W Post
 
August 24, 2011
 
Richard Dawkins
 
 
Attention Governor Perry: Evolution is a fact
Q. Texas governor and GOP candidate Rick Perry, at a campaign event this  
week, told a boy that _evolution is ”just a theory”_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/under-god/post/rick-perry-evangelicals-and-evolution/2011/08/18
/gIQARsf6NJ_blog.html)  with “gaps” and that in  Texas they teach “both 
creationism and evolution.” Perry later added _“God is how we got here.”_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/20/rick-perry-evolution-inte
lligent-design_n_932073.html)  According to a _2009 Gallup study_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/114544/darwin-birthday-believe-evolution.aspx)  , 
only 38 percent of 
Americans say  they believe in evolution. If a majority of Americans are 
skeptical or unsure  about evolution, should schools teach it as a mere “theory”
? Why is evolution so  threatening to religion? 
A. There is nothing unusual about Governor Rick Perry. Uneducated fools can 
 be found in every country and every period of history, and they are not 
unknown  in high office. What is unusual about today’s Republican party (I 
disavow the  ridiculous ‘GOP’ nickname, because the party of Lincoln and 
Theodore Roosevelt  has lately forfeited all claim to be considered ‘grand’) is 
this: In any other  party and in any other country, an individual may 
occasionally rise to the top  in spite of being an uneducated ignoramus. In 
today’
s Republican Party ‘in spite  of’ is not the phrase we need. Ignorance and 
lack of education are positive  qualifications, bordering on obligatory. 
Intellect, knowledge and linguistic  mastery are mistrusted by Republican 
voters, who, when choosing a president,  would apparently prefer someone like 
themselves over someone actually qualified  for the job. 
Any other organization -- a big corporation, say, or a university, or a  
learned society - -when seeking a new leader, will go to immense trouble over  
the choice. The CVs of candidates and their portfolios of relevant 
experience  are meticulously scrutinized, their publications are read by a 
learned  
committee, references are taken up and scrupulously discussed, the 
candidates  are subjected to rigorous interviews and vetting procedures. 
Mistakes are 
still  made, but not through lack of serious effort.  
The population of the United States is more than 300 million and it 
includes  some of the best and brightest that the human species has to offer, 
probably  more so than any other country in the world. There is surely 
something 
wrong  with a system for choosing a leader when, given a pool of such talent 
and a  process that occupies more than a year and consumes billions of 
dollars, what  rises to the top of the heap is George W Bush. Or when the likes 
of Rick Perry  or Michele Bachmann or Sarah Palin can be mentioned as even 
remote  possibilities. 
A politician’s attitude to evolution is perhaps not directly important in  
itself. It can have unfortunate consequences on education and science policy 
 but, compared to Perry’s and the Tea Party’s pronouncements on other 
topics such  as economics, taxation, history and sexual politics, their 
ignorance of  evolutionary science might be overlooked. Except that a 
politician’s 
attitude to  evolution, however peripheral it might seem, is a surprisingly 
apposite litmus  test of more general inadequacy. This is because unlike, 
say, string theory  where scientific opinion is genuinely divided, there is 
about the fact of  evolution no doubt at all. Evolution is a fact, as securely 
established as any  in science, and he who denies it betrays woeful 
ignorance and lack of education,  which likely extends to other fields as well. 
Evolution is not some recondite  backwater of science, ignorance of which would 
be pardonable. It is the  stunningly simple but elegant explanation of our 
very existence and the  existence of every living creature on the planet. 
Thanks to Darwin, we now  understand why we are here and why we are the way we 
are. You cannot be ignorant  of evolution and be a cultivated and adequate 
citizen of today. 
Darwin’s idea is arguably the most powerful ever to occur to a human mind.  
The power of a scientific theory may be measured as a ratio: the number of 
facts  that it explains divided by the number of assumptions it needs to 
postulate in  order to do the explaining. A theory that assumes most of what it 
is trying to  explain is a bad theory. That is why the creationist or ‘
intelligent design’  theory is such a rotten theory. 
What any theory of life needs to explain is functional complexity. 
Complexity  can be measured as statistical improbability, and living things are 
 
statistically improbable in a very particular direction: the direction of  
functional efficiency. The body of a bird is not just a prodigiously 
complicated 
 machine, with its trillions of cells - each one in itself a marvel of  
miniaturized complexity - all conspiring together to make muscle or bone, 
kidney  or brain. Its interlocking parts also conspire to make it good for 
something -  in the case of most birds, good for flying. An aero-engineer is 
struck dumb with  admiration for the bird as flying machine: its feathered 
flight-surfaces and  ailerons sensitively adjusted in real time by the on-board 
computer which is the  brain; the breast muscles, which are the engines, the 
ligaments, tendons and  lightweight bony struts all exactly suited to the 
task. And the whole machine is  immensely improbable in the sense that, if you 
randomly shook up the parts over  and over again, never in a million years 
would they fall into the right shape to  fly like a swallow, soar like a 
vulture, or ride the oceanic up-draughts like a  wandering albatross. Any 
theory 
of life has to explain how the laws of physics  can give rise to a complex 
flying machine like a bird or a bat or a pterosaur, a  complex swimming 
machine like a tarpon or a dolphin, a complex burrowing machine  like a mole, a 
complex climbing machine like a monkey, or a complex thinking  machine like 
a person. 
Darwin explained all of this with one brilliantly simple idea - natural  
selection, driving gradual evolution over immensities of geological time. His 
is  a good theory because of the huge ratio of what it explains (all the 
complexity  of life) divided by what it needs to assume (simply the nonrandom 
survival of  hereditary information through many generations). The rival 
theory to explain  the functional complexity of life - creationism - is about 
as 
bad a theory as  has ever been proposed. What it postulates (an intelligent 
designer) is even  more complex, even more statistically improbable than 
what it explains. In fact  it is such a bad theory it doesn’t deserve to be 
called a theory at all, and it  certainly doesn’t deserve to be taught 
alongside evolution in science  classes. 
The simplicity of Darwin’s idea, then, is a virtue for three reasons. 
First,  and most important, it is the signature of its immense power as a 
theory, 
when  compared with the mass of disparate facts that it explains - 
everything about  life including our own existence. Second, it makes it easy 
for 
children to  understand (in addition to the obvious virtue of being true!), 
which means that  it could be taught in the early years of school. And finally, 
it makes it  extremely beautiful, one of the most beautiful ideas anyone 
ever had as well as  arguably the most powerful. To die in ignorance of its 
elegance, and power to  explain our own existence, is a tragic loss, 
comparable to dying without ever  having experienced great music, great 
literature, 
or a beautiful sunset. 
There are many reasons to vote against Rick Perry. His fatuous stance on 
the  teaching of evolution in schools is perhaps not the first reason that 
springs to  mind. But maybe it is the most telling litmus test of the other 
reasons, and it  seems to apply not just to him but, lamentably, to all the 
likely contenders for  the Republican nomination. The ‘evolution question’ 
deserves a prominent place  in the list of questions put to candidates in 
interviews and public debates  during the course of the coming election.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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