An Unwanted Premiere!
In June 2005 I was in Washington D.C. for a most unusual
premiere. A film based on the 2004 book called The Privileged Planet{1}
was being introduced to an invitation only group of about 200 at the
Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History.
 The Smithsonian was approached several months earlier about
allowing their Baird Auditorium to be used for this special showing. They asked
to see the film. Several people on the museum payroll viewed the film and said
great, let’s show it. The inquiring organization was The Discovery Institute,
the leading organization promoting Intelligent Design in the U.S. and abroad. Discovery was given instructions on how to use the Smithsonian logo on the
invitation, was asked for a donation of $16,000, and told the premiere was a
go.
However, when the invitations went out in late May, the
Smithsonian was instantly barraged by calls and emails from disgruntled
Darwinians demanding that the premiere be canceled. How dare the prestigious
Smithsonian give aid and support to the Intelligent Design Movement by allowing
this film on its premises? Never mind that the film has nothing to do with
biological evolution and natural selection. People (even some who likely hadn't
seen the film or read the book) were on a rampage.
It didn’t take long for the Smithsonian to withdraw its
co-sponsorship of the event although they said they would honor their
commitment to allow the film to be shown. In a letter to Discovery they said, “Upon
further review, the Museum has determined that the content of the film is not
consistent with the mission of the Smithsonian Institution’s scientific
research.”{2} Initially, the Smithsonian said Discovery would not be required
to make the “donation,” but eventually kept $5,000 for expenses incurred.
As a Fellow of the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science
and Culture I was issued an invitation, and as the storm of controversy raged
in The Washington Post and New York Times, I decided to
get myself to Washington for this controversial and special event.
The premiere itself was a bit of an anticlimax after all the
fuss. Several local scientists, national TV and newspaper media, a Congressman
from Texas, and other local dignitaries were treated to a special showing and
question and answer period with the authors, Gonzalez and Richards. The
reception was held two floors up in the Hall of Geology, Gems, and Minerals.
Most in attendance were quite impressed . . . and mystified!
They were impressed with the quality and premise of the film and mystified how
a purely scientific film could be so misrepresented. In what follows, we’ll
explore the thesis of the book and film and see what all the fuss is about. For
now, just remember science is pursued by people, and everyone has a
worldview that can alter dramatically how science is perceived and what counts
as science.
Is the Moon Just for Signs and Seasons?
When I was in the seventh grade, I remember standing in my
best friend’s backyard with a box over my head in broad daylight. On one end of
the box was a small pinhole. On the inside of the box, against the opposite
side of the box from the pinhole, was a small piece of aluminum foil. The
pinhole, when facing the sun, made a small circle, maybe one-half inch in diameter,
on the aluminum foil wall. As the partial solar eclipse progressed, I could
watch the progress of the moon shadowing the sun inside the box. I was
fascinated that I could safely watch the partial solar eclipse with such a
simple device.
You could watch partial solar eclipses on every planet in
our solar system with a moon. But earth is the only planet where a full or total
solar eclipse can be seen. It turns out that our moon is 1/400th the
size of the sun. But the sun is 400 times farther away from earth than the
moon. So when the moon comes between the sun and the earth a small portion of
earth experiences a total solar eclipse, meaning the sun is fully blocked out
by the moon.
When a total solar eclipse occurs, the sun is fully blocked
out by the moon darkening the earth and providing a unique glimpse of the sun’s
atmosphere or corona. Normally the sun’s corona is overwhelmed by the sun’s
brightness, but in an eclipse the moon so completely shuts out the sun that the
corona shines brightly for a few minutes. It is then that scientists can
measure the light spectrum of the corona which reveals what is burning inside
the sun. Otherwise we would not be able to measure the elemental makeup of the
sun. So the fact that earth experiences a total eclipse of the sun makes our
planet unique in the solar system with respect to what we can learn about what
goes on in the sun’s interior.
If that was all that was unique about our moon, we could write
it off as a curious coincidence. But the size, shape, and orbit of our moon do
more for human life than just give us a glimpse of the sun’s atmosphere every
so often. Without the moon, life as we know it on earth would be impossible.
It turns out that our moon is just the right size and
distance from the earth that, in conjunction with the gravity of the sun, it
causes substantial diurnal [daily] tides which mix the waters of the oceans,
evening out their temperature and stirring their nutrients. With no moon, or a
few smaller moons, the tides would lessen greatly in intensity, therefore
reducing this mixing effect. Life would be limited to the upper few feet of the
oceans, and complex life would be hard pressed to survive.
Is Earth’s Atmosphere Just for Breathing?
The book and film, The Privileged Planet, reveal many
other earth systems as well that combine to make earth unique for life and
scientific discovery.
Take a deep breath. Now exhale! No, this is not the latest Probe Ministries exercise routine. If you did what I just recommended on any other planet in the
solar system, you’d be dead right now.
Our atmosphere of mostly nitrogen, oxygen, and just the
right amount of water and carbon dioxide provides so much more than breathable
air. We so easily take it for granted every time we breathe. Earth’s closest
planetary cousins, Venus and Mars, have atmospheres dominated by carbon
dioxide. Venus’s atmosphere is so thick you can’t see through it, and it creates
surface temperatures as high as 900 degrees Fahrenheit. Mars’ thin carbon
dioxide atmosphere contributes to such cold temperatures that carbon dioxide
freezes at the poles.
Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay Richards, in their book The
Privileged Planet, tell you more than you thought possible about the unique
parameters of our atmosphere in allowing life and scientific discovery. Nitrogen,
for example, is necessary for life as a critical component of the building
blocks of DNA and proteins. Our atmosphere of seventy percent nitrogen also
allows for a transparent atmosphere that allows light as we face the sun and
dark nights that allow us to see the stars.
Oxygen, of course, is necessary for animal life, and our
atmosphere contains just enough to support life and not so much as to poison
life. Oxygen is also a transparent gas, keeping our atmosphere transparent for
observation of our dark night skies.
Water as well is necessary for life, but water in our
atmosphere, along with nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide, creates an
atmosphere that is breathable but also is the best atmosphere to transmit light
in the visible spectrum. Water also creates clouds over about two thirds of the
earth at any one time. Clouds help control our temperature by reflecting some
of the sun’s energy back out into space.
Without water in our atmosphere, we never would see a
rainbow. Rainbows prompted scientists of the seventeenth century to search for
an explanation of the rainbow’s beauty and mystery. This search eventually
resulted in understanding the solar spectrum and the effect of prisms in
bending light of different wavelengths.
Carbon dioxide is life’s major source of carbon, that
versatile and stable element absolutely necessary for life of any kind. If
earth were just five percent closer to the sun, however, we would end up much
like Venus: nothing but carbon dioxide resulting in a runaway greenhouse effect
and totally uninhabitable planet.
Once again, earth is shown to be just right—just right for
life and just right for scientific observers. What an amazing coincidence!
More and more, scientists are coming to realize that the
earth is not just some insignificant pale blue dot orbiting around an
insignificant star. Our planet seems designed not just for life, but for
scientific discovery as well.
So the Earth Has Oceans, Crust, Mantle, and Core. So What?
The starship Enterprise from Star Trek used a nifty
force field deployed around the ship to protect it from oncoming photon
torpedoes. During an attack, those on the bridge were always concerned with how
the “shield” was holding. There was great consternation if energy levels dipped
low enough to make the shield ineffective.
Our planet earth has a similar protective shield. Earth
possesses a magnetic field around it that shields us from the harmful solar
wind. Our atmosphere would be slowly stripped away without our magnetic field.
This magnetic shield is generated because the earth is just the right size to
maintain a hot liquid iron core. The heat from this core convects through the
mantle, creating plate tectonics and electricity. The electricity generates our
magnetic field. But you have to have the right size planet with a molten
metallic core and a crust that weakens somewhat due to chemical reactions with
water so it will bend and not break. All this benefits life.
The size of earth is important for other reasons. A smaller
planet would lose its atmosphere much too readily, and its interior would cool
too quickly, eliminating the protective magnetic field. A more massive earth
would retain too much of harmful gases such as methane. On a more massive
planet, the thicker atmosphere would make breathing much more difficult.
Earth’s voluminous quantities of water are also extremely
necessary for life and even for technological life. Water helps regulate our
atmosphere and, of course, provides the perfect soluble medium for life. Water
is perhaps the most unique molecule in the universe with its unique solvent
properties coupled with the fact that ice floats instead of sinks like all
other solid/liquid pairs. This unique feature means that when temperatures are
cold enough for water to freeze, only the top layer freezes and life can go on
below the ice. If ice sank, then all liquid water would eventually freeze and
life would be extinguished in some environments every winter.
In order for earth to maintain its watery oceans it needs to
be the right distance from the sun. As noted earlier, if the earth were just
five percent closer to the sun we would end up like Venus with thick hot clouds
of carbon dioxide for an atmosphere. If we were just twenty percent farther
away we would end up like Mars, a frozen wasteland. The heat coming from our
just right liquid core also helps maintain our watery home.
All in all earth is a remarkable place for its size,
distance from the sun, elemental make-up, size and closeness of the moon,
presence of water, stable liquid iron core that generates a magnetic field, and
so many other features. The suspicion of design and purpose quickly arises.
Has the Earth Been Designed for Multiple Purposes?
In many circles of academia, the idea that our earth is both
designed for life and for scientific discovery is both surprising and resented.
For years the notion that we are just an insignificant planet circling an
ordinary star, otherwise known as the Copernican Principle, has dominated the
physical sciences.
But discovery after discovery has altered that view, and has
brought many kicking and screaming to a design perspective. Simon Conway
Morris, a paleontologist from England, is quoted on the dust jacket of The
Privileged Planet as saying:
In a book of magnificent sweep and
daring, Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay Richards drive home the argument that the
old cliché of no place like home is eerily true of Earth. Not only that, but if
the scientific method were to emerge anywhere, Earth is about as suitable as
you can get. Gonzalez and Richards have flung down the gauntlet. Let the debate
begin; it is a question that involves us all.
The book and film of the same name have been wildly
successful and controversial. At the Washington premiere I discussed earlier,
scientists and legislators agreed that the thesis the authors propose is
deserving of wide discussion.
A father brought his eight-year old son to a showing of the
film we sponsored at Probe Ministries. I privately thought he would be too
young. They had to leave before the film was done, but they purchased the DVD
before they left and finished viewing it at home. As soon as Mom walked in the
door, the eight-year old promptly began to explain the intricacies of solar
eclipses, the size of the moon relative to the sun, and how these factors were
not only a boon for life but also for scientific discovery.
The film does an excellent job of taking sometimes complex
scientific concepts and communicating them in a way that most anybody can
appreciate. This film deserves as wide a distribution as possible.
But because much of the scientific community remains locked
in a purely naturalistic worldview, the perspective of purpose and design will
continue to be resisted. However, parents and educators can readily use this
excellent resource to simply investigate the facts and help to eventually gain
Intelligent Design a much deserved place at the roundtable of scientific
inquiry.
One other comment from the dust jacket says it well:
Not only have Guillermo Gonzalez
and Jay Richards written a book with a remarkable thesis, they have constructed
their argument on an abundance of evidence and with a cautiousness of statement
that make their volume even more remarkable. In my opinion, The Privileged
Planet deserves very special attention.
Notes
- Guillermo Gonzalez and Jay Richards, The Privileged Planet (Washington D.C.: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 2004).
- June 1 entry on Discovery Institute's weblog at www.evolutionnews.org/2005/06/.
© 2006 Probe Ministries
About the Author Raymond G. Bohlin is president of Probe Ministries. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois (B.S., zoology), North Texas State University (M.S., population genetics), and the University of Texas at Dallas (M.S., Ph.D., molecular biology). He is the co-author of the book The Natural Limits to Biological Change, served as general editor of Creation, Evolution and Modern Science, co-author of Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning (The BioBasics Series), and has published numerous journal articles. Dr. Bohlin was named a 1997-98 and 2000 Research Fellow of the Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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