Smithsonian in Uproar Over
Intelligent-Design
Article
Posted January 29, 2005 on WorldNetDaily.com
The career of a prominent researcher at the
Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington is in jeopardy
after he published a peer-reviewed article by a leading proponent of intelligent
design, an alternative to evolutionary theory dismissed by the science and
education establishment as a tool of religious conservatives.
Richard Sternberg says that although he
continues to work in the museum’s Department of Zoology, he has been kicked out
of his office and shunned by colleagues, prompting him to file a complaint with
the U.S. Office of Special Counsel.
Sternberg charges he was subjected to discrimination
on the basis of perceived religious beliefs. “I’m spending my time trying
to figure out how to salvage a scientific career,” Sternberg told David Klinghoffer,
a columnist for the Jewish Forward, who reported the story in the Wall Street
Journal.
Sternberg is managing editor of a nominally
independent journal published at the museum, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. His trouble
started when he included in the August issue a review-essay by Stephen Meyer,
who holds a Cambridge University Doctorate in the Philosophy of Biology.
Hans Sues, the museum’s number two senior
scientist, denounced Meyer’s article in a widely forwarded e-mail as “unscientific
garbage.”
According to Sternberg’s complaint, which is
being investigated, one museum specialist chided him by saying: “I think you
are a religiously motivated person and you have dragged down the Proceedings because of your religiously
motivated agenda.”
Sternberg strongly denies that.
While acknowledging he is a Catholic who
attends Mass, he says, “I would call myself a believer with a lot of questions,
about everything. I’m in the postmodern predicament.”
The complaint says
the chairman of the Zoology Department, Jonathan Coddington, called Sternberg’s
supervisor to look into the matter.
“First, he asked whether Sternberg was a
religious fundamentalist. She told him no. Coddington then asked if Sternberg
was affiliated with or belonged to any religious organization....He then asked
where Sternberg stood politically;…he asked, ‘Is he a right-winger? What is his
political affiliation?’”
The supervisor recounted the conversation to
Sternberg, who also quotes her observing: “There are Christians here, but they
keep their heads down.”
The complaint, according to the Journal
column, says Coddington took away Sternberg’s office, which prevents access to
the specimen collections he needs. Sternberg also was assigned to the close
oversight of a curator with whom he had professional disagreements unrelated to
evolution.
“I’m going to be straightforward with you,”
said Coddington, according to the complaint. “Yes, you are being singled out.”
Meyer’s article, The Origin of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic
Categories, cites mainstream biologists and paleontologists from schools
such as the University of Chicago, Yale, Cambridge and Oxford who are critical
of certain aspects of Darwinism.
Meyer – a fellow at Seattle’s Discovery Institute,
a leading advocate of intelligent design – contends supporters of Darwin’s
theory cannot explain how so many different animal types sprang into existence
during the relatively short period of Earth history known as the Cambrian
explosion.
He argues the Darwinian mechanism would
require more time for the necessary “genetic information” to be generated, and
intelligent design offers a better explanation.
The Journal notes Meyer’s piece is the first
peer-reviewed article to appear in a technical biology journal laying out the
evidential case for intelligent design.
The theory holds that the complex features
of living organisms, such as an eye, are better explained by an unspecified
designing intelligence than by random mutation and natural selection.
Klinghoffer notes the Biological Society of
Washington released a statement regretting its association with Meyer’s article
but did not address its arguments.
Klinghoffer points out the circularity of
the arguments of critics who insisted intelligent design was unscientific
because if had not been put forward in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.
“Now that it has,”
he wrote, “they argue that it shouldn’t have been because it’s unscientific.”