Inherit an Ill Wind
by EDWARD LARSON and LARRY WITHAM
Way down in Georgia last month, REM lead singer Michael Stipe paused in
the middle of a solo
during a rock concert because he had Kansas on his mind. "What's with Kansas
and
creationism?" he asked, looking puzzled. He had heard, he explained, that
Kansas officials had
brought in "a Hollywood ad man" to put the best spin on their actions.
"We have medieval
sodomy laws here in Georgia," he added, "but we don't advertise it."
The sold-out crowd cheered, and America's great debate over Darwinism found
its place once
again in the popular culture. Even rockers in Atlanta were asking how Kansas
could strip
evolution from its science-education standards seventy-five years after
the Scopes trial had
supposedly ended such silliness. It did seem as medieval as Georgia's sodomy
law--but even that
was struck down by the state Supreme Court last year. The question merits
an answer because
the episode is not a home-grown Kansas anomaly. It arose from forces that
are national in origin
and scope.
Creation Science & Intelligent Design
The first step toward understanding the events in Kansas is to disregard
all that we've learned
about the Scopes trial from Inherit the Wind. Clarence Darrow did not slay
William Jennings
Bryan, or if he did, the spirit of the old warhorse has risen again, largely
in the body of Berkeley
law professor Phillip Johnson. The Kansas episode reflects the convergence
of Johnson's new
anti-evolution crusade and old-style biblical creationism.
In 1961 Genesis Flood, by Virginia Tech engineering professor Henry Morris
and conservative
Christian theologian John Whitcomb, gave believers scientific-sounding
arguments supporting the
biblical account of a six-day creation within the past 10,000 years. Even
Bryan and other early
twentieth-century fundamentalists could not accept such a young earth in
light of modern
geology. Yet the book spawned a movement within American fundamentalism,
with Morris as its
Moses leading the faithful into a promised land where science proves religion.
This so-called creation science spread among ultraconservative churches
through the missionary
work of Morris's San Diego-based Institute for Creation Research. The emergence
of the
religious right carried it into politics in the seventies. Within two decades
after the publication of
Genesis Flood, three states and dozens of local school districts had mandated
"balanced
treatment" for young-earth creationism along with evolution in public-school
science courses.
It took nearly a decade before the Supreme Court finally unraveled those
mandates as
unconstitutional. Creation science was nothing but religion dressed up
as science, the High Court
decreed in 1987, and therefore was barred by the Constitution's establishment
clause from
public-school classrooms along with other forms of religious instruction.
By this time, however,
young-earthers, who were deeply concerned about science education, were
entrenched in local
and state politics from California to Maine.
Then along came Johnson--a chaired professor at the University of California's
Boalt Hall Law
School and former clerk to Chief Justice Earl Warren. He is no young-earth
creationist, but he is
an evangelical Christian with an uncompromising faith in God. Reading Richard
Dawkins's The
Blind Watchmaker in 1987 enraged him. Dawkins uses Darwinian evolution
to deny God and
dismiss the supernatural--but Johnson saw the argument as circular. "I
could see that Dawkins
achieved his word magic with the very tools that are familiar to us lawyers,"
Johnson explained in
the journal Christianity Today. "If you take as a starting point that there's
no creator, then
something more or less like Darwinism has to be true."
Johnson then launched his own crusade--not for biblical creationism but
against philosophical
naturalism in science. In a series of popular books beginning with Darwin
on Trial in 1991,
Johnson argued that science should not automatically exclude supernatural
explanations for
natural phenomena. It was an easy sell in a country where opinion polls
find about 10 percent of
the people believing that life evolved by natural processes without divine
intervention along the
way. Of course God could have created humans, or at least laws that guided
their evolution from
the primordial ooze, most Americans readily concede.
The Berkeley don brought what his allies call "cultural confidence" to
the familiar lament against
excluding God from science. A sophisticated law professor conversant in
postmodernist rhetoric
(though a realist himself), Johnson could argue that science makes metaphysical
assumptions no
less than religion, and some scientists and philosophers began to concede
a bit. "You had to
meet intimidation with counterintimidation in order to move the discussion
along," says Johnson.
"Now, that perhaps was the lawyer's contribution."
Johnson also reached beyond the academy to latent popular distrust of science.
His latest book,
aptly titled An Easy-to-Understand Guide for Defeating Darwinism by Opening
Minds,
captures his tone. "Given that only a small minority of Americans believe
the central finding of
biology," he asks, "how should our educational system deal with this important
instance of
disagreement between the experts and the people? One way would be to treat
the doubts of the
people with respect.... The opposite way is to tell people that all doubts
about naturalistic
evolution are inherently absurd.... American educators have chosen the
second path."
Johnson's books have sold more than a quarter-million copies, and it is
no wonder that his kind
of arguments showed up among conservative Christians who voiced their opinions
during the
science standards hearing in Kansas.
Another "authority" often cited in Kansas was a Lehigh University biochemistry
teacher named
Michael Behe, who enlisted in Johnson's crusade in 1991. That year, Behe
wrote a letter to the
journal Science defending Darwin on Trial. Johnson responded by encouraging
Behe, a devout
Catholic, to write his own easy-to-understand book presenting biological
phenomena that defied
Darwinist explanation. It was the type of argument popularized more than
a century ago by
Darwin's archfoe, the great Harvard zoologist Louis Agassiz, updated with
examples of complex
organic molecules. Another bestseller was born--Behe's Darwin's Black Box.
Johnson and Behe do not argue for the young earth of creation science,
but they do propound
that intelligent design (rather than random chance) is apparent in nature.
This, they argue,
divorced from biblical creationism, should be a fit subject for public-school
education. With this
argument, they have expanded the tent of people willing to challenge the
alleged Darwinist
hegemony in the science classroom, and this emboldened the populist uprising
in Kansas.
National Standards & Local Control
Bottom-up revolts against authority can come in reaction to top-down reforms,
and that was
evident in Kansas. The state Board of Education members who rejected evolution
were also
trying to strike a blow for local control and against national education
standards.
The federal push for standards-based education reform began in 1989, when
the nation's
governors met with President Bush to rally around his call for "measurable
national goals" in
education. The governors, of course, emphasized state flexibility under
increased federal grants,
an idea that worked for the Bush White House as well. Some federal education
experts, flush
with new theories of learning, saw the reform movement in more centralizing
terms. Here was a
financial and political vehicle to advance a national curriculum.
The Bush Administration's "America 2000" was more a tone-setter than legislation,
and the tone
was picked up in Kansas. In 1989, led by its then-progressive Board of
Education, Kansas set
in motion a program to establish measurable and unified goals for its public
schools. It fit neatly
into a general trend, in which states began to displace local school boards
in financing and setting
standards for public education.
The centralizing move, along with the rise of new theories of education
like outcome-based
grading and process-based science, provoked a conservative reaction in
many states. In Kansas
it was led by Kansas Education Watch, or KEWNET, which criticized experts
for usurping the
role of parents and local schools. This new grassroots activism began affecting
decisions of the
elected state Board of Education, especially after 1996, when four social
conservatives friendly
to KEWNET won seats. The board was then split 5 to 5 on issues of local
and state control.
This was not a partisan division in solidly GOP Kansas, but intraparty
warfare pitting Bob
Dole-type Main Street Republicans against the party's right-wing activists.
No one has been
more critical of the board than the state's stalwart GOP Governor, Bill
Graves, who has
advocated abolishing that elected body ever since the right-wing resurgence.
Board member Val
DeFever, a moderate Republican who voted with the minority on the science
standards, calls the
conservatives "stealth candidates" who sneaked into power. Others said
they were forthright
campaigners who promised an independent board, but most voters probably
did not fully
appreciate what that might mean before the fireworks in August.
Either way, as one Kansas teacher said, the 1996 election "blew the education
establishment out
of the water. They'd never seen a board like this." Lawrence Lerner, an
emeritus science
professor, reviews state science standards and how they are adopted. "State
boards at least tend
to have people with professional qualifications" and are usually appointed,
he says. "Kansas is a
peculiar situation."
In the nation's capital, meanwhile, under the banner of "Goals 2000," the
new Clinton
Administration had accelerated the national education reform movement.
The Educate America
Act, passed by the Democratic Congress in 1994, put teeth behind the call
for state education
standards. Under the new law, standards written by states had to be reviewed
in Washington to
insure quality and uniformity in English, history, math and science. That
backfired, however,
when a federally funded set of history standards came out that conservative
critics denounced as
replacing "the Founding Fathers" with multicultural heroes. The new Republican
Congress
responded by deleting federal control of the content of state education
standards in 1996.
The states have great flexibility now, although they still tend to follow
national trends. Yet, from
Washington's point of view the Kansas outcome is well within the state's
authority. "We don't
review standards for substance, only process," notes Melinda Kitchell Malico,
a spokeswoman
for the US Department of Education. "We won't be reviewing the Kansas standards."
Goals 2000, Kansas Style
Like other states, Kansas began with the model science standards drafted
by the National
Research Council, a public-policy arm of the prestigious National Academy
of Sciences. Various
national science and teacher groups had asked the NAS to develop model
national science
standards. Nearly every state then used them in drafting their Goals 2000
state science
standards, notes Rodger Bybee, who helped draft the NAS document. "They
are called national
standards, but it is not a mandate," he says, "It is not a law. Their use
is voluntary. The states see
the comprehensiveness of the standards, and then use portions of them."
The standards cover physical, life and earth science, and it is in the
latter two areas that the
concept of evolution falls. Further, "Evolution and Equilibrium" is presented
as one of five
"unifying concepts and processes in science." The other four pillars--from
systems and evidence
to measurement and form--appear devoid of ideological content.
Bybee, now director of the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study in Colorado,
said he visited
eight or ten states to give presentations on the NAS document. "It's by
invitation," he said. "It's
usually to the committee reviewing the standards." He made such a visit
to Kansas in early
August of 1998, a month after the state commissioner of education, a gubernatorial
appointee,
had formed a committee of Kansas scientists and science educators to write
the state's new
science standards.
"I spent a morning with them," Bybee recalls. The topic of evolution invariably
came up, a
concern of some Board of Education members but not of the science writing
committee. "The
committee anticipated there would be some conflict," Bybee said after the
board vote in August.
"But I don't think they understood it would end up this way."
In working through similar processes over the past few years, controversy
has erupted over
evolution in thirteen other states besides Kansas. Only three of them,
however--Alabama, Illinois
and Nebraska--ended up diluting the teaching of evolution. Alabama, for
example, required a
disclaimer in biology and geology texts stating that evolution "is theory,
not fact." Illinois put
evolution in its "controversial issues" category. That allows each local
school district to decide
how to approach it. Nebraska did not go that far, but after an assistant
attorney general argued
that teaching evolution might violate the religious freedom of some students,
the state school
board added cautious caveats. Kansas might have ended up merely in this
group were its elected
Board of Education not half composed of assertive social conservatives.
"I really believe the good things that come out of schools happen in classrooms
and locally," said
Scott Hill, one of the conservative board members. "It was a huge issue
for us." That sort of
thinking led the board last year to demand a role in actually drafting
the science standards. That
startled the state education establishment, but it conceded five slots
on the twenty-seven-member
writing committee to the conservative board members. Evolution was not
a major issue in
anyone's thinking yet.
In the early nineties, amid a backlash in local schools against process-based
science education,
the board had voted to make process-style assessment tests optional. Going
into the 1998
science standards, conservatives' main concern had been to roll back the
focus on process. A
board appointee to the writing committee explains, "One of the charges
was to make these
standards more content-oriented, or fact-oriented. Forget the process.
Get us back to what
content these kids have to know when they get out of school." It was only
after board members
saw the emphasis given to evolution by the NAS model that they began adding
opposition to
Darwinism to their concern that science should study "facts."
Evolution Takes Center Stage
The leader of the anti-evolution wing of the board is Steve Abrams, a Baptist
lay leader and
veterinarian who has been active on the religious-right wing of state GOP
politics. He stresses
fact-based science, but there is no denying his belief in young-earth creationism.
"In the scientific
field, we should be studying science: facts that can be documented, observed
and measured,"
Abrams told the news media. "Evolution is not good science, and, as such,
we don't believe it
should be presented."
In all, the science writing committee had nine meetings from mid-1998 to
June 1999, with the
first public comments solicited in December and January for version 2 of
the standards. Kansas
teachers' groups, which were already supportive, tended to write in with
accolades, while
conservatives were the ones showing up at the otherwise poorly attended
public comment
sessions. By this time, however, it became clear that the committee's intent
was basically to
follow the NAS model. Revised versions 3 and 4 did just that. "We were
not going to remove
the theory of evolution from the document," said John Staver, co-chairman
of the writing
committee and professor of science education at Kansas State University.
Abrams led a threesome on the board that Staver viewed as the only probable
negative votes to
the writing committee's version 4. Then, at a May board meeting, Abrams
suddenly announced
that an ad hoc "subcommittee" had produced an alternative set of standards
called Trial 4a,
which had the fingerprints of young-earth creationism all over it.
The rift became openly political. The education commission sent a mediator
to urge peace, but
public hearings in May and June became vociferous showdowns between science
educators and
religious parents. Nearly every science and education organization in the
state sent petitions to
the board and letters to newspaper editors.
With the board vote still uncertain, the science committee offered a compromise
fifth draft, which
deleted all reference to the age of life on the earth and substituted "patterns
of cumulative change"
for "evolution" as a unifying concept of science. Responding to widespread
ridicule of his
creationist Trial 4a draft, Abrams also went back to the drawing board
by taking the committee's
fifth draft and excising the offending content, such as macro-evolution
and the Big Bang. "What
we did was delete language," board member Hill explained; yet the final
product contained
evidence of its creationist path by recommending study projects on recent
dinosaurs and abrupt
geological events. It was broad enough to attract support from Kansans
worried about issues of
evolutionary naturalism raised by Johnson and Behe.
In the days leading to the vote, various "alerts" went out among leaders
on the science writing
committee warning that the Abrams proposal was "speaking to powerful emotional
needs" found
in the religious public. Staver argued that most religions accept evolution;
he noted that the
Roman Catholic Church did, and he even quoted the Pope. The Kansas Catholic
Conference
disagreed, however. Taking a leaf from Behe's book, state Catholic education
officer Mary Kay
Culp said, "A major concern here is teaching evolution as a fact protected
from any valid
scientific criticism." She complained that the NAS standards seemed to
put "science as a way of
knowing" above religion, which it associated with superstition and myth.
Tensions rose to fever pitch as the matter moved toward a final vote by
the Board of Education
in early August. Local, state and national science educators lobbied board
members, especially
wavering moderates. Local religious conservatives lobbied their board members.
An NPR
Weekend Edition on the pending showdown featured a string of moderate state
Republican
officeholders, including Governor Graves, denouncing the anti-evolution
effort, but more telling
was an interview with a local student. "No one was there that's still alive
today that actually
witnessed creation or evolution," he commented. "It's just what a person
believes. I mean, we
have no right to say what exactly is true." That's fact-based education
with a postmodernist twist,
and a scientist's worst nightmare.
Conservative Victory & National Response
The final 6-to-4 conservative victory came as no surprise. One swing moderate,
a devout
Mennonite, had let on that he would follow his conservative constituency
in voting for the
anti-evolution standards. Apparently in Kansas, teaching nothing about
origins is a political
compromise between young-earth creationism (three votes) and evolution
(four votes). The
decision on August 11 generated headline news stories across the country,
and soon even rock
singers were talking about it onstage.
Johnson and Behe tried to sound conciliatory. "In context," Johnson wrote
in the Wall Street
Journal, "the Kansas action was a protest against enshrining a particular
world view as a
scientific fact and against making 'evolution' an exception to the usual
American tradition that the
people have a right to disagree with the experts." Behe added in the New
York Times, "Teach
Darwin's elegant theory. But also discuss where it has real problems."
Speaking in Topeka only a
week after the vote, however, Johnson saluted the bravery of the conservatives
on the state
Board of Education, saying that the controversy has led to an "unrestricted
debate about the
scientific and philosophical issues."
Many media commentators and scientists denounced the Kansas board's action.
"The Kansas
skirmish marks the latest episode of a long struggle by religious fundamentalists
and their allies to
restrict or eliminate the teaching of evolution in public schools," current
president of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science Stephen Jay Gould responded.
"The major
argument advanced by the school board--that large-scale evolution must
be dubious because the
process has not been directly observed--smacks of absurdity and only reveals
ignorance about
the nature of science." According to Gould and the NAS, creation science
is bad science, and
intelligent design is not science at all. Gould has planned a speaking
trip to Kansas for October,
when he surely will have more to say about the Kansas Board of Education.
Four conservatives
on that body stand for re-election next year, in what promises to be a
hotly contested fight.
Politicians can spot a tide from miles away, however. When asked about
the Kansas action,
campaign spokespersons for all the leading GOP presidential candidates
said that such decisions
should be left to states and localities, with a Bush spokeswoman adding
that her candidate
"believes both [evolution and creationism] ought to be taught." Democratic
front-runner Al Gore
apparently agreed, because his spokesman immediately commented that the
Vice President
"favors the teaching of evolution in the public schools" but cautiously
added that "localities should
be free to teach creationism as well." REM's Michael Stipe has good reason
to be puzzled about
more than just Kansas and creationism.
Edward Larson is the author of Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial
and America's
Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion (Harvard), which won the Pulitzer
Prize in
history in 1998. Larry Witham is an author and journalist in Washington,
DC.
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