Bush Remarks Roil Debate on Teaching of
Evolution
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
Published:
In an interview at the White House on Monday
with a group of
Recalling his days as
Mr. Bush was pressed as to whether he accepted the view that intelligent
design was an alternative to evolution, but he did not directly answer. "I
think that part of education is to expose people to different schools of
thought," he said, adding that "you're asking me whether or not
people ought to be exposed to different ideas, and the answer is yes."
On Tuesday, the president's conservative Christian supporters and the
leading institute advancing intelligent design embraced Mr. Bush's comments
while scientists and advocates of the separation of church and state disparaged
them. At the White House, where intelligent design has been discussed in a
weekly Bible study group, Mr. Bush's science adviser, John H. Marburger 3rd, sought to play down the president's remarks
as common sense and old news.
Mr. Marburger said in a telephone interview that
"evolution is the cornerstone of modern biology" and
"intelligent design is not a scientific concept." Mr. Marburger also said that Mr. Bush's remarks should be
interpreted to mean that the president believes that intelligent design should
be discussed as part of the "social context" in science classes.
Intelligent design, advanced by a group of academics and intellectuals and
some biblical creationists, disputes the idea that natural selection - the
force Charles Darwin suggested drove evolution - fully explains the complexity
of life. Instead, intelligent design proponents say that life is so intricate
that only a powerful guiding force, or intelligent designer, could have created
it.
Intelligent design does not identify the designer, but critics say the
theory is a thinly disguised argument for God and the divine creation of the
universe. Invigorated by a recent push by conservatives, the theory has been
gaining support in school districts in 20 states, with
Mr. Marburger said it would be
"over-interpreting" Mr. Bush's remarks to say that the president
believed that intelligent design and evolution should be given equal treatment
in schools.
But Mr. Bush's conservative supporters said the president had indicated
exactly that in his remarks.
"It's what I've been pushing, it's what a lot of us have been
pushing," said Richard Land, the president of the ethics and religious
liberties commission of the Southern Baptist Convention. Dr. Land, who has
close ties to the White House, said that evolution "is too often taught as
fact," and that "if you're going to teach the Darwinian theory as evolution, teach it as theory. And then teach
another theory that has the most support among scientists."
But critics saw Mr. Bush's comment that "both sides" should be
taught as the most troubling aspect of his remarks.
"It sounds like you're being fair, but creationism is a sectarian
religious viewpoint, and intelligent design is a sectarian religious
viewpoint," said Susan Spath, a spokeswoman for
the National Center for Science Education, a group that defends the teaching of
evolution in public schools. "It's not fair to privilege one religious
viewpoint by calling it the other side of evolution."
Ms. Spath added that intelligent design was viewed
as more respectable and sophisticated than biblical creationism, but "if
you look at their theological and scientific writings, you see that the
movement is fundamentally anti-evolution."
The Rev. Barry W. Lynn, the executive director of Americans United for
Separation of Church and State, called the president's comments irresponsible,
and said that "when it comes to evolution, there is only one school of
scientific thought, and that is evolution occurred and is still
occurring." Mr. Lynn added that "when it comes to matters of religion
and philosophy, they can be discussed objectively in public schools, but not in
biology class."
The Discovery Institute in Seattle, a leader in developing intelligent
design, applauded the president's words on Tuesday as a defense of scientists
who have been ostracized for advancing the theory.
"We interpret this as the president using his bully pulpit to support
freedom of inquiry and free speech about the issue of biological origins,"
said Stephen Meyer, the director of the institute's Center for Science and
Culture. "It's extremely timely and welcome because so many scientists are
experiencing recriminations for breaking with Darwinist orthodoxy."
At the White House, intelligent design was the subject of a weekly Bible
study class several years ago when Charles W. Colson, the founder and chairman
of Prison Fellowship Ministries, spoke to the group. Mr. Colson has also
written a book, "The Good Life," in which a chapter on intelligent
design features Michael Gerson, an evangelical
Christian who is an assistant to the president for policy and strategic
planning.
"It's part of the buzz of the city among
Christians," Mr. Colson said in a telephone interview on Tuesday about
intelligent design. "It wouldn't surprise me that it got to George Bush.
He reads, he picks stuff up, he talks to people. And
he's pretty serious about his own Christian beliefs."