Books
Review

IDing ID’s Designer

Darwin’s Nemesis shows why the debate isn’t going away.

Every few months, a wise head predicts the end of Intelligent Design—in time for the next uproar. Darwin’s Nemesis, a collection of essays in honor of Phillip Johnson—the Berkeley law professor whose Darwin on Trial started the controversy in 1991—helps readers understand why id cannot simply go away. Long before Johnson, many scientists objected to Darwinism, but lacked a framework for their objections in an academic environment committed to reductive materialism. Johnson’s legal approach provided that framework.

Darwin's Nemesis: Phillip Johnson and the Intelligent Design Movement

Darwin's Nemesis: Phillip Johnson and the Intelligent Design Movement

Brand: IVP Academic

357 pages

$21.30

Steve Meyer’s analysis of the Cambrian explosion, reprinted here, should have interested only the few paleontologists who really care about extinct organisms from half a billion years ago. His paper instead became headline news, because it challenged Darwinism.

Mathematician William Dembski, Johnson’s successor as informal leader of the id community, offers reflections on how a small, beleaguered band of scientists succeeded in bringing their issues to the front page. One reason he suggests is that id is not a top-down community and thus is less vulnerable to politically correct scientific orthodoxy. As this volume demonstrates, we can expect more such uproars in the coming years.

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Darwin’s Nemesis is available from ChristianBook.com and other book retailers.

Christianity Today coverage of science, evolution, and Intelligent Design includes:

Science in Wonderland | Getting some perspective (250 million years’ worth) on the evolution controversy. By John Wilson (Apr. 25, 2006)

The Other ID Opponents | Traditional creationists see Intelligent Design as an attack on the Bible. (Apr. 25, 2006)

Doubts About Fish Story | Anti-Darwinists downplay ‘missing link.’ (May 11, 2006)

God by the Numbers | Coincidence and random mutation are not the most likely explanations for some things. (March 10, 2006)

Intelligent Design Is Too Religious For Schools, Judge Rules | “Abundantly clear” that it’s updated creationism, he says. (Dec. 21, 2005)

Design Film Sparks Angst | Under fire, Smithsonian disavows presentation on Intelligent Design. (July 6, 2005)

Science that Backs Up Faith | There is overwhelming evidence for a creator, says Lee Strobel. (June 1, 2005)

Verdict that Demands Evidence | It is Darwinists, not Christians, who are stonewalling the facts. (March 28, 2005)

Were the Darwinists Wrong? | National Geographic stacks the deck. (Nov. 23, 2004)

The Art of Debating Darwin | How to intelligently design a winning case for God’s role in creation. (Sept. 08, 2004)

Unintelligent Debate | It’s time to cool the rhetoric in the Intelligent Design dispute. (Sept. 03, 2004)

The Dick Staub Interview: William Dembski’s Revolution | The author of Intelligent Design set out to answer the toughest questions about the movement he helped promote. (March 30, 2004)

‘A Nuclear Bomb’ For Evolution? | Critics of Darwinism say skull’s discovery isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. (Aug. 14, 2002)

Your Darwin Is Too Large | Evolution’s significance for theology has been greatly exaggerated. (May 25, 2000)

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Where We Are and How We Got Here

What Married Women Want

The Church's Great Malfunctions

Flea Market Believers

A Bioethicist on Genesis

Hope for Shalom

CT Classics

From Eternity to Here

A Greater Vision

Grappling with God

A One-China (Church) Policy

Editorial

Save the E-Word

Editorial

Media in Motion

Genocide and Grace

LBJ and JFK

News

Q&A: Richard Stearns

What's Next: Relief and Development

What's Next: International Justice

What's Next: Higher Education

Legacy of a Global Leader

Evangelism Plus

Train Wreck Coming

What's Next: Evangelism

What's Next: Culture

Let Us Reason Together About Life

What's Next: Theology

News

To Russia with Fury

What's Next: Publishing & Broadcasting

The Top 50 Books That Have Shaped Evangelicals

What's Next: Politics

What's Next: Missions

News

Go Figure

What's Next: Youth

News

Quotation Marks

What's Next: Local Church

News

One 'Major Step'

'Truth from the Evangelical Viewpoint'

News

'Christianity Today' News Briefs

Calvary Reunion: Skip Heitzig Returns to N.M.

News

'They Know We Are Christians'

News

A Hint of Peace

News

Passages

News

Soaking in Blood—Again

Asylum vs. Assistance

Cool on Climate Change

Braves Lose Focus

The Earmark Epidemic

News

Axis Denied

News

Indonesia's Death Quota

News

Disputed Dismissal

News

The Price of Protest

View issue

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Charlie Kirk Aims to Expand Turning Point USA to Evangelical Campuses

But not all Christian campuses have embraced the conservative group.

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Sarah Jakes Roberts Evolves T. D. Jakes’s Women’s Conference

At a record-setting event this fall, 40,000 followers listened to her preach about spiritual breakthrough and surrender.

Being Human

Walking the Camino de Santiago with Barrett Harkins

The missionary to pilgrims shares wisdom from the trail.

News

The Evangelical Voters Who Changed Their Minds

Amid a hyperpartisan electorate, a minority plan to vote differently than they did in 2016 and 2020.

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Meet the Evangelical Expats Staying in Lebanon

Shout to the Lord in a Foreign Language

Worshiping God with words we don’t understand may seem strange. But I consider it a spiritual practice.

Jesus Is Still Right About Persecution

Nine truths believers need to understand to pray well for the suffering body of Christ.

The Bulletin

Electioneering

The Bulletin discusses the final presidential campaign push, churches in the age of screens, and the UN’s work in Gaza.

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