teaching the Origins Controversy.”(30)

3. The Historical Nature and Subject Matter of Origins Science Impacts the Issues.

3.1 The Nature of Origins Science.

As a prelude to a discussion of the legal issues, it is necessary to examine the unique nature of origins science. Origins science is different from other sciences in two major respects. It is historical rather than empirical. Origins science also has unavoidable religious implications. “Where do we come from?” is a question fraught with an obvious and critical impact on theistic religions.

-13-

3.2 Origins Science Demands Objectivity Because of its Historical Nature

The nature of origins science is explained by Ernst Mayr.(31)

“For example, Darwin introduced historicity into science. Evolutionary biology, in contrast with physics and chemistry, is a historical science — the evolutionist attempts to explain events and processes that have already taken place. Laws and experiments are inappropriate techniques for the explication of such events and processes. Instead one constructs a historical narrative, consisting of a tentative reconstruction of the particular scenario that led to the events one is trying to explain.” (emphasis added)

The historical-empirical distinction is critically important. Contrary to purely empirical sciences whose conclusions are held to rigorous objectivity by “laws and experiments” the explanations of a historian are held to no such standard or discipline. This allows the historian’s explanations to be subjective. The distinction becomes particularly acute when it is recognized that evolutionary biology and origins science have been driven by Methodological Naturalism – a method which excludes the evidence of design and allows only a natural explanation. This bias – mandate – for only natural explanations – strips the Naturalistic Hypothesis of any objectivity and seriously undermines its credibility.(32) Given that origins science is historical in nature it is especially important that the history be written and taught objectively and logically without philosophic or religious bias, and that all relevant evidence be properly evaluated.

The consequence of not conducting and teaching origins science objectively is reflected in the fact that Darwinism has spawned a growing secular religion that is having an enormous impact on our culture. Recently, the highly regarded ex Christian, Darwinist and philosopher Michael Ruse published a paper complaining that “evolution” has become a religion. In “How Evolution Became a Religion,” http://www.nationalpost.com, (May 13, 2000), Dr. Ruse tells about his complaint:

Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion — a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality. I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex Christian, but I must admit that in this one complaint — and Mr. Gish [a proponent of Creation Science] is but one of many to make it — the literalists are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.” (emphasis added)

Dr. Ruse’s reference to evolution being “promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion….with meaning and morality ” is reflected in Ernst Mayr’s views that Darwinian evolution provides a basis for our ethics and morals:

-14-

“…..Darwin provided a scientific foundation for ethics.

*****

“To borrow Darwin’s phrase, there is grandeur in this view of life. New modes of thinking have been, and are being, evolved. Almost every component in modern man’s belief system is somehow affected by Darwinian principles.”(33)

3.3 Origins Science Generates Unavoidable Religious Implications

Origins science necessarily becomes entangled with theistic and atheistic world views. This is because origins science seeks to provide explanations about where we came from.

Furthermore, the two Hypotheses – the Design Hypothesis and the Naturalistic Hypothesis are necessarily antagonistic. The design hypothesis supports theistic world views while the Naturalistic hypothesis supports atheistic world views. The conflict was recently made clear by Ernst Mayr:

“First, Darwinism rejects all supernatural phenomena and causations. The theory of evolution by natural selection explains the adaptedness and diversity of the world solely materialistically. It no longer requires God as creator or designer (although one is certainly still free to believe in God even if one accepts evolution). Darwin pointed out that creation, as described in the Bible and origin accounts of other cultures, was contradicted by almost any aspect of the natural world. Every aspect of the “wonderful design” so admired by the natural theologians could be explained by natural selection.”(34)    (emphasis added) 

A design inference is the foundation for all theistic religions for at least two reasons. A design inference provides support for a belief in a God, because Gods are, by definition, designers – creators. Although minds that produce the designs we see in nature need not belong to a “God,” the inference clearly supports belief in a God.

Secondly, all theistic religions claim that humans have an inherent purpose. The reason is that all designs have a purpose.(35) If we are designed or created, then we necessarily have been created or designed for a purpose. If we are not designed, then we have no inherent purpose. If we are designed our inherent purpose is that which is set out by the designer. It then becomes a purely religious or philosophic issue to discern what that purpose might be. Religions and religious texts attempt to explain that purpose. It is not the function of science to deal with that issue. It is the function of science to systematically investigate the natural world and to objectively report its findings regardless of the religious or philosophic implications that may flow from the evidence. It is not the function of science to hide or censor the evidence merely because it may support or lead to a conclusion central to a religious belief.

The Naturalistic Hypothesis – that living systems are not designed teaches either that there is no God or designer, or if there is a God, it is one that does not intervene in the material world to create inherent purpose in living systems. This explanation is inconsistent with the God of most theistic religions which hold that God has intervened in the material world to create humans for a purpose. Accordingly, the Naturalistic Hypothesis supports atheistic and agnostic world views and other world views which are unavoidably antagonistic to most theistic religions.

-15-

The conflict between science and religion in our culture today is in part the result of the practice of modern science to censor inquiry, evidence and inference that supports the Design Hypothesis.

4. DISCUSSION OF THE LEGAL ISSUES

4.1 A Statement of the Issues

The question then becomes: Should we teach only one hypothesis and exclude evidence that supports the competing hypothesis? If we censor the evidence which supports the competing hypothesis, how do we affect the credibility of the protected hypothesis and the religious or anti-religious implications which it generates?

To illustrate the issues assume this hypothetical situation: A science teacher visits the school principal. The teacher has in her right hand evidence which supports the Naturalistic

Hypothesis. The teacher has in her left hand evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis. The evidence supporting the Design Hypothesis in the left hand is of the kind mentioned above. The evidence supporting the Naturalistic Hypothesis in the right hand is the evidence presently found in most biology text books.(36) The evidence in the left hand supports but does not require any theistic belief. The evidence in the right hand supports but does not require an atheistic or agnostic belief.

You are the principal. The teacher asks you: “I am about to go into my science class to discuss the origin and diversity of life. I believe the evidence in both hands is relevant to that issue. What should I do with the evidence? Can I show it to the students or must I hide the evidence in one hand? If I hide evidence of design I will be promoting an atheistic world view and thereby denigrating theistic world views. If I hide the evidence of Darwinian evolution I will be promoting a theistic world view and denigrating atheistic world views. What should I do with this evidence?”

Being a good administrator, the principal decides to pass the question on to a lawyer. So, the principal comes to me and asks this question: Should we let the teacher show the evidence which supports both hypotheses or should we censor the evidence that supports only the Design Hypothesis?

Here are my answers:

4.2     It is legal to show the Evidence of Design in a Science Class Because a Design
Inference is not a Religion and Clear Secular Purposes Exist for the Showing.

Is it legal to teach the evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis? The answer to this question is clearly and unequivocally yes.

-16-

Generally school authorities are permitted to establish school curricula except where the curricula impinges on basic constitutional values [Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U.S. 97, 104 (1968)]. The only constitutional objection that I am aware of regarding the showing of evidence consistent with the Design Hypothesis is the erroneous assertion that such teaching involves the establishment of religion in violation of the Establishment clause of the First Amendment. This is an invalid objection for a number of reasons.

The First Amendment provides:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; of the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

The Supreme Court has held that by virtue of the 14th Amendment, the First Amendment also applies to any state or local government or subdivision thereof. This has been construed by the Supreme Court to mean that the “principal or primary effect” of a state action must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion [Board of Education v. Allen, 392 U.S. 236, 243, 88 S.Ct. 1923, 1926 (1968)].

The question then becomes whether a logical inference that natural objects may be designed based on scientifically gathered and analyzed evidence constitutes a religion. The seemingly obvious answer is that an inference is not a religion – it is merely an inference. However, we should explore the issue in more detail to confirm that conclusion.

Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1993) defines religion as:

“1: the personal commitment to and serving of God or a god with worshipful devotion, conduct in accord with divine commands esp. as found in accepted sacred writings or declared by authoritative teachers, a way of life recognized as incumbent on true believers, and typically the relating of oneself to an organized body of believers <ministers of ~>.”

A design inference simply does not meet this definition in any respect. Nor does it meet the definition of religion used by federal courts that have addressed the issue of what constitutes an establishment of religion. The definition used by the court in Alvarado v. City of San Jose, 94 F3d 1223, 1229 (9th Cir. 1996) states:

“First, a religion addresses fundamental and ultimate questions having to do with deep and imponderable matters. Second, a religion is comprehensive in nature; it consists of a belief-system as opposed to an isolated teaching. Third, a religion often can be recognized by the presence of certain formal and external signs.”

A design inference does not meet any of the three tests mentioned in this definition.

-17-

A design inference does not “addresses fundamental and ultimate questions having to do with deep and imponderable matters.” It is merely a logical conclusion drawn from scientific analyses of patterns which occur in nature. The inference is not dependent on or guided by any religious text. The inference does not require a conclusion that the design is that of a God or of a “supernatural being.” A design inference is entirely silent on these issues. Design detection methodology is focused on the detection of direct causes and not on the detection of ultimate causes.(37) The evidence which design theorists show to support a design inference is no different than the kind of evidence that the SETI program seeks to find with radio telescopes.

As to the second part of the Alvarado definition of religion, a design inference does not contemplate or advocate any belief system, moral code or system of ethics.

Finally, a design inference is not associated with any formal and external signs such as a clergy, a structure, an organization, religious texts, or any similar sign.

Contrary to statements made by those who wish to censor the evidence of design, there are no cases where a court has held that intelligent design theory is a religion or is inappropriate for discussion in a science class. The cases which the censors cite are all cases which deal with “creation science.” An inference that design exists in nature is not “creation science.”

Creation Science was first fully described and defined in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, 529 F.Supp 1255 (E.D. Ark 1982). In that case, the Arkansas district court found that a statute that mandated the teaching of “creation science” was unconstitutional. As defined in the statute, “creation science” included a number of tenets relating to the age of the earth, a world wide flood and similar matters found in the first eleven chapters of Genesis. The Court found that this definition was, in effect, a restatement of those provisions of Genesis and that teaching this material would have the effect of promoting a particular religion or religious view. A similar “creation science” statute was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in the case of Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 107 S.Ct. 2573 (1987). The holding in Edwards was based on the same reason – that the statute had the effect of promoting a particular religious view – the Genesis account found in the Bible.(38) Subsequent cases that have found against teachings relating to origins have all been based on a finding that the position being promoted was one designed to promote the Genesis account.(39) None of these cases have involved a teaching of the evidence of design or criticisms of Darwinian theory. In particular, the Edwards court noted that its decision was not intended to proscribe the teaching of scientific critiques of evolution(40) or other theories about biological origins:

“In a similar way, teaching a variety of scientific theories about the origins of humankind to schoolchildren might be validly done with the clear secular intent of enhancing the effectiveness of science instruction.”(41)

As has been shown above, a design inference says nothing about the validity or invalidity of the Genesis account. It does not promote any particular religious doctrine or viewpoint. As mentioned below a policy that permits the showing of the evidence of design has a number of clear secular purposes. It assures that teachings about origins science are consistent with logic and the scientific method. It implements the requirement for constitutional neutrality in a religious arena. It is protective of the rights of teachers, students and parents that teachers be academically free to provide scientific viewpoints not driven by religion or philosophy on issues relevant to the subject matter of the forum. These secular purposes are designed to avoid indoctrinating students in naturalism and generating the kinds of misinformation that such a dogma spawns. Indeed, a showing of all the relevant evidence regarding origins science is necessary to provide a comprehensive teaching with the scrupulous objectivity that is required in this religiously charged historical science that permits wide latitude for subjective rather than objective explanations. Adherence to such a policy will enhance the overall effectiveness of teachings about origins science.

-18-

If there is any question about whether a design inference is a religion, it should be noted that secular humanism and other broad concepts that generate religious implications have been held to not constitute a “religion” for establishment clause purposes. [Peloza v. Capistrano Unified School District, 37 F3rd 517, 521 (9th cir 1994): holding that secular humanism is not a religion; and Alvarado v. City of San Jose, 94 F. 3rd 1223, 1230 (9th Cir 1996) finding that “New Age” beliefs are not a religion for establishment clause purposes]. Furthermore, the courts have ruled that the establishment clause is not violated simply “because the material to be taught happens to coincide or harmonize with the tenets of some or all religions.”(42) Thus, a design inference does not become a religion simply because it happens to support theistic beliefs.

If implications of a teaching generated a violation of the establishment clause, then Darwinism would not be permissible since it supports the view that life does not result by design and thereby denigrates religion. This denigration was published with prominence in the July 2000 issue of Scientific American. A six page article focuses on the way that Darwinism has changed “Modern Thought” by replacing theistic religion with a Darwinian basis for our morals and ethics.

“First, Darwinism rejects all supernatural phenomena and causations.

*****

“…..Darwin provided a scientific foundation for ethics.

*****

“To borrow Darwin’s phrase, there is grandeur in this view of life. New modes of thinking have been, and are being, evolved. Almost every component in modern man’s belief system is somehow affected by Darwinian principles.”(43)

As indicated below, the only neutral way to deal with these religious implications is to allow teachers to show relevant scientific evidence that relates to both the Naturalistic and Design Hypotheses. If the evidence supporting the Design Hypothesis is censored then Darwinism, protected by the censoring mechanism of Naturalism, is indeed a religion as Michael Ruse has so eloquently stated.(44)

Based on the above, it is my opinion that it is clearly legal to allow a science teacher to show students evidence which supports the design Hypothesis, consistent with the attached Policy Statement for Teaching About Origins.

-19-

4.3        It Is Not Legal to Censor the Evidence which Supports the Design Hypothesis
On the Grounds that a Design Inference is Outside the Domain of Science.

Most of the opposition to the showing of the evidence of design in a science class is based on the argument that a design inference, even though it may not be a religion, is outside the domain of science.

This argument is not based on the ground that design theorists fail to use proper scientific methodology. Nor is it based on traditional and proper definitions of science. Rather the claim is based on a naturalistic definition of science that has been developed to specifically exclude the Design Hypothesis from consideration.

              4.31     Scientific Criticisms of the Naturalistic Hypothesis Are Permissible.

It should be evident that scientific criticisms of Darwinian evolution of the kind described in Icons of Evolution(45) are appropriate for discussion in science classes. In addition, there should be no reason why a teacher should not explain the historical nature of origins science and how it differs from purely empirical sciences. Finally, it would appear critically necessary to explain to students how methodological naturalism has driven origins science to exclude objective consideration of the competing design hypothesis. These disclosures reflect underlying assumptions, the disclosure of which are critical to an accurate, complete and objective understanding of the credibility and trustworthiness of Darwinian explanations. Even the new Kansas Science Education Standards state the need of students to “identify their assumptions, use critical and logical thinking, and consider alternative explanations.”(46)

It is hard to imagine any genuine and valid scientific or secular reason for censoring any teaching of this kind. Indeed, any such censorship would have the effect and the appearance, if not the objective, of promoting a belief in naturalism. As mentioned below, any such censorship would appear to clearly conflict with the Establishment and Speech clauses of the First Amendment.

Since methodological naturalism can not serve as a basis for censoring criticisms, the strategy usually used is to attempt to assign religious motives to the critic. This is a hollow claim that avoids the substance of the criticism and is inconsistent with the recognition by the Supreme Court that the establishment clause is not violated simply “because the material to be taught happens to coincide or harmonize with the tenets of some or all religions.”(47)

Once students are advised that the Design Hypothesis exists, that it is embraced by a number of credentialed and qualified scientists, and that the evidence for the hypothesis has been given no objective consideration due to its censorship by methodological naturalism, students will necessarily be led to ask: Well, what is the evidence for the Design Hypothesis? How can we form a belief as to the Naturalistic Hypothesis if we are not also informed about the evidence that supports the competing hypothesis?

To withhold answers to these questions seems absurd. The Kansas Science Standards place teachers and students in this very dilemma. Those standards have been written to censor (in my opinion, improperly) any discussion of design. The standards further direct teachers to advise students to take questions that are “outside the domain of science” to their “family or other appropriate source.”(48) The drafters of the standards advise that design inferences are not natural explanations and that the evidence which supports the Design Hypothesis is therefore outside the domain of science. The difficulty is that scientists are the only persons qualified to systematically investigate, analyze and properly explain the extent of any evidence of design that occurs in nature. Accordingly, in Kansas the questions of the students will remain unanswered – they will be led down a blind alley to family members and “other appropriate sources” consisting of non-scientists for answers to questions that only scientists can answer. The effect of this practice is merely to indoctrinate students in a belief in a naturalistic world view.

-20-

The point of this discussion is that, assuming necessary disclosures are made about the nature of origins science and the naturalistic limitation on explanation, it would seem impossible for a teacher to teach origins science with the necessary candor and scrupulous objectivity without allowing the teacher to answer the questions about the evidence of design or other wise show the evidence in anticipation of such obvious questions. If the evidence is withheld, the obviously one-sided presentation of the evidence supporting the Darwinian “historical narrative” will not deserve the respect of students and will only serve to undermine the authority of science, the teacher and the public institution that fosters the indoctrination.

This conclusion is also expressed by Larry Laudan, a philosopher of science critical of philosophic limitations on the study of origins science, and in particular the naturalistic definition used by the court in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, 529 F.Supp 1255 (E.D. Ark 1982)]:(49)

“The victory in the Arkansas case was hollow, for it was achieved only at the expense of perpetuating and canonizing a false stereotype of what science is and how it works. If it goes unchallenged by the scientific community, it will raise grave doubts about that community’s intellectual integrity. No one familiar with the issues can really believe that anything important was settled through anachronistic efforts to revive a variety of discredited criteria for distinguishing between the scientific and the non-scientific.” (emphasis added)

4.32   Design Detection, Analysis and Inference fall within Traditional
Definitions of Science.

Science is generally defined as follows:(50)

Science.…3.a……accumulated and accepted knowledge that has been systematized and formulated with reference to the discovery of general truths or the operation of general laws : knowledge classified and made available in work, life, or the search for truth: comprehensive, profound or philosophical knowledge; esp knowledge obtained and tested through the use of the scientific method;”

“Scientific method…”the principles and procedures used in the systematic pursuit of ….. knowledge and involving ….. the recognition and formulation of a problem, the collection of data through observation and if possible experiment, the formulation of hypotheses, and the testing and confirmation of the hypotheses formulated.” (emphasis added)

21-

In the Federal district court case of McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, 529 F.Supp 1255 (E.D. Ark 1982)], Michael Ruse, a distinguished philosopher of science testified to a different definition of science to promote a position that “creation science” was not science. Dr. Ruse’s definition was described by the Court as:

“More precisely, the essential characteristics of science are:

(1) It is guided by natural law;
(2) It has to be explanatory by reference to nature law;

(3) It is testable against the empirical world;
(4) It’s conclusions are tentative, i.e. are not necessarily the final word; and
(5) It is falsifiable. (Ruse and other science witnesses).”

As one might note, the Ruse definition is critically different from the definition cited by Webster’s. Rather than being a body of knowledge developed in a search for general truths using the scientific method, the Ruse definition consists of a list of exclusionary criteria that have the effect of limiting scientific investigation, analysis and explanation to a strictly empirical and falsifiable domain that permits only “natural explanations.” The Ruse limitation has profound effects on the conduct of origins science and has been harshly criticized by highly regarded philosophers of science.(51) Indeed, even the Ernst Mayr description of evolutionary biology seriously conflicts with the Ruse definition since Mayr acknowledges that evolutionary biology is a historical science that can not always be tested against the empirical world and is not falsifiable:(52)

“Many biologists and philosophers deny the existence of universal laws in biology and suggest that all regularities be stated in probabilistic terms, as nearly all so-called biological laws have exceptions. Philosopher of science Karl Popper’s famous test of falsification therefore can not be applied in these cases.”

Recently the Ruse definition of science evolved with the aid of national science organizations(53) into a new species that retains the naturalistic portion of the Ruse definition while eliminating the requirement for falsification. It is contained in new Kansas Science Education Standards that were adopted by the Kansas State Board of Education on February 14, 2001. The new definition provides that:

“Science is the human activity of seeking natural explanations for what we observe in the world around us.”(54)

Prior to February 14, 2001, science had been defined in Kansas as:

“Science is the human activity of seeking logical explanations for what we observe in the world around us.”

-22-

The effect of this change in the definition is to remove logic from origins science and replace it with what amounts to a philosophy of naturalism.(55)

When logic is removed from origins science and replaced with naturalism, Darwinian evolution does indeed provide the foundation for a new religion. This is because its historical narrative is protected from criticism by naturalism so that it achieves a virtual monopoly on the scientific answer to a question that is fundamental to religion. It is interesting that the very philosopher who first suggested this dogmatic definition of science is also one who has recognized that Darwinian evolution has become a religion.”(56)

The limitation on explanation to only natural explanations rather than logical explanations is intended to specifically exclude a design inference from science. This was made clear by the authors of this definition in their testimony before the Kansas State Board of Education on January 9, 2001.(57) In that testimony, the Board was told that a “natural explanation” does not permit a design inference and if a student were to raise a question regarding a design inference the teacher was directed to censor any discussion of the question by telling the student to take the question to the student’s “family and other appropriate sources.”

The naturalistic definition of science adopted by Kansas on February 14, 2001, merely reflects the “unwritten rule” that has pervaded science within the last fifty years. That rule censors scientists who suggest that natural objects may be designed. The existence of the rule was noted by a popular science writer in 1988:

“He [a computer scientists who broke the rule] is generally insensitive to the unwritten rules of scientific conduct, one of which is to scrupulously avoid even the faintest teleological [design] overtones.” (58) (emphasis added)

The rule is also articulated by Robert Wesson as follows:

“The important point is that there can be nothing purposive or teleological in evolution; any notion of inherent purpose would make nature less amendable to objective analysis. For a biologist to call another a teleologist is an insult. Even orthogenesis, is disliked. The sole force for change must be adaptation.”(59)

Further references to the existence of the gag rule may be found in the notes to remarks of the undersigned to the Kansas State Board of Education on July 13, 1999.(60)

The driving force for excluding design does not derive from logical or secular considerations, but rather from the desire to eliminate any scientific basis for a belief in God:

“Eliminating God from science made room for strictly scientific [naturalistic?] explanations of all natural phenomena: it gave rise to positivism; it produced a powerful intellectual and spiritual revolution, the effects of which have lasted to this day.”(61) (bracketed phrase added)

-23-

Eugenie Scott, a primary spokesperson for the Naturalistic Hypothesis explains it this way:

“The National Center for Science Education is concerned with science as a way of knowing. You are confusing the necessity for science to operate in a rational fashion only dealing with natural phenomenon, only explaining natural phenomenon using natural processes, avoiding the supernatural. I mean you simply have to avoid the supernatural in your explanations if you are going to play by the rules of science….. When you practice science you can’t explain what is going on by recourse to the supernatural – that is a very fundamental tenet of modern science. That may have been the case 300 years ago, but in the 20th century science this is absolutely essential.”(62)

The reasons given by Ms. Scott for the unwritten rule are not persuasive. Her arguments ignore the fact that (a) a design inference does not entail a supernatural mind, (b) science had done quite well for thousands of years without a naturalistic limitation on scientific investigation, analysis and inquiry, (c) origins science seeks to explain historically what has happened and not empirically about “what is going on,” (d) the limit as applied to origins science violates logic, the scientific method and the neutrality required by our constitution, and (e) only scientists are qualified to thoroughly and properly investigate, analyze and explain the evidence of design.

Design inferences have been drawn by scientists since the beginning of civilization. Indeed science was driven by teleologists until the recent move of modern science to eliminate design inferences with the “unwritten rule.” As noted above,(63) the foundations of science were laid by men who acknowledged the design inherent in nature. William Harvey discovered the way in which the Blood Circulation system functions using design theory.(64) Indeed the structure of the genetic code was determined by analogy to human designed coding systems.(65) Design inferences are developed through the observation of patterns appearing in nature and the use of the scientific method. The inferences are tested against the competing Darwinian hypothesis. All of the work is done by scientists. It takes biologists, microbiologists, biochemists, chemists, physicists, paleontologists, geologists, astronomers, astrophysicists, information theorists and computer scientists and those working in other scientific endeavors to investigate, observe and analyze the evidence necessary for a design inference. As indicated in Section 2.33, design detection methodology is used by a number of scientific disciplines, including the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Accordingly, design theory has been and continues to be within the domain of science that is focused on a search for general truths via the scientific method.

4.33       There is No Reasonable Secular Purpose for Using a Naturalistic Definition
to Censor the Evidence of Design In Origins Science.

Given the fact that the Design Hypothesis meets the traditional and commonly accepted definitions of science, is there any reasonable secular and non-religious purpose for changing the definition to a naturalistic one so as to censor the investigation, analysis and explanation by scientists of the evidence that supports the Design Hypothesis? If there is no such purpose, then reason and our Constitution require that no such definition be adopted or employed, at least as to origins science.

24-

4.331   Censoring the Evidence is Inconsistent with the Need of Society to Know About the Evidence – Only Scientists Are Qualified to Develop it. Society has a legitimate interest in knowing the extent of the evidence that natural objects are designed. It also has an interest in seeing that the truth about this issue is not skewed so that the only answer permitted is that life is not designed. If science is defined so as to exclude legitimate investigation, inquiry and explanation regarding the issue, society, rather than getting closer to the truth about the matter, will necessarily be misled. As indicated by the Webster’s definition, science is a search for the truth.(66) Obviously, if only a natural explanation is sought, the search for the truth is abandoned. For this reason alone, the naturalistic definition is wholly inappropriate.

Cultural reasons also abound for the elimination of a purely naturalistic definition of science. These are discussed in our January 5, 2001 letter as well as in the attachment to a letter we issued on June 8, 2001 to each of the 304 Kansas School Boards.(67)

4.332   Censoring the Evidence is Inconsistent with Logic and the Scientific Method. The logical problems with permitting only a natural explanation go to the root of the problem. As an example, consider the way an arson investigation would be conducted if only natural explanations were allowed. The purpose of the investigation is to determine the true cause of a fire. Was it the result of only chance and necessity or did it happen to be designed – deliberately started. The arson investigator seeks to analyze a pattern of historical events and arrive at a best logical explanation as to the true cause. Suppose our arson investigator goes to a burned down house and finds empty gas cans in the bushes and a trail of accelerant leading from the bushes to the center of the house where it appears that the fire started. Assume also that the owner was deeply in debt due to a gambling addiction and had increased the insurance on the home a week before the fire. Assume that the fire occurred on a cloudless night free of lightening and thunder storms. If the arson investigator is permitted to give only a natural explanation for the cause of the fire, then all of the evidence of design will be ignored and the best logical explanation will never be achieved.

This example reveals the inherent difficulty with a definition of science that seeks to limit explanation to only causes that can be described in terms of the laws of physics and chemistry and chance. In the case of a fire there are essentially two hypotheses (a) design and (b) chance and necessity – the fire was started intentionally or was caused by some form of accident. In the above example, the problem with the limit on explanation is that it leads the investigator to fail to test one hypothesis against the other. Since it seeks to explain by only one of the two hypotheses it fails to test that hypothesis against the evidence that supports the competing but ignored hypothesis. The effect of this methodology is to violate logic and the scientific method. The scientific method requires that a proposed hypothesis be tested against the competing hypothesis. When that test is not performed and when the evidence supporting it is ignored and censored one will necessarily generate an unreliable and untrustworthy explanation. This results in a failure of logic.

An investigation regarding the cause of life and its diversity is no different than an arson investigation. There are essentially only two hypotheses. If you arbitrarily exclude the Design Hypothesis and allow only the Naturalistic Hypothesis, then you have violated logic and the scientific method. This is not consistent with any secular purpose for a definition of science that seeks only natural explanations.

-25-

4.333   Censoring the Evidence Precludes Any Falsification of Darwinism. Another concept ingrained in science is the desirability of being able to falsify a scientific hypothesis. If the hypothesis can not be falsified or ever proven wrong under any set of circumstances, then it is a hypothesis of dubious value. The Supreme Court has noted the desirability of being able to falsify a scientific hypothesis.(68)

In the case of evolutionary biology and the Naturalistic Hypothesis, Ernst Mayr acknowledges that evolutionary biology is not falsifiable.(69) This is true even without the limit on explanation which reflects the assumption that living systems are not designed. However, with the censorship of design, Darwinian evolution can never be falsified. Because scientists are not allowed to test Darwinian evolution against objective consideration of the evidence that supports the competing Design Hypothesis, Darwinian evolution becomes immune to any attempted falsification. Why should we believe Darwinian evolution so long as it is protected from criticism and testing by a Naturalistic definition of science that excludes the Design Hypothesis?

The need to understand the strength of Darwinian theory requires that it be tested against the competing Design Hypothesis and that objective consideration be given to the evidence that supports the Design hypothesis. No secular purpose is apparent in protecting the Darwinian Hypothesis from falsification.

4.334   Censoring the Evidence Results in Misinformation and Indoctrination. Another compelling reason for including the evidence of design in any discussion regarding origins is that it is inherently misleading to exclude it.(70)

If searching for the truth is abandoned in principle by predetermining the outcome one is bound to misinform the students. The problem is readily apparent in the new Kansas Science Education Standards that permit only natural explanations. Although those standards tell students that science requires identification of any assumption upon which a theory or hypothesis is based, the Standards themselves fail to even require that teachers explain the naturalistic assumption that underpins evolutionary theory. This failure is not due to any oversight. The request that the assumption be stated was ignored when the Standards were adopted on February 14, 2001, without incorporating this suggestion.(71) Teaching without stating or explaining material assumptions not only is misleading, it amounts to nothing more than indoctrination.(72) There is nothing wrong with teaching evidence which supports the Naturalistic Hypothesis, but to censor the evidence which directly contradicts that hypothesis is indoctrination.

Biology textbooks are also notorious in their omission to adequately explain the subjective nature of origins science as a historical science and the way in which it is protected from criticism by the use of methodological naturalism. For example, one 10th grade biology text goes to great length to explain the scientific method, various modes of reasoning and how to conduct experiments. However, there is no discussion of how methodological naturalism is used to limit inquiry, analysis and explanation relating to its competing hypothesis. Nor, is there any discussion of the historical nature of origins science and how that may affect the objectivity of the narrative accounts that are constructed in explaining Darwinian evolution.(73) With regard to the origin of life, rather than discuss the evidence that supports the Design Hypothesis, the text only mentions the religious notion of Divine Creation and describes it as a “belief rather than a scientific theory, because it is accepted on faith.”(74) At the same place in the book, the discredited Miller-Urey experiment(75) is shown as the “cornerstone of the theories of the origin of life.” Although Divine Creation depends to some extent on faith, the Design Hypothesis is based on scientific investigation and observation, logical analysis and reasonable inference after testing the hypothesis against the competing hypothesis. Faith is not involved in that discipline. Of course this is not mentioned. Nor is it mentioned that the Darwinian theory is not tested against the competing Design Hypothesis.

-26-

Perhaps the most misleading statement in the textbook is this one:

“The most widely held view among scientists is that life arose by natural processes.”(76)

The reason it is misleading is that the student is not told that methodological naturalism permits no other “view among [the] scientists.” Indeed, the real status is that scientists don’t have a clue as to how life could arise with only physical and chemical processes.(77) At the same time abundant, but non-disclosed, evidence exists that the first cell was an irreducibly complex information processing system that is best explained by the Design Hypothesis. What secular purpose is served by omitting to state this critical, but highly relevant information?

However, even stating the Naturalistic assumption will not be effective to avoid misinformation and indoctrination if the only evidence being presented promotes the protected hypothesis. We can not expect our children to understand or even remember the assumption. The only antidote is to permit teachers to teach objectively and without bias all of the relevant scientific evidence which bears on the issue of biological origins.

4.335   A Naturalistic Limitation on Origins Science Has Been Criticized By Scientists and Philosophers of Science. The inherent problems with a naturalistic limitation on explanations for the origin of life and its diversity is consistent with the views of philosophers of science that have criticized definitions of science that focus on rigid demarcation criteria.(78)

Although the unwritten rule of modern science to censor design inferences has been extremely effective, many scientists are rebelling both publicly and privately. An IDnet January 5, 2001 letter to the Kansas State Board of Education was focused primarily on eliminating the Naturalistic definition from the science education standards for the reasons mentioned in this letter. During a two week period prior to the Board’s action on February 14, 2001, we sought endorsements from scientists and educators for this viewpoint.(79) The results of that very limited solicitation are explained in our letter of February 8, 2001. More than 58 persons holding doctoral degrees agreed that a logical rather than a naturalistic definition be used. This includes fifteen holding doctoral degrees in the biological sciences (biology, biochemistry, molecular biology, neurobiology, microbiology, plant pathology and zoology), eleven holding doctoral degrees in chemistry or physics and eight holding doctoral degrees in medicine. The endorsers included 34 college professors and nine research scientists.

4.336   A Naturalistic Definition is Inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s Definition of Science. Finally, the Naturalistic definition of science is inherently in conflict with the recent views of the Supreme Court on how science should be defined [Daubert v. Merrill Dow Corporation, Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993) and Kumho Tire Co., Ltd., Et al. V. Carmichael Et al. 119 S.Ct. 1167 (1999)]. In these cases the Supreme Court has ruled that the definition of science used with respect to any given scientific discipline should be controlled by the question being asked and not by rigid demarcation criteria. In particular the Daubert and Kumho cases stand for the following points regarding the definition of science.

-27-

  1. The definition of science must be “flexible” to fit the circumstances of each case.(80)
  2. The definition used should focus on the “evidentiary relevance and reliability – of the principles that underlie a proposed submission [explanation].”(81)
  3. In determining evidentiary reliability the focus should be “on whether the reasoning or methodology underlying the testimony [explanation] is scientifically valid, and of whether that reasoning or methodology properly can be applied to the facts in issue.”(82)
  4. “The focus, of course, must be solely on principles and methodology, not on the conclusions that they generate.”(83)

A naturalistic definition of science violates all four of these criteria.

As to point 1: If the question is the cause of life and its diversity, than a naturalistic definition that a priori excludes one of the only two possible answers is not one that is “flexible” to fit the circumstances of this inquiry.

As to point 2: A naturalistic definition rather than focusing on evidentiary reliability focuses on the explanation to be given.

As to point 3: A naturalistic definition has a focus on one explanation rather than on whether the reasoning and methodology that gets to a Darwinian explanation is scientifically valid. Indeed, the methodology used by a naturalistic definition is not valid because it ignores and otherwise censors the evidence which supports the competing hypothesis.

As to point 4: A naturalistic definition that seeks only a “natural explanation” focuses on the conclusion rather than on the principles of logic and method that form the basis for the conclusion.

For all of the foregoing reasons, a logical and reasonable inference of design drawn by qualified scientists from scientifically conducted observations of patterns that exist in nature and properly tested against the competing hypothesis is scientific within any proper definition or “domain” of science that studies the origin of life and the diversity of life.

There also appears to be no reasonable secular purpose in applying a naturalistic limitation to censor a teacher from discussing the evidence of design to enhance the effectiveness of teachings about origins science.

28-

4.4 It is Not Legal to Censor the Evidence

4.41   Censoring the Design Hypothesis to Promote the Naturalistic Hypothesis Conflicts
With the Establishment Clause Because (1) it Violates the requirement that a
Government Practice Remain Neutral When It Touches Upon Religion;
(2) The Censorship Has No Reasonable Secular Purpose and (3) Because it
Results in an Excessive Entanglement with Religion.

As indicated above, use of a definition of science that permits only a naturalistic definition of science has the effect of promoting an ideology, a dogma, a philosophy of Naturalism. It teaches that a design inference is not valid and that all natural objects reflect no actual design or purpose.

Perhaps one of the better examples of where this teaching leads us is reflected in benchmark 3 of Standard 5 for fourth graders contained in the new Kansas Science Education Standards:(84)

“By The End Of FOURTH GRADE

*****

“STANDARD 5: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

*****

“Benchmark 3: All students will distinguish between natural and human-made objects.

“Some objects occur(85) in nature; others have been designed and made by people to solve human problems and enhance the quality of life.” (notes and emphasis added)

Under this teaching a fourth grader is taught to learn that the distinguishing difference between natural objects and human-made objects is that natural objects just “occur” or just “happen” and are not designed. The teaching seeks to show that only nonnatural or human made objects are “designed” and made for some purpose. Since humans are “natural objects” it is safe to assume that the child will come to conclude that humans just occurred or just happened without design and without inherent purpose. Since the child is a human, it is safe to assume that the child may also conclude that he or she has not been designed. Since purpose only derives from design, the fourth grader will be led to conclude that he or she is in the nature of an accident without inherent purpose.(86) Even without this particular benchmark to focus our attention, a teaching that permits only natural explanations of what we observe in the world around us will lead to a similar conclusion. When we observe ourselves and seek an explanation for our own existence we are led only to a natural explanation that excludes design and purpose.(87)

The assertion that we are not designed is not a scientific fact or even a theory. It is nothing more that a philosophic limit on scientific investigation, analysis and explanation. It is a world view that happens to be seriously inconsistent with the available evidence and all theistic religions.

This kind of teaching seeks, at least by effect, to indoctrinate children at a very impressionable age. It is not calculated to enhance the effectiveness of teachings about origins science. It is not calculated to teach evidence gathered per the scientific method and rigorously
tested against the competing hypothesis. It is not calculated to fairly and adequately inform about this most important issue.

-29-

Although this benchmark is not a standard that applies to schools outside of Kansas, it enunciates a teaching that is the logical consequence of a definition of science that permits only natural explanations.

As previously mentioned, although a design inference does not entail a God, it clearly supports theistic world views. Also, although Darwinian evolution does not entail no God, it clearly supports atheistic world views. This is unequivocally articulated by Ernst Mayr’s discussion of the matter as mentioned above.(88)

Neither of these views standing alone results in a religion or constitutionally prohibited denigration of religion. However, when one of the views is censored, the censorship promotes the non-censored view and thereby denigrates the competing viewpoint. I believe this results in a violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the Constitution when government becomes the censor [Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U.S. 96 (1968)].

The Establishment Clause provides that the federal government will impose no law or regulation “respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” The court has also held that by virtue of the 14th Amendment, the First Amendment also applies to any state or local government or subdivision thereof. This has been construed by the Supreme Court to mean that the “principal or primary effect” of a governmental action must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion.(89) Similarly, the Supreme Court has held that a state institution that encourages open discourse on a subject may not censor single or multiple viewpoints without violating the Free Speech clause of the constitution.(90)

The neutrality required by the Constitution is articulated by Justice O’Connor in her concurring opinion in the Rosenberg v. Rector, et. al, at page 846 (2525 S.Ct.) as follows:

“‘We have time and again held that the government generally may not treat people differently based on the God or gods they worship, or do not worship.’ [Citations omitted]. This insistence on government neutrality toward religion explains why we have held that schools may not discriminate against religious groups by denying them equal access to facilities that the schools make available to all. [citations omitted]. Withholding access would leave an impermissible perception that religious activities are disfavored. ‘The message is one of neutrality rather than endorsement; if a State refused to let religious groups use facilities open to others, then it would demonstrate not neutrality but hostility toward religion.‘ [citations omitted]. ‘The Religion Clauses prohibit the government from favoring religion, but they provide no warrant for discriminating against religion.’ [citations omitted]. Neutrality, in both form and effect, is one hallmark of the Establishment Clause.” (emphasis added)

-30-

A Supreme Court case which applies this view of the constitution to hold unconstitutional the censorship of evidence in a school context to promote an ideology is the case of Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U.S. 96, 107-09 (1968).

In that Case, Ms. Epperson was a biology science teacher that wished to teach the evidence in support of Darwinian evolution. A state statute prohibited a Darwinian explanation of the cause of the diversity of life. The statute was similar in effect to the new Kansas Science Education Standards which prohibit the teaching of design explanations. The court found the statute to be unconstitutional because a scientific teaching was censored to promote religion:

“In the present case, there can be no doubt that Arkansas has sought to prevent its teachers from discussing the theory of evolution because it is contrary to the belief of some that the Book of Genesis must be the exclusive source of doctrine as to the origin of man.”

However, in reaching this holding the court noted that just as a state can not censor a scientific teaching to promote a religious viewpoint, neither can a state censor a scientific teaching to promote a doctrine, dogma or orthodoxy. Naturalism is not only a doctrine, dogma and orthodoxy, it also happens to be one that is antagonistic to theistic religions. In the latter respect, the Epperson Court made it clear that government can not act in a hostile manner toward religion. Government “must be neutral in matters of religious theory, doctrine, and practice.”

These views were expressed by the Court as follows at page 103-106:

“Government in our democracy, state and nation, must be neutral in matters of religious theory, doctrine, and practice. It may not be hostile to any religion or to the advocacy of no-religion; and it may not aid, or foster or promote one religion or religious theory against another or even against the militant opposite. The First Amendment mandates government neutrality between religion and religion, and between religion and nonreligion.

“As early as 1872, this Court said: ‘The law knows no heresy and is committed to the support of no dogma, the establishment of no sect.'”

******

“Judicial interposition in the operation of the public school system of the Nation raises problems requiring care and restraint. Our courts, however, have not failed to apply the First Amendment’s mandate in our educational system where essential to safeguard the fundamental values of freedom of speech and inquiry and of belief…..'[t]he vigilant protection of constitutional freedoms is nowhere more vital than in the community of American schools,’ Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U.S. 479, 487 (1960). As this Court said in Keishian v. Board of Regents, the First Amendment ‘does not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom.‘ 385 U.S. 589, 603 (1967).”

*****

“…….the State may not adopt programs or practices in its public schools or colleges which ‘aid or oppose’ any religion. Id. at 225. This prohibition is absolute. It forbids alike the preference of a religious doctrine or the prohibition of theory which is deemed antagonistic to a particular dogma.” (emphasis added)

-31-

Thus, Epperson holds that a state may not forbid the teaching of a theory simply because it is “antagonistic to a dogma.” In this case the theory is the design theory and the dogma is Naturalism. Accordingly, design theory may not be suppressed simply because it is antagonistic to the Naturalistic Hypothesis.

Epperson, also holds that the state may not adopt a practice that “oppose”s or is “hostile to” religion. The state “must be neutral in matters of religious theory, doctrine and practice.” As a consequence, the state may not adopt the practice of teaching only a Naturalistic account of origins since this will necessarily be hostile rather than neutral to the theory, doctrine and practices of all of the major theistic religions.

Consistent with this discussion the Supreme Court in the case of Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971) adopted three criteria for determining whether a governmental practice violates the establishment clause. If any of the criteria are violated, the establishment clause is violated. The test is described in Alvarado v. City of San Jose, 94 F.3rd 1223 (9th Cir 1996) as follows:

“Establishment Clause principles have been ‘refine[d]’ into the three-part ‘Lemon’ test named for the Court’s decision in Lemon v. Kurtzman, [citation omitted]. [County of ]Allegheny [v. American Civil Liberties Union, 492 U.S.573 (1989)] 492 U.S. at 592, 109 S.Ct. at 3100. ‘Under the Lemon analysis, a statute or practice which touches upon religion must have a secular purpose; it must neither advance nor inhibit religion in its principal or primary effect; and it must not foster an excessive entanglement with religion.” (emphasis added)

The use of a Naturalistic definition of science to censor the evidence of design, which provides the foundation for all theistic religions, violates each of the three prongs of the Lemon Test.

As indicated above there is no reasonable secular purpose for censoring the evidence of design in origins science. Although it might be reasonable in strictly empirical sciences such as physics and chemistry as explained by Ernst Mayr, there is no reasonable secular rational for using it in origins science, a historical science that is unavoidably subjective.

The principal or primary effect of the Censorship clearly inhibits religion. Children are led to believe in school by “qualified scientists” that design does not play a role in their existence. When they attend churches, synagogues, or mosques, clergy who are not scientists teach belief systems that are predicated on an entirely conflicting view. Why should the children believe the clergy regarding an issue of scientific fact? As William Provine once said:

-32-

“‘You have to check your brains at the church-house door if you take modern evolutionary biology seriously.'”(91)

The removal of God as a cause of life is not only the principal effect of the censorship, it is the acknowledged intended effect. As explained by Eugenie Scott and Ernst Mayr the focus is to remove God from science.(92) Accordingly, the intent to affect religion is clear.

Censorship also fosters an excessive entanglement with religion. The debates over whether there is a conflict between science and religion are legion. There is a widespread and justifiable perception that public school curricula is anti-religious. This results in government entanglement with religion that is so excessive that parents are fleeing public schools in favor of private institutions or home schooling. The one sided teaching of Darwinism has been a significant contribution to this perception. The only way to eliminate the entanglement is to allow the two Hypotheses to compete fairly and openly in all government sponsored programs. This is the only way for government to be neutral regarding this issue.

For all of the above reasons I believe that a direction to a teacher to censor the evidence of design in connection with teachings about origins so as to permit only natural explanations of origins would constitute a violation of the Establishment Clause.

4.42 Censorship Also Violates the Speech Clause of the First Amendment

Censoring the evidence also violates the academic freedom of teachers and their constitutional right to express a legitimate viewpoint on an issue that is properly the subject of classroom discussion. When a school decides to discuss origins, it must accommodate a variety of scientific viewpoints. The opinion of the Supreme Court in Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of University of Virginia, 115 S.Ct. 2510, 2516-18 (1995) indicates that it would be inconsistent with the Speech clause of the First Amendment to censor a teacher’s showing of the scientific evidence that supports a design inference in a science class focused on the teaching of origins science.

“The government must abstain from regulating speech when the specific motivating ideology or the opinion or perspective of the speaker is the rational for the restriction.

******

“Once it has opened a limited forum, however, the State must respect the lawful boundaries it has itself set. The state may not exclude speech where its distinction is not “reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum.” (emphasis added)

******

“If the topic of debate is, for example, racism, then exclusion of several views on that problem is just as offensive to the First Amendment as exclusion of only one. It is as objectionable to exclude both a theistic and atheistic perspective on the debate as it is to exclude one, the other, or yet another political economic or social viewpoint.” [Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of University of Virginia, 115 S.Ct. 2510, 2516-18 (1995)]

-33-

In light of the previously stated logical, scientific and constitutional difficulties with the censorship of the Design Hypothesis, there appears no reasonable justification to restrict the teaching of origins science to only those viewpoints that promote a Naturalistic Hypothesis.

The Court has also made it clear that viewpoint discrimination is not justified due to a misplaced fear over incurring an establishment clause violation. That was the case in both Rosenberger v. Rector [Refusing to fund the publication of a religious publication when funding was provided for nonreligious publications] and Lamb’s Chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School District, 508 U.S. 384, 394 (1993) [Refusing access to a religious group to show a film series addressing various child-rearing questions from a “Christian perspective.”] Applied to the Design Hypothesis, viewpoint discrimination would not be justified simply because a school feared that it might lead to a violation of the establishment clause by a poorly supervised teacher.

For the foregoing reasons, I believe that any censorship of discussions about the evidence of design under the circumstances contemplated above, is inconsistent with the Establishment and Speech clauses of the First Amendment. Accordingly, I would allow the teacher to go into the class room with the evidence in support of both the Naturalistic and Design Hypotheses. To direct the teacher to hide the evidence of either would reflect improper governmental bias rather than governmental neutrality in a constitutionally protected area.

5. Suggestions for Implementing Science Education Curriculum

Adopt a Constitutionally Neutral Policy Statement for the Teaching of Origins Science. The essential teaching of Epperson, Rosenberg and Lambs Chapel is for government to adopt a neutral policy regarding the teaching of origins. This requires that schools allow teachers to show scientific evidence which is relevant to both the Naturalistic and Design Hypotheses so long as the evidence is being shown and discussed objectively, consistent with the scientific method and for the purpose of enhancing the effectiveness of science education. Attached to this letter is a one page policy statement which could be used by a School District.

Develop Curriculum for Showing the Evidence relating to the Design Hypotheses. Although I am not aware of any accepted curriculum for use in discussing the evidence of design, efforts are being made to develop constitutionally neutral curriculum which would be consistent with the Policy Statement. I expect curriculum may be available within the near future. I will provide copies as soon as it becomes available.

I encourage school districts, school teachers and school administrators who have a desire to develop curriculum, to do so. I believe IDnet can put them in touch with scientists and educators who could provide assistance.

Seek Advice from Objective Experts and Advisors. Most scientists in the field of biology have sat under the tutelage of the unwritten rule and believe that they can seek only natural explanations for what may be observed in the natural world. Accordingly, obtaining advice only from naturalists about the development of constitutionally neutral curriculum may not yield satisfactory results. This is due to the disfavor that they will likely receive if they “break the rule.” According to Robert Wesson, they will be insulted [“for a biologist to call another a teleologist is an insult”]. For this reason, I strongly suggest that school authorities develop a group of design theorists, naturalists and other neutral or objective scientists who are committed to a policy of neutrality to work together to achieve a satisfactory result for students.

-34-

Very truly yours,

s/ John H. Calvert

John H. Calvert, Esq

I have reviewed and endorse the scientific and other non-legal matters contained in the foregoing opinion. I express no opinion as to any of the legal matters contained in the opinion.

s/William S. Harris

William S. Harris, PhD
March 21, 2001

-35-

Appendix A

Policy Statement for Teaching About Origins

Any teaching about origins has religious and philosophical implications. This is particularly true with respect to teachings about the cause of life and its diversity. A naturalistic teaching that life and its diversity results only from mechanisms of chance and necessity, such as Darwinian evolution guided by random mutation and natural selection, implies that no intelligent agent or god has intervened in the process. Accordingly, the implications of that teaching are consistent with atheism and inconsistent with theistic religions founded on the belief that a God does intervene in the material world. A teaching that life and its diversity may result from design implies the intervention of an intelligent agent. Accordingly, the implications of that teaching are consistent with theism.

Good science education about origins issues should not censor the teaching of evidence of any of the possible causes of life and its diversity so long as the evidence is reliable, is relevant to and logically supportive of the issue, and being presented to enhance the effectiveness of science education rather than to advocate a particular religious or philosophical belief. In particular, scientific teachings about the cause of life and its diversity should not be based on a philosophy of naturalism nor should they be based on any religious text or belief. Naturalism is “the doctrine that cause-and-effect laws (as of physics and chemistry) are adequate to account for all phenomena and that teleological [design] conceptions of nature are invalid” (Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged, 1993).

If a teacher is censored from discussing evidence of design so that the teacher may only teach a theory based on mechanisms of chance and necessity, then the school may be causing the state to promote atheistic beliefs in a way that has the effect of denigrating theistic beliefs. If a teacher is censored from discussing evidence of Darwinian evolution based on natural selection and random mutation so that the teacher may only teach a theory based on design, then the school may be causing the state to promote theistic beliefs in a way that has the effect of denigrating atheistic beliefs and religions which are not theistic.

Teachers should also not be censored from teaching evidence that tends to criticize any theory of origins for the same reasons. Censorship of evidence critical of any theory of origins will tend to promote the protected theory and its atheistic or theistic implications. Censorship of the evidence will also undercut the credibility of the protected theory and will be inconsistent with the fundamental principle of science that all theories should be held open to testing and criticism.

Any conclusions expressed by a teacher regarding the weight of the evidence supporting any particular theory should be formed objectively and tentatively, based on the strength of the evidence and not on any religious or philosophical view or belief. The tentativeness of any such conclusion is important since ultimate answers to the issue of the origin of life are currently unknowable based on available technology.

Teachers should also be encouraged to explain to science students an objective history of the philosophy of science and how that philosophy changed with the advent of Darwinism to a philosophy of naturalism. Science teachers should carefully explain that naturalism is merely a belief or philosophy and that explanations of origins may be affected by this belief or philosophy.


                                                                                                                                   Appendix B

NOTES

  1. Teleology is the study of the evidences of design or purpose in nature,” [Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (1999)].
  2. Many contend that science does not practice philosophical naturalism, but rather practices only methodological naturalism. In practice the two have the same effect in the area of origins science and therefore I do not believe any theoretical distinction between the two is relevant to my opinion.
  3. Martin Rees, “Just Six Number – The Deep Forces that Shape the Universe,” 148-151 (Basic Books, 1999); and Paul Davies, “God and the New Physics,” 189 (Touchstone, 1983): “The seemingly miraculous concurrence of numerical values that nature has assigned to her fundamental constants must remain the most compelling evidence for an element of cosmic design.”
  4. Paul Davies, “God and the New Physics”, 217 (Touchstone, 1983)
  5. Noam Lahav, “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” at 303 (Oxford University Press, 1999).
  6. Ibid at 144.
  7. For example, “Biology: The Dynamics of Life” (Glenco/McGraw-Hill 1998) at page 20 states: “The paws of cats, the feet of frogs, and the hands of people, although appearing different on the outside, contain similar sets of bones. This suggests that these animals all share a common ancestry.” However, the evidence is also consistent with a common design that has simply been modified to fit similar but different purposes.
  8. See Section 3.2.
  9. The SETI program is conducted by a group of scientists who are searching for extraterrestrial intelligence. The SETI home page on the Internet is: http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/ Additional information about its design detection methodology may be found at http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/about_seti/about_seti_at_home_4.html.
  10. William A. Dembski, “The Design Inference,” p.36-66 (Cambridge University Press, 1998).
  11. Alton Biggs ,Chris Kapica and Linda Lundgren, “Biology – The Dynamics of Life,” p. 410-414 (Glenco/McGraw-Hill (1998); Jonathan Wells, “Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong,” 9-28 (Regnery Publishing, Inc. 2000).
  12. Stephen C. Meyer, “Word Games, DNA, Design & Intelligence,” p. 48 (Touchstone, July/August 1999).
  13. Nancy R. Pearcey and Charles B. Thaxton, “The Soul of Science”, p. 238 (Crossway Books, Wheaton Ill, 1994); Dean L. Overman, “The Case Against Accident and Self Organization,” p. 87 (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997).
  14. Consider the DNA sequence for just one gene that codes for a single protein containing 100 amino acids. The probability of the random formation of this sequence has been calculated to be around 4.9 x 10 – 191. This is a mathematical impossibility [Walter L. Bradley and Charles B Thaxton, “Information and the Origin of Life” in the “Creation Hypothesis,” p.190, ed. J.P. Moreland (Downers Grove, Il.; InterVarsity Press, 1994)]. A number of similar probability calculations by a number of scientists have been collected by Dean L. Overman in “A Case Against Accident and Self Organization” at 58 – 65 (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 1997).
  15. See notes 26 and related text and Hans D. Pflug, “Earliest organic evolution. Essay to the memory of Bartholomew Nagy.” [Precambrian Research, Vol. 106, (1-2), pp. 79-91 (2001)]. “On the basis of such studies, the interaction of microorganisms with the formation of minerals can be traced back to early Archean times, 3800 million years ago. There is no indication supporting the assumption that some kind of prebiotic evolution took place in the recorded history of the Earth. The origin of life is open to alternative explanations, including extraterrestrial phenomena.”
  16. Michael J. Behe, “Darwin’s Black Box – The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution,” p. 69-73 (The Free Press, 1996).
  17. The methodology is explained at http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/about_seti/about_seti_at_home_4.html.
  18. John Maynard Smith, “The Concept of Information in Biology” [67 Philosophy of Science 177-194, at 183-184 (June 2000)].
  19. John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, “The Anthropic Cosmological Principle” at p. 29-82 (Oxford University Press, 1986), where the authors chronicle the use of design theory until the advent of Darwinism.
  20. Richard Dawkins, “The Blind Watchmaker,” at 1 (W.W. Norton & Company, 1996).
  21. Tom Abate, “Human Genome Map Has Scientists Talking About the Divine. Surprisingly Low Number of Genes Raises Big Questions,” [San Francisco Chroniclel (February 19, 2001)].
  22. Noam Lahav, “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” at 209-211 (Oxford University Press, 1999): “The first speculation about the origin of the genetic code was suggested by Gamow (1954). In spite of a continuous effort by hundreds of scientists since then, the problem of the origin of the genetic code has not been solved as yet. In retrospect this is expected, in view of the complexity of the protein synthesis machine. Given such a complex system, containing more than a hundred components (Lacano, 1994), it is not surprising that Moras (1992) noted with much pessimism that “the absence of direct link between the anticodon loop and the site of aminoacylation suggests that the search for a simple stereochemical correlation between the three letter genetic code and the amino acid or the synthetase (associated with the idea of a second genetic code) is hopeless.”

*****

“Based on statistical analysis of the sensitivity of the different properties of amino acids to point mutations in the DNA, several authors have suggested that the genetic code did not originate through a frozen accident.”

  1. Dean Overman, “The Case Against Accident and Self Organization,” p. 101 (Rowman & Littlefield 1997): “Without evidence for a method of generating sufficient information content in the limited time available, self-organization theories for the formation of life from inert matter are not plausible at the present time.”
  2. See note 18 and the related text.
  3. See http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/Jody’s%20Art.htm for a discussion of the machine living system analogy.
  4. Noam Lahav, “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” at 158 (Oxford University Press, 1999) and note 15.
  5. Jonathan Wells, Ph.D., “Icons of Evolution – Science or Myth” 37-42 (Regnery Publishing, Inc. 2000).
  6. Ibid.
  7. Teaching the Origins Controversy: Science or Religion or Speech, 2000 Utah Law Review 39, 49-56 (February 9, 2001).
  8. Ibid at 59-66.
  9. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 80, (July 2000, Scientific American). Dr. Mayr is described in the biographical sketch that accompanies the article at page 83 as “one of the towering figures in the history of evolutionary biology.”
  10. See the end of Section 4.31 and the quotation of Larry Laudan.
  11. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 82-83, (July 2000, Scientific American).
  12. Ibid at 81. Dr. Mayr’s concession that one “is certainly free to believe in God if he wants to” suggests disdain for one who would hold two inherently contradictory views of nature.
  13. The verb “design” means: “3. to intend for a definite purpose.” [The Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary.(1999)] A design is merely a pattern of events arranged by intent.
  14. Biology textbooks do not generally contain any evidence against Darwinism because “modern science” has effectively censored any discussion of the evidence of design. The mechanism used is called Methodological Naturalism. If the evidence of design is censored by the Principal or the School Board, it will have the effect of indoctrinating students in a naturalistic world view. For a discussion of how Naturalism is being incorporated into Kansas Science Standards see the letters of Intelligent Design network, inc. dated January 5, 2001 and February 8, 2001, at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/6thdraftrevisions.htm and http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/Feb8letterKSBE.htm.
  15. A salt crystal exhibits a pattern that may be ultimately caused by a mind. However, the application of design detection methodology would not be able to rule out chance and natural law as the direct cause of the pattern. This would defeat a design inference as to the direct cause of that pattern.
  16. “Here, it is clear that religious belief is the Balanced Treatment Act’s ‘reason for existence.’ The tenets of creation-science parallel the Genesis story of creation,4 and this is a religious belief.” 107 S.Ct. 2588.
  17. Tangipahoa Parish Board of Education, et. al. v. Freiler, 185 F3rd 337, 346 (5th Cir 1999), cert. den. 120 S.Ct. 2706 (2000), (prohibiting a disclaimer which had “the primary effect of protecting and maintaining a particular religious viewpoint, namely belief in the Biblical version of creation.”); and Webster v. New Lennox School District # 122, 917 F2nd 1004, 1006 and 1008 (7th Cir 1990); (prohibiting discussions of religious issues and “creation science” teachings to rebut textbook statements that the earth is over four billion years old).
  18. Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 107 S.Ct. 2573, 2582 (1987); “We do not imply that a legislature could never require that scientific critiques of prevailing scientific theories be taught.”
  19. Ibid. at 2583.
  20. Ibid. at 2588; Alvarado v. City of San Jose, at 1232 and Fleischfresser v. Directors of School District 200, 15 F3rd 680, 689 (7th Cir 1994).
  21. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 81-83, (July 2000, Scientific American).
  22. See Section 3.2 and the comments of Dr. Ruse.
  23. Jonathan Wells, “Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong,” (Regnery Publishing, Inc. 2000).
  24. Kansas Science Education Standards,” p 2, (February 14, 2001). They are posted at: http://www.ksbe.state.ks.us/welcome.html
  25. Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 107 S.Ct. 2573, 2588 (1987).
  26. Kansas Science Education Standards,” note 46 at 5.
  27. Larry Laudan, “Science at the Bar: Causes for Concern,” in Michael Ruse, Editor for “But is it Science” at 351, 355 (Prometheus Books 1996).
  28. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged (1993).
  29. See note 49 and related text. Larry Laudan, “Science at the Bar – Causes for Concern,” in Michael Ruse, ed., “But is It Science? (Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1988), 351-355; Philip Quinn, “The Philosopher of Science as Expert Witness,” in “But is It Science” at 367-385; David K. DeWolf, Stephen C. Meyer and Mark E. DeForest, Teaching the Origins Controversy: Science, Or Religion Or Speech,”  2000 Utah Law Rev. 39, 68-75 (Vol. 2000).Home
  30. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 80 -82, (July 2000, Scientific American). See also Section 3.2.
  31. American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Research Council and the National Science Teachers Association who held copyrights with respect to much of the material contained in Science Education Standards recently adopted by the Kansas State Board of Education. See Page 4 of the Kansas Science Education Standards, Adopted February 14, 2001. The copyright privilege was withheld in 1999 after the Kansas State Board adopted a definition of science that was based on logic rather than Naturalism. The permission was subsequently granted when the definition of science was revised from the “activity of seeking LOGICAL explanations” to the “activity of seeking NATURAL explanations.”
  32. Ibid at 5.
  33. The censorship of the evidence of design amounts to an indoctrination in naturalism, particularly where the naturalistic assumption is not disclosed. This is explained in the IDnet letters of John H. Calvert, William S. Harris and Jody F. Sjogren, to the Kansas State Board of Education, dated January 5, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/6thdraftrevisions.htm and February 8, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/feb8letterksbe.htm. See page 2 for the definition of naturalism.
  34. See Section 3.2 and 3.3 and the quotation of Dr .Ruse in “How Evolution Became a Religion,” http://www.nationalpost.com, (May 13, 2000).
  35. John H. Calvert, William S. Harris and Jody F. Sjogren, Letter to the Kansas State Board of Education, dated February 8, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/feb8letterksbe.htm.
  36. Robert Wright, “Three Scientists and Their Gods,” 70-71 (1988)]. See note 1.
  37. Robert Wesson, “Beyond Natural Selection,” 10 (1991). “Orthogenesis….b. a theory that the evolution of a species in a continuous, nonbranching manner is due to a predetermined series of alterations intrinsic to the species and not subject to natural selection.” [Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (1999)].
  38. Remarks of John Calvert to the Kansas State Board of Education on July 13, 1999; http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/7139rem.htm.
  39. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 81, (July 2000, Scientific American). All of the reasons mentioned for eliminating God are philosophical or religiously based.
  40. Dr. Eugenie Scott, Executive Director of the National Center for Science, in a debate with Phillip Johnson on Wisconsin Public Radio in 1992.
  41. See “Apparent Design” under Section 2.34.
  42. John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, “The Anthropic Cosmological Principle” at p. 52-53 [Oxford University Press, 1986].
  43. John Maynard Smith, “The Concept of Information in Biology” [67 Philosophy of Science 177-194, at 183-184 (June 2000)].
  44. “‘Science and lies cannot coexist,” said [Bruce] Alberts, [current president of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences] in May 2000, quoting Israeli statesman Shimon Peres, “‘you don’t have a scientific lie, and you cannot lie scientifically. Science is basically the search for truth.” [Jonathan Wells,“Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong,” at 1 (Regnery Publishing, Inc. 2000).
  45. John H. Calvert, William S. Harris and Jody F. Sjogren, IDnet letter to the “Board of Education of Each of the Unified School Districts of the State of Kansas,” dated June 8, 2001, at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/June%8%letter%to%Boards.htm.
  46. Daubert v. Merrill Dow Corporation, Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 590 (1993); “Ordinarily, a key question to be answered in determining whether a theory or technique is scientific knowledge that will assist the trier of fact will be whether it can be (and has been) tested. ‘Scientific methodology today is based on generating hypotheses and testing them to see if they can be falsified; indeed, this methodology is what distinguishes science from other fields of human inquiry.'”
  47. See the quotation of Dr. Ernst Mayr in Section 4.32 and the related note 52.
  48. As mentioned in Section 2.34 under “Apparent Design,” biologists recognize that living systems appear to be designed for a purpose. As previously discussed, an enormous amount of other empirical evidence supports the claim that the apparent design is not merely an illusion, but represents actual design. To date science has not proven that this apparent design does not reflect actual design. The omission to state this fact in connection with teachings that systems are the product of only chance and necessity is a failure to state a material fact necessary to make the teachings not misleading. This amounts to misinformation and indoctrination.
  49. John H. Calvert, William S. Harris and Jody F. Sjogren, IDnet Letters to the Kansas State Board of Education, dated January 5, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesign network.org/6thdraftrevisions.htm and February 8, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/feb8letterksbe.htm.
  50. “Indoctrinate….1. to instruct in a doctrine, principle, ideology, etc., esp. to imbue with a specific partisan or biased belief or point of view.
  51. Biology: The Dynamics of Life” (Glenco/McGraw-Hill 1998) at 20-35.
  52. Ibid at 413.
  53. Jonathan Wells,“Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong,” 9-28 (Regnery Publishing, Inc. 2000).
  54. Biology: The Dynamics of Life” (Glenco/McGraw-Hill 1998) at 413.
  55. See Noam Lahav, “Biogenesis – Theories of Life’s Origins,” at 303 (Oxford University Press, 1999) where he describes the state of origin of life by natural explanation as seemingly “hopeless.”
  56. See Section 4.31 and the quotation of Larry Laudan at the end of that Section.
  57. “The 104 endorsements included endorsements issued by 58 persons holding one or more doctoral degrees, 14 holding terminal master’s degrees and 27 holding terminal bachelor’s degrees. Fifteen of the doctoral degrees were granted in the fields of biological sciences (biology, biochemistry, molecular biology, neurobiology, microbiology, plant pathology and zoology), eight in medicine, eight in law, six in chemistry, five in physics, 4 in philosophy, two in mathematics, two in education, including science education, two in psychology, one each in astronomy, oceanography, history of science and engineering, and two in other fields. The 14 masters and 27 bachelor terminal degrees were granted in a wide range of fields, including four in geology and earth sciences.

“The endorsers are employed or retired from employment as college professors (34), research scientists (9), attorneys (6), physicians and health care professionals (8), K-12 school teachers (9), business or technical managers or specialists (24), members of school boards (3), graduate students (6), pastors and religious ministers (3) and other activities (2). Most of the responses come from throughout the United States. A few have come from Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany, indicating the global perspective of this issue.” [John H. Calvert, William S. Harris and Jody F. Sjogren, Letters to the Kansas State Board of Education, dated January 5, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesign network.org/6thdraftrevisions.htm and February 8, 2001 at http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/feb8letterksbe.htm.]

  1. Daubert v. Merrill Dow Corporation, Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 592 (1993)
  2. Ibid. at 590.
  3. Ibid.
  4. Ibid.
  5. Kansas Science Education Standards,” p 28, (February 14, 2001). They are posted at: http://www.ksbe.state.ks.us/welcome.html
  6. “Occur….1. to happen; take place; come to pass: When did the accident occur?” Webster’s Random House Unabridged Dictionary (1999).
  7. This is consistent with the teaching of leading evolutionary biologists. George Gaylord Simpson, claimed that “Man is the result of a purposeless and materialistic process that did not have him in mind. He was not planned.” [George Gaylord Simpson, “The Meaning of Evolution,” at 344 (rev. ed. 1967)]. The issue is more fully discussed in David K. DeWolf, Stephen C. Meyer and Mark E. DeForest, “Teaching the Origins Controversy: Science, Or Religion Or Speech,” 2000 Utah Law Rev. 39, 87-90 (Vol. 2000).
  8. See Section 3.3.
  9. See Section 3.3.
  10. Board of Education v. Allen, 392 U.S. 236, 243, 88 S.Ct. 1923, 1926 (1968).
  11. Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia, 515 U.S. 819, 831-2, 115 S.Ct. 2510,2518 (1995).
  12. Phillip E. Johnson, “Reason in the Balance: The Case Against Naturalism in Science, Law and Education,” 189 (Inter Varsity Press 1995).
  13. See Section 4.32 and notes 61 and 62.

Freiler Case Letter

MEMO

TO: Dr. Robert Bowers and the
Science Standards Committee, Ohio State Board of Education

FROM: John Calvert
DATE: February 4, 2002
RE: The Freiler Case


I would like to thank you for inviting me to speak on January 13 and being interested in carefully exploring key issues about what Ohio should tell students about where they come from. I would also like to discuss a legal issue that arose at the close of that meeting that may be important to your deliberations.

Dr. Bowers may recall that following the meeting, we had a brief discussion about the case of Freiler v. Tangipahoa Parish Board of Education, No. 94-3577 (E.D. La. August 8, 1997).(1) It was suggested that the Freiler case had held that Intelligent Design was “creation science” and therefore it was subject to the prohibitions directed by Edwards v. Aguillard and McLean v. Arkansas against “creation science.” I disagreed. This memo is intended to explain my disagreement and to provide a further discussion of the legal issues that I did not have time to cover at the January meeting.

Freiler did not consider, deal with or hold against intelligent design at the District Court, Circuit Court or Supreme Court levels. Furthermore it did not equate the Design Hypothesis to “creation science” as defined in Edwards, McLean or other cases discussed below that deal with that subject. It dealt only with a statement to be read to science classes that was found to promote the “Biblical version of Creation.”

It is understandable that members of the Committee might be confused. I expect it is likely the result of a very misleading summary of the Freiler case that has been circulated to you and the Science Advisory Committee by proponents of censorship of the design inference. That summary contains the following misleading statement:

“Besides addressing disclaimer policies, the [District Court’s Freiler] decision is noteworthy for recognizing that curriculum proposals for ‘intelligent design’ are equivalent to proposals for teaching creation science.”

This description appears to be subtly designed to lead you to the wrong conclusion. Although the statement does not expressly say so, it makes a powerful suggestion that design is prohibited because it is “creation science.” This is the conclusion that you are led to because the other cases described in the same document generally state that “creation science” is prohibited. The conclusion that design is prohibited is not valid because the definition of creation science that has been used in cases to exclude “creation science” from the curriculum have been limited to the biblical creation account. Those cases have not considered or discussed the design hypothesis and have not included that hypothesis within the definition of any prohibited “creation science” account. In other words, the definition of “creation science” used by Judge Livaudais in an off-hand discussion of the background of the case is not the same definition that has been used by other courts to censor “science” that seeks to promote the Genesis account in the Bible and which has been labeled “creation science.”

In the District Court opinion Judge Livaudais simply noted as a part of the background for the case that a month before the board adopted the disclaimer that was viewed as promoting the “Biblical concept of Creation,” the school board had considered but rejected a proposal to permit the teaching of “the theory that the universe, including all forms of life, was created literally in the manner described in the Bible by a higher Being, or, as, as alternatively described, the theory of intelligent design or creation by a Divine Creator.” The court said, “as the term shall be used HEREIN,” I will refer to this list of concepts as “creation science.” There is no further discussion, consideration or characterization anywhere in the opinion about “intelligent design” and essentially no further significant discussion of “creation science” as defined by Judge Livaudais.

It is obvious from a reading of the opinion that the Court was doing nothing more than adopting a short-hand definition for a group of items without intending that any legal significance be attributed to that definition. The lone reference to intelligent design, is itself fairly cryptic. The only thing we can discern about intelligent design from the entire case is that it literally appears in the quoted phrase as something being different than creation by a higher “Being” discussed in the “Bible” and something different than “creation by a Divine Creator.” In this sense it is accurate to list it separately, since the design hypothesis postulates neither biblical creation nor creation by a Divine Creator. However, the opinion tells us nothing more about how “intelligent design” was “described” in this unused proposal that really has nothing at all to do with the decision in the case.

The important point, is that the Freiler court does not in any way pass judgement on intelligent design as a prohibited concept. Indeed, the Court’s opinion seems to suggest that the concept of “critical thinking” that is necessary for all good science requires the consideration of alternative origins theories and that the School Board was correct in not suppressing the discussion of alternative theories:

“Both parties stipulated that critical thinking and gathering of information are encouraged in all classes, and specifically in science classes. It was also stipulated that “[e]ven before the Disclaimer resolution was adopted, teachers in Tangipahoa Parish had the right to mention viewpoints other than evolution to their students, and often discussed those viewpoints and encouraged students to explore them. Therefore, it is undisputed that the teachers of Tangipahoa Parish public schools had the right to discuss alternate theories of the creation of life and could independently research such topics.”

Accordingly, if the District court opinion stands for anything, it stands against the censorship that is being proposed in the first draft of the proposed Ohio science standards.

The vice that the courts have consistently ruled against is not critical thinking and consideration of alternative theories, rather it is against state promotion of particular religious or “nonreligious” viewpoints. The Genesis account of creation in the Bible is obviously a particular religious viewpoint. The design hypothesis is not. It is merely a logical inference derived per the scientific method using scientifically accepted design detection methods.

The “Creation Science” that has been proscribed by the courts appears to have been first defined in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, 529 F.Supp 1255 (E.D. Ark 1982). In that case, the Arkansas district court found that a statute that mandated the teaching of “creation science” was unconstitutional. As defined in the statute, “creation science” included a number of tenets relating to the age of the earth, a world wide flood and similar matters found in the first eleven chapters of Genesis. The Court found that this definition was, in effect, a restatement of those provisions of Genesis and that teaching this material would have the effect of promoting a particular religion or religious view. A similar “creation science” statute was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in the case of Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 107 S.Ct. 2573 (1987). The holding in Edwards was based on the same reason – that the statute had the effect of promoting a particular religious view – the Genesis account found in the Bible.(2) Subsequent cases that have found against teachings relating to origins have all been based on a finding that the position being promoted was one designed to promote the Genesis account.(3) None of these cases have involved a teaching of the evidence of design or criticisms of Darwinian theory. In particular, the Edwards court noted that its decision was not intended to proscribe the teaching of scientific critiques of evolution(4) or other theories about biological origins:

“In a similar way, teaching a variety of scientific theories about the origins of humankind to schoolchildren might be validly done with the clear secular intent of enhancing the effectiveness of science instruction.”(5)

As has been discussed in great detail in Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools,(6) a design inference says nothing about the validity or invalidity of the Genesis account. It does not promote any particular religious doctrine or viewpoint. A policy that permits the showing of the evidence of design has a number of clear secular purposes. It logically addresses the question raised – what is the cause of life and its diversity? It assures that teachings about origins science are consistent with the scientific method. It implements the requirement for constitutional neutrality in a religious arena. It is protective of the rights of teachers, students and parents that teachers be academically free to provide scientific viewpoints not driven by religion or philosophy on issues relevant to the subject matter of the forum. These secular purposes are designed to avoid indoctrinating students in naturalism and generating the kinds of misinformation that such a dogma spawns. Indeed, a showing of all the relevant evidence regarding origins science is necessary to provide a comprehensive teaching with the scrupulous objectivity that is required in this religiously charged historical science that permits wide latitude for subjective rather than objective explanations. Adherence to such a policy will enhance the overall effectiveness of teachings about origins science.

If there is any question about whether a design inference is a religion, it should be noted that secular humanism and other broad concepts that generate religious implications have been held to not constitute a “religion” for establishment clause purposes. [Peloza v. Capistrano Unified School District, 37 F3rd 517, 521 (9th cir 1994): holding that secular humanism is not a religion; and Alvarado v. City of San Jose, 94 F. 3rd 1223, 1230 (9th Cir 1996) finding that “New Age” beliefs are not a religion for establishment clause purposes]. Furthermore, the courts have ruled that the establishment clause is not violated simply “because the material to be taught happens to coincide or harmonize with the tenets of some or all religions.”(7) Thus, a design inference does not become a religion simply because it happens to support theistic beliefs.

If implications of a teaching generated a violation of the establishment clause, then Darwinism would not be permissible since it supports the view that life does not result by design and thereby denigrates religion. This denigration was published with prominence in the July 2000 issue of Scientific American. A six page article focuses on the way that Darwinism has changed “Modern Thought” by replacing theistic religion with a Darwinian basis for our morals and ethics.

“First, Darwinism rejects all supernatural phenomena and causations.

*****

“…..Darwin provided a scientific foundation for ethics.

*****

“To borrow Darwin’s phrase, there is grandeur in this view of life. New modes of thinking have been, and are being, evolved. Almost every component in modern man’s belief system is somehow affected by Darwinian principles.”(8)

As indicated below, the only neutral way to deal with these religious implications is to allow teachers to show relevant scientific evidence that relates to both the Naturalistic and Design Hypotheses. If the evidence supporting the Design Hypothesis is censored then Darwinism, protected by the censoring mechanism of Naturalism, is indeed a religion as Michael Ruse has so eloquently stated.(9)

Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion — a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality. I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex Christian, but I must admit that in this one complaint — and Mr. Gish [a proponent of Creation Science] is but one of many to make it — the literalists are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.” (emphasis added)

Dr. Ruse’s plea can only be realized by eliminating methodolgical naturalism from origins science. So long as the irrebuttable naturalistic assumption is used, evolution will be promoted as a “nonreligion” in a manner contrary to the holding in Epperson v. Arkansas. The only way to legitimate Darwinian evolution and teach it in a religiously neutral manner is to remove the philosophical device that protects it from criticism and testing by the competing design hypothesis.

If the Board wishes to make its practices consistent with Freiler, it will promote critical thinking by permitting rather than censoring objective consideration of the competing hypothesis.

In closing I ought to comment briefly on the other seven cases mentioned in the document that appears to generate this discussion – “Eight Significant Court Decisions.”

Case 1, the holding in Epperson would seem to proscribe the use of methodological naturalism to censor design and thereby promote only a naturalistic account of our origins. Case 2, Segraves would seem to stand for the same proposition because it requires that “any speculative statements concerning origins, both in texts and in classes, should be presented conditionally, not dogmatically.” The use of Methodological Naturalism to censor design and thereby promote unconditional allegiance to Darwinian evolution is the epitome of dogmatism.

Case 2, Freiler, Case 3, McLean, Case 4, Edwards and Case 5, Webster, are all cases dealing with the teaching or promotion of the biblical account of origins in a science class. They do not discuss or deal with intelligent design or the use of methodological naturalism.

Case 6, Peloza, and Case 8, LeVake, deal only with the theory of evolution. They do not deal with the use of methodological naturalism in origins science to censor the design inference. That is the issue before the Ohio State Board.

Of course, the list does not include or discuss a number of other cases that support the arguments in Teaching Origins Science In Public Schools.

One recent case that the Board should give considerable attention to and that is not mentioned in either the list of 8 or Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools (published prior to the June 2001 decision) is Good News Club, et.al. v. Milford Central School, ____ U.S.___, No. 992036 (June 11, 2001). In that case a school excluded a religious club from using school facilities that were made available to the public after hours. The school argued that it was required to exclude the club to satisfy its establishment clause obligations. In reversing the school, the Court held that refusing access to the club would threaten satisfaction of the school’s establishment clause obligations to remain neutral. According to Justice Thomas, “allowing the Club to speak on school grounds would ensure, not threaten, neutrality toward religion.” By same token, eliminating methodological naturalism from the teaching of origins science would “ensure, not threaten, neutrality toward religion.”

I will be happy to discuss this with you further at your convenience.

John H. Calvert, Esq.


NOTES

  1. See Note 3 below as to the subsequent case history at the Circuit and Supreme Court levels.
  2. “Here, it is clear that religious belief is the Balanced Treatment Act’s ‘reason for existence.’ The tenets of creation-science parallel the Genesis story of creation,4 and this is a religious belief.” 107 S.Ct. 2588.
  3. Tangipahoa Parish Board of Education, et. al. v. Freiler, 185 F3rd 337, 346 (5th Cir 1999), cert. den. 120 S.Ct. 2706 (2000), (prohibiting a disclaimer which had “the primary effect of protecting and maintaining a particular religious viewpoint, namely belief in the Biblical version of creation.”); and Webster v. New Lennox School District # 122, 917 F2nd 1004, 1006 and 1008 (7th Cir 1990); (prohibiting discussions of religious issues and “creation science” teachings to rebut textbook statements that the earth is over four billion years old).
  4. Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578, 107 S.Ct. 2573, 2582 (1987); “We do not imply that a legislature could never require that scientific critiques of prevailing scientific theories be taught.”
  5. Ibid. at 2583.
  6. John H. Calvert, J.D., William S. Harris, Ph.D., Teaching Origins Science in Public Schools: Memorandum and Opinion (Intelligent Design network, inc., March 21, 2001) at http://www.IntelligentDesignNetwork.org/legalopinion.htm.
  7. Ibid. at 2588; Alvarado v. City of San Jose, at 1232 and Fleischfresser v. Directors of School District 200, 15 F3rd 680, 689 (7th Cir 1994).
  8. Ernst Mayr, “Darwin’s Influence on Modern Thought,” p. 81-83, (July 2000, Scientific American).
  9. Michael Ruse, How Evolution Became a Religion, http://www.nationalpost.com, (May 13, 2000). Dr. Ruse is a highly regarded philosopher of science who testified against the “Creation Science” stature in McLean v. Arkansas.

Remarks to Ohio BOE

REMARKS OF JOHN H. CALVERT, J.D.
To the Standards Committee of the Ohio State Board of Education

January 13, 2001

INTRODUCTION

I would particularly like to thank Bob Bowers, Joe Roman, Tom Mclain and President Sheets for the invitation to speak about an issue that is important not only to the children of Ohio, but all children. The issue is what should the State tell our children about where they come from. What should the State tell them about their origins.

I was trained to be a geologist and wound up as a lawyer. I have practiced corporate finance and business litigation for 33 years. About 20 years ago I became interested in Origins science while studying the complexity of DNA.

What qualifies a lawyer to talk about origins science? Lawyers are qualified because the key issues do not involve issues of fact. They involve issues of logic, issues of evidence and procedure and whether the rules, when applied by the State are consistent with the speech and establishment clauses of the constitution. These are issues that lawyers are particularly qualified to speak to.

What really pricked my interest was learning that science essentially abandons the scientific method when it deals with origins science. The effect of modern origins science is to imbue a belief in naturalism. This has led our government into a practice that has the effect of indoctrinating our children and culture in Naturalism. I happen to think that is somewhat problematic. That is why I am here today. To talk about State sponsored naturalism.

What is Naturalism? Naturalism is the DOCTRINE that all phenomena result only from natural processes and not by design. According to a naturalistic world view we are mere occurrences that just happen without purpose. We are not designs that have been designed for a purpose.

The point is illustrated in the brochure that you should have before you. Presently Naturalism censors the design hypothesis. The censorship serves to protect evolution from criticism. Evolution winds up being supported by a philosophy rather than the scientific method. Our goal is to see that origins science is conducted objectively. To do that we need to remove the naturalistic assumption and allow the two hypotheses to compete on a level playing field.

With that brief introduction lets go to the SUBJECT OF MY TALK: WHAT SHOULD OHIO, TELL CHILDREN ABOUT THEIR ORIGINS.

In my way of thinking ORIGINS SCIENCE is the most important SUBJECT that Ohio public schools will teach to children. Origins Science Asks the question – What causes the origin and diversity of life.- where did we come from. In my opinion this is the most important question we can ask. The question is important because its answer materially impacts the answers to other fundamental questions such as “Why am I here? What is the meaning and purpose of life.” If we are just occurrences that result from random and undirected natural processes then we have no inherent purpose. However, if we are the product of design then we have an inherent purpose since all designs have a purpose.

All biology textbooks and the proposed Ohio science standards choose to address this fundamental question. Where do we come from? So the question becomes, what should we tell our kids about it? What information should the State of Ohio decide to give our children about the most important issue in their lives?

THERE ARE ESSENTIALLY ONLY TWO SCIENTIFIC HYPOTHESES ABOUT OUR ORIGINS.

The Naturalistic and the Design Hypothesis.

The Naturalistic Hypothesis proposes that all phenomena, including life and its diversity result only from the operation of the laws of physics and chemistry and chance. In short it holds that we derive only from undirected and purposeless natural processes – we are merely occurrences that just happen.

The Naturalistic Hypothesis is predicated on two sub-hypotheses. Chemical Evolution and Darwinian Evolution.

Chemical evolution argues that life arose through some form of chemical evolution. The evidence for this claim is practically non-existent and there is no coherent theory about how life arose from inanimate matter through an undirected chemical process.

Darwinian evolution attempts to explain the diversity of life once life has somehow arisen via the unexplained process of chemical evolution. Thus, Darwinian evolution assumes as a starting point that the unsupported hypothesis of chemical evolution is true. Darwinian evolution argues that cellular complexity then increases as random variations within replicating populations are filtered or “naturally selected” by random environmental pressures. It is then postulated that over billions of years the gradual filtration/natural selection of these increases in complexity are sufficient to produce all of the diversity of life. Although there is evidence that supports the thesis that natural selection/filtration works at some biological levels, most of the evidence for macro evolution is in fact consistent with the competing design hypothesis. Hence, when tested against that hypothesis, the evidence for Darwinian evolution remains unconvincing at best. Stated another way, Darwinian evolution yields a satisfactory answer only so long as the competing hypothesis is ignored.

All biology textbooks and proposed draft of Ohio Science Standards propose to teach Ohio Children only the Naturalistic Hypothesis.

THE SCIENTIFIC HYPOTHESIS THAT COMPETES WITH THE NATURALISTIC HYPOTHESIS IS THE DESIGN HYPOTHESIS.

The Design Hypothesis holds that natural processes alone are not sufficient to produce the kind of complexity we see in life. This hypotheses suggests that a mind or some form of intelligence is necessary to produce life and its diversity.

The design hypothesis is supported by an abundance of scientific evidence and does not derive its authority from any religious text.

1.  We intuitively infer design when we observe the awesome complexity of the living information processing systems that comprise life. When we look into the black box of the cell we see a biological language, input devices, application programs, information processors, output devices, and systems designed to collect and process energy, make decisions and direct the construction, maintenance and operation of cellular machines and systems. DNA is a blue print that has a semantic or meaningful characteristic found in any writing produced by a mind. That semantic characteristic has not been explained by natural law and chance. Non-natural machines and information processing systems are the kinds of effects that are produced only by human minds. Hence, analogy leads to a reasonable inference that intelligence may also be the cause of similar biological machines and information processing systems.The fact that living systems appear to be designed – appear to be the product of a mind – is acknowledged by Evolutionary biologists. Their claim is that the apparent design we see in living systems is merely an illusion. They claim that the pattern is not really a design, but is merely an occurrence produced by the mindless undirected process of natural selection.

2. The problem with the claim of illusion is that it tends to be ruled out when we apply design detection methodology used in many recognized scientific disciplines such as cryptanalyis, archeology, forensic sciences and even scientific searches for extraterrestrial intelligence. Assuming we get a pattern from outer space – how do we know it comes from an intelligent source. Well, we use design detection methodology. If you apply these scientific design detection methodologies to the patterns we see in living systems, design becomes not only a viable possibility, it arguably becomes the “best explanation.”

3. The fossil record is in many respects more consistent with the Design Hypothesis then the Naturalistic Hypothesis. It shows sharp bursts of increased complexity and long periods of stasis rather than a gradual progression of complexity as predicted by Darwinian evolution.

4. Physicists, chemists and cosmologists are finding that the fundamental constants necessary for life are fine tunned to the extent of near statistical impossibility.

5. There is no coherent naturalistic explanation for the origin of life, much less any experimental production of it.

6. There is no working model to show how natural selection can produce irreducibly complex living systems. The only known cause for such complexity is intelligence – the workings of a mind.

All of this evidence is evidence that is based on scientific investigation, scientific observation, and scientific analysis per the scientific method. It is evidence that can only be systematically investigated, observed and analyzed by scientists. It takes biochemists, geologists, paleontologists, mathematicians, statisticians, biologists, cosmologists, physicists and chemists to study the evidence of design. It is not a subject for study by philosophers and theologians. If science will not allow its members to examine the evidence it will be assigned to an intellectual black hole.

THIS BEING THE STATE OF THE EVIDENCE, THE QUESTION BECOMES WHAT INFORMATION SHOULD OHIO GIVE ITS Children about where they come from?

To answer this question lets assume a HYPOTHETICAL situation.

Lets assume that I am a science teacher that is about to enter a science class room to discuss the origin and diversity of life – were we come from. I come to you as the Ohio State Board of Education and ask you what you are going to allow me to do. In my right hand I have a standard biology text book. This book gives only a naturalistic explanation for the origin of life and its diversity. It does not even mention the design hypothesis or the evidence that supports that hypothesis. It is effectively designed to imbue students with a belief in Naturalism.

In my left hand I have evidence that supports the competing design hypothesis – this is the kind of evidence that I have just discussed.

By the way, this evidence is not “creation science” as defined by the courts. It does not lead to a young earth, a world wide flood or any other religious text or religious account about the origin of life. It derives its authority solely from investigation, observation and analysis per the scientific method.

Although the evidence of design is scientifically derived, it clearly has religious implications. But that is also true of the naturalistic hypothesis. Any answer to the question – where do we come from has religious implications – either positive or negative. Design positively impacts theism – naturalism negatively impacts it.

So when we show evidence that supports the design hypothesis we show evidence that supports theistic belief. When we show the evidence that supports the Naturalistic Hypothesis we show evidence that contradicts the design hypothesis and that inhibits theistic beliefs. That evidence supports atheism and agnosticism.

So the question is, can I go into the science class with both hands full – can I tell the kids that there are two opposing views about where they come from?

The reason I am here today is the PRESENT DRAFT of Ohio science standards contemplate that we will show the kids only the evidence in the right hand – the evidence that inhibits theism. Indeed the standards are being written so that not only is naturalism the only given answer, they are being written so that the Design hypothesis will not even be mentioned – the Kids won’t even be told about the existence of the hypothesis and the fact that credentialed scientists have identified evidence that tends to confirm it.

The Draft of the standards proposes that I take the evidence in my left hand and put it behind my back. So when I go into the Room I do this: [Showing only the evidence in the right hand – a naturalistic world view that inhibits religion].

Do you see the problem?

DR ROBERT LATTIMER, A PHYSICAL CHEMIST AND A MEMBER OF THE OHIO SCIENCE WRITING TEAM HAS SUBMITTED PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS THAT SEEK TO CORRECT THIS SITUATION. His suggestions urge the Department of Education to see that origins science is taught objectively and without religious, philosophic or naturalistic bias. He proposes that Ohio students be shown the evidence that tends to support both hypotheses.

The response to the Lattimer proposals has been disappointing but expected.

Dr. Lattimer’s proposals have been rejected out of hand without any consideration of their evidentiary merit.

Why should we expect that result?

We should expect the result because modern science uses a rule called Methodological Naturalism/scientific materialism to rule out the design hypothesis by assumption rather than by the scientific method.

As mentioned, Methodological Naturalism is an irrebuttable assumption that all phenomena result only from natural processes and not by design. It is a philosophy and not an established fact.

Science claims that a naturalistic assumption is needed to promote objective science. Although this may have some utility in experimental sciences such as physics and chemistry, it destroys objectivity in historical sciences like origins science.

Because the rule says we must irrebuttably assume that things are not designed the Design Hypothesis is actively censored by the scientific “elite.” This is why science textbooks don’t mention design. This is why the PBS series on evolution did not discuss the design hypothesis. This is why Dr. Lattimer’s suggestions have been rejected out of hand.

NOW I BELIEVE THE QUESTION THE OHIO BOARD ENCOUNTERS AS AN AGENCY OF THE STATE IS WHETHER IT IS GOING TO IMPLEMENT METHODOLOGICAL NATURALISM – IS IT GOING TO USE THE RULE TO CENSOR THE EVIDENCE OF DESIGN WHEN IT CHOOSES TO INFORM STUDENTS ABOUT WHERE THEY COME FROM?

Is Ohio going to tell its teachers to go into the class room with the evidence of design behind their backs?

Perhaps an even more important question is whether Ohio is going to tell its teachers to teach using an UNDISCLOSED assumption that life is not designed.

Although the assumption itself is problematic, non disclosure of the assumption is even worse. NONDISCLOSURE OF A MATERIAL ASSUMPTION IS MISLEADING – IT IS INTELLECTUALLY DISHONEST. It would be one thing for me to go into class and say: Kids today we are going to talk about the origin of life and its diversity. There are two ideas about this – design and no design. We are not going to talk about design BECAUSE WE USE AN IRREBUTTABLE ASSUMPTION THAT LIFE IS NOT DESIGNED. We are going to put all the design evidence behind our backs. We are not going to look at it. We are going to only consider the evidence which promotes the naturalistic hypothesis. Because we are not showing you all the evidence you will have an incomplete picture about where we come from.

Of course disclosing the assumption is not what is done in textbooks and that is not what is proposed in the DRAFT Science Standards. Instead, the Draft contemplates that students will not be told about the assumption. The draft encourages teachers to continue to go into the class room – with both hands full. Except that the evidence of design in the left hand is left outside the class room and the left hand is filled with some of the evidence that was in the right hand. This gives the impression that this is the only evidence. What’s worse is that the evidence that is shown is characterized as having been tested by the scientific method and that is simply not the case. Do you see how misleading that is?

When you teach origins science using a critically undisclosed assumption, you are doing nothing more than indoctrinating Ohio youth in a belief in Naturalism. So the question you have to ask yourselves, should Ohio use the Rule in Origins Science? Should Ohio censor the design hypothesis?

I THINK YOU HAVE TO PUT ASIDE THE RULE FOR A COUPLE OF REASONS.

FIRST, CENSORING THE ONLY COMPETING HYPOTHESIS IS SIMPLY NOT CONSISTENT WITH GOOD SCIENCE OR THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD.

Origins science is a historical science that seeks to explain the cause of past events. The explanation of what caused a singular past event occurring millions of years ago can not be tested by experiment. How, then does one test a historical hypothesis that can not be tested by experiment. Essentially the only way to test the hypothesis is to rule out all reasonable competing hypotheses. When you decide to censor the only competing hypothesis, then you essentially exempt the protected hypothesis – evolution – from testing. It essentially ceases to have any scientific validity. An example would be an arson investigation. What if we assumed that all fires result only from natural causes and not by design. Would the explanations of arson investigators ever be credible? One must abandon the Rule in origins science so that the naturalistic hypothesis can be tested by the design hypothesis and vice versa. If you use the rule and teach evolution then you are not teaching science – you are simply indoctrinating students in naturalism.

STATE USE OF THE RULE SHOULD ALSO BE ABANDONED FOR CONSTITUTIONAL REASONS.

A constitutional issue arises when the State decides to teach origins science. The reason is that Origins science unavoidably takes students into a religious arena. You can not ask the question “where do we come from” without positively or negatively impacting religion. One answer supports theism. The other answer withdraws that support and promotes agnosticism and atheism.

Accordingly, when a State decides to teach origins science, it is engaged in an activity that “touches” religion.

The Supreme Court has held that when a state chooses to engage in a practice that “touches” religion the practice must satisfy three criteria.

1. The practice must have a secular purpose

2. The practice must not advance nor inhibit religion in its principal or primary effect

3. The practice must not foster an excessive entanglement of the state in religion.

The question then becomes, when the State decides to enter this religious arena can it choose to use a practice – Methodological Naturalism – to censor the design hypothesis? Can it choose to simply tell teachers to hide the evidence of design.

I think not. Essentially there is no secular purpose for using Methodological Naturalism in origins science. To the contrary, the effect of the rule is to violate the scientific method. The only stated purpose of methodological naturalism is to keep the supernatural out of science. That is not a secular purpose.

I have an offer of $20 to anyone who can show me a secular purpose for the use of the Rule in origins science.

Perhaps a more clear violation of the establishment clause is the fact that the primary effect of use of the rule in origins science is to inhibit religion – theistic belief. In Epperson v Arkansas the Supreme Court ruled as unconstitutional a statute that censored a hypothesis about the origin of life. In so doing the Court said the state must be neutral towards religion.

“Government in our democracy, state and nation, must be neutral in matters of religious theory, doctrine, and practice. It may not be hostile to any religion or to the advocacy of no-religion; and it may not aid, or foster or promote one religion or religious theory against another or even against the militant opposite. The First Amendment mandates government neutrality between religion and religion, and between religion and nonreligion.

So if you tell Ohio teachers to go hide the evidence of design when I enter the class room are you causing the state to be Neutral or are you causing it to imbue Ohioans in a belief in Naturalism – non religion?

I think you will be involved in unconstitutional indoctrination.

My conclusion is that Methodological Naturalism is not consistent with good science, logic or the law.

I think Methodological Naturalism also conflicts with the speech clause of the constitution. That issue is discussed in more detail in Teaching Origins Science. Copies of this will be furnished to each of you after our discussion this evening.

Finally, I would like to point out that the concept of objective origins science is consistent with recent public school legislation signed by President Bush on Jan 8. You have been furnished a two page hand out that discusses the legislation. It states that good science education will prepare students to “distinguish the data and testable theories of science from religious or philosophic claims that are made in the name of science. Where topics are taught that may generate controversy (such as biological evolution), the curriculum should help students to understand the full range of scientific view that exist, why such topics may generate controversy and how scientific discoveries can profoundly affect society.”

Thus, the Ohio Board is in a unique position. If it follows the Santorum amendment and the Lattimer proposals it can be on the cutting edge of new science standards that will enhance the effectiveness of origins science and insure that it is conducted objectively and consistent with logic, good science, and the law.

I have some suggestions on how you might implement objective origins science. However, I believe I will leave those to the question and answer period.

Thanks again for listening.

Comments on Draft of Ohio Standards

IDnet and SEAO Publish Comments on Draft of Ohio Life Science Standards

February 6, 2002
JOINT NEWS RELEASE:


Contact:
Intelligent Design network, inc.                            Science Excellence for All Ohioans (SEAO)
John Calvert, Managing Director                          Barry Sheets, Executive Director
913-268-0852                                                      614-989-5250



Columbus, Ohio:
The results of a survey about teaching origins science (study of the origin of life and its diversity) was released on February 4, 2002. “This report destroys the myth being circulated that ‘no real scientist’ believes in intelligent design as a reasonable scientific theory for our origin,” said John Calvert, a Managing Director of Intelligent Design network, inc. (IDnet).

The report shows overwhelming support from a highly educated group for teaching origins science objectively and without philosophic, naturalistic or religious assumptions. The Report was presented to the Standards Committee of the State Board of Education of Ohio on Monday. The Report reflects comments posted to an Internet web site open to the public that was maintained by IDnet and Science Excellence for all Ohioans (SEAO).

A total of 271 of 309 respondents (88%) favor the inclusion of diverse viewpoints, in the teaching of origins science. Objective origins science permits the conduct and teaching of intelligent design as a competitor to Darwinian evolution.

“Those favoring objective origins science include 78 of 83 respondents holding doctoral degrees (94%), 71 of 85 respondents that are or have been engaged in biological sciences (84%) and 73 of 80 engaged in teaching or education (91%),” said John Calvert, a Managing Director of Intelligent Design network, inc.

The Report reflects comments received from the public about proposed “Modifications” to a draft of Life Science Standards circulated by the Ohio Department of Education in December, 2001 and may be viewed by clicking this text.

“The Modifications urge the State Board to drop the assumption used in science education that allows only naturalistic (materialistic) explanations for processes occurring in nature,” said Barry Sheets, Executive Director of SEAO. Naturalism is the belief that all phenomena in nature result only from chance and the laws of chemistry and physics. “Naturalism eliminates intelligent design as a possible answer to the all important question: ‘Where do we come from?'” said Sheets. “This leaves Darwinian evolution with a monopoly on the explanation for origins.”

The Report contains detailed comments from many of the respondents that explain the reasons for their votes and views. “All you have to do is read the comments to fathom the depth of the intellectual support for origins science conducted objectively per the scientific method rather than as a strategy to protect Darwinism from criticism,” Calvert said.

The IDnet-SEAO poll was open to anyone who wished to comment. Although about two-thirds of the respondents were Ohioans, a number of highly credentialed scientists from all over the world visited the web site to express their views, including a member of the National Academy of Science.

The Science Standards Committee of the State Board of Education is deliberating about the issues raised in the Report. Senate Bill 1 (2001) requires that Science Standards be adopted by the State Board by the end of the year.

*******************
Intelligent Design network, inc. is a member based nonprofit organization. IDnet promotes evidence based origins science that is conducted and taught without religious, naturalistic or philosophic bias or assumption. It also seeks to increase public awareness of the scientific evidence of intelligent design in the universe and living systems.

Intelligent Design is a scientific theory that intelligent causes are involved in the origin of the universe and of life and its diversity. It holds that design is empirically detectable in nature, and particularly in living systems. Intelligent Design is an intellectual movement that includes a scientific research program for investigating intelligent causes and that challenges naturalistic explanations of origins which currently drive science education and research.

Science Excellence for All Ohioans is a project of the American Family Association of Ohio, a nonprofit organization. SEAO is a network of concerned citizens and organizations who support excellent state science standards that are fair, reasonable, and unbiased.