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Michael Ruse
How evolution became a religion Creationists correct?: Darwinians wrongly mix science with morality, politics
National Post, Saturday, May 13, 2000
In 1980 the young governor of Arkansas, one Bill Clinton, neglected
his constituent base and was defeated in his run for re-election. He learned
a
lesson never to be forgotten, regained office in 1982, and remained
governor until he was elected President. During the two-year interregnum,
the
governor's mansion was occupied by a man called Frank White, whose
surprise at his election was equalled only by his inadequacy for the job.
Uncritically, Governor White signed into law a bill promoted by an evangelical
Christian state representative, a bill debated by the
legislature for less than half an hour. This "balanced treatment" bill
required that children be taught not only the theory of evolution, but
also the Bible -- taken absolutely literally. Countering the claim
that we are all descended by Charles Darwin's glacially slow process of
development
from very simple organisms, children were also to be told, in their
biology classes, that Adam and Eve were real people, and that Noah's Flood
once
covered the whole earth.
The U. S. constitution separates church and state. Whatever its pedagogical
merits -- and they were few -- the Arkansas law was clearly
unconstitutional. The American Civil Liberties Union challenged the
law, and before the year was out a trial was held and the legislation struck
down.
Appearing as expert witnesses for the ACLU were the famous -- Stephen
Jay Gould, Harvard professor, paleontologist, and America's best-known
evolutionist -- and the not-so-famous -- a philosophy professor from
the University of Guelph, yours truly.
I still remember arguing in the Arkansas court house with one of the
most prominent of the literalists (now generally known as creationists).
Duane
T. Gish, author of the best-selling work, "Evolution: The Fossils Say
No!," resented bitterly what he felt was an unwarranted smug superiority
assumed
by us from the side of science.
"Dr Ruse," Mr. Gish said, "the trouble with you evolutionists is that
you just don't play fair. You want to stop us religious people from teaching
our views in schools. But you evolutionists are just as religious in
your way. Christianity tells us where we came from, where we're going,
and what we
should do on the way. I defy you to show any difference with evolution.
It tells you where you came from, where you are going, and what you should
do
on the way. You evolutionists have your God, and his name is Charles
Darwin."
At the time I rather pooh-poohed what Mr. Gish said, but I found myself
thinking about his words on the flight back home. And I have been thinking
about them ever since. Indeed, they have guided much of my research
for the past twenty years. Heretical though it may be to say this -- and
many of
my scientist friends would be only too happy to chain me to the stake
and to light the faggots piled around -- I now think the Creationists like
Mr.
Gish are absolutely right in their complaint.
Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science.
Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion -- a
full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality.
I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex-Christian, but I must admit that
in this one
complaint -- and Mr. Gish is but one of many to make it -- the literalists
are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution
in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.
---
One of the earliest evolutionists was the eighteenth-century physician
Erasmus Darwin, grandfather of Charles. He was no atheist, believing
rather in God as "Unmoved Mover": a being who decides right at the
beginning on the future course of nature, lays down unbreakable laws, and
never acts again.
Rightly, Erasmus Darwin saw this "deism" as challenging Christian theism,
which takes God as ready always to intervene miraculously in His creation.
For Erasmus Darwin, evolution was simply confirmation of his commitment
to a law-bound process of creation set down by a non-interventionist God.
It
was part and parcel of his alternative religion.
To this vision, Darwin's grandfather added an enthusiasm for social
progress -- as embodied by the Industrial Revolution -- which progress
he then read
right into his science. Erasmus saw social progress as a rise from
a simple village-based society to the complexity of the modern city, and
analogously he thought evolution rises progressively from the simple,
the undifferentiated blobs of the first life forms (known as "monads"),
to the
apotheosis of organic complexity, the human race.
In his progressivism -- especially in his belief that we humans ourselves
can and do improve our overall well-being -- Erasmus clearly stood in yet
another way against Christianity, which stresses that salvation can
come only through God. For the Christian, our greatest gains "count for
naught."
Evolution therefore came into being as a kind of secular ideology, an
explicit substitute for Christianity. It stressed laws against miracles
and, by analogy, it promoted progress against providence.
And so things continued. In 1859, Charles Darwin, the father of modern
evolutionary thought, published his great work On the Origin of Species.
With this book, Darwin hoped to change things and make a less ideological
system of evolution. He offered a systematic survey of the biological
world, showing how many different factors -- the fossil record, the
geographical distributions of organisms, the discoveries from embryology
-- point to
evolution. At the same time, he proposed his celebrated mechanism of
natural selection: thanks to population pressures, some creatures flourish
and
have offspring and some do not and, over the ages, this "survival of
the fittest" leads to full-blown change.
But almost at once Darwin's efforts were frustrated by (of all people) his greatest supporter, his famous "bulldog," Thomas Henry Huxley.
When Jesus died he left no functioning religion. This was the work of
his supporters, especially Saint Paul, and as we all know the Christianity
of
Saint Paul was not exactly identical to the Christianity of Jesus.
Like the great apostle and Christianity, Huxley -- one of the most prominent
scientists and greatest educators and social reformers of his day --
had begun by denying evolution, and when converted had the same enthusiasm
as
Paul.
But like Paul also, for all that Huxley venerated Charles Darwin, he
could see in the master's writings only a glimpse of what he himself needed
for
his own purposes. And in working to his own ends, Huxley was led to
the same consequences as Paul: a functioning system, but not that of the
man in
whose name he worked and preached.
Origin appeared at just that time in Victorian Britain when it was necessary
to transform the country from a rural-based, near-feudal society and to
fit it for an urbanized, industrialized future. There was need for
reform everywhere: in the civil service, merit had to count, not connection.
In
medicine, doctors had to stop killing patients and start curing them.
In education, learning had to be for today and not to glorify the past.
Huxley and his fellow reformers were in the thick of all this -- Huxley
himself was a college dean, served as a member of the new London School
Board and on
numerous royal commissions looking into the state of things.
Correctly, Huxley saw Christianity -- the established Anglican Church
particularly -- as allied with the forces of reaction and power. He fought
it vigorously, most famously when he debated Samuel Wilberforce, the
Bishop of Oxford. (Supposedly, on being asked whether he was descended
from
monkeys on his grandfather's side or his grandmother's side, Huxley
replied he had rather be descended from an ape than from a bishop of the
Church of
England.)
As a social reformer therefore, Huxley, known in the papers as "Pope
Huxley", was determined to find a substitute for Christianity. Evolution,
with its stress on unbroken law -- which could be used to reflect messages
of social progress -- was the perfect candidate. Life is on an upwardly
moving escalator. It has reached Victorian Britain. Who knows what
glories and triumphs might lie ahead? Thus the vision of Saint Thomas --
something
to be preached far and wide. Working men's clubs, popular scientific
congresses, debating societies, university convocations were Huxley's
Corinthians and Galatians.
Indeed, recognizing that a good religion needs a moral message as well
as a history and promise of future reward, Huxley increasingly turned from
Darwin (who was not very good at providing these things) toward another
English evolutionist.
Herbert Spencer -- prolific writer and immensely popular philosopher
to the masses -- shared Huxley's vision of evolution as a kind of metaphysics
rather than a straight science. He was happy to insist that even moral
directives come from the evolutionary process itself.
"Social Darwinism" (more accurately, Social Spencerianism) took evolution
to entail struggle and success for the few, and so the moral message was
understood as enthusiasm for laissez-faire individualism. The state
should stay out of the running of society, and the best should be allowed
to rise
to the top. Failures deserve their fates.
Of course, there were differences between Social Darwinians. Socialists,
Marxists and anarchists also justified their beliefs in the name of
Darwin. The point is that the harnessing of evolution to ends that
were explicitly moral, even political, went on right through the nineteenth
century.
The even greater point is that it continued to go on right through the
twentieth century. Evolutionary ideas were to undergo a great
transformation in the 1930s and 1940s, when a professional science
of evolutionary studies was developed -- a professional science which stood
on its own legs by its own merits, having no need for an alternative career
as secular ideology. But this secular ideology or religion hardly folded
its tents and crept
away. One of the most popular books of the era was Religion without
Revelation, by evolutionist Julian Huxley, grandson of Thomas Henry. First
published in 1927, the book was revised (for a second time) and reissued
in the 1950s.
"All thought and emotion," Huxley wrote, even the highest, spring from
natural mind, whose slow development can be traced in life's evolution,
so
that life in general and man in particular are those parts of the world
substance in which the latent mental properties are revealed to their
fullest extent." As always, evolution was doing everything expected
of religion, and more.
---
Today, professional evolution thrives. But the old religion survives
and thrives right alongside it. Evolution now has its mystical visionary,
its
Saint John of the Cross. Harvard entomologist and sociobiologist Edward
O. Wilson tells us that we now have an "alternative mythology" to defeat
traditional religion. "Its narrative form is the epic: the evolution
of the universe from the big bang of fifteen years ago through the origin
of the
elements and celestial bodies to the beginnings of life on earth."
Faithful to the oldest tradition of evolutionary theorizing -- reading
his morality and politics into his science and then reading it right back
out
again -- Mr. Wilson warns us that we have evolved in symbiotic relationship
with the rest of living nature, and lest we cherish and preserve
biodiversity we will all perish. Drawing on the dispensationalism of
his Southern Baptist childhood, with the eloquence and moral fervour of
Billy
Graham, Mr. Wilson begs us to repent, to stand up and acknowledge our
sins and to walk forward in the ways of evolution. We have but a short
time,
else moral darkness will fall on us all.
The language of Stephen Jay Gould is hardly more tempered. We learn
that evolution "liberates the human spirit," that for sheer excitement
evolution "beats any myth of human origins by light years," and that
we should "praise this evolutionary nexus -- a far more stately mansion
for the human soul
than any pretty or parochial comfort ever conjured by our swollen neurology
to obscure the source of physical being."
Mr. Gould ultimately rejects traditional readings of evolution for a
more inspiring, liberating version: "We must assume that consciousness
would
not have evolved on our planet if a cosmic catastrophe had not claimed
the dinosaurs as victims. In an entirely literal sense, we owe our existence,
as large and reasoning mammals, to our lucky stars." If this is not
to rival traditional Judaeo-Christian teaching -- with its central belief
that we
humans are not just random happenstances, but a major reason why God
created heaven and earth -- I do not know what is.
What is the moral to be drawn from all of this? You might think that the time has come to save evolution from the evolutionists.
Darwinism is a terrific theory that stimulates research in every area
of the life sciences. In the human realm, for instance, discoveries in
Africa
trace our immediate past in ever greater detail, while at the same
time the Human Genome Project opens up fascinating evolutionary questions
as we learn of
the molecular similarities between ourselves and organisms as apparently
different as fruit flies and earthworms. Surely this is enough.
There is no need to make a religion of evolution. On its own merits,
evolution as science is just that -- good, tough, forward-looking science,
which should be taught as a matter of course to all children, regardless
of creed.
But, let us be tolerant. If people want to make a religion of evolution,
that is their business. Who would deny the value of Mr. Wilson's plea for
biodiversity? Who would argue against Mr. Gould's hatred of racial
and sexual prejudice, which he has used evolution to attack?
The important point is that we should recognize when people are going
beyond the strict science, moving into moral and social claims, thinking
of their
theory as an all-embracing world picture. All too often, there is a
slide from science to something more, and this slide goes unmentioned --
unrealized even.
For pointing this out we should be grateful for the opponents of evolution.
The Creationists are wrong in their Creationism, but they are right in
at
least one of their criticisms. Evolution, Darwinian evolution, is wonderful
science. Let us teach it to our children. And, in the classroom, let us
leave it at that. The moral messages, the underlying ideology, may
be worthy. But if we feel strongly, there are other times and places to
preach that gospel to the world.
Michael Ruse is professor of philosophy and zoology at the University
of Guelph. His next book, Can a Darwinian be a Christian? The Relationship
between Science and Religion, will be published this fall.
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