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paleonet BushandEnlightenment



Since the subject is in the air....here is an expert view on what's
happening as it relates to the Enlightenment world view that supports
science.

November 4, 2004
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR 
The Day the Enlightenment Went Out
By GARRY WILLS

vanston, Ill.
This election confirms the brilliance of Karl Rove as a political
strategist. 
He calculated that the religious conservatives, if they could be turned
out, 
would be the deciding factor. The success of the plan was registered
not only 
in the presidential results but also in all 11 of the state votes to
ban 
same-sex marriage. Mr. Rove understands what surveys have shown, that
many more 
Americans believe in the Virgin Birth than in Darwin's theory of
evolution.
This might be called Bryan's revenge for the Scopes trial of 1925, in
which 
William Jennings Bryan's fundamentalist assault on the concept of
evolution was 
discredited. Disillusionment with that decision led many evangelicals
to 
withdraw from direct engagement in politics. But they came roaring back
into the 
arena out of anger at other court decisions - on prayer in school,
abortion, 
protection of the flag and, now, gay marriage. Mr. Rove felt that the
appeal to 
this large bloc was worth getting President Bush to endorse a
constitutional 
amendment banning gay marriage (though he had opposed it earlier).
The results bring to mind a visit the Dalai Lama made to Chicago not
long 
ago. I was one of the people deputized to ask him questions on the
stage at the 
Field Museum. He met with the interrogators beforehand and asked us to
give him 
challenging questions, since he is too often greeted with deference or

flattery.
The only one I could think of was: "If you could return to your
country, what 
would you do to change it?" He said that he would disestablish his
religion, 
since "America is the proper model." I later asked him if a pluralist
society 
were possible without the Enlightenment. "Ah," he said. "That's the
problem." 
He seemed to envy America its Enlightenment heritage.
Which raises the question: Can a people that believes more fervently in
the 
Virgin Birth than in evolution still be called an Enlightened nation?
America, the first real democracy in history, was a product of
Enlightenment 
values - critical intelligence, tolerance, respect for evidence, a
regard for 
the secular sciences. Though the founders differed on many things, they
shared 
these values of what was then modernity. They addressed "a candid
world," as 
they wrote in the Declaration of Independence, out of "a decent respect
for 
the opinions of mankind." Respect for evidence seems not to pertain any
more, 
when a poll taken just before the elections showed that 75 percent of
Mr. Bush's 
supporters believe Iraq either worked closely with Al Qaeda or was
directly 
involved in the attacks of 9/11.
The secular states of modern Europe do not understand the
fundamentalism of 
the American electorate. It is not what they had experienced from this
country 
in the past. In fact, we now resemble those nations less than we do our

putative enemies.
Where else do we find fundamentalist zeal, a rage at secularity,
religious 
intolerance, fear of and hatred for modernity? Not in France or Britain
or 
Germany or Italy or Spain. We find it in the Muslim world, in Al Qaeda,
in Saddam 
Hussein's Sunni loyalists. Americans wonder that the rest of the world
thinks 
us so dangerous, so single-minded, so impervious to international
appeals. They 
fear jihad, no matter whose zeal is being expressed.
It is often observed that enemies come to resemble each other. We
torture the 
torturers, we call our God better than theirs - as one American general
put 
it, in words that the president has not repudiated.
President Bush promised in 2000 that he would lead a humble country, be
a 
uniter not a divider, that he would make conservatism compassionate. He
did not 
need to make such false promises this time. He was re-elected precisely
by 
being a divider, pitting the reddest aspects of the red states against
the blue 
nearly half of the nation. In this, he is very far from Ronald Reagan,
who was 
amiably and ecumenically pious. He could address more secular
audiences, here 
and abroad, with real respect.
In his victory speech yesterday, President Bush indicated that he would

"reach out to the whole nation," including those who voted for John
Kerry. But even 
if he wanted to be more conciliatory now, the constituency to which he
owes 
his victory is not a yielding one. He must give them what they want on
things 
like judicial appointments. His helpers are also his keepers.
The moral zealots will, I predict, give some cause for dismay even to 
nonfundamentalist Republicans. Jihads are scary things. It is not too
early to start 
yearning back toward the Enlightenment.
Garry Wills, an adjunct professor of history at Northwestern
University, is 
the author of "St. Augustine's Conversion."


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Paul Loubere
Professor
Geology and Environmental Geosciences
NIU