Intelligent design's challenge to Darwinism hits Sunday papers
By Staff
NEW YORK (BP)--Intelligent design is hitting the front pages of Sunday
newspapers.
At least of The New York Times on April 8 and The Los Angeles Times
on
March 25.
Among those quoted in both articles about the emerging alternative to
Darwinism: William Dembski, the Baylor University professor who has
faced
off against pro-evolution faculty members at the Baptist-related Texas
school.
Dembski along with Phillip Johnson and Michael Behe are "regarded as
the intellectual
fathers" of the intelligent design movement, according to The New York
Times article.
Dembski, whose credits include a doctorate in math from the University
of Chicago, is
the author and coauthor of numerous books, including the 1999 InterVarsity
release, "Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Science & Theology."
Johnson, a professor emeritus of law at the University of California
at
Berkely, is the author of "Darwin on Trial," described by The New York
Times as the "manifesto" of the intelligent design movement.
Behe, author of "Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to
Evolution," is a professor of biological sciences at Lehigh University
in
Pennsylvania.
The Los Angeles Times story noted that the intelligent design movement
is
led by "a new breed of mostly Christian scholars" who, as the newspaper
put it, are redefining "the old evolution-versus-creationism debate
...
with more intellectual firepower, mainstream appeal and academic
respectability."
The New York Times story quoted a leading critic of intelligent design,
Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education, as
acknowledging, "The most striking thing about the intelligent design
folks
is their potential to really make anti-evolutionism intellectually
respectable."
Both articles can be seen at the respective papers' Internet sites,
nytimes.com and latimes.com, by entering a search for intelligent design.
A key source of ongoing information about the intelligent design movement,
meanwhile, is the Seattle-based Discovery Institute, on the Internet
at
www.discovery.org.
Oryginal: http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=10661