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BlackChampagne -- no longer new; improvement also in question.: Turning back the clock on science.



Sunday, February 12, 2006  

Turning back the clock on science.


Depressing article in the LA Times about Ken Ham, an evangelist who spends his life encouraging adults and children to ignore a great number of mankind's best scientific advances of the last several centuries.
A former high-school biology teacher, Ham travels the nation training children as young as 5 to challenge science orthodoxy. He doesn't engage in the political and legal fights that have erupted over the teaching of evolution. His strategy is more subtle: He aims to give people who trust the biblical account of creation the confidence to defend their views — aggressively.

He urges students to offer creationist critiques of their textbooks, parents to take on science museum docents, professionals to raise the subject with colleagues. If Ham has done his job well, his acolytes will ask enough pointed questions — and set forth enough persuasive arguments — to shake the doctrine of Darwin.

...

Ham encourages people to further their research with the dozens of books and DVDs sold by his ministry. They give answers to every question a critic might ask: How did Noah fit dinosaurs on the ark? He took babies. Why didn't a tyrannosaur eat Eve? All creatures were vegetarians until Adam's sin brought death into the world. How can we have modern breeds of dog like the poodle if God finished his work 6,000 years ago? He created a dog "kind" — a master blueprint — and let evolution take over from there.
When I hear about these sorts of people, I really wonder. It's like those insane, rabble-rousing columns by Ann Coulter; they can't really believe what they're saying, can they? I mean how can a person intelligent enough to think up Biblically-inspired ways to cheat the corners on biology and archeology and geology not know they're playind a fool's game? Perhaps it's my last lingering vestiges of faith in humanity, but I have to believe these guys know better, and know they're slinging bullshit, but that they do it because they think the end is worth the means. It's like the lying about WMDs and Al Queda connections and all the rest that Bush and others did to get us into the Iraq war; they knew it was lying, and the probably felt a little bad about it, but they honestly felt it was imperative that the US invade Iraq, and they were prepared to use any means at their disposal to make it happen.

Trained scientists and biologists can't honestly believe their fairy tale version of creation, but they think their followers are too stupid to handle cognitive dissonance, and that if people believe anything in the Bible isn't true, they'll lose faith in the whole thing. In fact, the guy in the article is quoted saying that, more or less:
When pastors dismiss the creation account as a fable, he says, they give their flock license to disregard the Bible's moral teachings as well. He shows his audiences a graphic that places the theory of evolution at the root of all social ills: abortion, divorce, racism, gay marriage, store clerks who say "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas."
No one with even rudimentary intelligence denies that evolution happens; after all, we've got hundreds of breeds of dogs, penicillin doesn't work anymore because bacteria has evolved resistances to it, etc. Ham even addresses the "dog kind" thing in the article, so he allows that evolution occurs; but only over short periods of time and not to human beings, who were created exactly as they are today, in the image of God. In that light, it seems like his real quibbles should be with geologists and archeologists and cosmologists, not biologists.

So he's not a complete crack pot, he's just a liar and a hypocrite who peddles lies and propaganda to the tune of $120k a year and a great deal of personal pain to the minds of the poor children who are subjected to his nonsense.

Whenever I read about one of these guys, I wonder if this happens anywhere else on earth, in Western nations. I assume there's no modern biology and evolution/origin of man taught in Islamic nations, since they are theocracies and I believe the Koran goes by a semi-Genesis account of human origins. But what about other Western Nations, like in Europe? Ham, the man in the LA Times profile, was originally from Australia, and he apparently left and came to make his fortune in America when he couldn't find enough gullible idiots in his homeland.

I'm sure there are local pockets of religious zealotry in every nation, and neo-Nazis who blame the Jews for unemployment or whatever, but are there national movements to overthrow contemporary scientific thought and education in other countries? I know this site has readers in NZ, Oz, Germany, the UK, Sweden, and lots of other countries -- seriously, does this sort of thing pop up in your local news, on a larger level than some nut on a street corner with a tangled beard and wild eyes?

I suspect not, which really makes me wonder what's wrong with the US? Conservative repression is always a reaction to changes in society, and there are always growing pains, but damn, even the Pope says that science is no threat to faith. And Pope Benedict is a conservative, and he's holding strong on all the church's traditional anti-women and gay doctrine, but even he is more scientifically with the times than your average white southern Christian in the US. And this "embrace ignorance and repression" movement in the US is actually growing!

America seems immortal and all-powerful, but all empires fall in time, usually when they grow too decadent and foolishly-self absorbed to renew themselves, while simultaneously overextending abroad. And um... read the news lately? When Bush's administration would seemingly be happy to embrace an American Taliban style of repression of dissent, they are supported by a substantial minority of frightened, violent, and torture-approving citizens, and they eagerly admit to conducting illegal and secretive spying operations on their citizens... yikes. As Malaya often says, we've gotta get a cabin in Canada, or a hide away in NZ. Just in case.
Comments:

Canada would welcome an open-minded American like yourself :)


 

This has nothing to do with your post, but you reminded me of it.

You said, "he apparently left and came to make his fortune in America when he couldn't find enough gullible idiots in his homeland."

A book that I am reading says that 46% of adults in the United States did not know how long it takes for the earth to make one orbit around the sun (of course there was no information about the polling technique).

If that is true then we are not a nation of "gullible idiots", just horribly uneducated idiots. Not that there is a lot of difference.


 

Never seen anything like that here. Sure we have the occassional crackpots, but most of our religious fanatics are very different from yours. Tom was telling my mum about the church that he and his parents went to in the US, and this was apparently a typical catholic church. My mum was appalled by what he was saying - that the pastor would get up and rant about the people who donated money last week and praise the people who donated lots of money and scould those who didn't donate very much, publicaly during the sermon. There were a lot of other contrasts between the churchs here and there, and it really looked like the ones over here were generally much more pleasant places to be; they also generally help the community a lot lot more.

I find it odd that he is blaming abortions, divorce and racism on the theory of evolution. Divorce has been around long before the theory of evolution has, and has been accepted by certain parts of the faith (not catholicism, of course). Racism was strongly backed by the christians, with the good old "god wouldn't have put them on separate continents" jig. Abortions have been going on for a long time too, and are only encouraged by the church's extreme views on contraception - a rape victim who is on the pill doesn't need to worry too much, but one who is a devout catholic...

I don't see how things like gay marriage or 'happy holidays' can possibly relate to the theory of evolution, but these are recent advances so its conceivable they can come up with a "look how awful modern times are, all because of Darwin" type arguement. Funny they aren't blaming it all on Galileo like they should be - he really kicked off the scientific revolution which led to Darwin. I guess that's been done, and failed. And the Pope pardonned Galileo fairly recently so I guess they can't contradict him :)


 

From what I know about religion here, in the uk, we don't have anything like that here. All the fundmentalist crap I hear about seems to be happening in the US (Or the middle east, but that's another story (Or, come to think of it, Africa))

So people really beleive in it? Yes. I've read too many quotes from www.fstdt.com to have any faith left in humanity.


 

Ha ha,

so from the bunch of your loyal readers comments, I find that I am the only 'fundamentalist' crackpot around. Course I'm from Chicago, a long ways away from the bible touting Jesus bangers in the South.

If you'll entertain my opinion, the simple fact is that alot of the 'scientific minded', and 'modern' people as you might describe yourself already have a set limitation to the understanding of a higher power. It's so engrained that you can't even entertain the possibility of God's existence.

The whole problem doesn't come down to what they are saying, because if God exists, then what they are saying is absolutely correct. It comes down to the definite question of does God exist, which I have never seen you address. I'm a person that doesn't believe that God's existence can be proven, because faith is a necessity. You may ask why faith is a necessity, and I would respond that it is necessary to protect free will.

you may criticize this guy for spreading his rhettoric and jargon, and criticize his motivations for doing so as purely selfish but I don't think that's the case. He actually believes this stuff and it's not really for you to say it's wrong for him to do so. He believes he's telling these people the truth, as you do would when you tell others of the inexistence of God. YOu think you're right, and he thinks he's right. What's the deciding factor between the two of you? I don't think I need to list the numerous scientists and the studies they've performed that have been done just as falsely to convince others of some scientific value they really want people to know. It really goes both ways.

=)


 

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