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foreword: Henry F. Schaefer III publisher: InterVarsity Press publication date: September 1998 number of pages: 475 list price: $24.99 |
Essayists: Introduction, Dembski; Part 1, "Unseating Naturalism," Walter Bradley, Jonathan Wells; Part 2, "Design Theory," Nancy Pearcey, Dembski, Steve Meyer, Paul Nelson; Part 3, "Biological Design," Mike Behe, Siegfried Scherer, Sigrid Hartwig-Scherer, Jeff Schloss; Part 4, "Philosophy and Design," J.P. Moreland, Del Ratzsch, John Mark Reynolds, Bill Craig; Part 5, "Design in the Universe," Hugh Ross, Robert Kaita, David Berlinski, Robert Newman; Concluding essays, Phil Johnson and Bruce Chapman.
In November 1996, Christian Leadership Ministries sponsored Mere Creation, a conference on origins which gathered 180 scientists and scholars from the growing intelligent design, or ID, community. Now the nineteen papers from this conference, with revisions and two additional essays, are available in this new volume. Abstracts of the essays and information on the authors are available at www.origins.org/mc/menus/conf.html.
The publication of Mere Creation signals a broadening, multi-disciplinary movement of scholars who challenge naturalistic evolution on scientific and philosophical grounds. Scientifically, specialists in the relevant fields show that the evidence points to intelligence which fine-tuned the universe and designed complex organisms. Philosophically, the authors insist that cosmological and biological origins must be separated from the naturalism which excludes design or a designer by definition.
Each essay contains an extensive bibliography and, unlike many edited volumes, Mere Creation has a thorough index. Most of the essays are accessible to college-level readers, but some are highly technical. In summary, this book makes a substantial contribution to the origins debate by gathering 19 leading scholars from relevant fields to propose how intelligent design can be made into a full-fledged scientific research program.
For over a century, the scientific establishment has ignored
challenges to the theory of evolution. But in the last decade such
complacency about its scientific and philosophical foundations has
been shaken. As cracks in the Darwinian edifice have begun to appear,
many are asking whether a defensible alternative exists.
In response to this growing crisis, a movement has emerged among
scholars exploring the possibility of intelligent design as an
explanatory theory in scientific descriptions of the universe. As
Michael Behe has proposed in his landmark Darwin's Black Box,
at the cellular level there appears to be a high level of irreducible
complexity that suggests design.
In this book Behe is joined by eighteen other expert academics
trained in mathematics, mechanical engineering, philosophy, physical
anthropology, physics, astrophysics, biology, ecology and
evolutionary biology to investigate the prospects for this emerging
school of thought. Challenging the reigning ideology of materialistic
naturalism on both scientific and philosophical grounds, these
scholars press the case for a radical rethinking of established
evolutionary assumptions.
"This book shows the robustness of the emerging design paradigm,
and demonstrates that it is a workable research program across a
broad range of disciplines. A great introduction to this exciting new
movement."
*****Chuck Colson, Prison Fellowship Ministries
"This collection not only brings one up to date on a vital issue, but
it is so stimulating that it should lead to more ground-breaking
investigations."
*****Diogenes Allen, Stuart Professor of Philosophy, Princeton
Theological Seminary
"Mere Creation goes way beyond the limitations of classical 'natural
theology' ... and it effectively cuts off at the knees the misguided
notion of 'creative evolution'. ... This book, which requires
rigorous thinking on every page, is essential reading for the
contemporary Christian discussion with science. Skip this volume at
your own risk."
*****Fr. Patrick Reardon, Touchstone Magazine
"This book resonates with the excitement of reopening urgent
questions that have long been suppressed by the dead hand of
philosophical dogmas disguised as scientific truth. It should be
welcomed as an invitation to a more honest exploration of the world
of which we are part."
*****Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, editor-in-chief, First
Things
"This extremely important and insightful book should be studied by
every thoughtful person who is interested in an honest inquiry into
the origin and existence of life."
*****Dean L. Overman, author of A Case Against Accident and
Self-Organization