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Friday, November 14, 2008

Intelligent design and popular culture: Video and essay contest, and academic freedom drive

From the Discovery Institute:

Turning Darwin Day into Academic Freedom Day

Next year is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin and the 150th anniversary of the publication of On the Origin of Species. As you can imagine, Darwinists have a full year of celebrations planned, and February 12th, Darwin’s birthday, is likely to be the high water mark for most of those celebrations. Every year Darwin Day celebrations get more and more elaborate and outrageous. Celebrants decorate evolution trees, sing Darwin carols and odes to natural selection, and eat from the tree of life.

Naturally, we don't want you to miss out on the fun. On Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday (Feb. 12, 2009), we want students everywhere to speak out against censorship and stand up for free speech by defending the right to debate the evidence for and against evolution and turn "Darwin Day" into
Academic Freedom Day.

Actually, the Darwin cult has become so ridiculous that it would be hard to parody. Just look at this ridiculous hagiography. And if they force it down school kids throats, some of it might wind up coming back again, too.

Video and Essay Contest: Grand Prize $500

All the details are here:


Who Is Eligible


Students currently enrolled in high school (grades 9-12) or as a college undergraduate may enter the contest. (High school students include those attending private, public, or home schools.) Essays must be submitted by an individual student, but videos may be submitted by a group of up to 5 students.The PrizesOne grand-prize winner will be announced and have his or her entry officially unveiled at academicfreedomday.com on Academic Freedom Day, February 12th 2009. The grand-prize winner will be awarded $500, and one essay runner-up and one video runner-up will receive $250. Up to 10 finalists will receive their choice of a free book or DVD.


The Deadline
Entries must be submitted to the YouTube Group "Academic Freedom Day Video Contest" here, by the end of business on January 23, 2009.

Here's Ben Stein introducing the idea:

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Darwinism, atheism, liberal religion, and the academy

As the Darwin bicentennial looms and the flapdoodle flaps, we are treated to ridiculous hagiography and soothing, reassuring spin on how Darwinism can live harmoniously with the non-materialist beliefs of the peoples of Earth.

Meanwhile, a friend draws my attention to Taner Edis.

He advises me that Edis is
a physicist at Truman State University and a researcher at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. He's also associate editor for physics and astronomy for the NCSE's monthly journal. In 2004, he co-edited Why Intelligent Design Fails, a volume with many scientific contributors opposing ID and supporting evolution; including various contributors associated with the NCSE.

And he offers some brief passages from Edis's 2005 book, Science and Nonbelief , as a commentary on the harmony we can expect:
"[E]volution does, in fact, undermine a common traditional conception of the nature of morality. In a Darwinian world, nature is no longer infused with morality. Living things do not have created functions that are right and proper, and variation is not a deviation from an essence with overtones of corruption."
(Taner Edis, Science and Nonbelief 90 (Greenwood Press, 2006).)

"[I]n the United States, there is a recent movement to celebrate February 12, Darwin's birthday, as "Darwin Day." This event is supported largely by humanist, freethought, and atheist-oriented groups, using slogans of science and humanity." Naturally, the scientific community responds positively, treading it as a public outreach .. Occasionally, university science departments cosponsor larger public events put on for Darwin Day, alongside atheist and humanist organizations." (Taner Edis, Science and Nonbelief 91 (Greenwood Press, 2006).)

"An alliance with religious liberals need not bother the nonreligious. After all, nonbelievers most often react against politically intrusive, conservative religions. Their political goals and ethical inclinations are usually close to those affirmed by modernist spiritualities. And even those nonbelievers who equate all religion with superstition very often think religious liberals are already halfway to rejecting the gods. If so, promoting public acceptance of Darwin would also nudge people toward dropping their supernatural beliefs, even if they hang on for a while to vague liberal conceptions of divinity." (Taner Edis, Science and Nonbelief 91-92 (Greenwood Press, 2006).)

Oh, well that's all perfectly all right then. If you attend a church, synagogue, mosque or whatever, Darwin Day sounds like a great way to find out which clergy should take early retirement. Just catch them promoting it.

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Sunday, February 11, 2007

Darwin Day: Get it while it's hot

My inbox is full of stuff about Darwin Day, apparently tomorrow. Looking at the photos fronting the Darwin Day site, I get the feeling that the old boy contracted a spiritual disease of some kind early in life that ate at his vitals. But hey, don't believe me. Look carefully at the portraits/photos and judge the matter for yourself.

Meanwhile, I don't recall if I ever got around to blogging on the Flock of Dodos film, yet another attempt to address the ID controversy without taking seriously the fact that materialism is in deep trouble. The promissory notes of promissory materialism are not cashing. Chimps are not people, the mind is not simply an illusion created by the functions of the brain, and human behaviour cannot be explained by controlling genes - and that's only a start on the problem. (For a detailed explanation, you will have to see The Spiritual Brain by Mario Beauregard and Denyse O'Leary, Harper, 2007). I will provide links for that shortly.

My ID-friendly friends are really upset at the misrepresentations in the Dodos film, and there is no sinple way that I can explain to them why the people involved must misrepresent ID. Most artsies assume that science IS applied materialism. To the extent that they ever involve themselves with science, their job is to promote science as applied materialism. From what I have heard, Dodos is no exception. Oh yes, the artsies may go home and think something entirely different in their private lives. But once they enter the "science" zone, they sell out immediately and pitch headfirst into radical materialism.

So, here's the kind of rubbidge they promote, not knowing that it isn't true: mind from mud, order for free, computers as incipient people, morals as the survival strategy of lucky beasts, et cetera. I have watched it, sickened, for many years. And watched the zoned-out stupidity that results.

Yes, misrepresentations would trip easily to the artsies' lips. They need their pay. Materialists generally control funding. Few projects go forth in confidence without the materialist stamp of approval.

And so much is at stake. If there is any evidence of intelligent design in the universe, not only is materialist atheism wrong, but whole rows of pasty-faced profs spluttering the formulas for selling out to materialism on behalf of dying institutional churchianity to increasingly empty pews are now ... obviated.

So we must begin again. Maybe even sober and without a budget ...

But the materialists and their supporters in institutional churchianity do have budgets. Whether from the hapless taxpayer, as is increasingly the case, or from the endowments of the dim (deceased!) pious old dears of institutional churchianity, they have budgets. They will fight hard for the survival of materialism. Darwin Day dawns.

In the runup to Darwin day, Discovery Institute staged a youtube video, demonstrating that, contrary to one of the more outlandish claims in the Dodos film, Haeckel's fraudulent series of drawing of embryos has NOT been retired. Decades later, it is still alive and well in biology texts.

Sometimes these situations frustrate me because, really, it is all so easy to understand. Haeckel's embryos - if his drawings had been accurate - would have shown that vertebrate taxa start out very similar, which supports Darwin's theory. Yes, if he had drawn the embryos accurately. But he apparently doctored them to look similar at key points, when they in fact do not. And generations of Darwinists have kept the pious lie going, like a legend of a saint who never really existed.

But let's be realistic. It would be very difficult for a convinced Darwinist to resist doctoring those drawings. To a Darwinist, it doesn't matter what is true. Human brain function is simply an outcome of human evolution. As Francis Crick famously said in The Astonishing Hypothesis,

"Our highly developed brains, after all, were not evolved under the pressure of discovering scientific truths but only to enable us to be clever enough to survive and leave descendants"


Oh? You want to know what is true? Well, then, by definition, you are not a convinced Darwinist because you think that your brain is adapted to discovering truth, not to leaving descendants. In that case, you should NOT celebrate Darwin Day at all.

Okay, here's a stab at a possible truth: Embryo development does not particularly support Darwin's theory. It argues rather for a yet undiscovered law, principle, process, or ... what? What does the dance of embryogenesis argue for?

Be sure that whatever embryogenesis argues for, the Darwinist thinks that it does not matter what the kids learn, as long as it works for Darwinism.

School board funding and the favourable huffing of politicians and celebrity journalists await the purveyor of materialism, and Darwinism as its creation story. Those people are so certain of what they believe that myth becomes reality in their hands, and is fed to further generations of schoolkids, to their profit and at their parents' expense. But both the kids and their parents are just meat puppets anyway, or bunch of chemicals running around in a bag. Right?

Still, the fraudulent Haeckel embryo series must be true in the eyes of Darwinists, just as any miracle story that supports a cult must be true in the eyes of believers. No wonder the filmmaker incorrectly claimed that the false drawings were no longer presented in textbooks.

While we are here: Some people wanted to know what I was going to do for Darwin Day. Well, I have several jobs:

1. Address marketing issues for non-materialist neuroscience book (Mario Beauregard and Denyse O'Leary, The Spiritual Brain, Harper 2007).

2. Catch up on bookkeeping (whoop, whoop).

3. Begin to proofread non-materialist neuroscience book.

None of that has anything to do with Darwin, specifically. It was just how my day turned out. I would have thought that burial in Westminster Abbey was enough for the old Brit toff, and I am not exceeding that myself.

Check out my book on the intelligent design controversy, By Design or by Chance?.

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