July 6, 2006
MANN TALK: Macroevolution
By Perry Mann
Hinton, WV (Special to HNN) – I search for a journalistic subject as a hawk
scans the landscape for a mouse. This week I have a mouse. Paul Kuharich III
of Huntington, WV has written a letter to the editor and excerpts from the
letter are my mouse.
“The choice between religion and secularism, however, is an illusion.
Secularism is merely another belief taken on faith, just as atheism is a
belief taken on faith: unprovable, undisprovable, and every bit as
opinionated as the most Bible-thumping sermon.
“Atheists and secularists often base their worldview on macroevolution, and
there is no more opinionated, unscientific, religious belief than
macroevolution. They try to keep valid criticism of it out of classrooms,
bring pressure to bear on teachers and professors who don’t toe the
macroevolutionist line, and refuse to publish valid criticisms of
macroevolution in their so-called ‘scientific’ journals. The media helps out
by not questioning unscientific assertions regarding ‘millions of years’
dating estimates and constantly accepting the false line that macroevolution
is ‘the central organizing principle of science.’” There you have the full
scope of the conspiracy to denigrate Creationism and inculcate children with
evolution.
Kuharich asserts that “there is no more opinionated, unscientific, religious
belief than macroevolution.” It’s difficult for one to include in so few
words so many inaccuracies and fallacies. He uses macroevolution instead of
microevolution or just evolution, because not even the most dogmatic
creationist can deny microevolution. Barnyards are full of examples of it: a
cow that gives three gallons of milk a day is the bred descendant of a beast
that gave a pint or so and the chicken that lays an egg a day is the bred
descendant of a bird that probably laid eggs twice a year. The wolf has by
microevolution evolved into hundreds of breeds from attack dogs to lap dogs.
And within my lifetime, potato beetles have become immune to insecticides
through microevolution.
Mr. Kuharich’s problem with macroevolution is that it refutes the belief
that God created every species from viruses to dinosaurs, including, of
course, Adam and Eve, in a week 8 thousand years ago and that since then
there have been no new species but only microevolutionary changes in the
species God created eight millennia ago. He cannot abide the theory that
all life originated a billion or so years ago and evolved from a common
ancestor over millions of years. As Richard Dawkins observes in “The
Ancestor’s Tale, A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution”: “There are those
who think Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection explains
microevolution, but is in principle impotent to explain macroevolution,
which consequently needs an extra ingredient---in extreme cases a divine
extra ingredient.”
Dawkins also writes this: “I have never seen any good reason to doubt the
following proposition: macroevolution is lots of little bits of
microevolution joined end to end over geological time, and detected by
fossils instead of genetic sampling.”
Kuharich says secularism is a belief based on faith. Not so. Faith is an
implausible hypothesis irrationally held. Secular belief is a plausible
hypothesis rationally held. There is no god or church or holy hierarchy or
divinely revealed truth associated with secularism. The foundations of its
beliefs are conscience, science, reason, imagination, knowledge and
intuition. The religionists, knowing how weak is the basis of their faith
and how substantial is the scientific basis of secularism, seek to weaken
secularism not by reason and facts but by disparaging its theories and those
who believe them. How can anyone who has read Darwin’s The Origin of
Species with an open mind characterize it as opinionated, unscientific and
religious? Or a better question is how many creationists have read The
Origin of Species?
Kuharich is disturbed because, as he sees it, atheists and secularists “try
to keep valid criticism of it out of classrooms, bring employment pressures
to bear on teachers and professors who don’t toe the macroevolutionist line,
and refuse to publish valid criticisms of macroevolution in their so-called
‘scientific’ journals.”
I doubt that there is in this land a court in which an atheist judge
presides. Yet, the courts of the land have without exception banned the
teaching of Creationism in schools on the ground that it is tantamount to
teaching religion and thus violates the First Amendment, but no court has
ever banned the teaching of evolution on the ground that it is the
teaching of religion. The reason is that evolution or macroevolution is not
a belief based on faith but is based upon reasoned opinion, scientific fact
and mountains of evidence.
The basic text to prove Creationism is found in the first two chapters of
Genesis, comprised of two pages of very large print in my Bible. My copy of
Darwin’s “The Origin of Species and The Descent of Man” comprises exactly
1000 pages of very small print, 75 pages of which are index. The difference
in the number of pages between Genesis and Darwin is not offset by the
allegation that the former is God’s word and the latter is man’s word. At
least, it is not to secularists.
The burden of proof that there is a God is on those who believe there is, a
burden that to secularists appears to be a Sisyphean task. There is no
burden on secularists because there is no probative evidence that there is a
God in the sense that He or She or It is in the image of man or woman or
whatever. And that that entity hears prays, answers them, suspends nature’s
laws, creates miracles and keeps books on the good and the bad one does as
evidence to be considered on Judgment Day.
Perry Mann is a former teacher, a lawyer, a former prosecuting attorney
of Summers County and a regular columnist for the Nicholas Chronicle in
Summersville and Huntington News Network. Born in Charleston, WV, in 1921,
he lives in Hinton.








