Sethbag wrote:FI disagree with the notion of "teaching the controversy". The fact is, teaching the controversy is not teaching science. At best it's Social Studies, or History. Science classes are for teaching science, not for teaching the fact that some frustrated born-again Christians have a problem with modern science. Until and unless ID can be demonstrated to be good science, it simply doesn't belong. And it hasn't been, and IMHO never will be, because it's just plain old bad science.
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As I've already noted, Michael Behe is a mainstream Catholic, Philip Johnson is a mainstream Protestant, Michael Denton is an agnostic former Protestant, and David Berlinski is an agnostic Jew.[/code]
Can you name some
more nonreligoius ID advocates? I'm afraid you just picked most of the few examples of your point that exist. I wouldn't want you to mistakenly give the impression to others that ID advocacy is more diverse than it is in reality. It is true there exist a few, but they are a tiny, tiny percentage of the overall group. I'm not saying this is good or bad. Actually, I'll just flat say it isn't bad. It's just reality. If you go down the Discovery Institute's list of fellows, almost all are religious, moreso than in society at large. Almost all are are specifically known for religious advocacy. Their funding is comes from religious sources, their work is mainly popular in religious apologetics, and they spend a great deal of time in religious venues arguing how their work supports religion. When I say "they" I mean people like Philip Johnson, Micheal Behe, William Dembski, Jay Richards, Jonathan Wells, J.P Moreland, Paul Nelson, Nancy Pearcy, Robert Koons, Forrest Mims, William Lane Craig, Dean Kenyon, and Charles Thaxton. I could go on until I've named almost every "whos who" name in ID. Most of this occurs specifically within the context of conservative protestant faiths in America. If you read the "dissent from Darwinism" list almost all found there are religious. Within that category, a very large percentage are evangelical protestants, though it is more diverse than what you are responding to implies. ID is an an evolution (pardon the pun) of the American creationist movement and still shares its general makeup, so this isn't shocking. It's dominated by conservative protestants, but it is by no means controlled by them. There are Muslim ID advocates just the same as there were Muslim creationists. So, yes, the stereotype is false in the sense that it isn't true in every case. It's wrong and and borderline bigoted to say it is just the product of "frustrated born-agains" but it is also wrong to think ID isn't not an overwhelmingly conservative Christian phenomenon.