Seeking an Open Inquiry
The Expelled
Controversy: Overcoming or Raising Walls
of Division?
© 2008 by Jeffrey P. Schloss. Center for Faith,
Ethics, and Life Sciences, Westmont College.
Reprinted with permission of the
American Scientific Affiliation
When the banner unfurls,
all reason is in the trumpet.
- Ukrainian Proverb
The movie Expelled: No
Intelligence Allowed has attracted national attention as the most recent
and explosive salvo in the battle - sometimes represented as a scientific
conflict, sometimes as an all out culture war - over evolution, divine design,
and the treatment of these issues in American academia. Critics of the movie and the Intelligent
Design (ID) movement it represents view the campaign as part of a holy war on
science,that in many respects involves the intellectual analog of terrorism. Having failed to gain ground in a
fairly-waged battle for ideas amongst scientific colleagues, ID advocates are
criticized as circumventing the rules of honest intellectual engagement by
going straight to school boards and legislators. Having failed there, they are now viewed as
resorting to a propaganda campaign of misinformation and vilification.
Expelled and
the ID advocates it portrays would agree that the battle hasnt been fairly
fought, but attribute this not to their tactics but those of a Dark Age of
totalitarianism that silences dissent through Kafkaesque persecution of
scientistsand others who challenge the system. Expelled portrays those who champion ID
or stand up to Darwinism as freedom fighters, struggling against an oppressive
intellectual regime that, while it may control the reins of power, does not
represent either sound reason or popular sensibilities. The film exposes the tactics that Darwinists
employ to maintain their stranglehold on academia and the scientific
establishment. In fact, it even closes with
stirring words from the Declaration of Independence and a celebration of those
brave warriors who have given their lives in the fight to preserve the legacy
of American freedoms. Producer Ben
Stein concludes, Freedom of inquiry has been greatly compromised, and this is
not only anti-American, its anti-science.
Over the course of this increasingly polarized battle, and
especially in the bitter criticisms and umbraged defenses of the film, each
side contends that the other not only is wrong, but also is committing the
destructive error of the above proverb. [It was taken, by the way, from the
famous discussion by Nobel laureate biologist Konrad Lorenz of militant
enthusiasm - the feverish group think in which rational considerations, criticisms,
and all reasonable arguments...are silenced by being
made to appear not only untenable but base and dishonorable.] For many of us who value science, biblical
faith, and civil exchange, it is very tempting to echo Mercutios lament at the
tragic consequences of feuding Montagues and Capulets: A plague on both your
houses!...I was hurt under your arm.
Indeed, our students, and the fabric of social discourse, and the very intellectual questions that have
been central to western civilization all appear to have been injured under the
arm of this feud.
But not so fast with a plea for moderation. If it is important to avoid the fallacy of
false extremes, it is also important to avoid the fallacy of the supposedly
golden median. Maybe we need, as
lifetime Darwin critic Tom Bethell claims in his movie review, to reject what might be called the
diplomatic option, [which] seeks to keep everyone happy by seeing reconcilable
truths on both sides. For in so doing
it puts diplomacy before truth. It is of course possible that one side is just plain wrong, not only in claims but also
in tactics. For this reason, it is crucial
both to hear sympathetically and to assess carefully the films claims. It is especially important for Christians to
do this, for the internal coherence of our faith and the integrity of our
social witness are at stake.
What I want to do in this review essay is
carefully assess the claims of the film, plus those made in the recent
firestorm of criticisms and defenses. It
is not targeted at scholars, but it is offered to the thoughtful. Is there no shorter way of coming to
Geometry...? King Ptolemy is reputed to have asked Euclid. Sire, there is no royal road to
geometry. Polemical sound bites
criticizing and defending the movie notwithstanding, there is no short way to
the truth of these issues. While the
following assessment is lengthy, it contains segments dealing with each major
claim of the film, which may be read separately.
Before examining the specific claims of the film
and its critics, I should make explicit two starting commitments that virtually
all Christians will bring (and atheists will reject) in coming to the
issues. First, along with all
monotheists in the Abrahamic traditions, Christians believe that the earth and
the history of humanity are not the accidental byproducts of a purposeless
cosmos, but the creation of a wise and loving God. Moreover, God has not left Himself without
witness, but His creation bears wondrous testimony of its Creator (in ways not
all agree on). Second, and this is a
somewhat distinctive and contentious claim of the Christian revelation: human
beings are prone to misidentifying the signature of divine artistry, and in
fact may actively work to deny it. The
scandalous message of the incarnation is that even when the Artist himself
entered his creation, its interlocking systems of thought and power not only
failed to recognize him, but also despised him.
No disrespect intended, but in a sense Christianity is the ultimate
conspiracy theory, involving the disturbing proposal that the self-deceiving
vulnerabilities of human personality and the self-justifying mechanisms of
cultural control are tilted away from Gods testimony, and are largely blind to
the direction of this tilt.
At face value, both of these affirmations seem
to concord with the films major emphases: there is evidence of a purposeful
creator, and there is a reigning ideological commitment to excluding, even
punishing, those who advocate this point of view. In fact, at a general level many Christians
would not even need a movie to be convinced of this. But the film attempts to go beyond the
general, by portraying very specific examples of this dynamic. If there is bona fide scientific evidence for design, its in the details; and
if there is institutionalized commitment to suppressing such evidence, its in
the details as well. Therefore its
important to take a hard look at the claims, or as the film encourages, to
examine the issues without ruling out one option in advance. In exploring these issues with my own
students, I invite them to begin by taking to heart the advice of Proverbs,
which exhorts us to unwavering self-honesty: He who gives an answer without
first hearing of the matter, it is his folly and shame. The importance of this proverbial counsel is
amplified by the theological notion I mentioned above, of a delusional conspiracy
that resists the gospel. For it is not
just Rome, but also Jerusalem that conspires. The community of faith is not
immune to misidentifying the enemy, in the very name of orthodoxy. The need here, as always, is to examine
everything carefully and hold on to the good (I Thes 5:21).
So here we go; maybe we can even have some
fun. The film claims that it exposes
the frightening agenda of the Darwinian Machine. Three grave questions are raised and answered
about the nature of that machine.
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