Intelligent Design proponent Phillip E. Johnson takes on science
While on sabbatical in London, law professor Phillip E. Johnson, was looking for
something to write about. He stumbled upon Darwin’s theory of evolution.
A teacher of contemporary legal theory at the
University of California at Berkley and someone who had recently had a
conversion experience himself, Johnson decided that Darwinism was not just
scientific theory but the story of creation for our time and began to question
and investigate the theory. Johnson spoke at Campbell’s Norman Adrian Wiggins
School of Law on Tuesday, Feb. 7.
“I discovered a lot of loose ends in Darwin’s theory,”
Johnson said. “And I’m the kind of person who, when I see a loose end, I have
this irresistible desire to pull on it.”
Johnson’s “pulling” led to a paper that eventually
became the draft of his first book “Darwin on Trial,” and the movement known as
intelligent design was begun. The movement holds that the biological aspects of
life are too complex to have evolved randomly, but must have been produced by an
unidentified intelligence. Johnson differentiated the theory from Creationism
because intelligent design doesn’t claim that there is anything supernatural
about this creative intelligence.
“We know today that cells are much more complex than
Darwin thought,” Johnson said. “They have their own chemical factories,
sophisticated transport systems and cell repair facilities, so the position that
this level of complexity could come together just by chance seems remote. We
concluded that life springs from some unidentified intelligence.”
Intelligent design also challenges scientists who claim
that the evidence of evolution is everywhere—from fruit flies branching into new
species to bacteria developing resistance to antibiotics—by insisting that
scientists use only small scale variations within a species to explain
evolution. There are no fossil records for the big transformations.
Unlike Creationists who claim the world was created in
just six days, intelligent design does not deal with the question of how long it
took to create the world, Johnson explained.
“The Creationists are up against all of the scientists.
I tried to narrow the debate and bring the movement into the realm of science,”
he said. “Scientists couldn’t dismiss the theory of an intelligence because they
investigate types of intelligence all of the time.”
Intelligent design has caused controversy throughout
the world. A federal judge ruled recently that intelligent design cannot be
taught in biology classes in a Pennsylvania school district because the teaching
of the Bible does not belong in science classes, but Johnson isn’t concerned
about the theory being taught in public schools.
“We want to discredit Darwinism,” Johnson said. “This
theory has had an enormous impact on secularization because it eliminates the
Creator. We thought that if the theory of evolution was cast into doubt, it
would have a big cultural impact, just as it did when it was discovered.
A native of Illinois, Johnson received his
undergraduate degree from Harvard and his Juris Doctor from the University of
Chicago School of Law, where he graduated first in his class. He became a clerk
to Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U.S. Supreme Court and, in 1967, began
teaching at Berkeley where he gained an international reputation as a teacher of
criminal law and legal theory. He is currently Professor Emeritus of law at the
University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of numerous books,
including “Reason in the Balance.”
Photo Copy: Intelligent Design proponent Phillip E. Johnson talks with students
after a lecture at Campbell University’s Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law.
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