John G. West
"Louisiana Confounds the Science Thought Police" in National Review Online (July 8, 2008).
[T]he idea that the current scientific consensus on any topic deserves
slavish deference betrays stunning ignorance of the history of science.
Time and again, scientists have shown themselves just as capable of
being blinded by fanaticism, prejudice, and error as anyone else.
Perhaps the most egregious example in American history was the eugenics
movement, the ill-considered crusade to breed better human beings.
During the first decades of the 20th century, the nation’s leading
biologists at Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and Stanford, as well by
members of America’s leading scientific organizations such as the
National Academy of Sciences, the American Museum of Natural History,
and the American Association for the Advancement of Science were all
devoted eugenicists. By the time the crusade had run its course, some
60,000 Americans had been sterilized against their will in an effort to
keep us from sinning against Darwin’s law of natural selection, which
Princeton biologist Edwin Conklin dubbed “the great law of evolution
and progress.” Today, science is typically portrayed as
self-correcting, but it took decades for most evolutionary biologists
to disassociate themselves from the junk science of eugenics. For
years, the most consistent critics of eugenics were traditionalist
Roman Catholics, who were denounced by scientists for letting their
religion stand in the way of scientific progress. The implication was
that religious people had no right to speak out on public issues
involving science.
