Community Commentary -- William Bentley
Science may be defined as the systematic knowledge of the physical
world gained through the application of the scientific method. And the
scientific method?
It consists of the following steps: A phenomenon is identified that
has no present explanation; a hypothesis is formulated to explain it; the
hypothesis is tested against all of the known data; if anything does not
fit, the hypothesis is modified, and the process is repeated. When it all
fits, and the hypothesis has passed the terrible peer review process, it
is upgraded to either a theory or a law.
What’s the difference?
There is none; a law usually contains more math than a theory, but not
always; just check out the amount of high-powered math in Einstein’s
relativity theorems.
It should be noted that science is only concerned with naturalistic
events that take place in the physical world. It is completely neutral
with regard to the spiritual world, religion and morality. Thus, the
Roman Catholic Church and most mainstream Protestant denominations accept
evolution as the best present explanation for the variety of fauna and
flora we see around us.
Evolutionists have no problem with the concept that God created the
universe, the Earth and man as long as it is recognized that he did it by
the naturalistic methods that science is trying to discover (and doing a
pretty good job of it). The idea that he accomplished the whole thing in
a six-day period in 4004 BCE (Before Christian Era) and then flooded the
Earth 1,656 years later flies in the face of virtually everything we know
about geology, astronomy, paleontology and ancient history.
The quote from Colin Patterson is rather spurious. Patterson was a
cladist, a person who specializes in the determination of the
relationship of species by the comparison of their physical configuration
and DNA. In the quote, he was chiding the paleontologists because
cladistics had, in many cases, been able to show better results than the
fossil record.
The study of the origins of life is called abiogenesis and is not a
part of the theory of evolution. Enormous strides in this field are being
made almost daily, and it is a pretty good bet that the secret of life
from inanimate matter will be discovered within the next 10 years.
The second law of thermodynamics essentially states that energy can be
converted from one form to another, but in doing so, some of it is lost.
As a result, the entropy builds up until the conversion process no longer
works. However, this is for closed systems in which no energy enters or
exits, and is not quite true for the Earth, which receives about two
calories per square centimeter per minute from the sun. The creationists’
use of this law has been so thoroughly debunked by thermodynamicists that
I am surprised to see it in print again (Community Commentary, “Pilot
columnist too accepting of evolution”).
The human eye is indeed a wonderful device, but its design is not
optimal. The retina is inside out, the lens ceases to function after half
of our normal life span of three score and 10, and a large industry has
been built around the inability of the average person’s eyes to focus
correctly. One would expect the perfect creator to build us the perfect
eye; instead, it is a typical mammalian eye, slightly refined, just about
what we could expect as the result of millions of years of slow
evolution.
In fact, a while back, two scientists wrote a computer program to
simulate the evolution of the human eye from a simple pigmented eye spot.
They used pessimistic values for the inputs, but when they ran the
program, even they were startled to find that the transition took less
than a half million years. I have not been able to find the quote from
Stephen Jay Gould (he has written over 17 books), but I have read enough
of his works to figure out that he is setting up a straw man, which he
will proceed to demolish in the next few paragraphs.
The quote from Fred Hoyle also does little to aid the creationists’
cause. He is pushing his own hypothesis called Panspermia, which proposes
that life reached the Earth from outer space by way of meteoroids.
It is an interesting concept, but the jury is still out. In the
interest of equal time, I would like to give a few more quotes from Sir
Fred: “The creationist is a sham religious person who, curiously, has no
true sense of religion. In the language of religion, it is the facts we
observe in the world around us that must be seen to constitute the words
of God and Darwin’s theory, which is now accepted without dissent, is the
cornerstone of modern biology. Our own links with the simplest forms of
microbial life are well-nigh proven.”
If, despite all of the above, it turns out that the majority of the
parents in a school district want their children to learn about
creationism in school, by all means let them. This is a free country.
But, please don’t teach it as a science.
* WILLIAM BENTLEY is a Costa Mesa resident.
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