David Roach, "Dembski: Intelligent design offers alternative to Darwinism" (2005)
http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=20574
Dembski: Intelligent design offers
alternative to Darwinism
By David Roach
Apr 13, 2005
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--Intelligent design has generated controversy because it deals with issues at the core of the current debate between secularists and people with a Christian worldview, said William Dembski, one of the ID movement's leading thinkers.
"These issues of intelligent design and creation really cut to the heart of
worldviews, what we are about, how we're putting life together and what's
ultimately meaningful, what morality is based on," Dembski said in speaking
on "Darwinism and the Church: a Conversation on Design and Cultural
Engagement" at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Dembski currently is associate research professor in the conceptual
foundations of science at Baylor University in Texas but will join Southern
Seminary's faculty in June as the Carl F.H. Henry Professor of Science and
Theology. Dembski and other proponents of intelligent design theory contend
that some features of the natural world are best explained as the products
of an intelligent cause rather than naturalistic evolution.
Addressing a forum sponsored by the seminary's Carl F.H. Henry Institute for
Evangelical Engagement, Dembski said he looks forward to serving at the
Louisville, Ky., campus because of Southern's willingness to sponsor
intelligent design research as a legitimate scientific enterprise -- an
attitude that some Christian colleges and universities do not share because
they believe embracing intelligent design will compromise their status in
the academic world.
"Even many Christians who have been raised and indoctrinated in a secular
mindset ... will say, 'Look, we're just going to have to accept the science
of the day and try to make our peace with it theologically,'" Dembski said.
"And there is no peace theologically ... ultimately with this view
[Darwinian evolution]. But they accept it. And so, this idea of intelligent
design becomes very threatening."
Intelligent design's first goal is to demonstrate the inadequacy of
Darwinian evolution as an explanation of the origin of the universe, Dembski
said. One of the chief methods of accomplishing this, he said, is to
demonstrate the weakness of the scientific evidence presented in support of
Darwinian evolution in many school classrooms.
"Evolutionary theory is in such a weak position that it shouldn't be taught
at all ... in this grand global sense," Dembski said. "If you want to say
natural selection operates in accounting for antibiotic resistance in
bacteria, you can make a case there. But if you are going to try to say
that's how you get bacteria, insects, all this in the first place, that's a
huge extrapolation. The [Darwinian] theory doesn't support that."
After offering a critique of Darwinian evolution, intelligent design
proposes alternative theories about the origin of the universe, Dembski
said. These theories argue that a designer must have fashioned the complex
biological and physical mechanisms humans observe in the world, he
said.
As the data supporting intelligent design increases, some members of the
secular scientific community have changed their minds and considered the
possibility of an intelligent designer for the first time, Dembski said,
noting that several researchers from major universities have contacted him
and expressed a desire to conduct intelligent design research.
"I think the other side is worried," Dembski said. "And they are right to be
worried because I think the ideas are on our side."
Although much of the scientific community views intelligent design with
disdain, Dembski said that in popular culture as many as 90 percent of
Americans "are favorably disposed" to the idea.
Because naturalism has influenced a variety of fields such as science,
philosophy, business and economics, Christians must be prepared to combat
the naturalistic worldview in every arena of life, Dembski said. Especially
effective, he said, is using intelligent design to challenge the basic
assumptions of naturalism and Darwinian evolution.
"I like to get back to the axioms, to the basics. If you can get at the
taproot, at the thing that's really fundamental, then I think all these
superstructures, the whole house of cards will come down," Dembski said.
"Intelligent design is pressing that you can't get [the design of the
universe] without intelligence."
WWW.BPNEWS.NET
Copyright (c) 2001 - 2005 Southern Baptist
Convention, Baptist Press
901 Commerce Street
Nashville, TN 37203
Tel: 615.244.2355
Fax: 615.782.8736