Friday, 8 October 2021

Scientific Creationism

Poul Anderson, "Science and Creation" IN Anderson, The Collected Short Works Of Poul Anderson, Volume 2, The Queen Of Air And Darkness (NESFA Press, Framington, MA, 2009), pp. 455-463.

Anderson quotes one of his own characters who said:

"'Sure, I'm anti-intellectual. I prefer people who think...'" (p. 455)

Which character was this? 

Anderson acknowledges that maybe this remark substituted rhetoric for discourse, which he has just accused others of doing, but defends it by saying that it got our attention.

Anderson agrees with scientific creationists that American public schools now teach secular humanism "...to the exclusion of crucial parts of our heritage." (ibid.) Which parts? He agrees that this educational shift has ominous implications for both liberty and national survival. How? He asks whether anyone's constitutional rights would be infringed if children learnt "...something about the roots of their civilization?" (p. 456) Which roots of civilization are (or were) being excluded from education? How had it been alleged that teaching about those roots would infringe anyone's constitutional rights?

Scientific creationists claim that Earth is only a few thousand years old and that current species have not evolved but have existed unchanged since the beginning. Anderson responds that:

these claims are untrue;

there is a First Amendment right to believe them and to teach them privately;

scientific creationism, astrology, psionics and Marxism should not be given equal time in education.

They should not. However, anyone who has been educated should be able (if they want to, of course), to inquire about scientific creationism etc and to assess them rationally. A guy I knew called Gerry was educated by Christian Brothers in Glasgow. Gerry kept hearing about a controversial figure called "Marx." Not knowing who Marx was or what he represented, Gerry asked a Brother, "Who was this guy, Marx?" The Brother responded with anger, regarding the question not as an inquiry but as a provocation. He responded, "You don't want to know that!" Gerry insisted that he had asked a question because he did want to know the answer to it. He wanted to be educated. The Brother then declared that Marx was a very evil man who wrote a book saying that he wanted everyone to be enslaved.

As Anderson writes:

"By now, reasoned debate is a rarity. There is seldom even any effort to understand an opposing point of view. Instead, a person attributes opinions or attitudes to the other fellow..." (p. 455)

9 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I've been trying to recall which of his own characters Anderson was quoting. I thought of Manse Everard but I think David Falkayn a bit more likely. These days that line Anderson quoted seems a lot less exaggerated!

Anderson was an American and wrote this essay for an American audience, meaning he could simply allude to some things and be understood by other Americans as to what he meant. And those parts of US history and culture which the left is attacking so viciously now is Christianity and the origins and founders of the US; and even of the very idea that gov't should be limited in its powers and restrained in what it can do.

That Christian Brother was wrong in how he responded to the question about Marx. However catastrophic Marxism has been, the Brother should have replied calmly, saying Marx was the founder of a form of socialism used by Lenin, Stalin, Mao, et al, for imposing totalitarian regimes on too many countries. And referred him to the BRITANNICA article on Marx.

Btw, I have read a bit of Marx, mostly THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO and the extracts quoted by Jacques Barzun in his book DARWIN, MARX, WAGNER.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

Knowing Gerry, he would have had many more questions for the Brother and would not have been content with a single Encyclopedia article especially on such a contentious issue.

Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Yes, but what I thought was the BRITANNICA article would have given Gerry some basic, non controversial information.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,
It would.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I have browsed the BRITANNICA and THE NEW CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA many times at the public library.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

The BRITANNICA is amazing because every article is written by a world expert and, if the expert says that s/he cannot possibly write about their subject at less than book length, then the BRITANNICA replies, "Very well, then your article must be of book length."

Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I agree, and the 1967 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA was like that as well, long, detailed, carefully written articles.

Ad astra! Sean

Nicholas D. Rosen said...

Kaor, Paul!

If I recall correctly, that quotation from an Anderson character is from Steve Matuchek, narrating OPERATION CHAOS. His America is undergoing its equivalent of the 1960s, with established wisdom being challenged (sometimes rightly, sometimes very wrongly) by leftist youth and some of their elders, including, in Matuchek’s timeline, the Johannine Church.

Best Regards,
Nicholas

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Nicholas!

Possibly, perhaps somewhere in Chapters XX-XXII of OPERATION CHAOS. But I'm still not sure that line was said by Steven Matuchek.

Regards! Sean