From our friends at the NCSE
Chris Mooney reports in The American Prospect that John H. Marburger III, director of the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy, denounced “intelligent design” as unscientific. Mooney writes:
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.”
In March 2004, when asked about the Bush administration’s scientific credibility in light of the president’s reported skepticism about evolution, Marburger similarly got it right: “Evolution is a cornerstone of modern biology.”
5 Comments
Joe McFaul · 23 February 2005
This is very good news. We can only hope that the President listens.
Uber · 23 February 2005
All I can say is GREAT!!!
There is hope for USA science education afterall.
I actually just gained some respect for the administration.
Richard · 23 February 2005
Given the Bush administration's tendency to pander shamelessly to the religious right, together with its dismal record of abusing/distorting/discarding science to advance its agenda on a number of fronts, my guess is that Marburger's days as science advisor may now be numbered.
Steve Reuland · 23 February 2005
Pim, your link has an insert in it which causes a 404. Fix it when you can.
Chris Lawson · 24 February 2005
To PvM:
Thanks for that link to Dembski's "pathetic comment." No better evidence of Dembski's scientific failure is his insistence that only Darwinists have to document their claims, while IDists don't have to.
It gets even better. In the very same thread, Dembski says, "Your filling in of details is like a man attempting to count to infinity -- the challenge ahead of you far exceeds any progress you've made to date or even any progress you give any indication of being able to make." In other words, Dembski is insisting that Darwinists need an infinite amount of evidence. (In contrast, ID theory requires an infinite amount of wishful thinking; of course, unlike evidence, there is no upper limit on wishful thinking.)
And then to cap it off, he complains about the number of references his opponents have posted to the thread, calling it "literature bombing." And this to a post that contains a total of eight references! Dembski even considers the need to find a way of preventing such "literature bombing" on the ISCID website. So what he's saying is, let's *prevent* people from listing references to back up their arguments. Now that's a real scientist speaking there. That's "teaching the controversy" for you.
regards,
Chris