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Creationism's Trojan Horse:  The Wedge of Intelligent Design
 
 
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Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design (Hardcover)

~ (Author), Paul R. Gross (Author) "Inquiry is the search for knowledge, whether in the work of a theoretical physicist, an automobile mechanic, or any other honest student of physical reality..." (more)
Key Phrases: crsc fellows, life after materialism, public school science curricula, Phillip Johnson, Wedge Document, Discovery Institute (more...)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"Science educators can benefit greatly by understanding creationists' motivations and strategies. These are thoroughly documented in Creationism's Trojan Horse"--SCIENCE
"This is the definitive work on modern creationism, an exhaustively detailed and compelling exposure of the attempt--by the well-known process in nature called by biologists "aggressive mimicry"--to corrupt science in the service of sectarian religion. In the process, the book explores the larger and seemingly endless struggle between religion-based tribal values and science-based universal values."--Edward O. Wilson, University Research Professor, Emeritus, Harvard University
"Creationism's Trojan Horse documents the disturbing movement to sneak religious dogma back into science education, driven by the vague fear that Americans can't handle the truth. Educators, scientists, and politicians would do well to understand this movement and its tactics, and this book is a superb and timely analysis."--Steven Pinker, Johnston Professor, Harvard University, and author of How the Mind Works and The Blank Slate
"Intelligent Design 'theory' (ID) has been well described as Creationism in a cheap Tuxedo. One if its luminaries, we are told, has 'angrily denied that ID is stealth creationism.' He is right. There's no stealth about it. It is Creationism. Unfortunately, ID 'theorists' have a streetwise political professionalism to outweigh the amateurishness of their science, and we therefore cannot ignore them. Barbara Forrest and Paul Gross meticulously document their pretensions, destroy their arguments, and expose their true motivation. An excellent and sadly necessary book."--Richard Dawkins, author of The Selfish Gene


Product Description

In Creationism's Trojan Horse, Forrest and Gross examine in full detail the claims and operations of the "Intelligent Design" movement, the most recent manifestation of American creationism. Explaining and analyzing what "design theorists" call their "Wedge Strategy," they document the Wedge’s aggressive political and public relations campaign. The most notable feature of the movement’s purportedly new scientific paradigm is an abject failure to produce scientific data in support of its claims or even a coherent research program. Instead, the Wedge maintains a crowded nationwide schedule of lectures, popular publications for its mostly conservative Christian constituency, and media appearances, all sustained by generous funding from religious benefactors. The Wedge has intruded itself efficiently into educational politics at local, state, and national levels.

Forrest and Gross detail efforts of intelligent design proponents to influence science standards in Kansas and Ohio, and to influence federal education legislation through the so-called "Santorum amendment" of the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act. They demonstrate the continuity of intelligent design with traditional creationism, including all the scientific claims, exposing its religious core and purposes. By displaying the movement’s alliance with Religious Right extremism, the book reveals the significance of William Dembski’s statement that the intelligent design movement’s challenge to the "evolutionary naturalism of Darwin" is "ground zero of the culture war."


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (January 8, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195157427
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195157420
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #656,546 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Barbara Forrest
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Inquiry is the search for knowledge, whether in the work of a theoretical physicist, an automobile mechanic, or any other honest student of physical reality. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
crsc fellows, life after materialism, public school science curricula, wedge strategy, state science standards, joint explanatory statement, intelligent design movement, theistic science, explanatory filter, specified complexity, detecting design, intelligent design theory, design inference, progressive creationism, complex biochemical systems, design creationism, animal body plans, theistic evolution, irreducible complexity, design proponents, scientific creationism, viewpoint discrimination, design theorists, origins conference, intelligent agency
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Phillip Johnson, Wedge Document, Discovery Institute, William Dembski, Michael Behe, Jonathan Wells, Polanyi Center, Everything Except Science, New Mexico, Stephen Meyer, Religion First-and Last, Biola University, Paul Chien, Bruce Chapman, Access Research Network, Paul Nelson, Power Politics, Baylor University, United States, Christian Leadership Ministries, University of Texas, Walter Bradley, Lehigh University, Nancy Pearcey, Stewardship Foundation
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43 Reviews
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192 of 227 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars They get it right, but they may underestimate their opponent, February 23, 2004
Is this a book where you get a definitive history and understanding of the intelligent design movement? Is it a fair and balanced treatment? No, not at all. This is a debunking treatment.

This book correctly places the intelligent design movement in its political and cultural context as an unfortunately successful attempt to discredit central elements of modern science ... in principle replacing the legitimate scientific tradition with a reformist theistic science as far as it succeeds.

Forrest and Gross do a superb job of showing why ID is not legitimate science according to the history and values that have driven science since its inception.

Yet in taking a scientific debunking approach and equating ID with "creationism" in general (and the "Scientific Creationism" of Henry Morris and Adventist literalism in particular) the authors also seem to miss some of the _non-scientific_ subtleties in their opponents' reasoning which make it as compelling and successful as it has been, even to many who aren't congenial to "Young Earth Creationism" and Seventh Day Adventism.

Forrest and Gross often discount rather than listening to their opponents, and in the process they often appear miss the internal logic and completely different way of thinking of the ID proponents. This results in arguments that must genuinely sound ad hominem and question-begging to ID enthusiasts, accusing the ID authors of deliberate fraud and deception of various kinds.

The ID movement has deceptive aspects to it, but then so does the marketing of evolutionary theory in the popular press. What Forrest and Gross do not consider, and should, is the extremely radical nature of the ID claims. They treat ID as bad alternative science, seemingly because the IDers present it as an alternative scientific paradigm to evolutionary biology and natural selection. They observe that it is neither conventional science nor speculative science ... concluding that it is therefore a fraud.

This doesn't quite seem to capture it. Leaders of the ID movement often claim that science has been mistaken *from its inception* about rejecting a Creator of some sort. In other words, they do not pretend to be doing naturalistic science and then sneak in a Creator, so much as they are claiming that science should have been theistic all along.

A Creator might possibly work through evolution, but with highly visible opponents like Richard Dawkins who often use natural selection as a reason to deny the existence of a Creator, IDers have little reason to split hairs between theistic and naturalistic evolution. Their (often hidden) point is the designer, not the design.

An early hero of the ID revolution, Michael Denton ("Evolution: A Theory In Crisis"), has no argument at all with natural selection, only with its use as an all-encompassing explanation of form and function throughout living things. His popularity among IDers reveals something important about the movement: their focus on making nature consistent with the presumed designer rather than worrying about the specific mechanisms used in design.

The rejection of Aristotelian purposes for all things was pretty clearly a positive step in the development of physical science, and this is a big part of what originally drove the rejection of teleology. The ID folks are not entirely wrong in claiming that the rejection of a Creator itself was the somewhat arbitrary result of opposing the medieval Church's tradition in general along with Aristotle's pervasive teleology. It was not a logical, empirical, or epistemic neccessity, but a cultural value associated with the Enlightenment faith in the autonomy of reason. The core reasoning of the IDers is consistent and reasonable, given their assumptions, so the tone of Forrest and Gross will likely come off as shrill to their IDer opponents.

In the end, Forrest and Gross are surely right to be alarmed at this movement, even though it is probably more sincere than they credit it. The problem with ID is not with its rather trivial observation of design in nature, but in the subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) reinterpretation of scientific data in light of scripture and an unspoken but shared vision of the Creator as an alternate way of reasoning in competition with the scientific tradition.

IDers do end up confusing the issue by claiming to be doing science (or "real science,") when in fact they are proposing "a new kind of science" rooted in theistic belief completely outside of the tradition to which we give that name.

Even if many scientists and philosophers were wrong to deny possibility of a Creator and the role of the Creator in natural events (something half of Americans seem to defend) Forrest and Gross are *still* right to be suspicious of a movement that borrows the name of the scientific tradition while seeking to reform it completely to reshape biology in completely non-evolutionary terms against the epistemic values and evidentiary basis of the field.

Forrest and Gross are not fooled by the superficial similarity and pretended association of ID with scientific reformers and fine-tuners of evolutionary theory. They are at their best making it clear that scientific reform of biology and the non-science of intelligent design are two very different things.

This book is a splash of cold water to those who still may think of creationism in any form as something that belongs as a "theory" alongside biological science in a classroom. ID is not alternative science, but an alternative *to* science, a part of a "culture war" to redefine the public symbols of truth and meaning. Forrest and Gross provide the evidence of this, although in avoiding the internal logic of the opposing arguments and considering their opposition to be based mostly on fraud and ignorance, they don't seem to fully realize just how powerful their opposition's reasoning can be to many people.

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138 of 167 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courageous, intellectual, and thorough, January 20, 2004
By Jeffrey O. Shallit (Kitchener, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"Intelligent design" (ID) is a religious and political movement that claims that only a designing intelligence (the Christian deity) could be responsible for the order we see in the natural world. It seeks to overthrow "scientific materialism" (what everyone else just calls "science") and replace it with Christian doctrine.

Although its proponents claim ID is science, there are essentially no papers describing the "theory", testing it, or making predictions from it in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Instead, its proponents publish popular books with religious or political presses.

ID books are full of self-praise and hype, but very little actual science. What little science there is is full of flaws (one crucial calculation in Dembski's _No Free Lunch_ is off by 65 orders of magnitude, a fact he has never publicly admitted).

This book is the first to document, in exhaustive detail, the religious and political motivations behind ID. Forrest and Gross show how the movement was conceived after a religious conversion by a law professor; how it is bankrolled by a Christian reconstructionist millionaire; how it is based on nonexistent science; and how it seeks to replace science at all levels, from grade school to the National Science Foundation, with Christian dogma.

Contrary to the claim by one reviewer (who did not dare give his name), there is essentially no name-calling in this book. Instead, the analysis is scholarly, impeccable, and sober; the endnotes alone run for 65 pages.

If you are concerned about how the Religious Right is hijacking science education in the United States, this book is essential reading. Be sure to take your blood pressure medication before starting, because the unrelenting duplicity that Forrest and Gross chronicle in the ID movement is sure to make you burst a blood vessel.

Will the scientific community heed this wake-up call? I certainly hope so.

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32 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book needed to be written, November 9, 2004
By Jill Malter (jillmalter@aol.com) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
I remember my astonishment, a little over eight years ago, when I read David Berlinski's article, "The Deniable Darwin," in Commentary magazine. After a few paragraphs, I wondered if I were reading a parody. I was shocked that Commentary had published something that merely substituted insults for facts and logic.

Of course, there were letters to the editor. Including a half-page one from Paul Gross. He rightly asked, referring to Berlinski's article, "How could Commentary not have let some biologist read it" (after which, one would hope, there was no way Commentary would have published it). He mentioned that he didn't have the space to refute all of Berlinski's unsupported or dead-wrong assertions in a short letter. I'm happy to report that he and Barbara Forrest have now taken the time and trouble to refute the Intelligent Designers in a full length book.

Still, as Forrest and Gross explain, the main problem is not with the content of the Intelligent Design arguments. It is with the lack of content. I was to discover this eight years ago when I read Berlinski's response to the letters to the editor. Berlinski spent over a page replying to Gross. No problem with that. The problem was that Berlinski didn't address the points Gross had made. And I finally realized that Berlinski had done this intentionally, simply writing down words that gave a vague appearance of having something to do with the topic but did not in fact counter any arguments.

The authors make this fundamental point about the "intelligent designers" (the "Wedge"). The Wedge has substituted public relations for facts and for logical arguments. As Forrest and Gross quite properly put it, "The issue is not Darwinism or science: the issue is the Wedge itself."

According to the authors, the Wedge seeks to do something other than challenge a debateable set of scientific assertions. It is trying "to overthrow the system of rules and procedures of modern science and those intellectual footings of our culture laid down in the Enlightenment."

I agree with Forrest and Gross that what we need is not so much a debate about Darwinian evolution: the authors answer the critics, but that topic was put to bed in any scientific sense of the term many decades ago. What we all need to address is what to do about the threat of public policy on scientific matters being determined on grounds which are entirely divorced from any semblence of scientific knowledge. And I hope this book will help us do that.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars To Fight a Thing, We Must First Understand It
I was impressed at the breadth of this book. Forrest covers all of the history of Intelligent Design and the Wedge. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Jedidiah Palosaari

1.0 out of 5 stars "creationists as the bad guys"
The preceding quote is from page 304 of this book, and concerns the movie "Inherit the Wind"; but it equally fits this book. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Paul Vjecsner

5.0 out of 5 stars An awesome expose of Intelligent Design.
I read this book shortly after rejecting creationism and intelligent design for evolution. Although I had read a number of the works by various ID luminaries, this book definitely... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Anthony Lawson

2.0 out of 5 stars Forrest: The pot calling the kettle black?
There is an overwhelming desire by people in the field to demolish anything not Darwinism.

Are we not to question in science? Read more
Published 11 months ago by Steve D. Brown

5.0 out of 5 stars An outstanding book by a key figure in the debate over ID
One author, Barbara Forrest, was one of the key witnesses in the Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School Board case. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Tim Beazley

5.0 out of 5 stars The Definitive Account On the Aims and History of Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Supporters
The barbarians are at the gates, threatening to destroy all that is noble and just in Western Civilization, especially America's preeminence in science and technology. Read more
Published 16 months ago by John Kwok

4.0 out of 5 stars Connecting the Dots.
Undoubtedly, this is a book that needed to be writen. In Creationism's Trojan Horse (CTH) Forrest and Gross attempt to show readers, via many angles, that Intelligent Design... Read more
Published 19 months ago by Kevin Currie-Knight

1.0 out of 5 stars This is not science, thsi is political aganda
Typical reasoning: "Prfessor Balabambuko is insignificant according to the opinion of prfessor Kalabambuko, therefore all his theories must be wrong". Read more
Published 23 months ago by lew

4.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent design is a political movement, not a scientific one
There's no questioning that Creationism's Trojan Horse will be the definitive source on the Intelligent Design sham for a long time to come. Read more
Published on June 28, 2007 by Stephen R. Laniel

4.0 out of 5 stars Revealing the extent of the deceit
A thorough investigation into the activities of some Intelligent Design supporters. It has to be wondered why any Christians, however convinced that the universe is designed,... Read more
Published on May 6, 2007 by calmly

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