According
to a recent Gallup poll, only 12 percent of Americans believe that life on
earth has evolved through a natural process, without the interference of a
deity. Thirty one percent believe that evolution has been "guided by
God." If our worldview were put to a vote, notions of "intelligent
design" would defeat the science of biology by nearly three to one. This
is troubling, as nature offers no compelling evidence for an intelligent
designer and countless examples of unintelligent design. But the current
controversy over "intelligent design" should not blind us to the true
scope of our religious bewilderment at the dawn of the twenty first century.
The
same Gallup poll revealed that 53 percent of Americans are actually
creationists. This means that despite a full century of scientific insights
attesting to the antiquity of life and the greater antiquity of the earth, more
than half of our neighbors believe that the entire cosmos was created six
thousand years ago. This is, incidentally, about a thousand years after
the Sumerians invented glue. Those with the power to elect our presidents and congressmen
- and many who themselves get elected—believe that dinosaurs lived two by two
upon Noah's ark, that light from distant galaxies was created en route to the
earth, and that the first members of our species were fashioned out of dirt and
divine breath, in a garden with a talking snake, by the hand of an invisible
God.
Among
developed nations, America stands alone in these convictions. Our country now
appears, as at no other time in her history, like a lumbering, bellicose,
dimwitted giant. Anyone who cares about the fate of civilization would do well
to recognize that the combination of great power and great stupidity is simply
terrifying, even to one's friends.
Sam Harris, in "Letter to a Christian Nation"
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