The Washington Times, November 19, 2000, Sunday, Pg. B6
HEADLINE: How a theologian, two biologists see Darwin
BYLINE: Larry Witham; THE WASHINGTON TIMES
In this trio of books on science, evolution, and
God, John Polkinghorne
best fits his self-described category of "scientist-theologian." He
is a
world-class physicist, member of the British Royal Society and an Anglican
priest. His Faith, Science and Understanding (Yale University
Press,
$19.95, 224 pages) strikes at the heart of the theology and science
debate. Is theology a real knowledge that has standing alongside science?
He answers yes, and says that if any field has claim to a "Theory of
Everything," it is not science but metaphysical theology.
Our next two authors are biologists, and both Kenneth
R. Miller and
Jonathan Wells at least may be called "scientist-lay theologians."
They
too try to meld the meaning of life with the "facts" of science.
Indeed, Mr. Miller's Finding Darwin's
God: A Scientist's Search for
Common Ground Between God and Evolution (Cliff Street, $14 paper, 288
pages) systematically criticizes so-called "creationists" so in the
end he
can posit that Darwinism has no conflict whatsoever with belief in
a
Christian deity.
By contrast, Mr. Wells' Icons of Evolution:
Science or Myth? Why
Much of What We Teach About Evolution is Wrong with illustrations by
Jody
Sjogren (Regnery, $27.95, 352 pages) does not mention God even once.
Yet
his criticism of how 10 popular "proofs" for Darwinism are either fake
or
exaggerated partly rests on the charge that "materialist philosophy,"
or
atheism, has been bootlegged into empirical science.
So while "Icons" is mostly a call to "clean house"
in science, it also
opens science to theology by weakening Darwinian hegemony. Though
Mr.
Miller's work cites God to no end, Mr. Wells is silent - and
this from an
author with a second doctorate in the early theological controversies
around Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species."
The Polkinghorne work is part reworked lectures,
and part original
essays. It sets the stage by saying that academic theology should have
a
significant role in a research university.
The retired Cambridge don also backs a modest revival
in natural
theology - the idea that God can be inferred from patterns in nature.
He
finds divine hints in a well-tuned universe that the mind can understand,
and in the ways that "chaos theory" may open material systems to God's
providence.
On the truth of Darwinian evolution, Mr. Polkinghorne
and Mr. Miller
have no doubts. They disagree, however, on natural theology (which
is
fairly typical between physicists and biologists). The classic Catholic
idea of primary and secondary causes - God is primary and thus utterly
undetectable - works fine for Mr. Miller (a Roman Catholic),
but not for
his Anglican compatriot.
Mr. Miller, of Brown University, tends to separate
theology and
science, adding that God "surpasses our ordinary understanding of chance
and causality." The British Mr. Polkinghorne, would agree that
God is
"surpassing," but finds the strict separation approach, or the "two
language" tack of a Mr. Miller, too reliant on pure faith.
Unlike Mr. Miller, Mr. Polkinghorne is
in search of the "causal
joint" where the rational believer can say God might contact matter.
This
has practical importance, says the priest, because modern rational
Christians still pray and hope as if God intervenes in the material
world
and in history.
To locate God's possible contact point, Mr.
Miller cites the uncertain
realm of quantum physics, and he quotes Mr. Polkinghorne with
favor. But
he shies from any theological detail, for his main goal is to show
what
"absurd" deities are proposed by three kinds of anti-evolutionists.
Young-earth creationists have a "charlatan" God who
tricks us by making
the world look evolved, and old-earth creationists have a "magician"
God
who creates species at will. Then, Mr. Miller goes after
the "mechanic"
God of the new group of "intelligent design" advocates - of which Mr.
Wells is a part as a fellow at the Discovery Institute, a Seattle think
tank.
Once these strange gods are compared with the evidence-based
conclusions of Darwinism, Mr. Miller argues, these "creationists"
are
"betting so consistently against science" for one main reason - they
think
Darwinism is atheism, as many famous Darwinists say. Not so,
says Mr.
Miller, whose final task is to show that many biologists like himself
accept evolution with absolute confidence and still worship the God
of
Jesus.
We have here two able writers. Mr. Polkinghorne
has been called "the
C.S. Lewis of science and theology," and Mr. Miller is a noted
lecturer,
debater and textbook writer - with no lack of confidence. "As
a
scientist, I find it easy to answer most questions about evolution,"
he
says. And while he can't answer people's objections about the
"personality" of God, he concludes: "I believe in Darwin's God."
Then comes Mr. Wells, a concise writer with
a dry wit who knows his
theology but focuses strictly on Darwinian science (with a mastery
of its
annotated literature). The implication of his approach is that people
who
do science-religion may want to make sure the science is good beforehand.
In his own doctoral work in biology, Mr. Wells
says, he noticed a
mismatch between textbook orthodoxy and articles in specialized journals.
He quotes top scientists on their search for fact and "truth," not
myth,
and their belief that everyone can learn science by hearing the evidence.
Thereafter, each chapter looks at an icon of biological
education. Two
icons - evolving peppered moths and "Haeckel's embryos," which look
alike
- are fakes used to teach evolutionary concepts, he argues. The
other
icons, he says, are cynically used despite heated debate over their
validity in specialized fields. These icons are: the 1953 Miller-Urey
experiment, Darwin's tree of life, homology in vertebrate limbs, the
Archaeopteryx fossil, Darwin's finches, the four-winged fruit fly,
fossil
horses, and the "ultimate icon" - human evolution.
"There is a pattern here that demands an explanation,"
Mr. Wells
says. Presuming innocence, he first states that the "specialist effect"
has kept scientists ignorant of problems in each others' fields.
Less
sanguine, he says the "English-speaking" Darwinian establishment, claiming
a fight against "the dark forces of ignorance and religious
fundamentalism," commits icon fraud to keep its political and financial
position.
All three works lead to a central question: How does
the modern,
rational, Christian believer conceive of God's action in nature.
Mr. Polkinghorne keeps that possibility open
by bolstering theological
knowledge as a twin of scientific theory. Mr. Miller says
that since the
"Origin," a God who gives freedom to nature always has been amenable
to
evolution. Mr. Wells suggests that Darwinian orthodoxy,
using its icons
to stifle dissent, may no longer be fruitful science. If non-Darwinian
biological models are considered, he might say, then theology has new
openings.
Reading these three books will easily bring a reader
up to speed on
the entire science-religion debate of the past 40 years. Each
offers
memorable phrases for future discussion: from the Polkinghorne "causal
joint" and "active information" (aka the Holy Spirit) to Mr.
Miller's
"Darwin's God."
Mr. Wells may have the pithiest remark.
He amends biologist
Theodosius Dobzhansky's famed 1973 motto, "Nothing in biology makes
sense
except in light of evolution," to say, "except in light of evidence."
Larry Witham covers religion for The Washington Times.