Mr. Sluagh wrote:This conspiracy is so far within reason that to call it implausible would be naive. The Wedge Document illustrates that the Discovery Institute's main goal is to create cultural change; science is a means, not an end. Marketing is the field concerned with influencing people's emotions on a large scale--that is to say, creating cultural change. I see no evidence that the people of the Discovery Institute are either stupid enough or honest enough not to use the right tool for the job.
Wikipedia wrote:In 2005, a federal court ruled that the Discovery Institute pursues "demonstrably religious, cultural, and legal missions", and the institute's manifesto, the Wedge strategy, describes a religious goal: to "reverse the stifling dominance of the materialist worldview, and to replace it with a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions".
The Institute's founders, Bruce Chapman and George Gilder, are Harvard educated. I don't think these two lack foresight and intelligence. I think we can safely call it a conspiracy. Here is the
origin of the term and the story of its adoption by the Discovery Institute.
I think we've all been missing the bigger picture of this rift in society. The DI's tactic is intelligent design. The underlying goals are:
"To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural, and political legacies"
"To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are created by God"
I started a thread about a book I'm reading called
Letters To Vanessa, by Jeremy W. Hayward, PhD, and he discusses this problem in much less acerbic language. I'll post some of the points he makes on that thread.
The bottom line though is that there are many people who aren't comfortable with the idea that we're all just abstract matter and energy and physics, and they view evolutionary science (and a lot of other science) as a proponent of that worldview.