Walter Bradley is a professor (retired) of Mechanical
Engineering at Texas A&M (something of a creationist hub, apparently) and Baylor
Universities, Fellow of the Discovery Institute, and a pretty central figure in
the creationist movement, for instance in virtue of his 1984 book The Mystery of Life’s Origin: Reassessing Current Theories (with Charles Thaxton and Roger L. Olson), which is generally recognized as one of the books that
started the Intelligent Design movement. In the book the authors attack and reject science as well as all
natural theories for the origin of life on earth, predictably ending up
claiming that the Christian God did it. It didn’t make a huge splash in
scientific communities, but as always with these people their battles aren’t
intended to be fought among experts but in public opinion (not convinced?
Here’s another “telling example”).
An example of the scientific bankruptcy of the book is here.
It is hardly Bradley’s only outreach effort on behalf of
science denial. He has witnessed for the anti-science side before the Texas Board of Education during certain board members’ efforts to introduce religion and science denialin Texas public schools,
and is on the selection committee for the Trotter Prize, which rewards work on
intelligent design creationism. And heck, Bradley was even one of the original
strategists behind the Wedge strategy for reforming American culture in line with evangelical principles. Dishonesty
is a sin only for nonbelievers, remember.
Bradley is of course also a signatory to the Discovery
Institute petition A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism.
Diagnosis: Bradley is actually known for being comparatively
upfront and fair in his presentations on intelligent design. His background
story suggests that this description doesn’t apply to his long term strategies.
You might want to look into this guy.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.samueliinstitute.org/about-us/wayne-b-jonas-md