The worst job in Washington

Imagine how hard it must be to the science advisor to a president who disdains science. Sure, if the White House found someone who shared Bush’s worldview and disregard for the “reality-based community,” it might not be too bad, but in this administration, the president actually has a competent science advisor. Too bad he’s ignored.

When it comes to science, John Marburger tends to know what he’s talking about. When it comes to intelligent-design creationism, Marburger recognizes reality.

Speaking at the annual conference of the National Association of Science Writers, Marburger fielded an audience question about “Intelligent Design” (ID), the latest supposedly scientific alternative to Charles Darwin’s theory of descent with modification. The White House’s chief scientist stated point blank, “Intelligent Design is not a scientific theory.” And that’s not all — as if to ram the point home, Marburger soon continued, “I don’t regard Intelligent Design as a scientific topic.”

So it probably came as a disappointment to Marburger when the president he advises on scientific and technological issues suggested that public schools should teach students modern biology alongside this discredited notion that Marburger realizes is non-scientific.

To his credit, Marburger tried to spin the situation.

At the White House, where intelligent design has been discussed in a weekly Bible study group, Mr. Bush’s science adviser, John H. Marburger 3rd, sought to play down the president’s remarks as common sense and old news.

Mr. Marburger said in a telephone interview that “evolution is the cornerstone of modern biology” and “intelligent design is not a scientific concept.” Mr. Marburger also said that Mr. Bush’s remarks should be interpreted to mean that the president believes that intelligent design should be discussed as part of the “social context” in science classes. […]

Mr. Marburger said it would be “over-interpreting” Mr. Bush’s remarks to say that the president believed that intelligent design and evolution should be given equal treatment in schools.

As desperate spinning goes, that’s not bad. Too bad it’s completely untrue.

Here’s the transcript from the president’s interview:

Q: I wanted to ask you about the — what seems to be a growing debate over evolution versus intelligent design. What are your personal views on that, and do you think both should be taught in public schools?

Bush: I think — as I said, harking back to my days as my governor — both you and Herman are doing a fine job of dragging me back to the past. (Laughter.) Then, I said that, first of all, that decision should be made to local school districts, but I felt like both sides ought to be properly taught.

Q: Both sides should be properly taught?

Bush: Yes, people — so people can understand what the debate is about.

Q: So the answer accepts the validity of intelligent design as an alternative to evolution?

Bush: I think that part of education is to expose people to different schools of thought, and I’m not suggesting — you’re asking me whether or not people ought to be exposed to different ideas, and the answer is yes.

Now, to hear Marburger tell it, Bush simply meant student could be exposed to intelligent-design creationism in a “social context.” As in, “Today, class, we’re going to temporarily put aside real science and talk about the unscientific beliefs of confused people.” Reading the transcript, I’m pretty sure that’s not what Bush meant.

As for how embarrassing this is to the country, I think Barney Frank summed this up nicely: “People might cite George Bush as proof that you can be totally impervious to the effects of Harvard and Yale education.”

So far in my college career I have taken 2 science classes, geology and biology and this semester I’m up for a course in comparative religion (all of them required). I struggled through the science courses and I’m sure that the religion class will have it’s own challenges. My point is this, why should I attend a science class to have the subject matter muddied with spiritual beliefs and for that matter why would I want to be distracted with scientific material in a religion class. Intelligent design is nothing more than spiritual theory and should be taught as such.

  • I don’t know. Bush’s words seem carefully crafted to be within the bounds of Mr. Marburger’s spin while at the same time giving aid and comfort to those who believe intelligent design belongs in the school as an alternative argument to theories about evolution. I feel that the words “properly taught” leaves a great deal of parsing room. You stated what “properly taught” means to you. Who knows what “properly taught” means to those who seek to overturn evolution in favor of ID? The president speaks of exposure to “different ideas.” What he fails to do is discuss the relative scientific merit of those ideas. It would have been nice if someone could have come up with an apt analogy that is equally kooky so that Bush would have to clarify his pre-fab comments. Heck, the president simply wants us all to understand what the debate is about. Don’t you think Marburger’s “social context” is a squishy enough term to accommodate that? This president practices mendacity from moment to moment and with deliberation. Barney Frank may think this is ignorance; I think it is calculation.

  • You can teach what we now know to be incorrect (or even untestable) beliefs in a science class. You can begin astronomy where the ancients began and where we ourselves begin as children. The earth looks largely flat. The stars do seem to move around us. You can even quote poetry (“Look not to that inverted bowl they call the sky….”). The idea, in a good science class, is to to move the students from those demonstrably false bits of “common sense” to what we’ve painstakingly learned about stars, planets, our sun and our earth over centuries of scientific development.

    Likewise, I see nothing wrong with beginning biological study with any creation myth you like. Have Yahweh separate the firmament from the fundament, make Adam and Eve and all the plants and critters, etc. After all, that’s largely what Darwin himself believed when he began his studies. He fully accepted the marginal note in his King James Bible containing Ussher’s estimate of the earth’s age (6,000 years). The was his original puzzle: The fantastic diversity of species could never have evolved through random mutation and natural selection in that short time frame.

    It was the work of his close personal friend Charles Lyell which opened Darwin’s eyes to the impossibility of Ussher’s much-too-brief span for earth’s duration. Lyell had pointed to geological processes which, at their observable rate of occurrence, could never have accounted for what anyone could see in a mere 6,000 years. Once Darwin (or your student) realizes the vast time-frame involved and something about the rate at which mutations are known to occur (e.g., from study of selective breeding)- and once you couple that, as Darwin did, with Malthus’ point about population always pushing support limits sooner or later, evolution by natural selection becomes the only sane view possible. Intelligent Design falls by its sheer idiocy, as does the terra-centric flat-earth.

    If you don’t want to (or the wall of separation of church and state prohibits) starting with Yahweh myths, you can still start where your students are with one of the ancient Greeks (Anaximander, Anaximines – c. 600 BC) who already did believe in evolution. They though fish or turtles crawled from the sea, learned to breathe, adapted to their environments, etc. The difference between that kind of thinking and ours is that Darwin took to trouble to go out on the Beagle in search of evidence for speciation.

    If you’re teaching a course in statistics (I did for years) you don’t have to start with coin flips (boring). I found it much better to begin by asking students to pretend that they were polytheistic pagans living in the pre-Christian world. Unlike monotheism, with one all-powerful deity, you’ve got dozens and dozens of major and minor ones fighting with each other and occasionally dragging us humans into their struggles. Monotheists can consult their Sacred Book to divine the will of their deity, predict the future, etc. What do polytheists do? Roll some knucklebones, examine goat entrails, look for “chancy” omens in a “chancy” (stochastic) world. It’s not too big a leap from rolling dice to calculating exact winnings expectations for a gambling house or determing the proper premiums for a life insurance company. Build up some of these statistical models of things and you can intellectually mirror subatomic processes and distributions in population genetics. Before you go off in all these specialized topics, however, it’s good to remind yourself and your students where we all begin, then try “teaching”: rapidly pulling them through time, from those ancient beliefs to whatever is “current”.

    The historical movement from “common sense” — which nearly always agrees with Aristotle and which is, therefore, nearly always wrong (see Galileo for great examples) — to mathematically derivable and empirically testable hypotheses is an astounding human accomplishment. Only a deprived (depraved?) culture, like ours, would see plausible-though-primitive ignorance as on an equal footing with the hard-won, yet-still-to-be-improved-upon magnificent edifice of modern science.

    Politicians like Bush, pontificating on things like Intelligent Design, make sense to equally ignorant people. The scientific world is right to (1) ignore such people and, if they insist on pretending knowledge they don’t have, (2) ridiculing them.

  • Do you suppose Bill Nye is available.
    Bush needs his science dumbed down a bit!

  • “…you’re asking me whether or not people ought to be exposed to different ideas, and the answer is yes.”

    Yeah, unless you’re the President of the United States.

  • I must admit he has a science advisor and I am even a bit surprised that someone would take the job know how hostile he is to science assume he knows much anyhow.

  • Let’s just take one of Bush’s statements:

    “I felt like both sides ought to be properly taught.”

    Does that mean, necessarily, that ID would be taught
    as an alternative to evolution? Or that ID would
    simply be mentioned in passing as a religious
    concept, not to be confused with science? The
    latter would be ID, “properly taught,” would it not?

    I think it’s a carefully crafted position, ambiguous,
    so that religious fanatics and rational people can
    both take comfort from it. In a sense, he hasn’t
    said anything.

    Would anyone object if ID were taught in a
    high school philosophy or comparative
    religion course? Does Bush’s statement
    preclude that? Wouldn’t that be ID “properly
    taught?”

    I think it’s just politics.

  • Here is an article that Bush should read:
    http://www.bendbulletin.com/news/results.cfm?story_no=17111

    Of course, it would have to be dumbed down for him. It was only written by a high school junior. An obviously brilliant high school junior.

    Pertinent paragraph:
    “The biggest problem with intelligent design as a theory is that it isn’t really a theory at all. It does not present itself in a well-defined, testable form because its only assertion is the replacement of “an unknown mechanism” with the unnecessary (in William of Occam’s parlance) and vague term of a deity. It makes no predictions, and as such cannot be proved or disproved on the outcome of such… Evolution has made predictions, of which many have been confirmed; intelligent design has not and cannot.”

    As for me, as a student of science, and as a Christian, I find Bush’s line of “thought” an insult to God. That people cannot use their God-given brains to understand science. To wonder at the complexity of life. That we don’t need all the answers right now. That the answers are not always easily understandable.

  • As Bruce Springsteen said re: the evolution debate:

    “We’ve come a long way… and we’re going back.”

  • Darwinian Evolution For Idiots

    A molecule: given it self-replicates,
    Add random mutation, it opens the gates
    To wonders; selection, you see, with the time
    Of a few billion years breeds a lion from slime.
    Yet, pardon my doubt if that really is true
    If Dennis Kozlowski’s the best it can do.

  • I have no problem with teachings creative design. But if you are going to teach that Christian view, then also teach the views of other religions, including that of advaita vedanta – which states that there is no creation.

    It doesn’t make sense for something to come out of nothing. In fact, all is consciousness. We just can’t see it because we like the dualism of life.

    I’ll even make a deal with the creationists: If you don’t want my view taught, then we won’t teach your view. Fair enough?

  • If any teacher here in the UK seriously proposed Intelligent Design – no, let’s use its real name, Creationism – as a scientifically sound theory, they would be laughed off-campus. If that means this is a godforsaken country, hooray for us. At least we aren’t stuck with a leader who got “born again” and somehow managed to turn out even more stupid than he was the first time.

  • Comments are closed.