| Evolution? (Page 1 of 3) |
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“…students who do not understand evolution cannot be said to be
scientifically literate”-
Eugenie C. Scott,
executive director of the National Center for Science Education, Inc. |
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“Students who understand the problems inherent in the theory of
evolution are more scientifically literate than those passive recipients
who accept it unquestioningly.”-
Website Author |
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In the mass media and in public education, the evolution/creation debate appears to have been decided in favor of evolution.
The above statement
made by Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for
Science Education, implies ignorance on the part of
those who do not accept evolution as the best explanation of the
beginnings and incredible diversity of life. The question is, do the
mass media and public education give a fair and balanced presentation of
all of the facts, or are they essentially censoring key information from
the public? Would you be surprised to learn that there are scientific
laws and discoveries which pose significant problems for scientists who
advocate for the theory of evolution? Or, that selective reasoning,
combined with a sloppy use of language, is obscuring important facts
from the public?
In
order to truly understand the evolution debate, you must understand the
following three terms: micro-evolution, macro-evolution, and
abiogenesis.
There are two
“sleights of hand” used to convince the public that the theory of
evolution is a better description of physical reality than creation:
#1 Use of the word “evolution”
to describe micro-evolution, macro-evolution, and abiogenesis, even
though these phenomena/ideas are not interchangeable: Micro-evolution
has been observed, abiogenesis and macro-evolution
have not been observed.
There
are many instances of
micro-evolution that have been observed. The word “evolution” simply
means “change”, and animals have been observed to change in order to
adapt to their environments. Does micro-evolution,
in itself, prove
macro-evolution and abiogenesis?
No.
Abiogenesis
describes the theory that over billions of years, pools of
nonliving matter formed living things. The theory of
macro-evolution assumes that these things then changed drastically
to form altogether new species, until eventually, humans were formed.
Read a
few articles defending evolution and watch the magic unfold. You will
probably see something like the following:
“Technically, evolution is described as only a theory,
even though there are numerous instances in which it has been observed
to occur.”
Well,
yes and no. Micro-evolution has been observed, that is absolutely true,
but macro-evolution and abiogenesis have
not been observed, they are
only assumed to have occurred.
The use of the one word “evolution” to describe these very disparate
concepts is confusing indeed. It can easily mislead the public to
believe that scientists have observed non-living substances form
themselves into living organisms, or that they have observed species
evolving into different species. This is simply not true. It is
intellectually dishonest, or, at the very least, sloppy science. Explain this problem to someone who advocates for abiogenesis and macro-evolution, and you are likely to uncover another twist of language (and logic), which is sleight of hand #2: Use of the words “science” or “scientific” to mean “reasonable” or “logical”, although these terms are not interchangeable. Read a few more of those articles defending abiogenesis and macro-evolution, and you are likely to see something like this: “Creationism is simply not science.” The impression that you are likely to take away from that statement is that creationism is not logical or reasonable, or that it is contradictory to the evidence. That’s not what that statement means.
The word “science” refers to physical phenomena in the
physical universe, that can either be observed directly or that leave
behind some type of physical evidence. Creationism, by definition, says
that something outside of the physical universe was the
cause of the physical universe. It doesn’t mean that creationism
isn’t logical or reasonable, it means that it’s not confined to the
physical universe, and is therefore outside the realm of strictly
physical phenomena (“science”). Well, why don’t the writers just say that? They could easily say that it simply falls outside of the parameters of the strictly physical universe, instead of implying that it’s a dumb idea.
Here is where the biases and faulty logic of the abiogenesists and
macro-evolutionists come in:
It is their OPINION and PERSONAL BELIEF that there is nothing outside of
the physical universe,
even though it is impossible to DISPROVE a supernatural realm.
Well, on the other hand, we can understand why scientists might be
biased against considering a supernatural plane, and why they might let
their personal opinions impact their outlook on this subject. After all,
we cannot necessarily observe things outside of the physical realm, but
we can observe the physical universe, so it makes sense to lean on the
side of the physical universe. One we know exists, and the other may or
may not exist…
But
here’s the problem: there is
some evidence of something beyond the physical realm. This evidence is
called the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The Second Law of
Thermodynamics (Entropy) states that energy always naturally goes from a
more organized state to a less organized state. Here’s an example of how
it works:
“For modern physics, as you have heard before, the universe is “running
down”. Disorganization and chance is continually increasing. There will
come a time, not infinitely remote, when it will be wholly run down or
wholly disorganized, and science knows of no possible return from that
state. There must have been a time, not infinitely remote, in the past when it
was wound up, though science knows of no winding up process.”
[emphasis added] (Lewis, C.S.,
The Grand Miracle, 1970)
p.9.
How did the universe get “wound up” in the first place? Science
has only observed the universe running down, it has
not observed the universe
winding itself up. Even assuming
for a moment that scientists are correct to rule out supernatural causes
and insist on natural ones, within that premise things within the
physical universe can only arise from other things in the physical
universe…If we go back in time to the moment of the Big Bang, we are
dealing with an immensely dense material object that is about to explode
and become the physical universe as we know it, but…where did this
object come from and how did it get there?
Science doesn’t know.
How does something come from nothing? C.S. Lewis makes the point that if
the universe had a beginning, it would essentially be like “creation”,
but if the universe did not have a beginning and is something that just
goes on an on- that also would be difficult to understand from a
“scientific” viewpoint. “Science, when it becomes perfect, will have
explained the connection between each link in the chain and the link
before it. But the actual existence of the chain will remain wholly
unaccountable.” (Lewis, C.S.,
The Grand Miracle, p. 53).
“The scientist’s pursuit of the past ends in the moment of
creation. This is an exceedingly strange development, unexpected by all
but the theologians…. For the scientist who has lived by his faith in
the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the
mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he
pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of
theologians who have been sitting there for centuries.”
Jastrow, Robert,
God and the Astronomers
(1992, Norton, New York)
p.103. |