Robert McHenry: How Low Can Ben Stein Go? (To the Maligning of Charles Darwin)
[Robert McHenry is a former editor-in-chief of Encyclopaedia Britannica and author of How to Know.]
You laughed at his affectless droning high school economics teacher in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off ; you may have enjoyed his repartee with Jimmy Kimmel or his command of trivial knowledge on “Win Ben Stein’s Money”; you may even have run out and bought some eyedrops on his recommendation. But don’t ask him about evolution, Charles Darwin, science, or any related topic, for on those Ben Stein is an ignoramus. Since he is demonstrably intelligent, it must be concluded that he is a willful ignoramus.
He evidently stars in a soon-to-be-released movie called “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed,” which makes some sort of case for “Intelligent [sic] Design” and decries the teaching of evolutionary science in public schools. The producers of the movie have built a website to help promote their work, and the compliant Mr. Stein has written a little essay to help us place “Darwinism” in historical context. Let’s have a look.
He begins, as any high school essay must, with a broad theme:
It would be taken for granted by any serious historian that any ideology or worldview would partake of the culture in which it grew up and would also be largely influenced by the personality of the writer of the theory.
Seems harmless enough, though we’re not sure what “partake” means, exactly, or how much is “largely.”
By way of illustration he gives us – guess which theoretician plucked, just offhand, from the entire history of mankind? Sonofagun! Karl Marx. What were the odds?
“[M]ajor theories,” the avuncular Ben tells us, “…come from the era in which they arose.” Yes, yes, I see your hands; tautology. But give him a break. Here comes the minor premise.
Darwinism…is a perfect example of the age from which it came: the age of Imperialism.
And therefore…. Well, he doesn’t say. This is called an enthymeme, or a rhetorical syllogism. The idea is that the conclusion gains force from seeming to occur spontaneously to the reader. This is the sort of thing that gives rhetoric a bad name.
But why isn’t “Darwinism” offered as a perfect example of, say, the Victorian Age? Or of the Steam Age? Or the Age of the Clipper Ship? Is it possible that Stein is loading the argument just a tad?
A little bit later he tells us that “Imperialism had a short but hideous history – of repression and murder.” He seems to think that the British, and specifically the Victorians, invented imperialism. This idea would surprise the Incas and the Arabs and the Spanish and the Portuguese, among others around the world. He seems also to believe that the results of European imperialism were uniformly terrible. Some were, some were not. There is surely something to be said for the spread of democracy and the rule of law and of technology such as the railroad and the telegraph. With difficulties but with clear lines of descent, such generally decent modern states as India, Indonesia, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States all arose out of imperialist action.
Stein has pulled a second fast one on us here, though. He has equivocated. He has said, in effect, “Marx wrote a theory; things done in its name were very bad. Darwin wrote a theory; [fill in the blanks].” He conflates two distinct senses of the word “theory,” one of them appropriate when a chap sits in the Reading Room of the British Museum, gazing up at the cobwebs, and concocts a story to explain all of human behavior and history, the other appropriate when another chap spends years in painstaking observation of specific phenomena and finds a way not only to explain by a single principle all that he has observed but to predict phenomena not yet seen. This latter method you may recognize as what we call “science.”
But Stein has found his horse now, and off he rides. “Darwin offered the most compelling argument yet for Imperialism.” No demonstration or even quotation is given in support of that astonishing charge, but suffice it to say that The Origin of Species contains no such argument. Much about birds and such, but not a word on who should rule Africa.
And now we are at full gallop:
"Alas, Darwinism has had a far bloodier life span than Imperialism. Darwinism, perhaps mixed with Imperialism, gave us Social Darwinism, a form of racism so vicious that it countenanced the Holocaust against the Jews and mass murder of many other groups in the name of speeding along the evolutionary process."
By now the term “Darwinism” has lost all connection to the theory of biological speciation as propounded by the quiet man in his study in Kent, and Stein has simply lost his mind.
What does it mean, for example, to speak of “Darwinism…mixed with Imperialism”? Is this a chemical compound of some sort? Was “Darwinism” relatively innocent until some proportion of “Imperialism” got mixed in with it? Then what to make of “perhaps”? And who did the mixing? There is a clue to this last question in the mention of “Social Darwinism,” an inapt phrase that is most often associated with the sociology of Herbert Spencer. Inconveniently, however, Spencer had first laid out his basic views in Social Statics, published eight years before Darwin’s great work.
It sorts out this way: Charles Darwin, after long study and thought, proposed a mechanism by which biological species differentiate. The mechanism was “natural selection,” which supposes that some of the observed variations among members of a species render the possessor more able to survive and propagate. By that means the variant becomes dominant. This is one side.
On the other hand is a wildly diverse assortment of economists, sociologists, political writers, and plain cranks who share in some degree the belief that certain physical characteristics, mental capacities, behavioral habits and so on render certain human individuals or certain groups more able to succeed in the search for survival and security. They have various and equally diverse notions of what inferences follow from this. But someone notices that there is at least a linguistic similarity between these thoughts and Charles Darwin’s theory and thus invents the label “Social Darwinism” to pin on the lot.
On the third hand, yet other people, possibly or possibly not influenced by reading works by some of the second crowd but quite clearly capable of evil without any such assistance, perpetrate great horrors.
And for these horrors Ben Stein wishes to blame the theory of evolution by natural selection. He produces a shambles of an essay in the course of which he manages to malign the name of Darwin by association with both Communism and Naziism, a remarkable day’s work after which any civilized man would knock off early and call for cocktails. But not Ben. No, Ben toils on. By the time he’s through, every kook and monster who ever used the word “evolution” has become the satanic spawn of Charles Darwin. This sort of thing is doubtless effective in a sermonette at the Discovery Institute, but as a contribution to the public discourse it is simply shameful.
And what is all this perverseness in aid of? In support of a set of beliefs that parades as a scientific alternative to “Darwinism” even though it is supported by no evidence, while evolution by natural selection is controverted by none. More subversively, it is a set of beliefs held by people whose aim is to prevail not in the scientific journals or the universities but at the ballot box and in the public schools. Like Ben Stein’s arguments, they are not to be trusted.
Read entire article at Britannica Blog
You laughed at his affectless droning high school economics teacher in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off ; you may have enjoyed his repartee with Jimmy Kimmel or his command of trivial knowledge on “Win Ben Stein’s Money”; you may even have run out and bought some eyedrops on his recommendation. But don’t ask him about evolution, Charles Darwin, science, or any related topic, for on those Ben Stein is an ignoramus. Since he is demonstrably intelligent, it must be concluded that he is a willful ignoramus.
He evidently stars in a soon-to-be-released movie called “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed,” which makes some sort of case for “Intelligent [sic] Design” and decries the teaching of evolutionary science in public schools. The producers of the movie have built a website to help promote their work, and the compliant Mr. Stein has written a little essay to help us place “Darwinism” in historical context. Let’s have a look.
He begins, as any high school essay must, with a broad theme:
It would be taken for granted by any serious historian that any ideology or worldview would partake of the culture in which it grew up and would also be largely influenced by the personality of the writer of the theory.
Seems harmless enough, though we’re not sure what “partake” means, exactly, or how much is “largely.”
By way of illustration he gives us – guess which theoretician plucked, just offhand, from the entire history of mankind? Sonofagun! Karl Marx. What were the odds?
“[M]ajor theories,” the avuncular Ben tells us, “…come from the era in which they arose.” Yes, yes, I see your hands; tautology. But give him a break. Here comes the minor premise.
Darwinism…is a perfect example of the age from which it came: the age of Imperialism.
And therefore…. Well, he doesn’t say. This is called an enthymeme, or a rhetorical syllogism. The idea is that the conclusion gains force from seeming to occur spontaneously to the reader. This is the sort of thing that gives rhetoric a bad name.
But why isn’t “Darwinism” offered as a perfect example of, say, the Victorian Age? Or of the Steam Age? Or the Age of the Clipper Ship? Is it possible that Stein is loading the argument just a tad?
A little bit later he tells us that “Imperialism had a short but hideous history – of repression and murder.” He seems to think that the British, and specifically the Victorians, invented imperialism. This idea would surprise the Incas and the Arabs and the Spanish and the Portuguese, among others around the world. He seems also to believe that the results of European imperialism were uniformly terrible. Some were, some were not. There is surely something to be said for the spread of democracy and the rule of law and of technology such as the railroad and the telegraph. With difficulties but with clear lines of descent, such generally decent modern states as India, Indonesia, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States all arose out of imperialist action.
Stein has pulled a second fast one on us here, though. He has equivocated. He has said, in effect, “Marx wrote a theory; things done in its name were very bad. Darwin wrote a theory; [fill in the blanks].” He conflates two distinct senses of the word “theory,” one of them appropriate when a chap sits in the Reading Room of the British Museum, gazing up at the cobwebs, and concocts a story to explain all of human behavior and history, the other appropriate when another chap spends years in painstaking observation of specific phenomena and finds a way not only to explain by a single principle all that he has observed but to predict phenomena not yet seen. This latter method you may recognize as what we call “science.”
But Stein has found his horse now, and off he rides. “Darwin offered the most compelling argument yet for Imperialism.” No demonstration or even quotation is given in support of that astonishing charge, but suffice it to say that The Origin of Species contains no such argument. Much about birds and such, but not a word on who should rule Africa.
And now we are at full gallop:
"Alas, Darwinism has had a far bloodier life span than Imperialism. Darwinism, perhaps mixed with Imperialism, gave us Social Darwinism, a form of racism so vicious that it countenanced the Holocaust against the Jews and mass murder of many other groups in the name of speeding along the evolutionary process."
By now the term “Darwinism” has lost all connection to the theory of biological speciation as propounded by the quiet man in his study in Kent, and Stein has simply lost his mind.
What does it mean, for example, to speak of “Darwinism…mixed with Imperialism”? Is this a chemical compound of some sort? Was “Darwinism” relatively innocent until some proportion of “Imperialism” got mixed in with it? Then what to make of “perhaps”? And who did the mixing? There is a clue to this last question in the mention of “Social Darwinism,” an inapt phrase that is most often associated with the sociology of Herbert Spencer. Inconveniently, however, Spencer had first laid out his basic views in Social Statics, published eight years before Darwin’s great work.
It sorts out this way: Charles Darwin, after long study and thought, proposed a mechanism by which biological species differentiate. The mechanism was “natural selection,” which supposes that some of the observed variations among members of a species render the possessor more able to survive and propagate. By that means the variant becomes dominant. This is one side.
On the other hand is a wildly diverse assortment of economists, sociologists, political writers, and plain cranks who share in some degree the belief that certain physical characteristics, mental capacities, behavioral habits and so on render certain human individuals or certain groups more able to succeed in the search for survival and security. They have various and equally diverse notions of what inferences follow from this. But someone notices that there is at least a linguistic similarity between these thoughts and Charles Darwin’s theory and thus invents the label “Social Darwinism” to pin on the lot.
On the third hand, yet other people, possibly or possibly not influenced by reading works by some of the second crowd but quite clearly capable of evil without any such assistance, perpetrate great horrors.
And for these horrors Ben Stein wishes to blame the theory of evolution by natural selection. He produces a shambles of an essay in the course of which he manages to malign the name of Darwin by association with both Communism and Naziism, a remarkable day’s work after which any civilized man would knock off early and call for cocktails. But not Ben. No, Ben toils on. By the time he’s through, every kook and monster who ever used the word “evolution” has become the satanic spawn of Charles Darwin. This sort of thing is doubtless effective in a sermonette at the Discovery Institute, but as a contribution to the public discourse it is simply shameful.
And what is all this perverseness in aid of? In support of a set of beliefs that parades as a scientific alternative to “Darwinism” even though it is supported by no evidence, while evolution by natural selection is controverted by none. More subversively, it is a set of beliefs held by people whose aim is to prevail not in the scientific journals or the universities but at the ballot box and in the public schools. Like Ben Stein’s arguments, they are not to be trusted.