October 12, 2004

The Stricture of Scientific Resolutions

In this installment of the Wedge Update, Mark Hartwig shows how the Biological Society of Washington has seemingly managed the impossible. more ...


"Wedge" Archives

  • Bitten (7.23.04) After a long leave for a stem-cell transplant, Mark Hartwig returns to the Wedge Update. In this article he talks about how the anti-ID community has been bitten by its own rhetoric, and is doing all it can to stanch the wound--by less than ethical means. more ...

  • Defending the Wedge (5.25.04) Recently, a few Intelligent Design (ID) critics have created some confusion over the meaning of "The Wedge." Several statements made by ID detractors have suggested "The Wedge" to be a partially concealed strategy by well-funded religious fanatics to attack science and force it to come under the thumb of a specific religious mindset. (But how concealed can it be when the acknowledged sharp edge of the wedge, Philip Johnson, writes a book entitled, "The Wedge of Truth" in which he delineates the strategy for all to read?) Is this an accurate characterization of "The Wedge," or is this just a baseless appeal by Darwinists to impugn the motives of their adversaries? Well, as they say, when the facts aren't on your side, argue motives. According to Paul Nesselroade, "The Wedge," facts can speak for themselves. more ...

  • Georgia, Ohio, and the Developing Dilemma for Darwinists (2.23.04) Recently Georgia State’s school superintendent proposed removing the word evolution from the state’s curriculum and replacing it with the phrase “biological changes over time.” This curious move by the Georgia superintendent was defended by Superintendent Cox as a way to allow access to the concept of evolution for those who might ordinarily be prevented from reading about it due to its controversial nature. The proposal, which has since been rescinded, drew strong fire from several supporters of the theory. more ...

  • Those Annoying Discovery Polls (10.29.03) It looks like the Darwinist camp has had a hard time responding to a series of polls commissioned by the Seattle-based Discovery Institute, the leading organization of the intelligent design movement. The polls, including a national poll in 2001 and several state polls in 2002 and 2003, have shown overwhelming support for teaching evidence both for and against Darwin’s theory of evolution in public school classrooms.more ...

  • Texans Favor "Teaching the Controversy" (7.01.03) Our thanks to Paul Nesselroade for providing The Wedge Update column for the past six months. This month Mark Hartwig is back with some news about teaching origins Texan style. more ...

  • Winds of Change? (7.01.03) What images come to mind when you are asked to think about the merits of teaching Darwinian evolution in the public school classroom? For many, the characters portrayed by Spencer Tracy, Fredric March, and Gene Kelly in the movie “Inherit the Wind” are among the first and most powerful.more ...

  • The Case of the Pseuodogenes (5.23.03) New research on mice has found evidence suggesting a pseudogene plays a crucial regulatory role in the expression of another gene within the cell. Findings like these have important implications for the authority of Darwinian evolution.more ...

  • Betting on All the Horses (4.09.03) Pre-existing beliefs are powerful organizing forces that can infiltrate the collective thought of even some of culture's biggest ideas. If we are not careful these beliefs will insulate us from assessing them fairly.more ...

  • Does Certainty Carry No Burden? (2.18.03) Many things in nature appear to be designed. This appearance has not dissipated with advances in knowledge. To the contrary, it has grown as we learn of exquisite sub-cellular order and complexity beyond anyone’s anticipation or explanation. Is not the willingness to at least consider design requisite to an exhaustive search for the truth?more ...

  • Asking the "Big" Questions (1.29.03) Each year at about this time millions of students across the country make their way back to campus to continue their unfettered pursuit of truth by asking life’s “big” questions in a free and liberating educational context; right? Well, unfortunately this ideal isn’t always reached. In fact, sometimes it is even obstructed.more ...

  • ID and Human Cloning (1.13.03) We would like to welcome Dr. Paul Nesselroade as our guest columnist for the Wedge Update. Paul will be filling in with some columns while Mark Hartwig is on medical leave. Dr. Nesselroade is currently associate professor of psychology at Asbury College in Kentucky where he resides with his wife and three children. In this week's column Nesselroade asks if the Intelligent Design movement has anything to say about current experimentation with human cloning.more ...

  • Darwinist "Triumph" in Ohio; Goodbye for Now (12.19.02) On Dec. 10, the Ohio board of education gave final approval to new science education standards requiring that students be able to think critically about contemporary evolutionary theory. The new standards also allow individual school districts to teach the theory of intelligent design. The Darwin-only camp, however, is proclaiming victory. To hear them tell it, they had narrowly averted an attempt to mandate teaching intelligent design in science classrooms and include it on state tests. more ...

  • Darwinian Resolution (12.04.02) Back-to-back victories for “teaching the controversy” (TTC) in Cobb County, Ga., and Ohio have shaken the leadership of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). On Nov. 6, the organization released a resolution by its board urging “citizens across the nation to oppose the establishment of policies that would permit the teaching of ‘intelligent design theory’ as a part of the science curricula of the public schools.” more ...

  • "Teaching the Controversy" Wins in Ohio (10.23.02) In this update, Mark Hartwig summarizes the October 15 Ohio Board of Education decision to "teach the controversy" about biological origins, and talks a little bit about how that decision relates to Intelligent Design. He also includes a list of ID resources for anyone troubled by his or her school's or district's one-sided treatment of evolution. more ...

  • Burned(10.03.02) We know what they're really up to. That has been the Darwinist message from the very beginning of the Cobb County controversy. As Mark Hartwig reports, however, some journalists got royally burned last week by reporting that message as if it were an established fact. more ...

  • Huffing and Puffing in Cobb County (9.25.02) When the Cobb County (Ga.) School District decided to paste disclaimers in district biology texts, they really touched a nerve. Mark Hartwig discusses the ensuing backlash of the Georgia School Board's controversial proposal. more ...

  • Fall Reading List (8.26.02) As the ID movement has grown, more and more scholars have contributed their talents to the cause. One happy result has been some hot new books that are now rolling off the presses. In this Wedge Update, Mark Hartwig discusses some of these titles. more ...

  • Wells Vindicated on Multiple Counts (7.29.02) Chalk up some points for biologist Jonathan Wells, author of Icons of Evolution. Ever since the publication of his book, which is critical of how biology textbooks teach evolution, both it and Wells have been trashed by Darwinists. But some Darwinist authors are now admitting that Wells was right-by quietly revising their textbooks. more ...

  • Tell Me Another One (7.18.02) Anthropologists working in Chad have unveiled a fossil they claim is the oldest hominid yet. But what it all means is anyone's guess.more ...

  • A Shift Toward Substance; ID Network Conference (6.30.02) In this Wedge Update, Mark Hartwig explains how the origins debate is shifting to a more substantive focus, and provides some recent examples. He also mentions the annual "Darwinism, Design and Democracy" symposium on July 26-27, hosted by the Intelligent Design Network.more ...

  • Ohio's Largest Paper Flips; The Wedge in Brazil (6.13.02) In this installment of the Wedge Update Mark Hartwig notes how the changing climate in Ohio is being reflected in recent articles in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Ohio's largest newspaper. Mark also discusses the changing views in Brazil. more ...

  • Nanoarchaeum: How Low Can You Go? (5..31.02) Researchers from the University of Regensburg, Germany, are adding a branch to the "tree of life" after discovering a tiny new microbe in a submarine vent north of Iceland. Measuring only 400 nanometers in diameter, the new microbe is among the smallest known living cells. more ...

  • Stephen Jay Gould (1941-2002) (5.22.02) On Monday May 20, Stephen Jay Gould, eminent paleontologist and prolific science writer, died of cancer at his home in Manhattan. In this Wedge Update, Mark Hartwig talks about the loss of evolutionary biology's most visible spokesman and his influence on the theory of evolution and the argument for design. more ...

  • Evolution Rerun to Backfire; New Poll from Ohio (5.13.02) Mark comments on the May 14 re-airing of the PBS Evolution series, and discusses Ohio's "Zogby International Poll", commissioned by the Discovery Institute. more ...

  • Krauss Goes Ballistic over ID; NSF's Biennial "Science Literacy" Survey (5.05.02) We are pleased to announce that we are resuming our Weekly Wedge Update. Receiving the torch from Phillip Johnson will be Mark Hartwig, a 17-year veteran of the origins debate and co-founder of Access Research Network. Mark served for 10 years as managing editor of Origins Research, now published as Origins and Design. His articles on science and science education have appeared in such places as The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Denver Post, Focus on the Family, Moody, World and many other newspapers and magazines.more ...

  • Archives of Phillip Johnson "Wedge" Articles



    | ARN Home Page

    Copyright 2009
    Access Research Network.
    All rights reserved. International copyright secured.

    The articles contained in this section are copyright protected individually by the author. Please refer to each article for specific copyright, reproduction, and usage limitations. A return link to the Access Research Network web site would be appreciated.

    replica breitling breitling replica watches

    AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /