Joshua Swamidass and the Cancellation of Christian Colleges – Discovery Institute

Posted: March 21, 2021 at 4:39 pm

Photo: Joshua Swamidass, by J. Nathan Matias, via Flickr (cropped).

My colleague David Klinghoffer has a superb post on a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed by Joshua Swamidass, a computational biologist who believes that colleges and universities that include creation science (undefined) in their curriculum should be blacklisted by the educational and scientific community and potentially lose their accreditation. He argues that only science courses that adhere to national norms (also undefined) should count for credit toward science degrees. Its clear from the context that one workable definition of national norms is what Darwinists believe.

Presumably, evolutionary psychology, multiverse theory, materialist neuroscience, transgender pediatrics, and the emerging rivulets of woke science and woke mathematics could nestle on the national norms pedestal, whether Swamidass wants them to or not.

Not only is Swamidasss proposed censorship, directed against Christian colleges, an affront to academic freedom on scientific questions of evolution and human origins, it is a gateway to unlimited litmus tests for the latest fashionable atheist and woke science. You dont think survivors survived explains life? You dont think there are more than two sexes? You dont think the multiverse is testable science? You dont think the mind is more than meat? No graduation or scientific career for you!

Notably, Swamidass completely leaves out the one criterion that is the cornerstone of accreditation of educational institutions: outcome metrics. Accreditation generally hinges on the question: how do graduates of an institution compare with other graduates on standardized tests, graduation rates, professional employment and accomplishments, etc.? I dont know (and Swamidass has nothing to say about it) how students from Christian colleges compare, but is it well established that homeschooled kids (who are disproportionately taught by conservative Christian families) score almost 100 points higher on the SAT and score correspondingly higher on the ACT than the national average. Christian colleges and universities that teach creation science (I use the term loosely, as does Swamidass) may also teach evolution, but they treat Darwinism as a theory, and they examine it critically.

How do undergraduates from Christian colleges perform on the science portions of GRE exams? If we are to accredit based on curricular content, we must examine all curricular content (lets start with implicit atheism, materialism, and wokeness) and lets use outcome metrics as the gold standard. My suspicion, based on the outstanding performance of homeschooled students on standardized testing, is that students from colleges that teach creation science do very well in comparison with their peers from colleges that teach atheist science.

It is certainly possible and I believe likely that students in universities that teach creation science understand more about Darwinism, not less, because they are taught to examine Darwinian theory as science, not as dogma.

Its noteworthy that among developed countries the United States is both the most creationist nation and the uncontested leader in science. For myself, I think theres a clear cause-and-effect relationship. Inference to Gods design is a powerful engine for scientific investigation, and has been since the Scientific Revolution, which was led largely by devoutly Christian scientists. In any case, it is certainly hard to credibly argue that creationism has held back science in any meaningful way. Compare the scientific productivity of the predominately Christian United States to the scientific productivity of the atheist Soviet Union. Compare the scientific productivity of largely Christian South Korea to atheist North Korea. Compare the scientific productivity of tiny largely Christian Taiwan to the scientific productivity of atheist China. Christianity is the most powerful engine of modern science in my view, and atheism is everywhere a science-killer (and people-killer, but thats for another discussion).

Physics Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman noted that science is the belief in the ignorance of experts. Swamidasss demand that science be handcuffed by national norms is exactly the opposite of what is necessary for good science. Every orthodox but false scientific theory in history was a national norm at one time or another. Science has been and remains beset with countless false theories eugenics, the imperative for population control, global cooling, and junk DNA were in their day the national norms in science. It was academic freedom and diversity of opinion that allowed science to advance beyond these historic errors.

The only way to truth in science is to permit and even encourage challenges to orthodoxy. Science is inherently the process by which orthodox beliefs about nature are challenged, and indoctrination of students in atheist and materialist dogma is the antithesis of science. Students educated in creation science, unlike their counterparts in explicitly or implicitly atheist institutions, understand the issues and controversies in science, and this understanding is the hallmark of real scientific knowledge.

Swamidasss demand that accrediting agencies blacklist Christian universities that challenge the atheist dogma that plagues modern science is reprehensible, and if enacted would trample on the rights of Christians and on the quality of American science. Diversity of opinion and inclusion of unorthodox perspectives is the indispensable ingredient of good science. Whatever he may have intended, Josh Swamidass calls for what amounts to the cancellation of Christian colleges.

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Joshua Swamidass and the Cancellation of Christian Colleges - Discovery Institute

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