The Panda's Black Box: Opening up the Intelligent Design Controversy
Average Rating: out of 1 Reviews
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Manufacturer: The Johns Hopkins University Press
EAN (European Article Number): 9780801885990
Number of Items: 1
Binding: Hardcover
Author: Scott Gilbert::Edward J. Larson::Jane Maienschein::Michael Ruse::Robert M. Young
Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press
Dewey Decimal Number: 231.7652
Publication Date: 2007-05-04
Reading Level: 184
Description:
The debate over Intelligent Design seemingly represents an extension of the fundamental conflict between creationists and evolutionists. ID proponents, drawing on texts such as Darwin's Black Box and Of Pandas and People, urge schools to "teach the controversy" in biology class alongside evolution. The scientific mainstream has reacted with fury, branding Intelligent Design as pseudoscience and its advocates as religious fanatics.
But stridency misses the point, argues Nathaniel Comfort. In The Panda's Black Box, Comfort joins five other leading public intellectuals -- including Daniel Kevles and Pulitzer Prize winner Edward Larson -- to explain the roots of the controversy and explore the intellectual, social, and cultural factors that continue to shape it.
One of the few books on the ID issue that moves beyond mere name-calling and finger-pointing, The Panda's Black Box challenges assumptions on each side of the debate and engages both the appeal and dangers of Intelligent Design. This lively collection will appeal to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of what's really at stake in the debate over evolution.
Customer Reviews
Review Summary: Uneven and frankly a little whiny.
Date: 2007-08-20
Details: My fault, maybe, for expecting something different. I am not used to reading books from biolgists and other scientists that seem so willing to give quarter to religious thinking. This is not a creationist tome by any stretch, but to pretend that our best scientific theories can in any way be reconciled with revealed religion is to perpetuate dangerously flawed and delusional thinking. Some of the information in "Panda's Box" is provocative and worthy of wider discussion, but my overall impression was disappointment that it was not made of sturdier stuff. This is not a time for science to compromise with superstitions...there's too much at stake.