World Scientific publishing creationist “symposium” proceedings
[This post got over 50 hits from Singapore, home of WSPC, on its first working day up]
Librarians, do not buy this book. University-based readers, please pass on these concerns to your librarian. Why World Scientific expects anyone to pay $139 for the volume is beyond me, unless they regard university libraries as a captive audience for whatever misrepresents itself as significant new material. Readers with any working relationship with World Scientific, if you agree with me please share your concerns with your contacts there.
The misrepresentation starts with the volume’s self-description: Proceedings of the Symposium Cornell University, USA, 31 May – 3 June 2011
So was this event organized or sponsored by CornellUniversity? No. They just hired a hall. Was it a symposium? Only if you can dignify with that name a gathering of the faithful, called together by invitation and without prior publicity.
It gets worse.
The “new perspectives” turn out to be nothing more than a regurgitation of long-refuted arguments from well-known creationists. (All chapters, by the way, are open access here, so any reader with the patience can go to the book, and refute what I am saying here chapter and verse.)
Nick Matzke originally reviewed the volume here on pandasthumb. At that stage, it was scheduled for publication by Springer, who reconsidered in remarkably short order; for the subsequent history, and reaction from the Discovery Institute, see here. We do not know how it came about that the volume is now scheduled for publication next month by World Scientific, but this, together with another extraordinary pending publication, gives great cause for anxiety about the health of a once-respected publishing house.
[Disclosure; World Scientific were the publishers for my own first non-technical book, From Stars to Stalagmites]
There is little that I can add to Matzke’s review. The book is based on the crucial refusal by the Intelligent Design movement to understand the process by which random change (generating novelty) followed by selection (filtering for function) gives rise to significant new information. This despite the fact that this process can be seen at every level from the creation within a computer of genetic algorithms, to the path-optimising activities of an ant hill. The contributors’ names are generally all too familiar; many readers of this piece will not need to be reminded, for example, what Dembski does for a living. However, I did spot one name that may be less familiar outside the UK; Andy McIntosh, of the creationist group Truth in Science, well known to the British Centre for Science Education for its attempts to sabotage the teaching of evolution in schools, and famous to his friends for his eccentric interpretation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics.
Presumably, World Scientific were aware of the concerns surrounding this volume. Nonetheless, they decided to publish. I can think of only three possible explanations:
1) An idealistic resolve to give due publicity to a particular point of view, however unfashionable. I think we can dismiss this, since World Scientific has not yet taken to publishing books about how aliens landed at Roswell, or the faking of the moon landings. Moreover, the Discovery Institute has adequate publication channels of its own.
2) Creationist infiltration. I would like to dismiss this as an unfounded conspiracy theory, were it not for the existence of another upcoming publication, about which I have already expressed my concerns on this blog. (I am currently in correspondence with World Scientific about that publication, and will be giving an updated report later this week.)
3) Utter incompetence. I would include in this category any cynical commercial decision to go ahead with full knowledge of the demerits of the work, since the damage to World Scientific’s reputation must surely outweigh the few thousands that would accrue from its publication.
Whatever the detailed explanation, I can only appeal to World Scientific, even at this late stage, to think again.
Posted on July 14, 2013, in Creationism, Education, Evolution in general, From Stars to Stalagmites and tagged Andy McIntosh, Biological Information, British Centre for Science Education, Creationism, Discovery Institute, Intelligent design, Nick Matzke, Second Law of Thermodynamics, Truth in Science, World Scientific. Bookmark the permalink. 1 Comment.
To learn what this publication means to Creationist you may want to have a look at the following threads on theology web. Jorge Fernandez who contributed to Biological Informatio: New Perspectives first mentioned the meeting back in 2011:
http://www.theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?146559-Symposium-on-Biological-Information-at-Cornell
Since then he gets mad at everybody who dares to critisize the book:
http://www.theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?150171-Springer-gets-suckered-by-creationist-pseudoscience
http://www.theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?156199-Clucky-and-the-Tooters-%93Creation-Science%94-available-online!
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