Posted by
Jack Fisher on Thursday, October 16, 2008 8:01:51 PM
As an atheist, I often come into conflict with the beliefs and values many people have. I respect and admire those beliefs, but on certain subjects that respect is lost in the sheer disparity of how extreme some beliefs are. One belief about religion that has long troubled and fascinated me is belief in creationism. As someone who strives to be rational with everyday things, I find it strange when I hear how people so fervently reject reason and logic in favor of mythological psuedo-science. I've looked into groups like the Institution for Creation Research and Creation Science and tried to understand their beliefs and how they justify them. And every time I hit a brick wall because they are all so completely and utterly convinced by their faith that what they believe is true that no amount of evidence, no matter how overwhelming it may be, will get them to believe otherwise. There are so many reasons why creationism is wrong, but that doesn't matter to them. All that matters is believing in their favorite myths and fables.
Recently, I came across some videos on youtube by a user known as Aron Ra. He's made a series out of the absurdities of creationism and I find his critique both enlightening, coherent, and entertaining. He is able to explain far more than I can so I thought I would share a clip and an excerpt from one of his videos. Please note: these are his words, not mine and only he can take credit for this skillfully assembled work.
The
U.S. population seems pretty evenly divided over whether the human
species is biologically related to other animals or whether we were
“specially-created” as part of a flurry of miracles. Even our
collective politicians -seemingly all of them- are wrapped up in this
controversy. Yet its hard to find even one of them who knows what its
about. Why is it that there is such concern in so many grade schools
(K thru 12) about teaching evolution, yet there is still a complete
consensus among scientists all over America and the rest of the world
-that evolution is the backbone of modern biology, and a demonstrable
reality historically as well?
Most
people really don’t understand science; what it is, how it works, what
hypotheses and theories are, or even the purpose behind it. Sadly even
those on your school faculty or state Board of Education often need an
education themselves before they can be trusted to govern how or what
our kids will be taught.
To
adequately understand evolution, you not only have to understand how to
be scientific, (which is the real trick for most people) but you also
have to know something about cellular biology, genetics, and anatomy,
geology, particularly paleontology, as well as environmental systems,
tectonics, atomic chemistry, and especially taxonomy, which most people
don’t know squat about at all. Most people who accept evolution also
tend to know a whole lot about cosmology, geography, history,
sociology, politics, and of course, religion.
But
to believe in creationism, you don’t have to know anything about
anything, and its better if you don’t! Because creationism relies on
ignorance. It is not honest research! It is a scam, a con job
exploiting the common folk, and preying on their deepest beliefs and
fears. Creationist apologetics depends on misrepresented data and
misquoted authorities, out-of-date and out-of-context, and uses
distorted definitions if it uses definitions at all.
There
are basically two types of creationists; the professional or political
creationists; these are the activists who lead the movement and who
will regularly deliberately lie to promote their propaganda; and the
second type which are the innocently-deceived followers commonly known
as “sheep”. I know lots of intellectual Christians, but I can’t get
any of them to actually watch the tele-evangelists, because they either
already know how phony they are, or they don’t want to find out. But
that only allows a radical fringe to claim support from they masses
they now also claim to represent. So there’s nothing to stop them.
Professional creationists are making money hand over fist with
faith-healing scams or bilking little old ladies out of prayer
donations, or selling books and videos at their circus-like seminars
where they have undeserved respect as powerful leaders. All of them
feign knowledge they can’t really possess, and some of them claim
degrees they’ve never actually earned.
Were
it not for this con, they’d have to go back to selling used cars,
wonder drugs, and multi-level marketing schemes. They will never
change their minds no matter what it costs anyone else. So it is
obviously the “sheep” whom I’m attempting to reach with this speech –so
that they might not be sheep anymore, and will stop feeding fuel into
that manipulative movement. Because its one thing to believe in
something that might be true (like God in general or Christianity
specifically) even though neither can be substantiated or tested in any
objective way. But it is a whole other matter to willfully deceive
others into believing things which are definitely not true -like
creationism, especially when we can also prove that those doing this
know their assorted arguments are bogus, and know they’re lying to our
children, and that they hope to continue doing so under the guise of
“education”.
Creationism
extorts support through peer-pressure, prejudice, and paranoid
propaganda, and sells itself with short, simplistic slogans which
appeal to those who don’t want to think too much, or are afraid to
question their own beliefs. Worst of all, it actually forbids critical
inquiry, and promotes anti-intellectualism, and it is based on at least
a dozen foundational falsehoods. First and foremost among them is the
idea that accepting evolution requires the rejection of theism, if not
all other religious or spiritual beliefs as well.
For
decades those behind the creationism movement have tried very hard to
portray the illusion that one cannot accept evolution and still believe
in God. They know better, but they still want you to believe that
evolution is atheist, and that it is either evolution without God, or
God creating without evolution. That’s been their central claim since
the creationism movement began. But this supposed controversy never
was about whether or not there is a god. Most people believe there is a
god, and they believe he is in control of all the seemingly-random
events of our lives. This is true of most of the people who accept
evolution also. Most of them believe in God as well, and they believe
that God is in control of evolution; that evolution, like every other
system in nature, is part of God’s design.
Of
the couple hundred different, and often violently-conflicting
denominations of Christianity, the largest of them by far is
Catholicism followed by Orthodoxy. Both of these have stated support
of evolution and denounced creationism. Pope Benedict recently
described evolution as an “enriching reality” and described creationist
contests against it as “absurd”. Both of the popes before him advised
Christians ‘round the world to consider evolution to be “more than an
hypothesis” and not to fear acceptance of that as being any challenge
to their faith in Christ.
The
early pioneers of evolutionary science were all initially Christian,
(including Darwin) and many leading proponents of modern evolutionary
science are still Christian today. For example, microbiologist Dr. Ken
Miller, (who testified against intelligent design creationism in
Kitzmiller v. Dover) -is a Catholic. Another outspoken proponent of
evolution, Dr. Robert T. Bakker, (who has PhDs from both Harvard and
Yale) is not only one of the leading, and most recognizable
paleontologists in the world today, but he also happens to be a
Bible-believing Pentecostal preacher; though he interprets Genesis
differently than literalists would. In his book, Bones, Bibles and
Creation, he says that to treat the Bible as though it were common
history is to degrade its eternal meaning. One of the earliest
geneticists, Theodosius Dobzhansky was an Orthodox Christian who many
times professed his belief that life was created by God, but that
nothing in biology made sense except in light of evolution. All these
men agree that even if there really is a god, and even if that god is
the Christian god, and even if that god created the universe and
everything in it, =which they all believe- evolution would still be at
least mostly true, and creationism would still be completely wrong.
Of
all the developed nations throughout Christendom, only the United
States has a significant number of creationists, and they’re the
minority even here! Every other predominantly-Christian country tends
to regard creationism as an incredulous, (if not insane) radical fringe
movement which is an almost exclusively American phenomenon, and not
taken seriously anywhere else. Poll after poll continues to reveal
that, around the world, most “evolutionists” are Christian, and most
Christians are evolutionists. So evolution is not synonymous with
atheism, and creationism isn’t synonymous with Christianity either.
Most creationists aren’t even Christians! There are millions more
Muslim and Hindu creationists than Christian ones.
Regardless
which religion they claim, creationism can be collectively defined as
the fraction of religious believers who reject science, not just the
conclusions of science, but its methods as well, and I mean all of
them, from uniformitarianism and methodological naturalism to the peer
review process and requirement that all positive claims be based on
testable evidence. These people rely instead on blind faith in the
assumed authority of their favored fables. In all cases, creationism is
an obstinate and dogmatic superstitious belief which holds that members
of most seemingly-related taxonomic groups did not evolve naturally,
but were created magically, -that plants and animals were literally
poofed out of nothing fully-formed, in their current state, unrelated
to anything else –despite all indications to the contrary.
Creationists
may side with western Abrahamic religions, (being the
Judeo-Christian/Islamic mythos) in which there are conflicting versions
of the same tales. Or creationists may belong to one of many eastern
religions where the sacred stories of creation are much older,
completely different, and dedicated to other gods and pantheons. But in
every case, the proposed "creator" is supernatural, meaning that it is
not a part of perceptible reality. Therefore it is undetectable by any
testable means, and can only be assumed to exist for subjective
emotional reasons, or as a result of cultural indoctrination, rather
than because of any measurable evidence or logical rationale. In other
words, there’s no way to say if its really there. Worst of all,
there’s also no way to distinguish anyone’s gods or ghosts from the
imaginary beings some primitive folks just made up either. This doesn’t
mean no god exists. But it does mean that science can’t say anything
about them. Because even if gods are real, they still don't appear to
be, and apparently don't want to –since all the holy books demand they
be believed on faith alone. As there is nothing anyone can verify and
thus actually know to be correct about gods, then science is unable to
make any comment about them at all. Because science can only ever
investigate things with demonstrable evidence can be tested or
measured.
From
the creationist’s perspective, the method or mechanism of creation
which these mystical beings use is nothing more than a golem spell
where clay statues are animated with an enchantment. Or its an
incantation in which complex modern plants and animals are "spoken"
into being. That’s right, magic words which cause fully-developed adult
animals to be conjured out of thin air. Or a god simply wishes them to
exist; so they do. That’s it! There really is nothing more to it than
that; pure freakin’ magic –by definition. Remember that the next time
you hear anything from a creation “scientist”.
So
for those who believe in God, the question really is how God created,
and whether it was by one of many inextricably integrated natural
systems he seemingly designed, or whether he simply blinked, wiggled
his nose, wished upon a star and said "abra-cadabera".