Center for Science and Culture
Part of a series on |
Intelligent design |
---|
Concepts |
Movement |
Campaigns |
Authors |
Organisations |
Reactions |
|
Creationism |
The Center for Science and Culture (CSC), formerly known as the Center for Renewal of Science and Culture (CRSC), is part of the Discovery Institute, a conservative Christian think tank[1] in the United States. The CSC lobbies for the inclusion of creationism in the form of intelligent design (ID) in public school science curricula as an explanation for the origins of life and the universe while casting doubt on the theory of evolution by portraying it as a "theory in crisis."[2]
These positions have been rejected by the wider scientific community, which identifies intelligent design as pseudoscientific Neo-creationism and challenges the notion that evolution is anything but widely accepted within science.[3]
The Center for Science and Culture serves as the hub of the intelligent design movement. Nearly all of the luminaries of intelligent design are either CSC advisors, officers, or fellows. Stephen C. Meyer, a founder of the Discovery Institute and CSC serves as Senior Fellow and Vice President, and Phillip E. Johnson is the Program Advisor. Johnson is considered the movement's "father" and architect of the center's Wedge strategy and "Teach the Controversy" campaign, as well as the Santorum Amendment.
History
Concurrent with the founding of the intelligent design movement, sometime prior to 1991, Phillip E. Johnson met Stephen C. Meyer. Through Meyer, Johnson met others who were developing what became the intelligent design movement, including Michael Denton, and became the de facto leader of the group. [3] This group formed the CSC and has continued to operate through it, forming the nucleus of the movement, which it remains to this day, with both Johnson and Meyer serving as CSC officers.
Originally called the Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture, it was founded in 1996 by the Discovery Institute with funding provided by Howard Ahmanson, Jr. and the MacLellan Foundation. The evolution of the Center's name reflects its attempt to present itself as less religiously motivated in the public's eye. The "renewal" in its name referred to its stated goal of "renewing" American culture by grounding society's major institutions, especially education, in religion as outlined in the Wedge document. Since that time the Center has disavowed any religious motivations to its agenda and so has dropped "renewal" from its title and moderated its formerly overtly religious language of its public statements Error in Webarchive template: Empty url.. This was done to appeal to a more secular audience to which the Center hopes its social and political programs will appeal and make inroads.
Despite these changes to attempt to appeal to a broader, less religious, audience, the CSC still states as a goal a redefinition of science, and the philosophy on which it is based, particularly the exclusion of what it calls the "unscientific principle of materialism", and in particular the acceptance of what it calls "the scientific theory of intelligent design". The position of the overwhelming majority of the scientific community is that the principle of naturalism allows falsifiability and that supernaturalism is unfalsifiable, meaning any suggested policies or curricula put forth by the Center that rest on supernatural suppositions would be by definition pseudoscience, not science. The Center maintains that the exclusion of supernatural explanations introduces a bias that is driven by materialism rather than being scientifically based.
CSC's Wedge strategy
An internal CSC report dating from 1998 which outlined a five-year plan for fostering broader acceptance of ID was leaked to the public in 1999. This plan became known as the Wedge strategy. The 'Wedge Document' explained the CSC's key aims are "To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and political legacies" and to "replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are created by God."
To accomplish this, the document sets as "Five-Year Goals" "To see intelligent design theory as an accepted alternative in the sciences and scientific research being done from the perspective of design theory" and notably "To see major new debates in education, life issues, legal and personal responsibility pushed to the front of the national agenda." This was seen in the following years, with public debates over the teaching of intelligent design in public school classrooms taking place in many states as part of the Teach the Controversy campaign.
If the CSC's strategy is successful, within twenty years the goals are "To see intelligent design theory as the dominant perspective in science. " and "To see design theory permeate our religious, cultural, moral and political life."
The CSC seeks to downplay the significance of the 'Wedge Document', saying "Conspircay [sic] theorists in the media continue to recycle the urban legend of the "Wedge" document."[4]
CSC campaigns
Teach the Controversy
The CSC's Teach the Controversy campaign seeks to portray evolution as a "theory in crisis" while advancing an education policy for US public schools that introduces intelligent design to public school science curricula and seeks to redefine science to allow for supernatural explanations.
The strategy has been to move from standards battles, to curriculum writing, to textbook adoption, all the while undermining the central positions of evolution in biology and methodological naturalism in science. The CSC is the primary organizer and promoter of the Teach the Controversy campaign. It adopted the tactic of remaining behind the scenes and orchestrating, underwriting and otherwise supporting local campaigns, ID groups, and proponents to act on its behalf in lobbying state and local politicians and school boards.
Examples of Teach the Controversy in action were the Kansas evolution hearings, the Santorum Amendment, 2002 Ohio Board of Education intelligent design controversy, and the Dover, Pennsylvania Board of Education intelligent design controversy.
The CSC alleges that the program and curricula they advocate presents evidence both for and against evolution and then encourages students to evaluate the arguments themselves. Casting the conflicting points of view and agendas as an academic and scholarly controversy was proposed by Phillip E. Johnson of the Discovery Institute in his book The Wedge of Truth: Splitting the Foundations of Naturalism. In it, he writes of the 1999-2000 Kansas evolution hearings controversy over the teaching of intelligent design in public school classrooms: "What educators in Kansas and elsewhere should be doing is to "teach the controversy."
In its early years the CSC (then called the CRSC) offered science curriculum that assured teachers that its "Web curriculum can be appropriated without textbook adoption wars." This had the net effect of encouraging ID sympathetic teachers to side-step standard textbook adoption procedures. Anticipating a test case, Discovery Institute director Stephen C. Meyer along with David K. DeWolf and Mark Edward DeForrest published in the Utah Law Review a legal strategy for winning judicial sanction.[4]
According to published reports, the nonprofit Discovery Institute spends more than $1 million a year for research, polls, lobbying and media pieces that support intelligent design and their Teach the Controversy strategy [5].
In August 2005 the New York Times reported that since 2004 there have been 78 campaigns in 31 states to either Teach the Controversy or include intelligent design in science curricla, twice the number seen in 2002-2003.[5]
Intelligent design in higher education
The cultivation of support for ID and its social and political agenda in higher education is a very active part of CSC's strategy. The CSC claims to have faculty supporters on every university campus in this country, including the Ivy League schools.[citation needed] Among these, Alvin Plantinga at Notre Dame and Frank Tipler at Tulane University, are high-profile figures in academia.
CSC recommended curricula benefits from special status at number of religious schools. Biola University and Oklahoma Baptist University are listed on the Access Research Network website as "ID Colleges." In addition, the Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness (IDEA) Center, which began as a student organization at the University of California, San Diego, helps establish student IDEA clubs on university and high school campuses. The Intelligent Design and Undergraduate Research Center, ARN’s student division, also recruits and supports followers at universities. Campus youth ministries play an active role in bringing ID to university campuses through lectures by ID leaders Phillip Johnson, William Dembski, Jonathan Wells, Michael Behe and others. This activity takes place outside university science departments.
Several public universities, including the University of California, Berkeley and the University of New Mexico have had ID courses slipped past academic scrutiny by sympathetic faculty, often as freshman seminars, honors courses and other courses outside required curricula in which instructors have wider latitude regarding course content. Critics of the movement allege this subverts the purpose of academic standards and raises the question of professional competence of the instructors; students should not pay the price for the negligence of instructors who are either not qualified to teach classes purporting to be about science or have subordinated scientific integrity to personal religious loyalties.
Research fellowships
The CSC offers lucrative fellowships of up to $60,000 a year for "support of significant and original research in the natural sciences, the history and philosophy of science, cognitive science and related fields." Published reports state that the CSC has awarded $3.6 million in fellowships of $5,000 to $60,000 per year to 50 researchers since its founding in 1996 [6].
To date none of the Center’s fellows has produced scientific research which has found wide acceptance within the broader scientific community. What research has been published is consistent with that called for in the Wedge Document however, which it says is to form the foundation of the center's Wedge strategy. Among these are 50 books on intelligent design, such as those by William A. Dembski, many published by religious presses like InterVarsity or Crossway, and two documentary films, Unlocking the Mystery of Life, and The Privileged Planet. The former was broadcast briefly on public television creating a controversy.
Since its founding in 1996, the CSC has spent 39 percent of its $9.3 million on research according to Meyer, underwriting books or papers, or often just paying universities to release professors from some teaching responsibilities so that they can ponder intelligent design. Over those nine years, $792,585 was spent to finance laboratory or field research in biology, paleontology or biophysics, while $93,828 was spent to help graduate students in paleontology, linguistics, history and philosophy.
The results of this are found in Discovery Institute-authored science class curricla, "model lesson plans," that are at the center of many of the current debates about including intelligent design in public school science classes. These are promoted by the CSC which urges states and school boards to include criticism of evolution science lessons, to "Teach the Controversy," rather than actually teach intelligent design which is susceptible to legal challenges on First Amendment grounds.
Controversies
In May 2005 the Discovery Institute donated $16,000 to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, and by museum policy, this minimum donation allowed them to celebrate their donation inside the museum in a gathering. The Discovery Institute decided to screen a film entitled The Privileged Planet, based on the book The Privileged Planet, written by two senior fellows of the Discovery Institute.[6] Notably, the video was also a production of Illustra Media,[7] which has been identified as a front for a creationist production company.[8] Upon further review, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History determined that the content of the video was inconsistent with the scientific research of the institution.[9] They therefore refunded the $16,000, clearly denied any endorsement of the content of the video or of the Discovery Institute, and allowed the film to be shown in the museum as per the original agreement. Recent editorials have decried as naïve and negligent the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's failure to identify the Discovery Institute as a creationist organization, exclude the video with its review process in the first place, and identify the entire incident as an example of Wedge Strategy in action.[10]
The Center also funded research for the controversial book From Darwin to Hitler by Center fellow Richard Weikart [7]. Weikart claims that Darwinism's impact on ethics and morality played a key role not only in the rise of eugenics, but also in euthanasia, infanticide, abortion, and racial extermination, all ultimately embraced by the Nazis. The reasoning and language Weikart employs mirrors both the preamble to the Wedge document and the center's early mission statement: "The cultural consequences of this triumph of materialism were devastating. Materialists denied the existence of objective standards binding on all cultures, claiming that environment dictates our moral beliefs." ... "materialism spawned a virulent strain of utopianism. Thinking they could engineer the perfect society through the application of scientific knowledge, materialist reformers advocated coercive government programs that falsely promised to create heaven on earth." Error in Webarchive template: Empty url. The Center also republishes similar articles from Weikart in which he expands on this theme [8].
On September 6, 2006, on the center's evolutionnews.org blog Discovery Institute staffer Casey Luskin published a post entitled "Putting Wikipedia On Notice About Their Biased Anti-ID Intelligent Design Entries." There Luskin reprinted a letter from a reader complaining that he believed Wikipedia's coverage of ID to be "one sided" and that pro-intelligent design editors were censored and attacked. Along with the letter Luskin published a Wikipedia email address for general information and urged readers to "to contact Wikipedia to express your feelings about the biased nature of the entries on intelligent design."[11]
Criticisms
At the foundation of most criticism of the CSC and the Discovery Institute is the charge that the Institute intentionally misrepresents many facts in the promoting of its agenda. A wide spectrum of critics level this charge; from educators, scientists and the Smithsonian Institute to individuals who oppose the teaching of creationism alongside science on ideological grounds. The following are most common areas in which the Institute is accused of being intentionally misleading:
- Teach the Controversy Mainstream scientific organizations maintain that there is no controversy to teach, in the sense that the theory of evolution is fully accepted by the scientific community. Such controversies that do exist concern the details of the mechanisms of evolution, not the validity of the over-arching theory of evolution, and the controversy alleged by the Discovery Institute is manufactured.
- Santorum Amendment Despite the amendment lacking the weight of law, consistent with the Discovery Institute's Wedge strategy, the amendment's inclusion in the conference report of the No Child Left Behind Act is constantly cited by the Discovery Institute as evidence that "federal education policy" calls for a "teach the controversy approach" [9].
- Wedge strategy and the Discovery Institute agenda A common allegation often leveled at the CSC by critics is that it is conducting a campaign, the ultimate goal of which is to reshape American culture by influencing public policy to reflect conservative Christian values. The Wedge document bolsters this claim. They claim that the Center's dismissal of the document and strategy is disingenuous, as when the Center's actions in the political sphere, such as its Teach the Controversy campaign, are taken into account it becomes apparent that the Wedge strategy is indeed being followed.
- Peer review Though the CSC often claims that articles and books asserting intelligent design are published in the peer-reviewed scientific press, the only pro-ID article that has been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal was quickly retracted by the publisher. That article, titled The Origin of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic Categories, was by the institute's Stephen C. Meyer and was published in Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington in 2004. One month after its publication, the journal's publisher issued a statement repudiating the article as not meeting its scientific standards and as having side-stepped peer review (see Sternberg peer review controversy).[10]
Intellectual dishonesty, in the form of misleading impressions created by the use of rhetoric, intentional ambiguity, and misrepresented evidence and a lack of rigour is one of the most common criticisms of the Center..[12] It is alleged that its goal is to lead an unwary public to reach certain conclusions, and that many have been deceived as a result. Its critics, such as Eugenie Scott, Robert Pennock and Barbara Forrest, claim that the CSC knowingly misquotes scientists and other experts, deceptively omits contextual text through ellipsis, and makes unsupported amplifications of relationships and credentials.
Barbara Forrest, author of Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design and Glenn Branch say that the CSC uses academic credentials and affiliations opportunistically.[13] In 2001 the Discovery Institute purchased advertisements in three national publications (the New York Review of Books, the New Republic and the Weekly Standard) to proclaim the adherence of approximately 100 scientists to the following statement: "We are skeptical of claims for the ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of life. Careful examination of the evidence for Darwinian theory should be encouraged."
Such statements commonly note the institutional affiliations of signatories for purposes of identification. But this statement strategically listed either the institution that granted a signatory's PhD or the institutions with which the individual is presently affiliated. Thus the institutions listed for Raymond G. Bohlin, Fazale Rana, and Jonathan Wells, for example, were the University of Texas, Ohio University, and the University of California, Berkeley, where they earned their degrees, rather than their current affiliations: Probe Ministries for Bohlin, the Reasons to Believe ministry for Rana, and the CSC for Wells. During controversies over evolution education in Georgia, New Mexico, Ohio, and Texas, similarly confusing lists of local scientists were circulated.
In another instance, the CSC frequently mentions the Nobel Prize in connection with Henry F. Schaefer, a CSC fellow, and chemist at the University of Georgia. Critics allege that CSC is inflating his reputation by constantly referring to him as a "five-time nominee for the Nobel Prize" since Nobel Prize nominations remain confidential for fifty years.
Alongside the allegation that the center intentionally misrepresents facts, Eugenie Scott and other critics say there is a noticeable conflict between what the CSC tells the public through the media and what they say before conservative Christian audiences. They contend that this is a studied and deliberate attempt at the obfuscation advocated by Wedge strategy author Phillip E. Johnson.[14] When speaking to a mainstream audience and to the media, the institute portrays ID as a secular, scientific theory, that the teaching the controversy campaign does not promote ID, and that their agenda is not religiously motivated. But when speaking to what the Wedge document calls their "natural constituency, namely (conservative) Christians," the institute's officers express themselves in unambiguously religious language that contradicts these statements. This in the belief that they cannot afford to alienate their constituency and major funding sources, virtually all of which are conservative religious organizations and individuals such as Howard Ahmanson, Jr..
Critics can also be found outside of the scientific community. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State has voiced First Amendment concerns over Discovery Institute's activities. He described the approach of the teach the controversy movement's proponents as "a disarming subterfuge designed to undermine solid evidence that all living things share a common ancestry":
- "The movement is a veneer over a certain theological message. Every one of these groups is now actively engaged in trying to undercut sound science education by criticizing evolution," said Lynn. "It is all based on their religious ideology. Even the people who don't specifically mention religion are hard-pressed with a straight face to say who the intelligent designer is if it's not God." [11]
Funding
The Center is funded through the Discovery Institute, which is largely underwritten by grants and gifts from wealthy Christian fundamentalist conservative individuals and groups, such as Howard Ahmanson Jr., Philip F. Anschutz, Richard Mellon Scaife, and the MacLellan Foundation.[15][16][17] [18]
Published reports place the Discovery Institute's budget for ID-related programs at over $4 million per year. The Center's expenditures can be assumed to be substantial based on the scope and quality of the Center's extensive public relations campaigns, materials and contributions to local and regional ID and Teach the Controversy efforts.
CSC director, Stephen C. Meyer, admits most of the Center's money comes from wealthy donors from the Christian right.[16] Howard Ahmanson Jr., who provided $1.5 million in funding that established the Center, has said his goal is "the total integration of biblical law into our lives."[19] The MacLellan Foundation commits itself to "the infallibility of the Scripture."[20] Most Discovery Institute donors have also contributed significantly to the Bush campaign. Until 1995, Ahmanson sat on the board of the Christian reconstructionist Chalcedon Foundation [12], and funds many causes important to the Christian right, including Christian Reconstructionism.
Fellows
Program Advisor
Senior fellows
- Michael J. Behe
- David Berlinski
- Paul Chien
- William A. Dembski
- David DeWolf
- Guillermo Gonzalez
- Michael Newton Keas
- Nancy Pearcey
- Jay W. Richards
- Mark Ryland
- Wesley J. Smith
- Jonathan Wells
- Benjamin Wiker
- Jonathan Witt
Fellows
- Francis J. Beckwith
- Raymond Bohlin
- Walter Bradley
- J. Budziszewski
- John Angus Campbell
- Robert Lowry Clinton
- Jack Collins
- William Lane Craig
- Brian Frederick
- Mark Hartwig
- Kenneth Hermann
- Cornelius G. Hunter
- Robert Kaita
- Dean H. Kenyon
- Robert C. Koons
- Forrest Mims
- Scott Minnich
- J.P. Moreland
- Paul Nelson
- Joseph Poulshock
- Pattle Pak-Toe Pun
- John Mark Reynolds
- Marcus Ross
- Henry Schaefer
- Wolfgang Smith
- Charles Thaxton
- Richard Weikart
See also
External links
- Discovery Institute's CSC
- The Wedge Strategy
- Discovery's Creation A brief history of the Discovery institute and how the Wedge Document was made public.
- The Wedge Document -- So what? from the Discovery Institute
- Evolving Banners at the Discovery Institute - the NCSE shows the changing banners on the CRSC/CSC's website.
- Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive Jody Wilgoren. Originally published in the New York Times. 21 August 2005
References
- ^ Patricia O’Connell Killen, a religion professor at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma whose work centers around the regional religious identity of the Pacific Northwest, recently wrote that "religiously inspired think tanks such as the conservative evangelical Discovery Institute" are part of the "religious landscape" of that area. [1]
- ^ Understanding the Intelligent Design Creationist Movement: Its True Nature and Goals. A Position Paper from the Center for Inquiry, Office of Public Policy Barbara Forrest. May, 2007.
- ^ Robert Pennock has pointed out that over 60 scientific societies have issued policy statements endorsing evolution as valid science [2], including the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Scientific American, Society for Neuroscience, The Lancet, the National Academy of Sciences.
- ^ The "Wedge Document": So What? Discovery Institute staff, February 3 2006
- ^ Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive Jodi Wilgoren. The New York Times, August 21 2005.
- ^ The Privileged Planet, The Discovery Institute.
- ^ The Privileged Planet
- ^ http://www.nmsr.org/smkg-gun.htm
- ^ http://www.pandasthumb.org/pt-archives/001098.html
- ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/02/AR2005060201659.html
- ^ Putting Wikipedia On Notice About Their Biased Anti-ID Intelligent Design Entries Casey Luskin. EvolutionNews.org, September 6, 2006.
- ^ "ID supporters present fallacious arguments, use dishonest rhetoric, and often present non-contemptuous responses as evidence that their theories are gaining acceptance." Leaders and Followers in the Intelligent Design Movement Jason Rosenhouse. BioScience, Vol. 53 No. 1, January 2003.
- ^ Wedging Creationism into the Academy Proponents of a controversial theory struggle to gain purchase within academia. A case study of the quest for academic legitimacy. Barbara Forrest and Glenn Branch. January-February 2005. Academe, a publication of the American Association of University Professors
- ^ "So the question is: "How to win?" That’s when I began to develop what you now see full-fledged in the "wedge" strategy: "Stick with the most important thing"—the mechanism and the building up of information. Get the Bible and the Book of Genesis out of the debate because you do not want to raise the so-called Bible-science dichotomy. Phrase the argument in such a way that you can get it heard in the secular academy and in a way that tends to unify the religious dissenters. That means concentrating on, "Do you need a Creator to do the creating, or can nature do it on its own?" and refusing to get sidetracked onto other issues, which people are always trying to do."Berkeley's Radical An Interview with Phillip E. Johnson Phillip E. Johnson. Touchstone Magazine June 2002
- ^ Discovery Institute emerging as force in creation, public policy Karen L. Willoughby. Baptist2Bapist, May 15 2001.
- ^ a b Battle on Teaching Evolution Sharpens Peter Slevin. Washington Post, March 14 2005.
- ^ "Nearly all of the Discovery Institute's money for the Intelligent Design project comes in the form of grants from wealthy fundamentalists and from Christian political groups. In 2003, the Discovery Institute received some $4.1 million in donations and grants. At least twenty-two different foundations give money to the Intelligent Design project; two-thirds of these are religious institutions with explicitly Christian aims and goals." Deception by Design Lenny Flank. TalkReason.org
- ^ "Financed by some of the same Christian conservatives who helped Mr. Bush win the White House, the organization's intellectual core is a scattered group of scholars who for nearly a decade have explored the unorthodox explanation of life's origins known as intelligent design." ... "The records show financial support from 22 foundations, at least two-thirds of them with explicitly religious missions." Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive Jodi Wilgoren. The New York Times, August 21 2005.
- ^ Blumenthal, Max (January 6, 2004). "Avenging angel of the religious right". Salon.com. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
- ^ Selvin, Peter (March 14, 2005). "Battle on Teaching Evolution Sharpens". Washington Post. Retrieved 2007-05-17.