A good account of Baylor

From: Bertvan@aol.com
Date: Fri Dec 22 2000 - 17:12:46 EST

  • Next message: Bertvan@aol.com: "Natural and Supernatural (was Chance and Selection)"

    Reporters are not generally stupid, and maybe some of them are beginning to
    realise the unobjectiveness of Darwinists.

    Bertvan
    http://members.aol.com/bertvan

    BYLINE: By UWE SIEMON-NETTO, UPI Religion Correspondent

    DATELINE: WASHINGTON, Dec. 21

        Professor William A. Dembski, 40, does not show his face at Baylor
    University in Waco, Tex., all that often anymore.

        "That's a very hostile environment over there," he told United Press
    International. "I go to the library and use the athletic facilities, but I
    work from home."

        Baylor calls itself the world's largest Baptist university with 18,000
    students. So why would this eminent scholar feel unwelcome in this
    Christian school? Why is he an exile within his own four walls?

          Well, Dembski entertains the hypothesis that the universe is the
    product of mindful planning rather than a random set of circumstances.
    Though an evangelical Christian, this scholar with doctorates in
    mathematics and philosophy does not name the designer, at least not in his
    work.

        Still, his ideas do not sit well with Baylor professors stuck in
    methodological naturalism. This stricture obliges scientists to be
    provisional atheists in their work, even if their research surfaces
    evidence to the contrary.

        They denounced Dembski's theories as "stealth creationism," as though
    he had promoted the notion that God made this world in six days, exactly as
    the Bible says.

        In e-mails and letters to the local media, Dembski's opponents accused
    him of endangering Baylor's scholarly reputation. At one point, the
    controversy became so frenzied that Robert Sloan, the university's
    president, spoke of "McCarthyism."

        Sloan, a renowned New Testament scholar, reminded faculty members how
    much scientists had suffered in the past when pressured by fundamentalist
    creationists. "It's rather ironic that people in the scientific community
    now appear to be suppressing others."

        Yet it took Dembski's antagonists a little over a year to have him
    fired from his position as Baylor's Center for Complexity, Information and
    Design. Now he is just an associate research professor.

        Sloan had caved in, although he "still supports Dembki's work,"
    according to Larry Brumley, Baylor's spokesman.

        William Dembski is a leading proponent of a theory known as Intelligent
    Design. This is also the title he gave to one of his books that received
    much acclaim around from the world. It has already sold 20,000 copies, a
    staggering figure for a volume of this kind.

        In his research, Dembski applies mathematics and statistics to detect
    purpose in the makeup of the natural world. As the magazine Christianity
    Today put it, he is "looking for the difference between a jumble of clouds
    and skywriting that broadcasts a message."

        President Sloan himself had discovered him a little over a year ago.
    Sloan had set himself two goals: leading Baylor into the top tier of
    American universities while also guiding it back to its Baptist heritage.

        As part of this endeavor, Sloan set up the Michael Polanyi Center and
    put Dembski in charge. The problem is that Baylor is caught up in the
    tension between the conservative Southern Baptist Convention and the more
    liberal Baptist General Convention in Texas to which this school owes
    allegiance.

        "I stepped into internecine Baptist struggles," Dembski told UPI
    referring to the ironic kind of struggle where even men and women of faith
    purport a materialist way of thinking while at work. "Some of my greatest
    enemies are Christians," Dembski said.

        So fierce was the opposition that in April most Baylor biologists
    boycotted a Polanyi Center conference attended by renowned mathematicians
    and other scientists from around the world, including two Nobel laureates.
    Scholars from other universities even tried to sabotage the conference.
    They sent bogus notes to all schedules speakers "disinviting" them, the
    American Spectator reported.

        Although the conference was a resounding success, Baylor's faculty
    senate voted to ask President Sloan to end all Intelligent Design
    initiatives. Sloan then convened an "independent committee" to evaluate
    Dembski's work. It recommended absorbing the center's functions into the
    Institute for Faith and Learning but unambiguously recognized Intelligent
    Design as a legitimate scientific discipline.

        Buoyed by this report, Dembski sent out an e-mail: "Dogmatic opponents
    of design have who demanded the center be shut down have met their
    Waterloo." Said Dembski, "I did not reckon with the faculty's lack of a
    sense of humor." Two days later, with Sloan's accord, Dembski was fired
    from his position as director of the center.

        Baylor spokesman Brumley mused on Thursday that "a lot that some
    bridge-building has to be done within the faculty" for Dembski's work to go
    forward. Meanwhile, Dembski works in his house determined not to let his
    foes relish their success.

        "I have offers from some Christian colleges," he said, "but to go there
    would mean handing a victory to my opponents here. My contract with Baylor
    runs for another four years."



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