"Darwinism Completely Refutes Intelligent Design". Spiegel interview with evolution philosopher Daniel Dennett (2005)
"Der Spiegel" December 26, 2005; http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,392319,00.html
> <br> "Darwinism Completely Refutes Intelligent Design"
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> <b>Intelligent Design is once again making headlines in the United States. But what is the attraction? Daniel Dennett spoke with SPIEGEL about the attraction of creationism, how religion itself succumbs to Darwinian ideas, and the social irresponsibility of the religious right in America.<b>
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SPIEGEL: Professor Dennett, more than 120 million Americans believe that God created Adam our of mud some 10,000 years ago and made Eve from his rib. Do you personally know any of these 120 million?
> <br> Dennett: Yes. But people who are creationists are usually not interested in talking about it. Those who are actually enthusiastic about Intelligent Design, though, would talk endlessly. And what I learned about them is that they are filled with misinformation. But they've encountered this misinformation in very plausible sources. It's not just their pastor that tells them this. They go out and they buy books that are published by main line publishers. Or they go on Web sites and they see very clever propaganda that is put out by the Discovery Institute in Seattle, which is financed by the religious right.
> <br> SPIEGEL: In the center of the debate is the theory of evolution. Why is it that evolution seems to produce much more opposition than any other scientific theory such as the Big Bang or quantum mechanics?
> <br> Dennett: I think it is because evolution goes right to the heart of the most troubling discovery in science of the last few hundred years. It counters one of the oldest ideas we have, maybe older even than our species.
> <br> SPIEGEL: Which is what exactly?
> <br> Dennett: It's the idea that it takes a big fancy smart thing to make a lesser thing. I call that the trickle-down theory of creation. You'll never see a spear making a spear maker. You'll never see a horse shoe making a blacksmith. You'll never see a pot making a potter. It is always the other way around and this is so obvious that it just seems to stand to reason.
> <br> SPIEGEL: You think this idea was already present in apes?
> <div> <table class="assetalignright" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="right" border="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td><font size="-1"><!-- Vignette StoryServer 5.0 Mon Dec 26 16:29:47 2005 --> <table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" width="180" bgcolor="#efefef" border="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td> <div class="contentkastenhead"><font size="-2"><b>DANIEL DENNETT<b>