Rebuttal -- Rick Rainey
I’d like to take exception with Joseph Bell’s column (“Censorship
deprives all students of full education,” Feb. 1) in which in one grand
sweep he “backhands” Wendy Leece and “clears up” the creationism issue.
Personally, I agree with Wendy Leece in the examination of the
viability of questionably controversial new books to the school reading
list.
There are many people in the local populace who would rather err on
the side of conservativism when it comes to keeping unnecessary sex,
violence or abuse out of the educational environment for our young
people.
It is not a matter of censorship. The kids should not have to get a
permission slip to study controversial material, rather they should not
allow the study of overly-salacious material in our schools.
As for Bell’s sage advice about the “exploding” of creationism, is it
not true that evolution is a theory and not actually proven?
I’d call it pseudoscience when the theory of evolution is taught in
schools as fact. Only 100 years ago, the prevalent world view was that
the universe and its life forms were the result of intelligent design
from a supernatural creator.
Darwin, in 1859, planted the seed for a paradigm shift in the world
view of creationism with his book, “The Origin of Species.”
Darwin stated that if his theory was true, there should be a large
number of “in between types” found as fossils. He also said that the
absence of such intermediates was the “most obvious and serious
objection” to his theory.
It is well known that any true transitional species has never been
found in the fossil record.
The famous fossil expert Stephen J. Gould and the American Museum
people are hard to contradict when they say there are no transitional
fossils.
In his book, Darwin sought to explain the origin of all life forms
without the benefit of intelligent guidance or a supernatural act of
creationism.
What about the Divine Watchmaker argument?
Bishop William Paley, in 1818, said of the watch “that its gears,
springs and other mechanisms could never arise by the actions of random
chance alone.”
Modern microbiology has revealed that the most simple organisms, even
cells, are incredibly complex machines beyond our imagination, with
“hundreds of factories” within each cell.
Evolution’s concepts of upward organization and system assemblies
violate natural law, such as the entropy laws and the Second Law of
Thermodynamics, which says that order always proceeds downward (not
upward) to disorder or decay.
Those who are artists or designers know the actual amount of thought,
planning and execution that go into the making of something simple, such
as a painting.
Why does it take such a stretch of faith to consider that we are all
here as part of a plan executed by an entity larger than ourselves, as we
consider the incredible myriad of systems and life forms, that seem to
work together, from our galaxies in space to the smallest cell on earth?
Personally, I’d like to see more open-mindedness on the part of the
evolutionists.
* RICK RAINEY is a Costa Mesa resident.
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