Is US becoming hostile to
science?
Yahoo News/Reuters
By Alan Elsner
October 28, 2005
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bitter debate about how to teach evolution in U.S.
high schools is prompting a crisis of confidence among scientists, and some
senior academics warn that science itself is under assault.
In the past month, the interim president of Cornell University and the dean
of the Stanford University School of Medicine have both spoken on this theme,
warning in dramatic terms of the long-term consequences.
"Among the most significant forces is the rising tide of anti-science
sentiment that seems to have its nucleus in Washington but which extends
throughout the nation," said Stanford's Philip Pizzo in a letter posted on the
school Web site on October 3.
Cornell acting President Hunter Rawlings, in his "state of the university"
address last week, spoke about the challenge to science represented by
"intelligent design" which holds that the theory of evolution accepted by the
vast majority of scientists is fatally flawed.
Rawlings said the dispute was widening political, social, religious and
philosophical rifts in U.S. society. "When ideological division replaces
informed exchange, dogma is the result and education suffers," he said.
Adherents of intelligent design argue that certain forms in nature are too
complex to have evolved through natural selection and must have been created by
a "designer," who could but does not have to be identified as God.
AT ODDS WITH BUSH
In the past five years, the scientific community has often seemed at odds
with the Bush administration over issues as diverse as global warming, stem
cell research and environmental protection. Prominent scientists have also
charged the administration with politicizing science by seeking to shape data
to its own needs while ignoring other research.
Evangelical and fundamentalist Christians have built a powerful position
within the Republican Party and no Republican, including Bush, can afford to
ignore their views.
This was dramatically illustrated in the case of Terri Schiavo earlier this
year, in which Republicans in Congress passed a law to keep a woman in a
persistent vegetative state alive against her husband's wishes, and Bush
himself spoke out in favor of "the culture of life."
The issue of whether intelligent design should be taught, or at least
mentioned, in high school biology classes is being played out in a Pennsylvania
court room and in numerous school districts across the country.
The school board of Dover, Pennsylvania, is being sued by parents backed by
the American Civil Liberties Union after it ordered schools to read students a
short statement in biology classes informing them that the theory of evolution
is not established fact and that gaps exist in it.
The statement mentioned intelligent design as an alternative theory and
recommended students to read a book that explained the theory further.
Brown University biologist Kenneth Miller believes the rhetoric of the
anti-evolution movement has had the effect of driving a wedge between a large
proportion of the population who follow fundamentalist Christianity and
science.
"It is alienating young people from science. It basically tells them that
the scientific community is not to be trusted and you would have to abandon
your principles of faith to become a scientist, which is not at all true," he
said.
On the other side, conservative scholar Michael Novak of the American
Enterprise Institute, believes the only way to heal the rift between science
and religion is to allow the teaching of intelligent design.
"To have antagonism between science and religion is crazy," he said at a
forum on the issue last week.
Proponents of intelligent design deny they are anti-science and say they
themselves follow the scientific method.
AMERICANS DON'T ACCEPT EVOLUTION
Polls for many years have shown that a majority of Americans are at odds
with key scientific theory. For example, as CBS poll this month found that 51
percent of respondents believed humans were created in their present form by
God. A further 30 percent said their creation was guided by God. Only 15
percent thought humans evolved from less advanced life forms over millions of
years.
Other polls show that only around a third of American adults accept the Big
Bang theory of the origin of the universe, even though the concept is virtually
uncontested by scientists worldwide.
"When we ask people what they know about science, just under 20 percent turn
out to be scientifically literate," said Jon Miller, director of the center for
biomedical communication at Northwestern University.
He said science and especially mathematics were poorly taught in most U.S.
schools, leading both to a shortage of good scientists and general scientific
ignorance.
U.S. school students perform relatively poorly in international tests of
mathematics and science. For example, in 2003 U.S. students placed 24th in an
international test that measured the mathematical literacy of 15-year-olds,
below many European and Asian countries.
Scientists bemoan the lack of qualified U.S. candidates for postgraduate and
doctoral studies at American universities and currently fill around a third of
available science and engineering slots with foreign students.
Northwestern's Miller said the insistence of a large proportion of Americans
that humans were created by God as whole beings had policy implications for the
future.
"The 21st century will be the century of biology and we are going to be
confronted with hundreds of important public policy issues that require some
understanding that all life is interconnected," he said.
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