Posts Tagged ‘BPSDB’

Innocent Victims of Creationist Fangs

Posted on March 31st, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

Over on Panda’s Thumb, there is a posting about the case of Nancey Murphy, a professor of Christian Philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary. Dr. Murphy, an ordained minister in the Church of the Bretheren, opposes intelligent design, and she wrote an article critical of creationist Philip Johnson’s book, Darwin on Trial. She has said that intelligent design creationism is not only poor theology, but “so stupid, I don’t want to give them my time.”

For her trouble, Philip Johnson called up a trustee of Fuller and reportedly tried to have her fired.

“His tactic has always been to fight dirty when anyone attacks his ideas,” (Murphy) said. “For a long time afterward, I would tell reporters I don’t want to comment, and I don’t want you to say I don’t want to comment. I’m tired of being careful.”

According to the story, Johnson denies it:

Johnson denied he had tried to get Murphy fired. He said that he had spoken with a former trustee of the seminary who was himself upset with Murphy but that he was not responsible for any action taken against her.

Yeah, right. Both the trustee and Johnson were pissed off at Murphey but they didn’t talk about being pissed off at Murphy and nothing they said could have encouraged such persecution. Makes perfect sense.

Anyway, if you read down through the comments, you come to a very interesting list of people that creationists have harassed, gotten fired, threatened, or killed because of their understanding of evolution. (Yes, creationists have killed someone over evolution.) It kind of puts the lie to creationist Johnson’s further remarks:

“It’s the Darwinists who hold the power in academia and who threaten the professional status and livelihoods of anyone who disagrees,” Johnson said. “They feel to teach anything but their orthodoxy is an act of professional treason.”

Apparently, Johnson is having some trouble telling the truth. Here’s a working list of people fired, compromised, or killed by creationist nutbags (no claim is made that this list is complete, and I’d like to see some citations to sources, so maybe I’ll work on that for a future post):

2 professors fired, Bitterman (SW CC Iowa) and Bolyanatz (Wheaton)

1 persecuted unmercifully Richard Colling (Olivet)

1 attempted firing Murphy (Fuller Theological by Phillip Johnson IDist)

1 successful death threats, assaults harrasment Gwen Pearson (UT Permian)

1 state official fired Chris Comer (Texas)

1 assault, fired from dept. Chair Paul Mirecki (U. of Kansas)

1 killed, Rudi Boa, Biomedical Student (Scotland)

Death Threats Eric Pianka UT Austin and the Texas Academy of Science engineered by a hostile, bizarre IDist named Bill Dembski

Death Threats Michael Korn, fugitive from justice, towards the UC Boulder biology department and miscellaneous evolutionary biologists.

Will Expelled be talking about these cases? Right. Didn’t think so.

Edit to add: Link for Richard Colling.

Pro-Hunting Groups Attack Science

Posted on March 30th, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

Update: I have some moose in the freezer - meat which came from hunting the animal, just in case anyone is under the impression there are moose ranches in Alaska - and I’ve made arrangements to have some of the cuts medically imaged in search of lead fragments sometime in the next week! Stay tuned for results! Post follows:

But what else is new, eh?

This time, the National Shooting Sports Foundation (whose website is down as I write, returning 0-length html documents), an industry group representing firearms manufacturers and ammunition makers, has issued a press release that savages scientific results as being cruel and unscientific. The release, with a little additional reporting from AP writer James McPherson, is getting wide play today.

The story starts last year, when Dr. William Cornatzer of Bismark, North Dakota took 100 one-pound packages of venison that had been donated to food pantries, and imaged them in a CAT scanner. The CAT scan showed that more than 60 of the samples had been contaminated with high levels of lead from the bullets used to kill the animals. Every package had some level of contamination.

Cornatzer is a dermatologist and professor at the University of North Dakota medical school in Grand Forks.

The North Dakota Health Department followed up with its own tests, which confirmed Dr. Cornatzer’s results. Minnesota and Iowa evaluated the results, with some media reporting they also conducted their own tests. As a result, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Iowa have alerted food pantries in the state to the contamination and suggested they not distribute the meat.

Lead poisoning results in reduced cognitive abilities, nausea, abdominal pain, irritability, insomnia, headache, seizure, coma, and death. It can also result in constipation, vomiting, weight loss, anemia, kidney damage, learning disability in children, and reproductive damage and infertility.

Dr. William Cornatzer explains how the contamination occurs:

“When [a bullet] hits the deer, it sends little bits of schrapnel-type lead that are almost liquid at that point because of the speed the bullet is going,” explains Cornatzer.

The impact is enough to scatter the deadly toxin throughout the entire animal. Luckily, not all bullets are the same. Dr. Cornatzer says you should avoid bullets that have lead in them that fragment when they hit deer. Instead, you should choose something that`s lead free that mushrooms.

Cornatzer’s tests were spurred by previous scientific results showing that California condors were getting lead poisoned by eating animals killed and abandoned by hunters:

Cornatzer said he became concerned after hearing about possible lead fragments through his membership in the Peregrine Fund of Boise, Idaho, a group that promotes the conservation of birds of prey, including peregrine falcons and California condors.

The organization says lead from bullets in the carcasses of animals is primarily responsible for lead poisoning that has endangered the condors.

A lead bullet shot from a high-powered rifle “fragments into hundreds of tiny pieces,” said Rick Watson, vice president and director of international programs for the Peregrine Fund. “Usually a hunter cuts away damaged meat, but the lead sprays through a large part of the animal,” he said.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation has apparently coordinated multiple statements from the same talking points attacking the discovery that lead from bullets results in widespread contamination of venison:

“It’s alarmist and not supported by any science,” said Lawrence Keane, a vice president and lawyer for the Newton, Conn.-based National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association for the firearms and ammunition industry. “High quality protein is now taken out of the mouths of needy, hungry people.”

Not supported by any science? So a doctor using a CAT scanner and a health department using materials assays are doing something unscientific? Only in his dreams.

Says Doug Burdin, a lawyer for the Tucson, Ariz. group Safari Club International:

“This is disheartening, and we certainly don’t think this program should come to an end on the unscientific assessment that has occurred here.”

Does Doug think that dowsing rods were used to find the lead?

And what is with the lawyers passing judgement on scientific results? I’ll grant that not all lawyers are scientifically ignorant. But these two seem to be.

Jason Foss, president of Pheasants for the Future (and of unknown lawyer status), says:

“Sportsmen have been shooting deer for hundreds of years with lead bullets with no problems.”

Poor Jason apparently has no idea that it has only been a few decades that hunters have been using high-powered ammunition with fragmenting lead bullets. As muzzle-loaders know, balls do not fragment on impact; neither do a number of bullet types designed to mushroom rather than fragment.

This is just another sad example of ignorant people lining up to attack science without seeing the opportunities that scientific results present. Hunters and their families will enjoy improved health if they respect the dangers of lead poisoning. Guidelines about the amounts and frequency of consumption of hunted meat could protect non-hunters. And manufacturers of premium, non-fragmenting ammunition have certainly not been well-served by their industry organization, which has essentially just taken a crap all over their business. NSSF had a tremendous opportunity to look like the good guys, if only they had chosen to respond opportunistically to the news; but instead they seem to take a stand against medicine, CAT scanners, and good public health. And in favor of lead in food.

Why Antiscience Sucks, Part 2

Posted on March 26th, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

The Capital Times reports:

An 11-year-old girl died after her parents prayed for healing rather than seek medical help for a treatable form of diabetes, police said Tuesday.

[Everest Metro Police Chief Dan] Vergin said an autopsy determined the girl died from diabetic ketoacidosis, an ailment that left her with too little insulin in her body, and she had probably been ill for about 30 days, suffering symptoms like nausea, vomiting, excessive thirst, loss of appetite and weakness.

The parents explained that the reason their child did not get better as a result of prayer is that they did not have sufficient faith.

The mother believes the girl could still be resurrected, the police chief said.

The parents told investigators their daughter last saw a doctor when she was 3 to get some shots, Vergin said. The girl had attended public school during the first semester but didn’t return for the second semester.

If you didn’t catch it up there, the girl was 11 years old when she died. She hasn’t seen a doctor since she was three. She went more than two-thirds of her lifetime without medical care.

The girl has three siblings, ranging in age from 13 to 16, the police chief said.

They are still in the home,” he said. “There is no reason to remove them. There is no abuse or signs of abuse that we can see.”

Social service agencies and the social work profession will continue to have difficulty establishing credibility amongst common-sense people as long as they continue to consider this sort of thing normal. It should be viewed as a form of neglect that necessitates professional intervention.

Will the parents be charged? I don’t know, but I doubt it. A Wisconsin state law was helpfully posted in the story comments:

State statute 948.03(6): A person is not guilty of an offense under this section solely because he or she provides a child with treatment by spiritual means through prayer alone for healing in accordance with the religious method of healing … in lieu of medical or surgical treatment.

The comments predictably have a bunch of religious extremists defending the parents’ actions as an efficacious response to sickness, even though every controlled study ever done has shown that prayer is ineffective at curing or even helping someone who is sick. Personally, I think it is fine to pray for your child to be healed, as long as you also get them some competent medical help. A sane, fit parent does anything and everything they can to save the life of their child.

Sometimes the issue when not seeking out health care is lack of insurance or inability to pay for an expensive treatment. The parents operate a small business, operating a coffee shop in a suburb of Wausau, according to the story. Diabetic ketoacidosis is both easily, and fairly inexpensively, treated - at least if you don’t let the condition progress to an acute, dangerous form. People who get it and seek medical attention do not die of it. But it is still possible that the parents didn’t have the money for the treatment, right? It could be they were praying not because they thought that was the best thing to do, but because they had no alternative - right?

Wrong.

Wisconsin has a health insurance program for children called BadgerCare Plus. You can sign up for it here, and it provides comprehensive services to any child under 19, whether they already have insurance or not. Services do require a co-pay. The co-pay ranges from fifty cents to three dollars.

I’m thinking that someone selling lattes for a living can afford a fifty-cent co-pay if it means saving the life of their child.

Several people sent this to me, but I saw it on Pharyngula first.

Why Antiscience Sucks, Part One

Posted on March 17th, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

Here is an excellent example of how the antiscience movement harms people and stands in the way of their happiness. This video is from the IEEE Spectrum Online, and it is about a prosthetic arm currently under development. A really amazing, very cool prosthetic arm, so please watch.

The best bit is toward the end:

Amputee: I’ve been able to do stuff with this that I haven’t, seriously, I haven’t been able to do in 26 years.

Interviewer: Like what?

Amputee: Pick up a banana. Peel a banana and eat it, without it squishing….

A few seconds after that, he mentions something else he could do with the prosthesis that he hasn’t done in 26 years….

What would have happened here if the engineers and amputees that are working on this prosthesis had taken an antiscience approach to their work? Simple: They wouldn’t even have tried to build this thing. There’s way too much mysterious technology at work here - footpad input systems, sensory feedback devices, multiple parallel processing, closed loop positioning systems1…. It all comes from science, and you can’t hate science and have anything to do with developing something like this.

An antievolutionist, applying the logic of their worldview to this problem, would have said “we don’t know how to make an artificial arm like this, so it can’t be done.” And they might well have said “If someone loses an arm, God meant it to happen, for his own mysterious reasons.” Or perhaps they would blame the victim: “if only the amputee had enough faith they would be healed.” This isn’t wild, unfair conjecture on my part, Christians actually say stuff like this.

Such as Exhibit A:

This guy says that amputees would be healed if only Christians had enough faith, and if good spiritual leaders would arise. Amputations wouldn’t be a problem, see, if we just all agreed about god, and were all holy and spiritual. If that happened, then we wouldn’t need those pesky engineers who are working to give people their arms back right now. If only we were better Christians, amputees could have their arms back, you know, whenever we might get around to being good enough Christians and all that….

This next guy says that amputees do heal. What he means is that they don’t bleed to death; that the blood clots, scar tissue forms, the wound heals over, and they don’t die. Apparently not dying is considered just as good as “getting your limb back.”

He also says people who disagree with him are ignorant of science and are in “violation of the philosophy of science.” Whatever that means. Why should I even listen to it, or think about his point at all? There’s a really simple fact in place here. Engineers who embrace what science tells them about materials and energy have actually created a really outstanding artificial limb, and the kid broadcasting from his bedroom is nattering on and on about how the rest of us misunderstand science. Well, I think I’m going to go out on a limb here, and embrace my alleged stupidity, because I think the engineers are doing a good and creditable thing, whilst the antiscience folks are just bellyaching into webcams2 from their bedroom.

If we leave it up to these antiscience people, the amputees will be sitting outside the city gates dressed in rags begging for coins while we all try to join the perfect church and raise up some kind of ideal spiritual leader who will make everything better. This has never worked before. These are terrible, terrible people, with a crass and uncaring attitude toward their neighbors.

Who do I like better? Duh. The person who looks around and says, “holy crap, that guy doesn’t have an arm, let’s figure out how to make him one,” and then goes to work building it. Those are the people who have chosen to join us in civilization, those are the people who have exhibited a grasp of and commitment to morality, and those are the people who are actually helping their fellow man. Let’s hope the antiscience people get a clue and join us in this endeavor.

  1. Ok, that’s not mysterious at all - that’s part of my stock in trade. But much of the rest seems daunting. []
  2. The irony, that webcams come from science, is not lost on me []

Casey Luskin Blasphemes His God?

Posted on March 11th, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

I was just looking around on Casey Luskin’s web site, and I noticed that on one of the pages he says:

“God isn’t merciful enough to forgive us when we screw up” which is why “good things always happen to good people and bad things only happen to the bad.”

Is this true? Did Casey Luskin actually say such a blasphemous thing?

No. He didn’t.

Both sentence fragments come from different parts of his web page on Judaism, but I’ve re-arranged them and put them together so that they make up a misleading statement. Nothing on his website suggests that he thinks anything like this at all, and he certainly never wrote such a thing on his website.

So what is the point of this exercise?

Well, it’s to show Christians like Luskin why it is wrong to do something like this. What I’ve stitched together is pretty innocuous, but I bet I can stitch together unrelated quotations of Luskin’s that would seem to promote genocide, or imprisoning Christians, if I wanted to. And the only thing stopping me from doing it, and passing it off as real, is that I have morals and principles about such things.

One would think that the ninth commandment1 would be enough to provide devout Christians with a similar set of morals and principles. We all understand lying is wrong, but it appears they disagree. Luskin recently did this very thing when quoting the National Academy of Science book, Science, Evolution, and Creationism.

Luskin wrote:

In January, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences weighed in on this debate, declaring that “[t]here is no scientific controversy about the basic facts of evolution,” because neo-Darwinism is “so well established that no new evidence is likely to alter” it. As an undergraduate and graduate student taking multiple courses covering evolutionary biology at the University of California San Diego, that is what I was told as well. My science courses rarely, if ever, allowed students to seriously entertain the possibility that Darwin’s theory might be fundamentally flawed.

This quotation is crafted to suggest that even if new evidence were introduced that refuted neo-Darwinism, scientists would not accept it or change their opinions. This is of course false - over the century and a half that evolution has been scientifically tested, a number of evolutionary hypotheses have been discarded by scientists as incorrect (including, ironically, something called neo-Darwinism), and a number of at first seemingly implausible ideas have been shown to have merit and are now part of mainstream evolutionary theory. Scientists have changed their thinking in response to evidence, as part of the long and painstaking human process of learning more and more about how the world works.

So Luskin is lying, the same way I was lying when I said Luskin had written that God is not merciful and bad things only happen to bad people. The difference, of course, is that I openly crafted a lie for the sake of discussion and told you I was lying right up front - whereas Luskin secretly crafted a lie with deliberate intent to deceive, and as of this writing has still not confessed his sin2.

Luskin got the first half of his quotation on page 52, close to the end of the book:

There is no scientific controversy about the basic facts of evolution. In this sense the intelligent design movement’s call to “teach the controversy” is unwarranted. Of course, there remain many interesting questions about evolution, such as the evolutionary origin of sex or different mechanisms of speciation, and discussion of these questions is fully warranted in science classes.

Notice that he took an entire sentence from the source, but misrepresented it as only part of a sentence when he quoted it. And notice also that the sentence is in a paragraph that specifically advocates teaching about controversies associated with evolution - and that it has nothing to do with neo-Darwinism.

To get the second half of the quote, he had to go backward 36 pages to the beginning of the book. In his use of the material, he implies that he’s quoting related text - perhaps from the same sentence, or at least a nearby sentence - in order. But he’s not. He’s not even quoting text about remotely the same subject.

Many scientific theories are so well established that no new evidence is likely to alter them substantially. For example, no new evidence will demonstrate that the Earth does not orbit around the Sun (heliocentric theory), or that living things are not made of cells (cell theory), that matter is not composed of atoms, or that the surface of the Earth is not divided into solid plates that have moved over geological timescales (the theory of plate tectonics).

Here, Luskin has taken a sentence fragment about theories other than evolution, and grafted it in a Frankenstein-esque manner to an unrelated sentence so as to apply it to evolution. This is a great way to mislead people about the meaning of the author being quoted!

Now, Luskin has a page on his website about intelligent design creationism, where he says:

Many critics of intelligent design have promoted false, straw [man] versions of intelligent design.

He then goes on an eleven paragraph rant whining about how unfair it is that people misrepresent intelligent design creationism3. Meanwhile he stitches together quotations from science books so that they appear to mean whatever old thing he wants them to mean.

Hypocrite.

If intelligent design creationism had any legitimacy at all, they wouldn’t need to misquote science books to promote it.

  1. Eighth commandment in Roman and Lutheran traditions. []
  2. I’d just say what he did was wrong, not that he had sinned. But I’m willing to adopt his religious standards out of respect for his beliefs. []
  3. Just for the record, I disagree that many of his examples of “misrepresentation” are in fact misrepresentative. []

Why Not Use Nutritional Supplements as a Treatment for Autism? Why Not Research Them?

Posted on March 8th, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

The Bad Astronomer recently brought to my attention Jenny McCarthy’s advocacy of using nutritional supplements and dietary restrictions to treat autism. McCarthy has claimed that diet and nutritional supplements help autistic kids, saying:

“I’ve been speaking to moms across the country who are all shouting out the same thing: ‘This (diet and supplement intake) is working.’”

“It’s so heartbreaking to see the medical community not support something called diet and vitamins. And it pains us, city after city after city. I see this heartbreak on these mom’s faces.”

“Autism isn’t covered by [medical] insurance. If things like diets and supplements are working, then why not support it? These kids are getting better and I will not shut up and will not stop fighting about it.”

This parallels a larger set of claims from the DAN and biomedical folks who claim that certain interventions can cure autism. As is well known, Jenny McCarthy and her fellow-travelers are wrong. Diet and supplements don’t cure autism.

There are lots of people who don’t know this, however, and they hear the kinds of crazy things said by McCarthy, the mercury militia, the biomedical quacks, and sundry other nutjobs, and they wonder about this stuff. Occasionally, they ask, well, why couldn’t diet and nutritional supplements help?

When asked, you could trot out the data and go over the statistics. And that would be a great idea in certain situations, such as if you were addressing a conference, or if you were a physician going over the evidence for an interested parent, or if you were a genuine expert blogger who was going over the data for the rest of us.

For the rest of us, though, we encounter these kinds of questions from our acquaintances - those who know we are rational thinkers, who might be under the impression we are knowledgeable or smart, or at least who know we are likely to have an opinion. What’s the best way to respond to these people?

For my part, I admit that diet restriction and vitamin intake could help. Exercise could help. Avoiding sun exposure could help. Wearing special underwear could help. Appealing to a magic sky-god could help.

But then I change the rules of the discussion and take them on a journey through common sense. Here is what I tell them:

The question is whether it is really likely to help.

Let’s have a look at this question rationally. Autism is a neurological disorder caused by disrupted early brain development. Autistic persons’ brains are characterized by differences in size and mass, excess neurons in certain locations, abnormal synapses and dendritic spines, structural differences in mirror neurons, and a differently-functioning cingulate cortex. Genetic differences have been found in autistic persons. The biological evidence suggests the disorder is a result of genetics and environmental interaction during brain development, which results in the fetus “building” a brain which is anatomically and functionally different from that of a typical human.

Now, there are also people who, due to a combination of genetics and environmental influences, develop abnormal hands, feet, palates, noses, kidneys, pancreases, stomaches and other pieces of anatomy.

Do we find those people’s hands/feet/etc attain normality if they consume a specific diet and take vitamin supplements?

No.

As much as it would be nice if nutrients could rebuild a brain into a standard configuration, there’s no reason to think that they could, if they can’t even rebuild other, simpler organs in a similar way.

Another line of evidence makes it unlikely. We do know about thousands of chemicals that can cause the body to reorganize entire organs and body systems into new configurations. Those chemicals are (a) not nutrients, and (b) deadly. The few that aren’t deadly are highly specialized pharmaceuticals that need careful dosing so as to not cause more harm than good - and most of them work despite their tendency to cause organ development to go haywire, not because of it. Potentially, one or a combination of these chemical compounds, if given in the right dosages over a period of time, might possibly result in re-organizing the brain in such a way to ameliorate autism. The problem is, none of these kinds of chemicals are found in any significant amounts in a normal diet, or in supplements.

So the question becomes: why research nutrients? Why think they might work? There’s already tons of evidence that it would be pointless. In the meantime, there are other avenues of research that we have plenty of reason to think could be helpful. Perhaps neurological drugs could result in more-normal brain functioning. Perhaps some kind of surgical intervention could do the same. Perhaps genetic-environmental interaction research could reveal risk factors, resulting in preventive strategies to bar autistic brain development.

All of these techniques have been proven to be effective in other disorders that have origins similar to autism. Whereas nutrition has been proven ineffective in other disorders that have origins similar to autism.

In a world where resources were unlimited, I’d do formal, double-blind, large-n trials of nutrients. In the real world where resources are limited, however, I’m going to spend my money in the place that prior knowledge shows it is most likely to do good. And similarly, I’d be placing my faith in proven or at least plausible treatments, rather than disproven ones that don’t make any sense in the first place.

Is Intelligent Design Creationism Pro-Infanticide?

Posted on February 22nd, 2008 by blue collar scientist

BPSDB

S. Walker at Inconcinnus Sermo has posted some excellent observations about intelligent design creationism and organism behavior.

Has anyone ever wondered why intelligent design never really talks about anything but complexity and molecules or just complain about all the ‘holes’ in evolution (NOT)?

Walker continues:

How about infanticide? How would intelligent design explain infanticide? This would be a real test of the ID paradigm.

Indeed. Does intelligent design creationism predict and explain infanticide?

Evolutionary theory does. Here in Alaska, any brown bear sow with a cub will go to considerable trouble to avoid interaction with a male, because the male will frequently attempt to kill the cub. It makes sense that the bear would do this - the chances of a particular cub being his offspring are very small, so eliminating a cub almost always eliminates the genes of a competing male. It also makes the sow sexually receptive more quickly, thus increasing the male’s chances of mating. By this means males who commit infanticide make their genes more frequent in the population. In other words, in this case, the genes that make infanticidal bears perpetuate themselves in the gene pool.

What about infanticide in humans? There are many cultures in which people committed infanticide under various circumstances. Some cultures set deformed children out of doors to die by exposure. While not morally defensible in our culture, in a society in which resources are scarce, doing this makes a certain amount of perverse sense - you want to expend what little in the way of crops that you have on children who are healthy and vigorous. Evolutionary theory predicts that those parents who expend the least on children of low fitness will better perpetuate their genes. Just because a baby is lost this year, doesn’t mean you can’t try again next year, or the year after, when crops are good.

In addition to these well known forms of infanticide, other cultures have committed infanticide for other reasons. The ancient Israelites killed1 all of the children of the city Ai in a military assault. In a society based on genetic relationships2, killing all the inhabitants of a city you wish to take by force means that your clan can avoid competition with the remnant of a competing clan. By eliminating the children, they eliminate long-term resentment that can work against them in the future. But it also eliminates the conquereds’ genes. Evolutionary theory shows that what at first might seem to be merely a political policy also has a genetic effect: genes that influence people to kill “enemy” children - if any - will have an advantage over the genes of peaceful people - they will, on average, be slaughtered by the former, not vice-versa.

While evolutionary theory explains this brutality, it also suggests a solution to the problem. Knowing that the natural process of evolution encourages some nasty behaviors in our fellow man is a powerful realization. While very few people condemn competition, virtually everyone believes competition should be fair. It is pretty obvious that in the genetic lotteries, killing helpless children is an unfair tactic - you reap a big genetic reward with little cost and little risk3. Without evolutionary theory, we wouldn’t have this insight - the only thing standing in the way of people killing their neighbor’s babies would be a vague distaste over the noise, or perhaps the mess. There’d be an emotional reluctance, perhaps - but we wouldn’t have any knowledge about why such a thing is wrong.

Evolutionary theory also suggests ways that society can respond to this bloodthirstiness and suppress the killing of children. One potential way to do that is to found a religion in which an all-powerful sky god condemns the killing. Unfortunately, the god of the most popular religion in the United States is depicted as being pro-infanticide4. I guess that explains why this idea hasn’t worked out.

Massacre of the Innocents

Obligatory good art: Giotto’s Massacre of the Innocents.

Another way is to create a government that (1) protects each of the society’s productive members right to exist, and (2) allows them to make effective decisions about when to reproduce. There’s a potential evolutionary advantage to leveling the genetic playing field in this manner. By ostracizing and penalizing child-killers, their genes will be less perpetuated in your society’s gene pool. As a result, your gene pool should be more diverse, rather than dominated by genes influencing infanticide, thus possibly making the species more survivable in the face of changing environmental conditions.

And by giving adults the means to prevent reproduction, the genetic competition is played out in terms of strategy, instead of violence and force. Those who are best at determining when to reproduce, and how many times, prevail in the genetic lotteries. To the extent that genes determine good decision making, this is a recipe for evolving a smarter society.

So much for the beneficial insights of evolutionary theory. Let’s leave aside the peaceful morality that proceeds from evolution, and explore what intelligent design has to say on the issue.

I started with a Google search, and I was disappointed to find that Walker is correct when he says that intelligent design creationism is silent on the issue. I found nothing from an intelligent design creationist on the web5 that said anything about intelligent design creationism’s views on infanticide.

That leaves us to explore the issues for ourselves. As Walker notes:

What characteristics of the unknown designer might we infer from infanticide? … [T]he issue here is that ID as a theory is doomed unless something is known about the designer and that information can be used to generate hypotheses about the real world.

That’s a real problem, because intelligent design creationists frequently refuse to say who or what the creator/designer is. But we can obviously go the other direction here. Infanticide is widespread, not only among people, but also in nature. This is observed fact. Given this, what does it say about the designer/creator?

What it necessarily must say is that the designer/creator found nothing wrong with killing children and helpless young animals. Otherwise, this capability would not have been built into creation. Even if we accept the rather ad-hoc and evidence-lacking assertion that “the fall” corrupted creation and infanticide did not exist prior to then, organisms could not be physically capable of infanticide if the tools for it had not been built into life in the first place.

Intelligent design creationists say that biological structures are intelligently designed to fulfill their functions. If so, that means that the biological structures that animals use to kill babies were intelligently designed for the purpose of killing babies.

Furthermore, infanticide is practiced by organisms that are incredibly diverse. Even plants do it. Bacteria do it. Lobsters do it. The list is incredibly long, and as far as I can tell every class of organism does it. That suggests that not only does the designer/creator condone infanticide, but that he’s positively enthusiastic about it.

This picture of the creator/designer is not, I would suggest, the kind of supernatural power or little green alien that my readers would enjoy hanging out with.

Of course, science is all about finding out what is true, and not about gathering support for what you want to be true. So all we need to do is look at the evidence. Evolutionary theory makes several predictions and provides powerful explanations for what we observe in the biological world - including infanticide. It is so successful at this that it it responsible for originating or explaining - or both - all of our knowledge of biology. Every day, more scientific studies about evolution are conducted, and every day, all of them show that evolution is sound.

Meanwhile, intelligent design creationism? It explains nothing. Even infanticide, which it explains, presumably, by hypothesizing a bloodthirsty infanticide-loving designer/creator, is better explained by evolutionary theory. But it goes beyond this. An intelligent design creationism that explains infanticide with a designer/creator that approves of violence against children cannot cope with the simultaneous presence of altruism in organisms - while evolutionary theory does.

Not only does science better explain what we know about infanticide, in a modern civilization evolutionary theory shows us how the problem it represents can be solved. Meanwhile the primary accomplishment of intelligent design creationism has been to demand that the government subsidize the teaching of its nonsense by raising taxes on the populace so stickers can be placed in texbooks and teachers can be forced to offer religious indoctrination in science class.

  1. If we believe the account in the bible, in Joshua chapter 8. []
  2. Which is how the bible describes the ancient Israelites. []
  3. Babies aren’t really known for defending themselves successfully against the assaults of adults. []
  4. In Joshua 8, god is said to not only have approved of, but to have planned, the killing of the children of Ai. In 1 Samuel 15:3, god commands the slaughter of infants. Psalms 135:8 & 136:10, god is praised for killing babies. Psalms 137:9, god commands babies be dashed against the rocks. Exodus 12:29, god plans and carries out the killing of the oldest child of every family in an entire country. Etc. []
  5. After looking at a few pages of search results. []