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Intelligent Design Advocate Testifies Theory as Science in Court Battle

A biochemistry professor who is one of the leading advocates of intelligent design testified in a Pennsylvania federal court that the theory does not advance any religious belief, qualifies as science, and has a place in biology classes.

by Christian Today
Posted: Friday, October 21, 2005, 18:20 (BST)
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A biochemistry professor who is one of the leading advocates of intelligent design testified in a Pennsylvania federal court that the theory does not advance any religious belief, qualifies as science, and has a place in biology classes.

On his third and final day of testimony on Wednesday, Michael J. Behe, an associate professor at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, defended intelligent design theory. Behe was the lead witness for the Dover Area School District, whose board members last year required teachers in ninth grade biology classes to name the theory as an alternative to biology. Local parents sued the school board, contending that the concept is religious.

Some feel that the case of Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, now in its fourth week of testimony, will be one of the most significant court proceedings involving creation and evolution in the public schools.

Although the Supreme Court has banned the teaching of creationism in schools, proponents of intelligent design say that the theory is different, and takes no stand on biblical accounts of creation, adding that it cannot identify who or what the designer is, although some proponents believe that the designer is God.

In his testimony earlier this week, Behe said that intelligent design is a scientific theory that argues that some aspects of nature are so complex that the evidence points to an intelligent agent that designed them. He said he based his statement on physical, empirical, observable evidence from nature, as well as logical inferences.

In one exchange during cross-examination on Wednesday with the parents’ attorney Eric Rothschild, Behe explained that certain complex systems such as the immune system and blood clotting suggested intelligent design and questioned whether such systems could have evolved through natural selection and random mutation alone.

Rothschild then presented Behe with more than a half-dozen text books written about the evolution of the immune system, according to AP.

“A lot of writing, huh?” Rotschild said.

However Behe explained that “evolution” has various meanings.

"I am quite skeptical that they present detailed, rigorous models of the evolution of the immune system through random mutation and natural selection," he said.

Behe also defended his best-selling book, “Darwin’s Black Box,” which is an argument for intelligent design which says that the theory qualifies as science because it can be tested.



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