Intelligent Design Has No Place in the Science Curriculum
By Harold Morowitz, Robert Hazen and James Trefil
The Chronicle of Higher Eduction

2 September 2005 Issue
Volume 52, Issue 2, Page B6

    Scientists who teach evolution sometimes feel as if they are 
trapped in an old horror film - the kind where the monster is 
killed repeatedly, only to come to life in a nastier form each time. 
Since the Scopes trial in 1925, the battle between scientists who 
want to teach mainstream biology in American public schools, 
and creationists who want to promulgate a more religious view, 
has gone through several cycles.

    In McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education in 1982, a federal 
court ruled that the introduction of creationism into public-school 
curricula constituted the establishment of religion, and hence 
was expressly forbidden by the First Amendment. That decision 
dealt a serious (though by no means fatal) blow to old-line 
creationism and its close cousin, so-called creation science. But 
another variant of creationism, so-called intelligent design, has 
cropped up. At least 19 states are now debating its use in public 
education, and President Bush commented in August that he 
thought both evolution and intelligent design "ought to be 
properly taught."

    Many people fail to understand the subtle but important 
differences between the new and old forms of creationism, and 
the different debates those approaches engender. Like the 
French generals who used tactics from World War I to face the 
Nazis in 1939, some educators seem intent on fighting the last 
war.

    A word about the authors of this essay: Although our areas of 
expertise differ, all of us have investigated aspects of life's origin 
and evolution. In addition, our political views span the spectrum 
from liberal Democrat to conservative Republican. Thus the 
essay does not represent any particular ideological or 
disciplinary viewpoint. We are united in our concern that the 
science curriculum, from kindergarten through university, should 
reflect the best and most up-to-date scholarship.

    Consider, then, several different theories of life's origin and 
evolution. The main theories are those of miraculous creation 
and of sequential origins. Within the theories of sequential 
origins are the theories of intelligent design and of emergent 
complexity, and the latter can in turn be divided into the theories 
of frozen accident and of deterministic origins. The debate 
surrounding each pair focuses on a different aspect of the nature 
of science.

    Miraculous creation versus sequential origins. Was the origin 
of life a miracle, or did it conform to natural law - and how can we 
tell? Many different versions of the doctrine of miraculous 
creation exist, but the one that is most at odds with modern 
science is called "young Earth creationism" and is based on a 
literal reading of the Bible. According to the supporters of that 
theory, our planet and its life-forms were created more or less in 
their present forms in a miraculous act about 10,000 years ago.

    Young Earth creationism is in direct conflict with scientific 
measurements of the age of rocks, the thickness of polar ice 
sheets, the expansion of the universe, and numerous other 
indicators of our planet's great antiquity.

    One unusual solution to that disparity was proposed in a book 
by Philip Gosse, called Omphalos, which was published two 
years before Darwin's On the Origin of Species. The word 
"omphalos" means navel in Greek, and Gosse argued that 
Adam was created with a navel, even though he had never been 
inside a womb. From that insight has flowed the so-called 
doctrine of created antiquity (Gosse actually called it 
Pre-Chronism), which states that although Earth was created 
10,000 years ago, it was created to look as if it were much older. 
Are some stars more than 10,000 light-years away? The 
universe was created with light from those stars already on its 
way to Earth. And what about those apparently ancient rocks? 
The universe was created with just the right mixtures of 
potassium-40 and argon to make the rocks appear much older 
than they really are.

    It is impossible to conceive of any experiment or observation 
that could prove the doctrine of created antiquity wrong. Any 
result, no matter what it was, could be explained by saying "the 
universe was just created that way."

    In fact, that property of young Earth creationism proved to be its 
Achilles' heel. Every scientific theory must be testable by 
observation or experiment - or it cannot be considered science. 
In principle, it must be possible to imagine outcomes that would 
prove the theory wrong. In the words of Karl Popper, scientific 
theories must be falsifiable, even if they are not false. Popper 
said that a theory that cannot be overturned by experimental data 
is not a part of experimental science.

    Created antiquity is not falsifiable. The teaching of young Earth 
creationism, along with any other doctrine based on a 
miraculous creation of life, was prohibited in public schools not 
because the theory was proved wrong but because it simply is 
not science. It is, as the court in McLean v. Arkansas Board of 
Education recognized, a religious doctrine, untestable by the 
techniques of science.

    Once we discard the theories of miraculous creation, we are 
left with the theories of sequential origins.

    Intelligent design versus emergent complexity. The theory of 
intelligent design, or ID, is a theory of sequential origins, but it is 
also the latest attack on the idea that the origin and evolution of 
life follow natural laws. Like created antiquity, ID has a long 
intellectual pedigree. The English philosopher William Paley first 
espoused it in 1802, arguing that if you found a watch in a field, 
you would conclude that it had been designed by some 
intelligence rather than assembled by chance. In the same way, 
the argument goes, the intricate universe in which we live 
reflects the mind of an intelligent maker.

    The modern theory of intelligent design is more sophisticated 
than Paley's argument, although it derives from much the same 
kind of reasoning. It is anchored in a concept called "irreducible 
complexity" - the idea that organisms possess many 
complicated structures, which are essential to the organism's 
survival but which are useless unless all the structures are 
present. The chance of Darwinian evolution's producing so many 
such structures and of their existing simultaneously, according 
to the theory, is so small that they must have been produced by 
an intelligent designer.

    Intelligent design challenges the conventional wisdom in 
origin-of-life research that life is a prime example of so-called 
emergent complexity. All around us are complex systems that 
arise when energy flows through a collection of particles, like 
living cells or grains of sand. Ant colonies, slime molds, sand 
dunes, spiral galaxies, traffic jams, and human consciousness 
are examples of such systems. Although scientists have yet to 
produce a living system in the laboratory, most origin-of-life 
researchers are optimistic that one day we will be able to do so, 
or at least to understand how life first emerged from inorganic 
materials.

    The supporters of intelligent design resort to the same kind of 
argument that creationists have used for decades, identifying 
some biological structure and claiming that it is irreducibly 
complex. Then supporters of emergent complexity have to 
analyze that structure and show that its complexity arises 
naturally. For example, 20 years ago, the predecessors of ID 
advocates pointed to the modern whale as an example of what 
would be called irreducible complexity today (that term wasn't 
used then). The whale, they argued, is a form so specialized that 
it could not possibly have been produced by Darwinian evolution.

    Alan Haywood, author of Creation and Evolution, put it this way: 
"Darwinists rarely mention the whale because it presents them 
with one of their most insoluble problems. They believe that 
somehow a whale must have evolved from an ordinary 
land-dwelling animal, which took to the sea and lost its legs. ... A 
land mammal that was in the process of becoming a whale 
would fall between two stools - it would not be fitted for life on 
land or at sea, and would have no hope for survival."

    The power of science is that, faced with such a challenge, one 
can test the relevant theory. The theory of evolution predicts that 
whales with atrophied hind legs must have once swum in the 
seas. If Darwin is correct, then those whales' fossils must lie 
buried somewhere. Furthermore, those strange creatures must 
have arisen during a relatively narrow interval of geological time, 
after the evolution of the earliest known marine mammals (about 
60 million years ago) and before the appearance of the 
streamlined whales of the present era (which show up in the 
fossil record during the past 30 million years). Armed with those 
conclusions, paleontologists searched shallow marine 
formations from 35 million to 55 million years in age. Sure 
enough, in the past decade the scientists have excavated 
dozens of those "missing links" in the development of the whale 
- curious creatures that sport combinations of anatomical 
features characteristic of land and sea mammals.

    But there's always another challenge to evolution, always 
another supposed example of irreducible complexity. At the 
present time the poster child of intelligent design is the flagellum 
of a bacterium. That complex structure in bacterial walls features 
a corkscrew-shaped fiber that rotates, propelling the bacterium 
through the water. Obviously, a completely functioning flagellum 
is very useful, but it is also obvious that all its parts have to be 
present for it to function. A nonmoving corkscrew, for example, 
would be useless and would confer no evolutionary advantage 
on its own. Roughly 50 molecules are involved in constructing 
the flagellum, so the probability of all the parts' coming together 
by chance seems infinitesimally small.

    However, that intelligent-design argument contains a hidden 
assumption: that all parts of a complex structure must have had 
the same function throughout the history of the development of 
the organism. In fact, it is quite common for structures to have 
one function at one time and be adapted for quite another use 
later on. A land animal's legs become a whale's flippers. An 
insect may develop bumps on the side of its body to help it get 
rid of internal heat, but when the bumps get big enough, they 
may help the insect glide or fly, thus opening up an entirely new 
ecological niche for exploitation. That process is so common 
that evolutionary scientists have given it a name: exaptation.

    No evolutionary theorist would suggest that something as 
complex as the flagellum appeared ab initio. Instead, it was 
assembled from parts that had developed for other uses. For 
example, some molecules produce energy by rotating, a normal 
procedure within cells. Other molecules have a shape that 
makes them ideal for moving materials across cell membranes. 
The flagellum's building blocks include both types of molecules. 
Instead of being assembled from scratch, then, the flagellum is 
put together from a stock of already existing parts, each of which 
evolved to carry out a completely different task. The flagellum 
may be complicated, but it is not irreducibly complex.

    An important distinction between the theories of intelligent 
design and miraculous creation is that the former makes 
predictions that can be tested. The problem with ID, at least so 
far, is that when statements like the one claiming irreducible 
complexity for the flagellum are put to the test, they turn out to be 
wrong.

    That distinction means that we should use different methods 
to counter intelligent design than those that defeated young 
Earth creationism. The more thoughtful advocates of intelligent 
design accept many of the tenets of Darwinism - the idea that 
living things have changed over time, for example. Although the 
motive of some ID proponents may be to re-introduce God into 
the debate about the origin of life, their arguments can be met 
with scientific, not legal, rebuttals. That is good news: They are 
playing on our field.

    Frozen accident versus deterministic origins. The last pair of 
theories are both subsets of emergent complexity, and both fall 
within the scientific mainstream; the debate here is about 
whether life had to develop the way it did, or whether it could 
have turned out differently. A number of distinguished scientists 
see the development of life on our planet as a series of 
accidental, perhaps improbable, events that became locked into 
the structures of living things - what have been termed "frozen 
accidents." In the words of the most eloquent advocate for that 
point of view, the late Stephen Jay Gould, if you played the tape 
again, you would get a different set of accidents, and hence a 
different outcome. Therefore life may be rare in the universe, and 
the way it began and evolved on Earth may be unique.

    Other scientists see life's chemical origin and many of its 
subsequent evolutionary steps as inevitable - a cosmic 
imperative. Indeed, much modern research on the origin of life is 
devoted to showing precisely how living things arose from 
inanimate matter through the action of the ordinary laws of 
chemistry and physics. That more deterministic view of life's 
origin and evolution means scientists are more likely to 
eventually understand the details of life's emergence, and it 
includes the testable prediction that similar life-forms exist on 
many other planets throughout the universe.

    It seems to us that the frozen-accident theory of life's origin is 
at best unsatisfying, and may be unworthy of the scientific way of 
approaching the world. To say that a natural process is random 
is, in effect, an act of surrender, something that should be done 
only as a last resort. If you read the frozen-accident literature 
carefully, you often get the feeling that what is really being said 
is: "My friends and I can't figure out why things happened this 
way, so it must have been random."

    Another aspect of the frozen-accident school of thought has 
unfortunate consequences for the educational system. Random 
events are, by definition, not reproducible. That makes them 
disturbingly similar to the unknowable interventions posited by 
intelligent design. Is there really much difference between 
irreproducible random events and irreproducible acts of God? 
We should note, however, that proponents of the frozen-accident 
theory make no claims of divine intervention, while advocates of 
intelligent design do move on to theological arguments.

    Although both the theories of frozen accident and deterministic 
origins have their supporters, virtually all scientists who work in 
the field believe that once living things appeared on our planet, 
the Darwinian process of natural selection guided their 
development. There is no disagreement on that point, although 
there is - and should be - vigorous debate on the details of the 
way natural selection has worked.

    Shouldn't we just teach the debates? That is the rallying cry of 
intelligent-design advocates. Having learned their lesson in 
Arkansas in 1982, they no longer demand that schools teach the 
theory of miraculous creation. Instead they say that students 
should be told that legitimate alternatives to Darwinian evolution 
exist, and thus biology classes should include the theory of 
intelligent design.

    That argument has an apparent fairness that is hard to resist, 
especially for academics who believe that, at least in the 
sciences, subjects should be approached with an open mind 
and critical thinking. But the idea of "teaching the debate" 
founders on two points.

    First, there really is no debate in the mainstream literature. 
The vast majority of scientists who study the origin of life accept 
the idea of nonmiraculous origins without any reservations. Only 
creationists support the theory of intelligent design.

    Second, American students, from kindergarten to university, 
spend far too little time as it is studying science. We shouldn't 
teach them about intelligent design for the same reason that we 
don't teach them that Earth is flat, or that flies are produced by 
spontaneous generation from rotting meat. It's bad science, and 
the curriculum has no room for bad science.

    Our educational system produces citizens who are ill prepared 
to deal with a world increasingly dominated by scientific and 
technological advances. If we were to "teach the debate," what 
should we remove from the already inadequate curriculum to 
make room for an idea that has yet to meet even the most 
rudimentary scientific tests? Should we neglect the 
environment? Energy? Genetics? Most high-school biology 
courses devote a pitifully small amount of time to evolution, 
which is arguably the most important idea in the life sciences. 
Should we dilute that instruction even further?

    The time to discuss altering the curriculum is when the theory 
of intelligent design reaches the point where it has serious 
arguments and data to put forward - to the point, in other words, 
where there is a significant debate among scientists.

    -------

    Harold Morowitz, Robert Hazen, and James Trefil are, 
respectively, the Clarence J. Robinson Professors of biology and 
natural philosophy, earth sciences, and physics at George 
Mason University.





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