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Saturday, 5 April 2025

Public Darwin vs. his evil doppelganger?

Rescuing Evolution from Darwinian Myth


Does the public promotion of Darwin’s theory of natural selection match Darwin’s own private view of his theory? On a classic episode of ID the Future, historian of science Michael Keas begins a two-part conversation with Robert Shedinger, the Wilford A. Johnson Chair of Biblical Studies and Professor of Religion at Luther College. Shedinger, author of Darwin’s Bluff, reports on the contrast between Darwin’s private view of his theory of natural selection and the public view as detailed in his published work. Shedinger also notes the deficiency in evidence for Darwin’s proposal, despite claims to the contrary from his followers and evangelizers today. 

Download the podcast or listen to it here. This is Part 1 of a two-part interview.

On musing on JEHOVAH’S inventions rather than man's

 Why John Muir Chose Nature Over Machines


John Muir (1838 – 1914) is typically remembered as one of America’s foremost naturalists, father of the country’s national parks, and tireless defender of the wilderness. But he might very well have been none of those things. As a young man, Muir was gifted at building machines, and he was set to pursue a career in technology until everything went dark. Literally. Revisiting this little-known chapter of Muir’s life can inspire us to better navigate our own relationship to technology and give us a fresh reason to celebrate his work.

In 1849, Muir left his homeland of Scotland and moved with his family to the backwoods of Wisconsin. Farm work, chores, and family Bible studies kept him busy most waking hours, and he often sacrificed sleep to read and build. The family cellar became his workshop, where he fashioned a host of time-saving inventions, including clocks, barometers, sawmills, and lamplighters. He even conjured up an “early-rising machine,” a bed connected to a clock that tilted the sleeper out of bed and into a pail of cold water at the desired hour each day. 

Though his mother hoped he would become a minister, his sisters and friends saw in Muir the makings of a great inventor. Hoping his inventions might lead to a career as a physician, Muir left home in his early 20s to continue his education and “live a while among machines.” At the Wisconsin State Fair in Madison, his novel contraptions drew praise from spectators and journalists alike, opening doors to employment and further instruction. In college, he continued to indulge his love of creating mechanical devices, including a fire-starting machine and a student desk that automatically dispensed and opened textbooks at desired intervals. At the same time, lessons in botany stoked in Muir a growing passion for nature. 

Two Great Loves

In 1866, Muir took a job at a carriage manufactory in Indianapolis. His work as a machinist prompted his boss to offer him higher wages and the position of foreman. Muir later recalled in his autobiography the difficulty of choosing between two great loves: “I liked the work of inventing and enjoyed the rush and roar and whirl of so many machines — it was a place, that factory, according to my own heart — but the attractions of nature were stronger, and I must sometime get away.”

The following year, while repairing a machine belt at work, the sharp end of a file pierced Muir’s right eye, temporarily blinding him in both eyes. He was confined to bed and a dark room for several weeks. Fearful he might never regain his sight, Muir was comforted during his recovery by visitors reading to him and by correspondence from loved ones. One such letter from his lifelong friend and mentor Jeanne Carr encouraged Muir to be patient and hopeful: “I have often in my heart wondered what God was training you for. He gave you the eye within the eye, to see in all natural objects the realized ideas of His mind…He will surely place you where your work is.”

A Mind for Nature


The Muir who emerged from the dark room was more anxious to travel than ever, determined to fill his mind with as much natural beauty as he could before another accident could stop him. As he put it years later in The Story of My Boyhood and Youth: “I made haste with all my heart, bade adieu to all thoughts of inventing machinery and determined to devote the rest of my life to studying the inventions of God.” 

With thoughts of California’s Yosemite Valley already swirling in his mind from brochures he had read, Muir decided to first satisfy a long-held desire to traverse the wilds of the American South. In the fall of 1867, he embarked on a thousand-mile walk to the Gulf. Facing unfamiliar territory with a renewed sense of purpose and urgency, Muir wrote in a letter a few days before his journey that he would be “carried of the Spirit into the wilderness.” With this excursion, the Muir many of us recognize today begins to take shape.

Though Muir committed himself to spending the rest of his life studying nature, he did not discard his mechanical inclinations overnight. In the winter of 1869, he built a sawmill for James Hutchings, the Yosemite Valley’s first permanent resident. A few years later, he asked one of his brothers to send a trunk full of his tools and models to him. While he lived in the Sierra Nevada mountains, he continued to use his own clocks to keep time and his singular alarm clock bed to get him up each morning. Even in the wilderness, Muir did not abandon human invention. He continued to use it as a tool. 

Exhilarating and Bewildering


Today, we live in a technological age that is by turns exhilarating and bewildering. As we navigate the challenges of AI, social media, and smartphone use, we need the benefits nature can give us now more than ever. Muir was passionate about machines, but he was willing to put them aside for the healing, perspective, and inspiration he found in the wilderness. Can we look up from our screens long enough to do the same? Here are two ways we can follow Muir’s lead.

First, get a bigger dose of wild. Muir could hardly contain himself in his praise of nature’s bounty: “Every landscape…and every one of its living creatures…and every crystal of its rocks…is throbbing and pulsing with the heartbeats of God.” All right for him, you might think, but what about us? According to a recent survey, most of us spend free time in nature at least once a month. But that may not be enough. A 2019 study reported that at least two hours a week in natural environments was associated with better health and wellbeing. That means a whole host of advantages, from reducing inflammation and mental distress to boosting cognitive function, improving sleep, and even protecting our vision. 

A walk in the woods might provide an optimal dose of nature, but any natural setting that includes greenery, fresh air, and sunlight will serve. Build into your weekly calendar a few forays into natural spaces. And every now and then, take your shoes and socks off and walk barefoot in the grass. This conductive contact between our body and the surface of the earth is known as grounding or earthing. It has a positive effect on our physiology and health, reducing inflammation and helping with pain relief and wound healing. You don’t have to sell all your stuff and go live off-grid to tap into the benefits of nature, but you will have to be purposeful. The good news is that you’ll start to feel results as soon as you make the effort. 

A second way to follow Muir’s example is by nurturing your inner life. We are endowed with the formidable power of our intellect, but these days, we’re living more reflexively than reflectively. We’re avoiding the activity of just thinking because we consider it a waste of time. A recent study in the Journal of Experimental Psychology compared expectations of thinking with the actual experience of doing it. Across the board, participants reported greater interest and engagement than they had anticipated beforehand. 

A Reservoir of Meaning

Each type of thinking we do provides its own mental benefits. For example, daydreaming is our uniquely human ability to alternate between fantasy and reality. It’s a force that can inspire change and make life more bearable at any age. Mind wandering, or “stream of consciousness thought,” allows us to generate novel, creative thoughts and gives us a space to consider obstacles to our goals. Even nostalgic thinking, often considered detrimental, can provide us with a reservoir of meaning and give us a sense of continuity between our present and our past. Boost your clarity and motivation by working up to at least twenty minutes a day of thinking without distraction.   

If Muir were still with us, he’d no doubt be intensely intrigued by our modern technological society. We’ve come a long way. And yet, for all our advancement, we still need what was here all along. And we need people like John Muir to remind us.

Braver and newer than ever

 

Neanderthals just keep getting more "Sapien"

 Neanderthals Keep Getting Smarter


Contemplate this headline: “Archaeologists Find Neanderthal Stone Tool Technology in China.”

At one time, Neanderthals were considered stupid. So the implication would be that those tools didn’t work very well.

Things have changed. Neanderthal art, glue, ornaments, etc., have forced a rethink. Those who are looking for the subhuman are still looking…

Those Mysterious Neanderthals

Meanwhile, Neanderthals are presenting some mysteries, including this one:

At ZME Science, Alexandra Gerea reports that stone tools found in Yunnan province in China, dating from 50,000 to 60,000 years ago, “look exactly like those made by Neanderthals in Ice Age Europe” using a technique now called Quina:

For a long time, archaeologists thought people in East Asia completely skipped the Middle Paleolithic. But this discovery says otherwise.

Quina is not just a vague style. It’s a craftsmanship signature. These tools — thick, sharp-edged scrapers with repeated retouch marks — were long considered an unmistakable calling card of Neanderthals in Europe.

Their presence in East Asia is perplexing. They’re around 7 to 8 thousand kilometers east of the region traditionally associated with this technology. 

“Neanderthal Stone Tool Technology,” April 4, 2025

From the paper’s Abstract

The finding of a Quina lithic assemblage in China not only demonstrates the existence of a Middle Paleolithic technology in the region but also shows large-scale analogies with Neanderthal behaviors in western Europe. Longtan substantially extends the geographic distribution of this technical behavior in East Asia. Although its origin remains unclear, implications for Pleistocene hominin dispersal and adaptation to diverse ecological settings are considered. 

Q. Ruan et al., Quina lithic technology indicates diverse Late Pleistocene human dynamics in East Asia, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 122 (14) e2418029122, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2418029122 (2025)

Could these far-separated populations have met up?

Fifty Years of Progress

Study author Ben Marwick doesn’t speculate on that at The Conversation, but he does say,

During the Middle Paleolithic, there were multiple human species that could make tools like this. It could have been modern humans like us. But it could also have been Neanderthals. Considering that the Quina technology in Europe is directly associated with Neanderthals, this seems likely. But it could also have been Denisovans, an extinct species similar to modern humans found during this time in Siberia, the Tibetan Plateau and Laos, or even a new human species that hasn’t been seen before.

Whoever was making and using these Quina scrapers, they were able to be inventive and flexible with their technology, adapting to their changing environment.

“Stone tool discovery in China shows people in East Asia were innovating during the Middle Paleolithic, like in Europe and Middle East,” March 31, 2025

Neanderthal man has sure smartened up in the last fifty years.

The rise and fall of the mongol horde.

 

Friday, 4 April 2025

The art of dissecting zombie science with small words and short sentences?

 A Celebrated Life: Colleagues Remember Dr. Jonathan Wells


On this ID the Future, we bring you some remarks given at a recent gathering in Poulsbo, WA, to celebrate the life of biologist Dr. Jonathan Wells, who passed away in September 2024 at the age of 82. Dr. Wells was one of the first Fellows of Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture. In 2000, he took the science world by storm with Icons of Evolution, a book showing how biology textbooks routinely promote Darwinism using bogus evidence — icons of evolution like Ernst Haeckel’s faked embryo drawings and peppered moths glued to tree trunks. Dr. Wells’s achievements in the field of biology are notable. In this episode you’ll get a glimpse into his life and character as well as his relentless search for scientific truth.

First to speak is Dr. John West, Managing Director of the CSC. West explains how Wells managed to be both brilliant AND understandable — no easy task! Following that you’ll hear from philosopher of biology Dr. Paul Nelson, who reminds us of the importance of wisdom and how Dr. Wells espoused it: “Second only to God himself is wisdom,” notes Nelson. “She is the queen of the physical world, and therefore the queen of science itself.” After that, Dr. Richard Sternberg takes the stage to share details of how his friendship with Wells impacted him personally and professionally. And then Dr. Casey Luskin wraps up these eulogies by giving the perspective of a student: one student among the many, “both current and former, who have learned the truth about evolution because of Jonathan’s work.” As he concludes, Luskin reminds all of us that it is our task to continue Jonathan’s quest to use grace, humor, and evidence-backed science to speak the truth into people’s lives. Download the podcast or listen to it here.

On the circular logic fallacy.

Spotting circular logic. According to GROK. 

The circular logic fallacy, also known as circular reasoning or begging the question, happens when an argument’s conclusion is assumed to be true within its own premises, creating a loop where no real evidence or reasoning is provided outside the circle. Essentially, the argument proves itself by restating the conclusion as a premise, rather than offering independent support for it.
Here’s how it works: In a valid argument, premises should lead to a conclusion through evidence or reasoning that stands on its own. In circular logic, the premise already contains the conclusion in disguise, so the argument doesn’t actually advance or prove anything—it just spins in place. It’s like saying, “I’m right because I’m right.”

For example:
"God exists because the Bible says so, and the Bible is true because it’s the word of God."
Here, the conclusion (God exists) relies on the premise (the Bible is true), but the premise’s truth is justified by assuming the conclusion (God’s existence) is already correct. The reasoning loops back on itself without offering external evidence—like, say, historical or scientific support—that could break the circle.

Another example:"This herbal supplement works because it’s effective, and it’s effective because it works."
This just repeats the same claim in different words, providing no real proof or explanation.
Circular logic often sneaks into debates where people lean on assumptions they don’t question, or when they’re trying to defend something without solid grounding. It’s a fallacy because it fails to justify the conclusion with anything beyond itself, leaving the argument empty. Spotting it helps you push for actual evidence instead of getting trapped in a rhetorical merry-go-round.

No college no problem II

 

No college no problem?

 

Thursday, 3 April 2025

On Norway's crossover to the dark side re:religious liberty

 

 Jehovah’s Witnesses in Norway: Why the Oslo District Court Decision Is Wrong

It claims that the practice of shunning illegally prevents adults and minors from leaving the religious organization. This claim is false.


On March 4, 2024, the Oslo District Court ruled against the Jehovah’s Witnesses and upheld the decisions of the government and the State Administrator of Oslo and Viken who denied the Jehovah’s Witnesses the state subsidies they had peacefully received for thirty years based on Section 16 of the Norwegian Constitution (“All religious and philosophical communities must be supported on an equal footing”). Registration as a religious organization of the Norwegian Jehovah’s Witnesses under Law No. 31 of April 24, 2020, was also denied.
           The District Court is aware that this was a difficult decision with serious consequences. It observes that at least, under Law No. 31 the lack of registration would not prevent the Norwegian Jehovah’s Witnesses to continue their activities and to teach what they teach everywhere in the world (except in a few totalitarian countries that have banned them, including Russia). The consequences of the non-registration are that they will not be eligible for state subsidies, nor will they be able to celebrate legally valid marriages.
             State subsidies in Norway are not a gift. Since the Church of Norway, a Lutheran denomination, is a state church supported by the government with transfers of money proportional to the number of its members, the Constitution mandates that to respect the principle of equality other religions should receive the same proportional subsidies. The judge himself acknowledges that not being able to celebrate legal marriages within one’s religious community may be perceived as discriminatory. He also agrees that the decision may have a broader “stigmatizing effect.”
           Yet, the judge believes that all these admittedly important factors “are not weighty enough” when compared to the fact that the Jehovah’s Witnesses, by practicing shunning, violate in his opinion their members’ freedom to change their religion. Shunning is the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ teaching recommending that members do not associate with those who have been disassociated as unrepentant of serious sins or have publicly disassociated themselves from the organization (as opposed to simply becoming inactive). Cohabiting relatives are not shunned, although they are excluded from the family’s religious activities.
          Here, I find the decision slightly confusing. At times, it seems that the judge regards the shunning both of adult and minor ex-members as grounds for his decision. In other passages, however, he seems to acknowledge that Law no. 31 includes a note that “if adult members of their own free will follow rules that restrict their rights and freedoms, they cannot be considered violations… Essentially, this also applies even if the obligations can be considered harmful.” In its conclusion, the decision cautiously focuses on the alleged violation of the “right to opt out” of children.
                      The decision notes that the European Convention on Human Rights also guarantees the right to leave a religious organization. The judge is persuaded that Jehovah’s Witnesses in practice are prevented from leaving since they know that, if they leave, they will be shunned.
                       As mentioned earlier, it is at times unclear whether in the end the objection only concerns the shunning of minors or also extends to adults. In the second case, the decision is patently absurd and runs counter to dozens of decisions on shunning by jurisdictions in other countries, including supreme courts. They have noted that religious organizations have the right to self-organize themselves as they deem fit. Christian groups also have the right to interpret the Bible in their own way. The interpretation by the Jehovah’s Witnesses in this case is not even particularly original. Clearly, something similar to the shunning they practice today is taught in 1 Corinthians 5:13 (“Expel the wicked person from among you”) and 5:11 (“Do not even eat with such people”), and 2 John 10–11 (“Do not take them into your house or welcome them. Anyone who welcomes them shares in their wicked work”). Others may suggest a non-literal interpretation of these passages, but it is not for secular courts of law to second-guess religious organizations on their interpretation of the Bible.
                            The main objection is, however, another. All human organizations have what sociologists call exit costs. By leaving a demanding but well-paid job I may gain more freedom but lose a good salary. The loss of the salary is my exit cost. Shunning is a typical exit cost. A spouse that decides unilaterally to divorce and to marry a different partner may be shunned by the abandoned ex-spouse, perhaps even by children. Members of a political party who quit and join a political organization with the opposite ideology may be shunned as traitors by their former comrades. Several religions, including Islam and branches of ultra-orthodox Judaism, treat “apostates” in a less charitable way than the Jehovah’s Witnesses
                     The Norwegian judge’s argument is that to avoid the exit costs we are compelled to remain in a religious organization we may no longer believe in and are thus denied our right to leave it that is enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights. But by applying the same argument, one can argue that marriage or political parties are also institutions that violate the rights of those who want to divorce or change political affiliation, since the exit costs may make them reluctant to leave.
            Sociologists know that eliminating exit costs is not possible. They are an unavoidable feature of organized social life. Sometimes, one has the impression that the enemies of the Jehovah’s Witnesses are precisely asking courts of law to compel those who do not want to communicate with their former co-religionists to do it, which is not only unfair but impossible. More often, opponents argue that what they want is that judges would prevent the organization of the Jehovah’s Witnesses from teaching shunning. But that would put the judges in the strange position of interpreting 1 Corinthians and 2 John and substitute their opinion to the one of a religious organization in determining what these venerable Biblical texts “really” mean.
             In the end, the Oslo judge found it safer to focus on minors who are first baptized and then, if they become unrepentant sinners, shunned. One can measure the cultural distance of the judge’s own feelings from those of any conservative religious group, not only the Jehovah’s Witnesses, when he wrote that he finds it “reasonable to expect” that most minors would engage in “sexual relations with their boyfriends or girlfriends.” Apart from the cultural problems of the judge in understanding conservative religion, he accepts the opinion of an “apostate” ex-member that minors are baptized and become Jehovah’s Witnesses when they are not mature enough to understand their obligations. But surely this is a drastic conclusion one cannot arrive at on the basis of one witness or a few anecdotical examples. What would be required is a quantitative study of those baptized as minors. Nothing similar is quoted in the decision. Although Norway has introduced a system of “youth punishment” with more lenient penalties for them, minors can be tried from criminal offenses from age 15. If they are mature enough in Norway to stand a trial before a criminal court, perhaps they are also mature enough to make informed religious decisions.
                    Once they have been baptized, minors run the risk of being shunned. Again, some opponents may have told the judge that this is not rare but among his numerous witnesses he found only one woman, now 40, who was disfellowshipped for a sexual offense and shunned as a minor, when she was 14, thus 26 years ago. She testifies that after a “short time” she was allowed to return to the fold by writing a “letter of regret” and attending a “short meeting.” There is simply no evidence that disfellowshipping minors, with the consequence that they are shunned (but not by cohabiting relatives), is more than a rare occurrence.
                      It may be objected that a rare injustice would be an injustice, nonetheless. The answer is that, as the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) stated in cases about the dissolution of organizations of the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia in 2010 (Jehovah’s Witnesses of Moscow and Others v. Russia) and 2022 (Taganrog LRO and Others v. Russia), denial or cancellation of registration of a religious organization is a serious measure with dramatic consequences for its members that states can adopt only in case of frequent and obvious crimes or misdemeanors. Shunning minors is not frequent, and the “principle of proportionality” between the fact and the sanction mentioned by the ECHR in its decisions about Russia would not be respected even if this was a crime.
                    But is it a crime? The judge himself admits that Jehovah’s Witnesses, in good faith, perceive shunning as a “loving and meaningful arrangement,” a painful medicine (painful, it should be added, for those who shun and not only for those who are shunned) that in many cases helps restoring family harmony and morality, as those shunned end up understanding their mistakes and repenting.
                  According to the decision, the violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child would be in the fact that to minors, just as to adults, would be denied the freedom to “opt out” of the organization. Afraid of being shunned, minors who would want to quit in the end are dissuaded from leaving the Jehovah’s Witnesses, which the judge thinks violates their right to change their religious affiliations. However, if the minors are mature enough to understand their obligations when they are baptized—and no evidence has been offered that this is not the case—they are aware of the exit costs just as the adults are. It is also false that a young boy or girl does not have experience of exit costs: he may decide to break a relation with a boyfriend or a girlfriend, quit a group of friends, leave a sport club, in extreme cases even leave the family and go live elsewhere. All these experiences have painful exit costs.
             The decision argues that, because youth are especially fragile, the experience of shunning is more traumatic for them. This is possible, but youths also have greater flexibility in socialization than adults. Young Jehovah’s Witnesses attend public schools, where after disfellowshipping they can continue to attend or newly enter into circles of friends who are not part of their former religion. The judge insists on the pain of not being able to communicate with grandparents who are Jehovah’s Witnesses. However, grandparents may cut ties with their children and grandchildren for a variety of reasons, none of which courts of law can really correct. And even outside the Jehovah’s Witnesses, minors who do something that is perceived by their relatives as a betrayal of the family or an expression of moral corruption may find themselves, for all practical purposes, “shunned.”
                       It is difficult to disagree with professor of religious history, Dag Øistein Endsjø, who told the leading Norwegian Christian daily newspaper “Vårt Land” that the verdict is against numerous decisions rendered in other countries, as well as against the case law of the European Court of Human Rights where it would have limited chances to survive. It is also against simple logic. Perhaps a higher Norwegian court will acknowledge it even before the court in Strasbourg.
                
                            
                      


Grok's take on bloodless medicine.

 

Bloodless medicine

15 web pages

4 posts

Bloodless medicine refers to medical practices and surgical procedures that aim to minimize or completely avoid the use of blood transfusions. This approach has gained traction due to several reasons:


Religious Beliefs: Some patients, notably Jehovah's Witnesses, refuse blood transfusions based on their religious beliefs. Bloodless medicine provides a way to treat these patients while respecting their convictions.

Health and Safety: There are also medical reasons for avoiding transfusions, including reducing the risk of transfusion-related infections, allergic reactions, or other complications like transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI).

Technological Advances: Developments in medical technology have made bloodless medicine more feasible. Techniques include:

Preoperative Blood Management: Using medications like erythropoietin to boost red blood cell production, and iron therapy to prevent or treat anemia before surgery.

Intraoperative Techniques: Employing minimally invasive surgery, precise surgical tools like lasers or sonic scalpels to minimize blood loss, and using cell salvage systems to recycle the patient's own blood lost during surgery.

Postoperative Care: Strategies to promote blood conservation post-surgery, including careful monitoring of blood loss and the use of medications to enhance blood clotting.

Economic Considerations: In some cases, bloodless medicine can be more cost-effective by reducing the need for expensive blood products and the associated costs of transfusion, though this varies by healthcare system.

Patient Outcomes: Studies suggest that patients undergoing bloodless surgery might experience benefits such as fewer postoperative infections, reduced hospital stays, and potentially lower rates of complications like strokes or heart attacks.


Institutions and Programs: Several hospitals and medical centers have established dedicated programs for bloodless medicine:


UPMC (University of Pittsburgh Medical Center) has a comprehensive program for bloodless medicine and surgery, focusing on patient blood management.


Tampa General Hospital offers a Center for Bloodless Medicine and Surgery, providing state-of-the-art care for patients who refuse blood products.

Johns Hopkins Medicine has a team dedicated to bloodless medicine, understanding the needs of patients who cannot or will not accept blood transfusions.

Current Sentiment: Posts on X (formerly Twitter) reflect both educational content on the subject and news about significant milestones or events in the field of bloodless surgery, like commemorating the first bloodless heart surgery by Dr. Denton Cooley.

Bloodless medicine represents a growing field in healthcare, emphasizing personalized treatment plans that respect patient autonomy while leveraging modern medical science to achieve successful outcomes without traditional blood transfusions

Tuesday, 1 April 2025

The hybrid engine is back?

 

The relationship between atheism and logic is not as axiomatic as some would wish?

 Standing O for Jerry Coyne


Ladies and gentlemen, shall we all give a standing ovation to atheist evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne? The Wall Street Journal platformed the University of Chicago emeritus prof today as a champion of free speech and common sense about gender — the existence of ladies and gentlemen as categories jointly exhausting the possibilities with human beings. The platforming comes in the form of an op-ed by Coyne about how he and fellow atheist scientists Richard Dawkins and Steven Pinker quit the board of the Freedom From Religion Foundation over issues of censorship and woke overreach. 

Censored on Gender

He recounts being censored by the group about the gender binary:

The trouble began in November, when the organization published an essay on its website denying the basic biological fact that all animals, including humans, have only two sexes. The FFRF piece, titled “What is a woman?,” concluded by begging the question: “A woman is whoever she says she is.”

I wrote a rebuttal, “Biology is not bigotry,” which FFRF published in late December. But the woke care more about “progressive” ideology than scientific facts, and within a day the FFRF took down my article and issued a statement asserting the publication of my piece was an “error of judgment,” that it “does not reflect our values or principles,” that it had caused “distress,” and that the FFRF stands “firmly with the LGBTQIA-plus community.”

He criticizes “transgender ideology,” saying that it 

makes anathema of heresy and blasphemy (tarring of dissenters as “transphobes”), attempts to silence critics who raise valid counter arguments, seeks to proselytize children in schools and excommunicates critics (J.K. Rowling is the best-known example).

The Criticisms Are Valid

But hold the applause a moment as Coyne has left out two relevant points. First, he has himself been an enthusiastic censor, seeking, if I may borrow his own words, to “silence critics who raise valid counter arguments.” In fact, he won the Censor of the Year Award from the Center for Science in Culture back in 2014 for his efforts to silence a Ball State University astrophysicist, Eric Hedin, for teaching a course on “The Boundaries of Science.” The course pointed students to, among other things, some literature on intelligent design.

In his war on Dr. Hedin — a younger, less powerful, and untenured scientist — Dr. Coyne joined forces with none other than his good buddies at the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRP). They went over Hedin’s head and succeeded in getting the course canceled. Hedin tells the story in his book Canceled Science.

Has Coyne come to regret any of this, now that he’s winning plaudits as a defender of free speech? As recently as 2022, nine years after the fact, he was still mocking Hedin at Coyne’s blog, Why Evolution Is True (“Eric Hedin beefs about being ‘canceled’ at Ball State by the FFRF and me”). Using his power and the prestige brand of his university to bully someone like Hedin was nothing less than loathsome. Coyne was a pioneer of “cancel culture” well before the term came into vogue.

Mistakes Were Made

And second, what about the gender binary position that Coyne also champions? If it’s mistaken to believe a man can become a woman, fairly competing against women in women’s sports, using women’s locker rooms and restrooms, demanding to be housed in women’s prisons, and all the rest, how did this mistaken way of thinking arise? What forces in the culture help us understand where it came from? In his op-ed, Coyne blames existentialism, postmodernism, and critical theory. He complains that “some forms of feminism” hold that “sex is a social construct.” Coyne harrumphs, “This is a denial of evolution.”

Hold on there. In the paradigm of intelligent design, it makes total sense to uphold the concept of there being only two genders, established by biology and not capable of being breached or amended by surgery or other methods. A male will always be a male no matter what medical interventions he seeks out to change that. Being male is his design, reflecting the intention of a purposeful designer. 

Nothing Sacred or Ordained

But in the paradigm of Darwinian evolution, there’s nothing sacred or ordained about gender. There couldn’t be, because in the atheist evolutionary view, nothing in the world is sacred or ordained. Trying to amend one’s gender is not a “denial of evolution” but, if anything, an affirmation of it. Evolutionary processes may have resulted in an individual being born with male genitalia, but the “fact” of evolution means there’s nothing to object to if he wishes to change his anatomy in keeping with strong feelings about identity. 

And if he now says he’s a woman, well, so he is! I mean, why not? The surgical results may seem a little rough at the moment, but that’s only because medical science hasn’t perfected them yet. After all, the science of organ transplantation has come a long way since its own pioneering days. In explaining the rise of what Coyne calls “transgender ideology,” evolutionism with its denial of design should not be skipped over.

Silencing Science

Coyne is not the only atheist scientist to fail to realize the contradictions in his own advocacy, either for gender realism or for free speech. Physicist Lawrence Krauss is another one. Dr. Krauss wanted to hide from school students in Ohio the fact that Darwinism is the subject of scientific controversy. Instead, evolution should be presented, propagandistically, as an unquestioned fact. What was that about, in Coyne’s words, “proselytiz[ing] children in schools”? Now Krauss is all in for academic free speech, supposedly (“Lawrence Krauss Exposes the Censorship Crisis Gripping Academia”). 

Richard Dawkins, as Coyne says, and Colin Wright are two other atheist evolutionary biologists who have argued for the reality of gender and have been subjected to woke outrage for it. But do they recognize that intelligent design, which they reject, supports their view while evolutionism undercuts it? Not that I’m aware.

Of course, I’m not saying you can’t change your mind about big issues. You certainly can, and admitting you were wrong is a mark of character. If Coyne and these others have performed such a public reassessment of their past positions, again, I’ve not heard about it.


Design as heuristic?

 Emily Reeves: How to Study Biology with Systems Engineering Principles


Traditional methods in biology have proven insufficient for understanding and accurately predicting complex biological systems. Why? The great majority of biologists are trained to study life from the bottom up, as the result of unguided evolutionary processes. It turns out there are better ways to observe, question, hypothesize, experiment, and analyze a complex system. On a new episode of ID the Future, I welcome biochemist and metabolic nutritionist Dr. Emily Reeves to the podcast to discuss her co-authored paper on how biologists can apply principles from systems engineering to biology to better approach the study of complex living systems. 

As Dr. Reeves explains, the need for a new methodology in biology is motivated by two key observations. First, biological systems appear to be designed. Zoom into any complex system in biology, such as the bacterial flagellar motor, the light harvesting complex of Photosystem I, or ATP synthase, and you’ll find exquisite nanotechnology that is better engineered than its human-engineered counterpart. Second, biological systems have already been demonstrated to have much in common with human engineered systems. Biological systems are hierarchical, integrated, modular, optimized, and robust. These are all characteristics of top-down designed systems. “Therefore,” explains Dr. Reeves, “the tools that engineers use to makes these systems can be adapted to better understand biology.”

In addition to explaining how the new methodology operates, Dr. Reeves shows how it can be applied to various systems and phenomena to produce fruitful scientific research. As a case study, she describes how to use the methodology to better understand the commonly studied process of glycolysis. She also highlights the implications of this approach for understanding phenomena such as the Warburg effect, a proposal that seeks to explain the metabolic requirements of cell proliferation in many types of cancer. Dr. Reeves notes that a systems engineering approach to the Warburg effect suggests a different reason, one that has not yet been widely studied or reported in the scientific literature. Download the podcast or listen to it here.

Commercialising the final frontier?