The Wedge: A Progress Report
Phillip E. Johnson
Berkeley, California, April 16, 2001
Approximately ten years ago, I formulated the Wedge strategy with two
related goals. The first was to legitimate the topic of intelligent
design, and hence the critique of Darwinism and its basis in naturalistic
philosophy, within the mainstream intellectual community. The second was
to make the critique of naturalism the central focus of discussion in the
religious world, replacing the deadlocked debate over the Genesis
chronology which had enabled the Darwinists to employ the "Inherit the Wind
stereotype" so effectively. The goals are intertwined because the approach
which is capable of challenging the dominant philosophy in the secular
world will also tend to attract the most interest in the religious
world. Likewise, the secular world finds it fairly easy to ignore a view
which it can categorize as marginal in the religious world, but very
difficult to ignore a view which has widespread and growing public support.
I believe that getting the right issues on the table for unprejudiced
discussion is the all-important step. Once that is accomplished, it will
be impossible to conceal for long that Darwinism is based on naturalistic
philosophy rather than on scientific testing, and that unprejudiced
evaluation of the scientific evidence points to the existence of
intelligent causes in biology.
I optimistically predicted at the beginning that both goals would be
achieved by the start of the new millennium. That could be dated either at
January 1, 2000 or, to give a bit of wriggle room, a year later. I was not
ready to declare success on either of those dates, although I knew we were
very close. The recent front page stories in the Sunday Los Angeles Times
(March 25) and the Sunday New York Times (April 8), in the context of other
developments, meet the criteria for success I have specified. One key
development has been the publication of so many excellent articles and
books written or edited by Wedge participants. The books by Michael Behe,
William Dembski, and Jonathan Wells are already well known, and others just
as important are on the way. Another key development has been the
increasingly cordial and mutually respectful relations among the differing
factions of those who advocate creation, or who merely oppose the dominant
naturalistic system of thought control. Indeed, my own personal
friendships cut right across the traditional divisions. Everyone who wants
to encourage open-minded critical thinking about fundamental issues is our
ally; only those who want to keep minds closed or confused are adversaries.
This is a progress report, not a victory statement. One of my agnostic
friends described the front page of the New York Times (especially Sunday)
as "the most valuable intellectual property in the world." We have
established a beachhead in that territory, but there are many difficult
steps ahead. Most journalists and professors are still confused by an
education that has taught them that science and naturalism are virtually
the same thing. Theistic methodological naturalists still dominate the
Christian academic world and the "religion/science" dialogue. Many people
who are potentially on our side don't yet understand the importance of the
rules of reasoning. They ask questions like "Couldn't God have used
evolution?" or allow themselves to be pacified by spin doctors who reassure
them that epistemic naturalism is merely a methodology confined to science.
There is plenty of difficult (and fascinating) work ahead, but the Wedge
is lodged securely in the crack. I am confident that there will be a
continually growing public acceptance of the principle that intelligent
causation is a legitimate subject for scientific investigation. Once the
principle is accepted that we should distinguish between the philosophical
support for Darwinism and the claimed empirical support, the train is
already moving along the logical track and it will not stop until it
reaches its destination. The inadequacy of the Darwinian mechanism to
account for complex specified information and irreducible complexity is
only the first subject to have emerged into the mainstream, and others will
follow. The importance of this intellectual movement is by no means
limited to science. Scientific naturalism has done its greatest damage in
the arts and humanities.
The initial goals of the Wedge strategy have been accomplished. As Winston
Churchill said after a crucial victory, it's not the beginning of the end,
but it is the end of the beginning.
Phillip E. Johnson
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