What is Darwinism?
Phillip E. Johnson
Professor of Law
University of California, Berkeley
http://www.arn.org/docs/johnson/wid.htm
This
paper was originally delivered as a lecture at a symposium at
Hillsdale College, in November 1992. Papers from the Symposium were
published in the collection Man and Creation: Perspectives on
Science and Theology (Bauman ed. 1993), by Hillsdale College
Press, Hillsdale MI 49242.
There is a popular
television game show called "Jeopardy," in which the usual order of
things is reversed. Instead of being asked a question to which they
must supply the answer, the contestants are given the answer and
asked to provide the appropriate question. This format suggests an
insight that is applicable to law, to science, and indeed to just
about everything. The important thing is not necessarily to know all
the answers, but rather to know what question is being asked.
That insight is the starting
point for my inquiry into Darwinian evolution and its relationship
to creation, because Darwinism is the answer to two very different
kinds of questions. First, Darwinian theory tells us how a certain
amount of diversity in life forms can develop once we have various
types of complex living organisms already in existence. If a small
population of birds happens to migrate to an isolated island, for
example, a combination of inbreeding, mutation, and natural
selection may cause this isolated population to develop different
characteristics from those possessed by the ancestral population on
the mainland. When the theory is understood in this limited sense,
Darwinian evolution is uncontroversial, and has no important
philosophical or theological implications.
Evolutionary biologists are
not content merely to explain how variation occurs within limits,
however. They aspire to answer a much broader question-which is how
complex organisms like birds, and flowers, and human beings came
into existence in the first place. The Darwinian answer to this
second question is that the creative force that produced complex
plants and animals from single-celled predecessors over long
stretches of geological time is essentially the same as the
mechanism that produces variations in flowers, insects, and domestic
animals before our very eyes. In the words of Ernst Mayr, the dean
of living Darwinists, "transspecific evolution [i.e.,
macroevolution] is nothing but an extrapolation and magnification of
the events that take place within populations and species."
Neo-Darwinian evolution in this broad sense is a philosophical
doctrine so lacking in empirical support that Mayr's successor at
Harvard, Stephen Jay Gould, once pronounced it in a reckless moment
to be "effectively dead." Yet neo-Darwinism is far from dead; on the
contrary, it is continually proclaimed in the textbooks and the
media as unchallengeable fact. How does it happen that so many
scientists and intellectuals, who pride themselves on their
empiricism and open-mindedness, continue to accept an unempirical
theory as scientific fact?
The answer to that question
lies in the definition of five key terms. The terms are creationism,
evolution, science, religion, and truth. Once we understand
how these words are used in evolutionary discourse, the continued
ascendancy of neo-Darwinism will be no mystery and we need no longer
be deceived by claims that the theory is supported by "overwhelming
evidence." I should warn at the outset, however, that using words
clearly is not the innocent and peaceful activity most of us may
have thought it to be. There are powerful vested interests in this
area which can thrive only in the midst of ambiguity and confusion.
Those who insist on defining terms precisely and using them
consistently may find themselves regarded with suspicion and
hostility, and even accused of being enemies of science. But let us
accept that risk and proceed to the definitions.
The first word is
creationism, which means simply a belief in creation. In
Darwinist usage, which dominates not only the popular and profession
scientific literature but also the media, a creationist is a person
who takes the creation account in the Book of Genesis to be true in
an very literal sense. The earth was created in a single week of six
24-hour days no more that 10,000 years ago; the major features of
the geological were produced by Noah's flood; and there have been no
major innovations in the forms of life since the beginning. It is a
major theme of Darwinist propaganda that the only persons who have
any doubts about Darwinism are young-earth creationists of this
sort, who are always portrayed as rejecting the clear and convincing
evidence of science to preserve a religious prejudice. The
implication is that citizens of modern society are faced with a
choice that is really no choice at all. Either they reject science
altogether and retreat to a pre-modern worldview, or they believe
everything the Darwinists tell them.
In a broader sense, however,
a creationist is simply a person who believes in the existence of a
creator, who brought about the existence of the world and
its living inhabitants in furtherance of a purpose. Whether
the process of creation took a single week or billions of years is
relatively unimportant from a philosophical or theological
standpoint. Creation by gradual processes over geological ages may
create problems for Biblical interpretation, but it creates none for
the basic principle of theistic religion. And creation in this broad
sense, according to a 1991 Gallup poll, is the creed of 87 per cent
of Americans. If God brought about our existence for a purpose, then
the most important kind of knowledge to have is knowledge of God and
of what He intends for us. Is creation in that broad sense
consistent with evolution?
The answer is absolutely
not, when "evolution" is understood in the Darwinian sense. To
Darwinists evolution means naturalistic evolution, because
they insist that science must assume that the cosmos is a closed
system of material causes and effects, which can never be influenced
by anything outside of material nature-by God, for example. In the
beginning, an explosion of matter created the cosmos, and
undirected, naturalistic evolution produced everything that
followed. From this philosophical standpoint it follows deductively
that from the beginning no intelligent purpose guided evolution. If
intelligence exists today, that is only because it has itself
evolved through purposeless material processes.
A materialistic theory of
evolution must inherently invoke two kinds of processes. At bottom
the theory must be based on chance, because that is what is left
when we have ruled out everything involving intelligence or purpose.
Theories which invoke only chance are not credible,
however. One thing that everyone acknowledges is that living
organisms are enormously complex-far more so than, say, a computer
or an airplane. That such complex entities came into existence
simply by chance is clearly less credible than that they were
designed and constructed by a creator. To back up their claim that
this appearance of intelligent design is an illusion, Darwinists
need to provide some complexity-building force that is mindless and
purposeless. Natural selection is by far the most plausible
candidate.
If we assume that random
genetic mutations provided the new genetic information needed, say,
to give a small mammal a start towards wings, and if we assume that
each tiny step in the process of wing-building gave the animal an
increased chance of survival, then natural selection ensured that
the favored creatures would thrive and reproduce. It follows as a
matter of logic that wings can and will appear as if by the plan of
a designer. Of course, if wings or other improvements do not appear,
the theory explains their absence just as well. The needed mutations
didn't arrive, or "developmental constraints" closed off certain
possibilities, or natural selection favored something else. There is
no requirement that any of this speculation be confirmed by either
experimental or fossil evidence. To Darwinists just being able to
imagine the process is sufficient to confirm that something like
that must have happened.
Richard Dawkins calls the
process of creation by mutation and selection "the blind
watchmaker," by which label he means that a purposeless,
materialistic designing force substitutes for the "watchmaker" deity
of natural theology. The creative power of the blind watchmaker is
supported only by very slight evidence, such as the famous example
of a moth population in which the percentage of dark moths increased
during a period when the birds were better able to see light moths
against the smoke-darkened background trees. This may be taken to
show that natural selection can do something, but not that it can
create anything that was not already in existence. Even such slight
evidence is more than sufficient, however, because evidence is not
really necessary to prove something that is practically
self-evident. The existence of a potent blind watchmaker follows
deductively from the philosophical premise that nature had to do its
own creating. There can be argument about the details, but if God
was not in the picture something very much like Darwinism simply has
to be true, regardless of the evidence.
That brings me to my third
term, science. We have already seen that Darwinists assume
as a matter of first principle that the history of the cosmos and
its life forms is fully explicable on naturalistic principles. This
reflects a philosophical doctrine called scientific naturalism,
which is said to be a necessary consequence of the inherent
limitations of science. What scientific naturalism does, however, is
to transform the limitations of science into limitations upon
reality, in the interest of maximizing the explanatory power of
science and its practitioners. It is, of course, entirely possible
to study organisms scientifically on the premise that they were all
created by God, just as scientists study airplanes and even works of
art without denying that these objects are intelligently designed.
The problem with allowing God a role in the history of life is not
that science would cease, but rather that scientists would have to
acknowledge the existence of something important which is outside
the boundaries of natural science. For scientists who want to be
able to explain everything-and "theories of everything" are now
openly anticipated in the scientific literature-this is an
intolerable possibility.
The second feature of
scientific naturalism that is important for our purpose is its set
of rules governing the criticism and replacement of a paradigm. A
paradigm is a general theory, like the Darwinian theory of
evolution, which has achieved general acceptance in the scientific
community. The paradigm unifies the various specialties that make up
the research community, and guides research in all of them. Thus,
zoologists, botanists, geneticists, molecular biologists, and
paleontologists all see their research as aimed at filling out the
details of the Darwinian paradigm. If molecular biologists see a
pattern of apparently neutral mutations, which have no apparent
effect on an organism's fitness, they must find a way to reconcile
their findings with the paradigm's requirement that natural
selection guides evolution. This they can do by postulating a
sufficient quantity of invisible adaptive mutations, which are
deemed to be accumulated by natural selection. Similarly, if
paleontologists see new fossil species appearing suddenly in the
fossil record, and remaining basically unchanged thereafter, they
must perform whatever contortions are necessary to force this
recalcitrant evidence into a model of incremental change through the
accumulation of micromutations.
Supporting the paradigm may
even require what in other contexts would be called deception. As
Niles Eldredge candidly admitted, "We paleontologists have said that
the history of life supports [the story of gradual adaptive change],
all the while knowing it does not."[ 1] Eldredge explained that this
pattern of misrepresentation occurred because of "the certainty so
characteristic of evolutionary ranks since the late 1940s, the utter
assurance not only that natural selection operates in nature, but
that we know precisely how it works." This certainty produced a
degree of dogmatism that Eldredge says resulted in the relegation to
the "lunatic fringe" of paleontologists who reported that "they saw
something out of kilter between contemporary evolutionary theory, on
the one hand, and patterns of change in the fossil record on the
other."[ 2] Under the circumstances, prudent paleontologists
understandably swallowed their doubts and supported the ruling
ideology. To abandon the paradigm would be to abandon the scientific
community; to ignore the paradigm and just gather the facts would be
to earn the demeaning label of "stamp collector."
As many philosophers of
science have observed, the research community does not abandon a
paradigm in the absence of a suitable replacement. This means that
negative criticism of Darwinism, however devastating it may appear
to be, is essentially irrelevant to the professional researchers.
The critic may point out, for example, that the evidence that
natural selection has any creative power is somewhere between weak
and non-existent. That is perfectly true, but to Darwinists the more
important point is this: If natural selection did not do the
creating, what did? "God" is obviously unacceptable, because such a
being is unknown to science. "We don't know" is equally
unacceptable, because to admit ignorance would be to leave science
adrift without a guiding principle. To put the problem in the most
practical terms: it is impossible to write or evaluate a grant
proposal without a generally accepted theoretical framework.
The paradigm rule explains
why Gould's acknowledgment that neo-Darwinism is "effectively dead"
had no significant effect on the Darwinist faithful, or even on
Gould himself. Gould made that statement in a paper predicting the
emergence of a new general theory of evolution, one based on the
macromutational speculations of the Berkeley geneticist Richard
Goldschmidt.[ 3] When the new theory did not arrive as anticipated,
the alternatives were either to stick with Ernst Mayr's version of
neo-Darwinism, or to concede that biologists do not after all know
of a naturalistic mechanism that can produce biological complexity.
That was no choice at all. Gould had to beat a hasty retreat back to
classical Darwinism to avoid giving aid and comfort to the enemies
of scientific naturalism, including those disgusting creationists.
Having to defend a dead
theory tooth and nail can hardly be a satisfying activity, and it is
no wonder that Gould lashes out with fury at people such as myself,
who calls attention to his predicament.[ 4] I do not mean to
ridicule Gould, however, because I have a genuinely high regard for
the man as one of the few Darwinists who has recognized the major
problems with the theory and reported them honestly. His tragedy is
that he cannot admit the clear implications of his own thought
without effectively resigning from science.
The continuing survival of
Darwinist orthodoxy illustrates Thomas Kuhn's famous point that the
accumulation of anomalies never in itself falsifies a paradigm,
because "To reject one paradigm without substituting another is to
reject science itself."[ 5] This practice may be appropriate as a
way of carrying on the professional enterprise called science, but
it can be grossly misleading when it is imposed upon persons who are
asking questions other than the ones scientific naturalists want to
ask. Suppose, for example, that I want to know whether God really
had something to do with creating living organisms. A typical
Darwinian response is that there is no reason to invoke supernatural
action because Darwinian selection was capable of performing the
job. To evaluate that response, I need to know whether natural
selection really has the fantastic creative power attributed to it.
It is not a sufficient answer to say that scientists have nothing
better to offer. The fact that scientists don't like to say "we
don't know" tells me nothing about what they really do
know.
I am not suggesting that
scientists have to change their rules about retaining and discarding
paradigms. All I want them to do is to be candid about the
disconfirming evidence and admit, if it is the case, that they are
hanging on to Darwinism only because they prefer a shaky theory to
having no theory at all. What they insist upon doing, however, is to
present Darwinian evolution to the public as a fact that every
rational person is expected to accept. If there are reasonable
grounds to doubt the theory such dogmatism is ridiculous, whether or
not the doubters have a better theory to propose.
To believers in creation,
the Darwinists seem thoroughly intolerant and dogmatic when they
insist that their own philosophy must have a monopoly in the schools
and the media. The Darwinists do not see themselves that way, of
course. On the contrary, they often feel aggrieved when creationists
(in either the broad or narrow sense) ask to have their own
arguments heard in public and fairly considered. To insist that
schoolchildren be taught that Darwinian evolution is a fact is in
their minds merely to protect the integrity of science education; to
present the other side of the case would be to allow fanatics to
force their opinions on others. Even college professors have been
forbidden to express their doubts about Darwinian evolution in the
classroom, and it seems to be widely believed that the Constitution
not only permits but actually requires such restrictions on academic
freedom. To explain this bizarre situation, we must define our
fourth term: religion.
Suppose that a skeptic
argues that evidence for biological creation by natural selection is
obviously lacking, and that in the circumstances we ought to give
serious consideration to the possibility that the development of
life required some input from a pre-existing, purposeful creator. To
scientific naturalists this suggestion is "creationist" and
therefore unacceptable in principle, because it invokes an entity
unknown to science. What is worse, it suggests the possibility that
this creator may have communicated in some way with humans. In that
case there could be real prophets-persons with a genuine knowledge
of God who are neither frauds nor dreamers. Such persons could
conceivably be dangerous rivals for the scientists as cultural
authorities.
Naturalistic philosophy has
worked out a strategy to prevent this problem from arising: it
labels naturalism as science and theism as religion. The former is
then classified as knowledge, and the latter as merebelief.
The distinction is of critical importance, because only knowledge
can be objectively valid for everyone; belief is valid only for the
believer, and should never be passed off as knowledge. The student
who thinks that 2 and 2 make 5, or that water is not made up of
hydrogen and oxygen, or that the theory of evolution is not true, is
not expressing a minority viewpoint. He or she is ignorant, and the
job of education is to cure that ignorance and to replace it with
knowledge. Students in the public schools are thus to be taught at
an early age that "evolution is a fact," and as time goes by they
will gradually learn that evolution means naturalism.
In short, the proposition
that God was in any way involved in our creation is effectively
outlawed, and implicitly negated. This is because naturalistic
evolution is by definition in the category of scientific knowledge.
What contradicts knowledge is implicitly false, or imaginary. That
is why it is possible for scientific naturalists in good faith to
claim on the one hand that their science says nothing about God, and
on the other to claim that they have said everything that can be
said about God. In naturalistic philosophy both propositions are at
bottom the same. All that needs to be said about God is that there
is nothing to be said of God, because on that subject we can have no
knowledge.
Our fifth and final term is
truth. Truth as such is not a particularly important
concept in naturalistic philosophy. The reason for this is that
"truth" suggests an unchanging absolute, whereas scientific
knowledge is a dynamic concept. Like life, knowledge evolves and
grows into superior forms. What was knowledge in the past is not
knowledge today, and the knowledge of the future will surely be far
superior to what we have now. Only naturalism itself and the unique
validity of science as the path to knowledge are absolutes. There
can be no criterion for truth outside of scientific knowledge, no
mind of God to which we have access.
This way of understanding
things persists even when scientific naturalists employ
religious-sounding language. For example, the physicist Stephen
Hawking ended his famous book A Brief History of Time with
the prediction that man might one day "know the mind of God." This
phrasing cause some friends of mine to form the mistaken impression
that he had some attraction to theistic religion. In context Hawking
was not referring to a supernatural eternal being, however, but to
the possibility that scientific knowledge will eventually become
complete and all-encompassing because it will have explained the
movements of material particles in all circumstances.
The monopoly of science in
the realm of knowledge explains why evolutionary biologists do not
find it meaningful to address the question whether the Darwinian
theory is true. They will gladly concede that the theory is
incomplete, and that further research into the mechanisms of
evolution is needed. At any given point in time, however, the
reigning theory of naturalistic evolution represents the state of
scientific knowledge about how we came into existence. Scientific
knowledge is by definition the closest approximation of absolute
truth available to us. To ask whether this knowledge is true is
therefore to miss the point, and to betray a misunderstanding of
"how science works."
So far I have described the
metaphysical categories by which scientific naturalists have
excluded the topic of God from rational discussion, and thus ensured
that Darwinism's fully naturalistic creation story is effectively
true by definition. There is no need to explain why atheists find
this system of thought control congenial. What is a little more
difficult to understand, at least at first, is the strong support
Darwinism continues to receive in the Christian academic world.
Attempts to investigate the credibility of the Darwinist evolution
story are regarded with little enthusiasm by many leading Christian
professors of science and philosophy, even at institutions which are
generally regarded as conservative in theology. Given that Darwinism
is inherently naturalistic and therefore antagonistic to the idea
that God had anything to do with the history of life, and that it
plays the central role in ensuring agnostic domination of the
intellectual culture, one might have supposed that Christian
intellectuals (along with religious Jews) would be eager to find its
weak spots.
Instead, the prevailing view
among Christian professors has been that Darwinism-or "evolution,"
as they tend to call it-is unbeatable, and that it can be
interpreted to be consistent with Christian belief. And in fact
Darwinism is unbeatable as long as one accepts the thought
categories of scientific naturalism that I have been describing. The
problem is that those same thought categories make Christian theism,
or any other theism, absolutely untenable. If science has exclusive
authority to tell us how life was created, and if science is
committed to naturalism, and if science never discards a paradigm
until it is presented with an acceptable naturalistic alternative,
then Darwinism's position is impregnable within science. The same
reasoning that makes Darwinism inevitable, however, also bans God
from taking any action within the history of the Cosmos, which means
that it makes theism illusory. Theistic naturalism is
self-contradictory.
Some hope to avoid the
contradiction by asserting that naturalism rules only within the
realm of science, and that there is a separate realm called
"religion" in which theism can flourish. The problem with this
arrangement, as we have already seen, is that in a naturalistic
culture scientific conclusions are considered to be knowledge, or
even fact. What is outside of fact is fantasy, or at best subjective
belief. Theists who accommodate with scientific naturalism therefore
may never affirm that their God is real in the same sense
that evolution is real. This rule is essential to the entire mindset
that produced Darwinism in the first place. If God exists He could
certainly work through mutation and selection if that is what He
wanted to do, but He could also create by some means totally outside
the ken of our science. Once we put God into the picture, however,
there is no good reason to attribute the creation of biological
complexity to random mutation and natural selection. Direct evidence
that these mechanisms have substantial creative power is not to be
found in nature, the laboratory, or the fossil record. An essential
step in the reasoning that establishes that Darwinian selection
created the wonders of biology, therefore, is that nothing else was
available. Theism is by definition the doctrine that something else
was available.
Perhaps the contradiction is
hard to see when it is stated at an abstract level, so I will give a
more concrete example. Persons who advocate the compromise position
called "theistic evolution" are in my experience always vague about
what they mean by "evolution." They have good reason to be vague. As
we have seen, Darwinian evolution is by definition unguided and
purposeless, and such evolution cannot in any meaningful sense be
theistic. For evolution to be genuinely theistic it must be guided
by God, whether this means that God programmed the process in
advance or stepped in from time to time to give it a push in the
right direction. To Darwinists evolution guided by God is a soft
form of creationism, which is to say it is not evolution at all. To
repeat, this understanding goes to the very heart of Darwinist
thinking. Allow a preexisting supernatural intelligence to guide
evolution, and this omnipotent being can do a whole lot more than
that.
Of course, theists can think
of evolution as God-guided whether naturalistic Darwinists like it
or not. The trouble with having a private definition for theists,
however, is that the scientific naturalists have the power to decide
what that term "evolution" means in public discourse, including the
science classes in the public schools. If theistic evolutionists
broadcast the message that evolution as they understand it
is harmless to theistic religion, they are misleading their
constituents unless they add a clear warning that the version of
evolution advocated by the entire body of mainstream science is
something else altogether. That warning is never clearly delivered,
however, because the main point of theistic evolution is to preserve
peace with the mainstream scientific community. The theistic
evolutionists therefore unwitting serve the purposes of the
scientific naturalists, by helping persuade the religious community
to lower its guard against the incursion of naturalism.
We are now in a position to
answer the question with which this lecture began. What is
Darwinism? Darwinism is a theory of empirical science only at the
level of microevolution, where it provides a framework for
explaining such things as the diversity that arises when small
populations become reproductively isolated from the main body of the
species. As a general theory of biological creation Darwinism is not
empirical at all. Rather, it is a necessary implication of a
philosophical doctrine called scientific naturalism, which is based
on the a priori assumption that God was always absent from the realm
of nature. As such evolution in the Darwinian sense is inherently
antithetical to theism, although evolution in some entirely
different and non-naturalistic sense could conceivably have been
God's chosen method of creation.
In 1874, the great
Presbyterian theologian Charles Hodge asked the question I have
asked: What is Darwinism? After a careful and thoroughly fair-minded
evaluation of the doctrine, his answer was unequivocal: "It is
Atheism." Another way to state the proposition is to say that
Darwinism is the answer to a specific question that grows out of
philosophical naturalism. To return to the game of "Jeopardy" with
which we started, let us say that Darwinism is the answer. What,
then, is the question? The question is: "How must creation have
occurred if we assume that God had nothing to do with it?" Theistic
evolutionists accomplish very little by trying to Christianize the
answer to a question that comes straight out of the agenda of
scientific naturalism. What we need to do instead is to challenge
the assumption that the only questions worth asking are the ones
that assume that naturalism is true.
Notes
1. Niles
Eldredge, Time Frames (Heinemann, 1986), 144.
2.
Ibid., 93.
3.
Stephen Jay Gould, "Is a New and General Theory of Evolution
Emerging?" Paleobiology, 6 (1980), 119-130, reprinted in
Maynard Smith, ed., Evolution Now: A Century After Darwin
(W. H. Freeman, 1982).
4. See
Stephen Jay Gould, "Impeaching a Self-Appointed Judge,"
Scientific American, (July 1992), 118-122. Scientific
American refused to publish my response to this attack, but the
response did appear in the March 1993 issue of Perspectives on
Science and Christian Faith, the journal of the American
Scientific Affiliation.
5. Thomas
S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 2d ed.,
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970), 79.
Copyright
© 1996 Phillip E. Johnson. All rights reserved. International
copyright secured.
File Date: 8.31.96

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