The
Bait and Switch of "Intelligent Design"
by Keith Lockitch
Legal and political battle lines have been drawn across the country
over the teaching of "intelligent design"--the view that life
is so complex it must be the product of a "higher intelligence."
The central issue under debate is whether "intelligent design"
is, in fact, a genuine scientific theory or merely a disguised form
of religious advocacy--creationism in camouflage.
Proponents of "intelligent design" aggressively market their
viewpoint as real science, insisting it is not religiously based. Writes
one leading advocate, Michael Behe: "The conclusion of intelligent
design flows naturally from the data itself--not from sacred books or
sectarian beliefs."
Proponents of “intelligent design” claim that Darwinian
evolution is a fundamentally flawed theory--that there are certain complex
features of living organisms evolution simply cannot explain, but which
can be explained as the handiwork of an "intelligent designer."
Their viewpoint is not religiously based, they insist, because it does
not require that the "intelligent designer" be God. "Design,"
writes another leading proponent, William Dembski, "requires neither
magic nor miracles nor a creator."
Indeed, "design" apparently requires surprisingly little of
the "designer's" identity: "Inferences to design,"
contends Behe, "do not require that we have a candidate for the
role of designer." According to its advocates, the "designer"
responsible for "intelligent design" in biology could be any
sort of "creative intelligence" capable of engineering the
basic elements of life. Some have even seriously nominated advanced
space aliens for the role.
Their premise seems to be that as long as they don't explicitly name
the "designer"--as long as they allow that the "designer"
could be a naturally existing being, a being accessible to scientific
study--that this somehow saves their viewpoint from the charge of being
inherently religious in character.
But does it?
Imagine we discovered an alien on Mars with a penchant for bio-engineering.
Could such a natural being fulfill the requirements of an "intelligent
designer"?
It could not. Such a being would not actually account for the complexity
that "design" proponents seek to explain. Any natural being
capable of "designing" the complex features of earthly life
would, on their premises, require its own "designer." If "design"
can be inferred merely from observed complexity, then our purported
Martian "designer" would be just another complex being in
nature that supposedly cannot be explained without positing another
"designer." One does not explain complexity by dreaming up
a new complexity as its cause.
By the very nature of its approach, "intelligent design" cannot
be satisfied with a "designer" who is part of the natural
world. Such a "designer" would not answer the basic question
its advocates raise: it would not explain biological complexity as such.
The only "designer" that would stop their quest for a "design"
explanation of complexity is a "designer" about whom one cannot
ask any questions or who cannot be subjected to any kind of scientific
study--a "designer" that "transcends" nature and
its laws--a "designer" not susceptible of rational explanation--in
short: a supernatural "designer."
Its advertising to the contrary notwithstanding, "intelligent design"
is inherently a quest for the supernatural. Only one "candidate
for the role of designer" need apply. Dembski himself--even while
trying to deny this implication--concedes that "if there is design
in biology and cosmology, then that design could not be the work of
an evolved intelligence." It must, he admits, be that of a "transcendent
intelligence" to whom he euphemistically refers as "the big
G."
The supposedly nonreligious theory of “intelligent design”
is nothing more than a crusade to peddle religion by giving it the veneer
of science--to pretend, as one commentator put it, that "faith
in God is something that holds up under the microscope."
The insistence of "intelligent design" advocates that they
are "agnostic regarding the source of design" is a bait-and-switch.
They dangle out the groundless possibility of a "designer"
who is susceptible of scientific study--in order to hide their real
agenda of promoting faith in the supernatural. Their scientifically
accessible "designer" is nothing more than a gateway god--metaphysical
marijuana intended to draw students away from natural, scientific explanations
and get them hooked on the supernatural.
No matter how fervently its salesmen wish "intelligent design"
to be viewed as cutting-edge science, there is no disguising its true
character. It is nothing more than a religiously motivated attack on
science, and should be rejected as such.
Keith Lockitch is a junior fellow at the Ayn
Rand Institute in Irvine, CA. The Institute promotes the ideas of
Ayn Rand--best-selling author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead
and originator of the philosophy of Objectivism.
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