What does
Bob Marks want? He wants the right to run computer simulations at Baylor that might (possibly) reduce confidence in Darwinian evolution.
That is, the simulations might show that Darwinian evolution is not nearly as probable as professional Darwinists claim.
Actually, the Wistar meetings showed that way back in the 1960s, but Darwinism is just too good a creation story for materialism to pass up. So otherwise respectable scientists have been lying for Darwin ever since, and snuffing out the careers of
anyone who breaks rank.
Contrary to popular belief, you need
NOT be a creationist or an ID guy. All you have to do is stop believing in magic - Darwinian magic - and ask for evidence.
That's a Big Sin because the
evidence does not support Darwinism.
Well, that explains the role of the Darwinist, who can hardly help suppressing evidence, but what about Baylor, the alleged Christian university?
Elsewhere, I have pointed out that institutions like Baylor essentially protect Christians from a world that favours materialism. The justification for their existence would be revolutionized if word got out that materialism is largely
disconfirmed over a broad area. As I said there,
In a trice, the harsh reality from which the institution protects its dumb sheeplike students is - a harsh UNreality. The students are not meat puppets who foolishly imagine that they have immortal souls and must therefore be humoured by their silly little campus groups. They are people who actually do have immortal souls who are being trained by the institution to accept a culture that lies to them that they are meat puppets. And the institution essentially brokers the lies in the interests of the materialist culture - and to its own prestige.
Now do you see the threat posed by an intellectually rigorous inquiry into intelligent design?
Last night, my mom and I were watching a video of one of my favourite movies -
The Great Escape. Suddenly, some of the dialogue seemed startlingly relevant to the struggle of scientists like Marks.
Listen, as the German Colonel Von Luger explains to the Allied prisoners of war:
We have in effect put all our rotten eggs in one basket, and we intend to watch this basket carefully. Very wise. You will not be denied the usual facilities. Sports, a library, a recreation hall, and for gardening we will give you tools. We trust you to use them for gardening. Devote your energies to these things. Give up your hopeless attempts to escape. And, with intelligent cooperation, we may all sit out the war as comfortably as possible.
What institutions like Baylor want is precisely that - faculty who will just
"sit out" the war between
rampant materialist atheism and all non-materialist traditions, in the comfort of a Christian environment.
But Group Captain Ramsey responds,
Colonel Von Luger, it is the sworn duty of all officers to try to escape. If they cannot escape, then it is their sworn duty to cause the enemy to use an inordinate number of troops to guard them, and their sworn duty to harass the enemy to the best of their ability.
Ramsey's reply is the proper duty of the Christian (or other non-materialist) academic in these times.
It is also the only safe one. There is no surprise, really, in the fact that today's academic environment is quickly
losing touch with the goal of intellectual inquiry. As Mario Beauregard and I show clearly in
The Spiritual Brain, materialists do not believe in the reality of the mind. In that case, it is more humane as well as easier to just program the young meat puppets to be whatever is needed, and sideline any mis-programmed puppets who interfere.
Only a non-materialist tradition - in which intellect functions as a cause of events - can responsibly support intellectual freedom.
A Christian you say? Well then, do not be a good prisoner of your Christian campus. Be a Bob Marks. BE a problem!
Labels: Baylor, Bob Marks, intellectual freedom