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49 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Too much blather, not enough evidence., September 9, 2001
There are some good things in this book: the appendix, in which the author retells the story of science through the lives of Bacon, Descartes, Brahe, Pascal, Kepler, Galileo, and the rest; the illustrations, including the authors own photos and cartoons (the fossilized Spitfire was pretty funny); and even an occasion telling argument. But unfortunately, specific, detailed evidence to back up the main points is one of the things the book is short on. Broom contradicts the first principle of expository writing: show it, don't just say it. He repeatedly asserts that natural selection doesn't make sense in a materialistic world, that early life experiments are unrealistic, and so on, but gives few specifics. He blathers on with philosophy and repetition of his main points when he should be backing them up with hard scientific facts, figures, and specific evidence. His overall argument may be right, (though I'm not quite sure I know what it is, exactly) and certainly some of his points make sense to me, but they are poorly developed. I wish you well, Dr. Broom. But you'll need more than cartoons and bald assertion if you want to overthrow a theory of origins as widely accepted as Darwinism. author, Jesus and the Religions of Man
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23 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The quality of the arguments is not consistent, April 20, 2002
"How Blind is the Watchmaker?" is an attempt to show the intricate complexity of design in nature, and expose the weaknesses of the naturalistic Neo-Darwinian paradigm. Unfortunately, the arguments vary in their consistency and ability to convince. I agree with the editorial review that the strongest portion of the book is in the sections overviewing the investigation of the origin of life, and that in other places Broom is prone to caricature the beliefs of Darwinists. There is a lot of interesting information presented in the book, and Broom does a good job of explaining the complexity of life, however, his arguments tend to have some holes in them. I did expect more of a response to Richard Dawkin's book "The Blind Watchmaker," but he did do a good, brief job of deconstructing several of Dawkin's analogies and simulations of evolution. There are better reads available on the same topics of intelligent design and evolution, that are better thought-out and more convincing. To name a few: "Darwin's God: Evolution and the Problem of Evil," "Wedge of Truth," and for a rigorous analysis of origins of life research, "The Mystery of Life's Origin." If you do decide to read "How Blind is the Watchmaker?", you can glean some good information, while stepping around the weaker argumentation.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An argument for vitalism falls short, November 16, 2008
I write as one who believes in intentional divine action beyond scientific discernment, thus I find much in Broom's book for which to be positive, but also some concerns. I strongly endorse the amount of research effort and scientific insight that exudes from the pages of this book. Broom's frequent references to the late little-known Christian philosopher Michael Polanyi certainly elevate his contributions to thought in science. Particularly strong are the chapters on dealing with the limits of scientific knowledge. "Science may be tempted to conclude that, because it cannot by its own methods see any `big picture,' there is no big picture to be found. When this happens, it is guilty of straying from its legitimate mission."
Also particularly helpful is the detail of explanatory demonstrations of scientific phenomena, such as the operation of DNA/RNA within the cell and biological `machines', chaos theory and self-organizing complexity, and the operation of photosynthesis, all well illustrated.
Where I feel Broom strays from a position of strength is in the main hypothesis that he advances, that biological life exhibits a `prolife principle', also referred to as a drive to achieve or survive. Broom unapologetically refers to this as vitalism, a property inherent in life that gives it a teleological framework. Although his observation is correct, it is very easy to argue that there is a survival advantage to this behavior, and it should come as no surprise to anyone with even a limited understanding of evolutionary development that this instinct is more likely to be conferred in the life that survives.
Although this book brings a fresh perspective from the usual Intelligent Design staple, it falls short of a truly satisfying understanding of the relationship between science and faith. The true strength of this book is simply identifying materialism as a false god based on an over-reaching science.
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