Sadly, an Honest Creationist
by Richard Dawkins
The following article is from
Free Inquiry
magazine, Volume 21, Number 4.
Creation “scientists” have more need
than most of us to parade their degrees and qualifications, but it pays to
look closely at the institutions that awarded them and the subjects in which
they were taken. Those vaunted Ph.D.s tend to be in subjects such as marine
engineering or gas kinetics rather than in relevant disciplines like zoology
or geology. And often they are earned not at real universities, but at
little-known Bible colleges deep in Bush country.
There are, however, a few shining
exceptions. Kurt Wise now makes his living at Bryan College (motto “Christ
Above All”) located in Dayton, Tennessee, home of the famed Scopes trial.
And yet, he originally obtained an authentic degree in geophysics from the
University of Chicago, followed by a Ph.D. in geology from Harvard, no less,
where he studied under (the name is milked for all it is worth in
creationist propaganda) Stephen Jay Gould.
Kurt Wise is a contributor to In Six
Days: Why 50 Scientists Choose to Believe in Creation, a compendium
edited by John F. Ashton (Ph.D., of course). I recommend this book. It is a
revelation. I would not have believed such wishful thinking and
self-deception possible. At least some of the authors seem to be sincere,
and they don’t water down their beliefs. Much of their fire is aimed at
weaker brethren who think God works through evolution, or who clutch at the
feeble hope that one “day” in Genesis might mean not twenty-four hours but a
hundred million years. These are hard-core “young earth creationists” who
believe that the universe and all of life came into existence within one
week, less than 10,000 years ago. And Wise—flying valiantly in the face of
reason, evidence, and education—is among them. If there were a prize for
Virtuoso Believing (it is surely only a matter of time before the Templeton
Foundation awards one) Kurt Wise, B.A. (Chicago), Ph.D. (Harvard), would
have to be a prime candidate.
Wise stands out among young earth
creationists not only for his impeccable education, but because he displays
a modicum of scientific honesty and integrity. I have seen a published
letter in which he comments on alleged “human bones” in Carboniferous coal
deposits. If authenticated as human, these “bones” would blow the theory of
evolution out of the water (incidentally giving lie to the canard that
evolution is unfalsifiable and therefore unscientific: J. B. S. Haldane,
asked by an overzealous Popperian what empirical finding might falsify
evolution, famously growled, “Fossil rabbits in the Precambrian!”). Most
creationists would not go out of their way to debunk a promising story of
human remains in the Pennsylvanian Coal Measures. Yet Wise patiently and
seriously examined the specimens as a trained paleontologist, and concluded
unequivocally that they were “inorganically precipitated iron siderite
nodules and not fossil material at all.” Unusually among the motley denizens
of the “big tent” of creationism and intelligent design, he seems to accept
that God needs no help from false witness.
All the more interesting, then, to read
his personal testimony in In Six Days. It is actually quite moving,
in a pathetic kind of way. He begins with his childhood ambition. Where
other boys wanted to be astronauts or firemen, the young Kurt touchingly
dreamed of getting a Ph.D. from Harvard and teaching science at a major
university. He achieved the first part of his goal, but became increasingly
uneasy as his scientific learning conflicted with his religious faith. When
he could bear the strain no longer, he clinched the matter with a Bible and
a pair of scissors. He went right through from Genesis 1 to Revelations 22,
literally cutting out every verse that would have to go if the scientific
worldview were true. At the end of this exercise, there was so little left
of his Bible that
. . . try as I might, and even with
the benefit of intact margins throughout the pages of Scripture, I found
it impossible to pick up the Bible without it being rent in two. I had to
make a decision between evolution and Scripture. Either the Scripture was
true and evolution was wrong or evolution was true and I must toss out the
Bible. . . . It was there that night that I accepted the Word of God and
rejected all that would ever counter it, including evolution. With that,
in great sorrow, I tossed into the fire all my dreams and hopes in
science.
See what I mean about pathetic? Most
revealing of all is Wise’s concluding paragraph:
Although there are scientific reasons
for accepting a young earth, I am a young-age creationist because that is
my understanding of the Scripture. As I shared with my professors years
ago when I was in college, if all the evidence in the universe turns
against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still
be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate.
Here I must stand.
See what I mean about honest?
Understandably enough, creationists who aspire to be taken seriously as
scientists don’t go out of their way to admit that Scripture—a local origin
myth of a tribe of Middle-Eastern camel-herders—trumps evidence. The great
evolutionist John Maynard Smith, who once publicly wiped the floor with
Duane P. Gish (up until then a highly regarded creationist debater), did it
by going on the offensive right from the outset and challenging him
directly: “Do you seriously mean to tell me you believe that all life was
created within one week?”
Kurt Wise doesn’t need the challenge; he
volunteers that, even if all the evidence in the universe flatly
contradicted Scripture, and even if he had reached the point of admitting
this to himself, he would still take his stand on Scripture and deny the
evidence. This leaves me, as a scientist, speechless. I cannot imagine what
it must be like to have a mind capable of such doublethink. It reminds me of
Winston Smith in 1984 struggling to believe that two plus two equals
five if Big Brother said so. But that was fiction and, anyway, Winston was
tortured into submission. Kurt Wise—and presumably others like him who are
less candid—has suffered no such physical coercion. But, as I hinted at the
end of my previous column, I do wonder whether childhood indoctrination
could wreak a sufficiently powerful brainwashing effect to account for this
bizarre phenomenon.
Whatever the underlying explanation,
this example suggests a fascinating, if pessimistic, conclusion about human
psychology. It implies that there is no sensible limit to what the human
mind is capable of believing, against any amount of contrary evidence.
Depending upon how many Kurt Wises are out there, it could mean that we are
completely wasting our time arguing the case and presenting the evidence for
evolution. We have it on the authority of a man who may well be
creationism’s most highly qualified and most intelligent scientist that no
evidence, no matter how overwhelming, no matter how all-embracing, no matter
how devastatingly convincing, can ever make any difference.
Can you imagine believing that and at
the same time accepting a salary, month after month, to teach science? Even
at Bryan College in Dayton, Tennessee? I’m not sure that I could live with
myself. And I think I would curse my God for leading me to such a pass.
Richard Dawkins is the Charles Simonyi Professor of Public
Understanding of Science at Oxford University. An evolutionary biologist and
prolific author and lecturer, his most recent book is Unweaving the
Rainbow.
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