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And Hector Avalos deserves tenure at ISU?

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The tenure denial of Guillermo Gonzalez by Iowa State University has been much discussed on this blog of late. The tenure of Hector Avalos, religious studies professor and militant atheist at Iowa State University, however, has yet to be broached here. So let’s do it.

Avalos conducted a witch hunt of Guillermo Gonzalez back in 2005 (go here). He just posted on PZ Myers’ blog a response to the Discovery Institute (go here). Here is an interesting quote from it:

I may not be an astronomer, but my article, “Heavenly Conflicts: The Bible and Astronomy,” passed the editorial review of Mercury: The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 27 no. 2 (March/April, 1998), pages 20-24. There, I critiqued fine-tuning arguments before I even heard of Gonzalez.

The Astronomical Society of the Pacific is the same organization that has published, via a sister publication (Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific), some of the work of Guillermo Gonzalez.

So the irony is that it is the scholar of religion whose work passed the editorial review of a legitimate astronomical organization, and it is the astronomer who has not published a refereed article on ID in an astronomical journal.

A couple of points about Avalos’s article. First, he misstates the name of the journal. It is actually called “Mercury Magazine,” and is not the ASP’s academic journal. It is its membership magazine. In fact, ASP does not list as an academic journal but under the category of magazine: www.astrosociety.org/pubs.html. That’s why Avalos says it passed editorial muster but not peer-review muster. This way he can fudge on the article’s status but have plausible deniability. This is also evident by his placing in the magazine’s subtitle “The Journal of…” even though it is not there in the actual publication. See the contributors guidelines here: www.astrosociety.org/…/guidelines.html. There is quote from it worth extracting:

We encourage writers to read past issues to get a sense of Mercury’s style. Mercury strives for a conversational tone. As you write your article, envision yourself sitting next to a stranger during a long airplane flight. The stranger asks about your interests, and after you tell him or her that you are an astronomer or are interested in astronomy, the stranger asks you for more detail. The stranger is intelligent and inquisitive, and may have a basic knowledge of science and astronomy, but he or she does not have a formal education in astronomy. Write the article as if you are speaking to this person. And remember that most readers will be reading your article in their leisure time.

Rigorous academic journal? Has Avalos puts this on his CV as a peer-reviewed article? Did this help him get tenure or promotion at ISU?

Second, the article touches the fine-tuning arguments in a cursory and superficial way, something one would expect from an academic not well-versed in the details of the philosophical arguments that one is required to know in order to engage the topic competently. Most of the article is a superficial rant against Bible-science arguments, rehashing the Galileo case in its secular urban-legend fashion. This is perhaps not surprising given Avalos’s biosketch at the end of the article (note that he was an assistant professor at the time he wrote it and thus without tenure):

HECTOR AVALOS is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Iowa State University in Ames, where he was named the 1996 Professor of the Year. He also serves as Executive Director for the Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion. He was a former fundamentalist child evangelist who now crusades for a non-religious understanding of the universe.

Note the statement in bold. Could it be that Avalos has gone too far in going after Gonzalez? Is he so desperate to undo Gonzalez’s “religious understanding of the universe” that he discredits himself rather than Gonzalez?

Third, if Avalos has fudged on the status of this article—and has done so in a very public way—his CV may loaded with this type of fluff. Perhaps it’s time to start hunting for the real witch.

Comments
No sentence man has ever written comes close to that astonishing level of poly-functional complexity we find in the DNA. Shakespeare?Mung
May 25, 2007
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Amateur researcher that Dembski is, he probably only looked for the journal on-line. The actual hard-copy I have has “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” right underneath the title “Mercury” on the cover of the issue (volume 27, no. 2) March/April 1998 in which I wrote my article. So, contrary to Dembski’s claims, “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” is in the “actual publication.” Look up the hard copy of this publication in a library, and you will see who is right.
Since we're talking amateur researchers. Apparently Avalos only researched the cover of the magazine to determine the "actual publication." Would anyone with an actual hardcopy of the magazine care to share what is inside the magazine wrt to the "actual publication." Thanks in advance.Mung
May 25, 2007
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Zero (0) citations in Smithsonian/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS), and zero (0) citations in Google Scholar reflect the scholarly importance of Hector Avalos’ article: “Heavenly Conflicts: The Bible and Astronomy.” Mercury v27 n2 p20-24 Mar-Apr 1998. See: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1998Mercu..27b..20A http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&sa=G&oi=qs&q=hector+avalos+author:h-avalosDLH
May 25, 2007
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The scholarly excellence and societal impact of now Professor Hector Avalos is revealed by Google Scholar: 7 citations to Avalos' first 5 publications. See: http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&sa=G&oi=qs&q=Hector+Avalos+author:h-avalos By contrast, Associate Professor Guillermo Gonzalez has a mere 685 citations for his first 5 publications! See: http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Guillermo+Gonzalez+&hl=en&lr=&btnG=Search Such are the high standards and commitment to "excellence" (sic) of the Iowa State University tenure process.DLH
May 25, 2007
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Someone (with some cash) needs to create a group contra NCSE that has a loud bark and mean bite, with people who know how to get media exposure
Mike1962, I was thinking at a very minimum, there should be an annual (student-sponsored) ID event(s) at ISU, and the more and the bigger the better.russ
May 25, 2007
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Avalos,
Amateur researcher that Dembski is, he probably only looked for the journal on-line. The actual hard-copy I have has “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” right underneath the title “Mercury” on the cover of the issue (volume 27, no. 2) March/April 1998 in which I wrote my article. So, contrary to Dembski’s claims, “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” is in the “actual publication.” Look up the hard copy of this publication in a library, and you will see who is right.
The name of the magazing you wrote for is Mercury. That is why the title says Mercury . Mercury is a general interest magazine not a peer reviewed journal. Mercury , for a general audience, and the technical journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific are two different publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) and are not the same thing. You did get past editorial review at Mercury. What does that take? ASP's web site has suggestions on how to write articles to appeal to the audience of Mercury.
1. The first three paragraphs (the "lead") must grab the attention of readers and entice them to read the entire article. 2. Use active voice as much as possible, and avoid passive voice as you would avoid the Ebola virus. 3. Use active verbs as much as possible, and avoid using the most boring verbs in the English language — the various incarnations of "to be" — such as am, is, are, was, and were. 4. Vary the length of sentences, but keep most sentences short and simple. 5. Keep paragraphs short.
So short simple sentences with short paragraphs and lots of active verbs are what you need to get past editorial review at Mercury. Very impressive.Jehu
May 25, 2007
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Jehu: Noted.russ
May 25, 2007
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Russ
The page heading says (selected) publications.
I am aware it says selected, that does not mean other journal articles actually exist. If you read his web page CV, notice that he even takes time to list the book reviews he has written on other web sites and articles for non referreed publications like Free Inquiry. How many journal articles do you think Avalos did not "select"?Jehu
May 25, 2007
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"If Avalos is getting promoted for undercutting ID (in popular venues at that), and if ISU denies Gonzalez tenure because of his support of ID, then ISU has not only made up its mind about ID but also undercut academic freedom on this topic." And needs to be vociferiously exposed. Someone (with some cash) needs to create a group contra NCSE that has a loud bark and mean bite, with people who know how to get media exposure. I would gladly donate. Too many nice people at the DI. Time to wake up and smell the napalm.mike1962
May 25, 2007
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Bfast: I just read a couple of blurbs of his childhood religion. So I extrapolated from some staunch atheists that I know who grew up in strict religious childhoods. I very well may be wrong in my reasoning but none-the-less he is a staunch atheist and by default a materialist. I believe the point of this blog is his article on fine tuning of universal constants so: The numerical values of the universal constants in physics that are found for gravity which holds planets, stars and galaxies together; for the weak nuclear force which holds neutrons together; for electromagnetism which allows chemical bonds to form; for the strong nuclear force which holds protons together; for the cosmological constant of space/energy density which accounts for the universe’s expansion; and for a few dozen other constants (and counting) which are universal in their scope, "happen" to be the exact numerical values they need to be in order for life, as we know it, to be possible at all. A slight variance in the value of any individual universal constant will undermine the ability of the entire universe to have life as we know it. On and on through each universal constant scientists analyze, they find such precision. There are many web sites that give the complete list, as well as explanations, of each universal constant. Search under anthropic principle. One of the best web sites for this is found on Dr. Hugh Ross's web site (reasonstobelieve.org). There are no apparent reasons why the value of each individual universal constant could not be very different than what they actually are. In fact, the presumption of any materialistic theory based on blind chance would expect a fair amount of flexibility in any underlying natural laws for the universe. They "happen" to be at the precise values necessary to enable carbon-based life to exist in this universe. According to the esteemed British mathematical physicist Roger Penrose (1931-present), the odds of a finely-tuned biocentric universe happening by chance are an astounding one in 10^10^123; If this number were written out in its entirety, 1 with 10^123 zeros to the right, it could not be written on a piece of paper the size of the entire visible universe, EVEN IF a number were written down on each atomic particle in the entire universe, since the universe only has 10^80 atomic particles in it. This is exactly why many theorists have suggested the existence of a “super-calculating intellect” to account for this fine-tuning. This is precisely why the anthropic hypothesis has gained such a strong foothold in many scientific circles. American geneticist Robert Griffiths jokingly remarked about these recent developments "If we need an atheist for a debate, I go to the philosophy department. The physics department isn't much use anymore." The only other theory possible for the universe’s creation, other than a God-centered hypothesis, is a materialistic theory based on blind chance. Materialistic blind chance only escapes being completely crushed by the overwhelming evidence for design by appealing to an infinite number of other "un-testable” universes(and dimensions) in which all other possibilities have been played out. Naturalism also tries to find a place for blind chance by proposing a universe that expands and contracts (recycles) infinitely. Yet there is no hard physical evidence to support either of these blind chance conjectures. In fact, the latter suffers many serious questions from the second law of thermo-dynamics. The only hard evidence there is, the precision found in universal constants, points overwhelmingly to intelligent design by an infinitely powerful and transcendent Creator. The hard evidence left no room for blind chance in this universe. Thus, materialism was forced into appealing to an infinity of other untestable universes for it was left with no footing in this universe. These developments in science make it seem like naturalism was cast into the abyss of nothingness so far as explaining the fine-tuning of the universe. Avalos chooses to believe blind chance instead of theism at this level. Yet on the level of biology the days are soon approaching where the design will be undeniable. There will be no infinite number of universes to appeal too. Already there is growing evidence that the DNA code is fantastically more complex than anything man can imagine. Indeed, there is a growing body of evidence that indicates most DNA sequences are poly-functional. That means that a DNA sequence will exhibit meaning on several different levels. For instance, if a sentence were written like the DNA code, you could read it normally and it would have one meaning. If you were to read it backwards it would also have another completely understandable meaning. Yet then again, a third equally coherent meaning would be found by reading every other letter of the sentence. A fourth level of meaning could be found in the sentence by using a simple encryption program to get yet another meaning. A fifth and sixth level of meaning could be found in the way you folded the sentence into specific two and three dimensional shapes. In fact there are estimates that the data compression of DNA is up to 12 codes thick!!!!! No sentence man has ever written comes close to that astonishing level of poly-functional complexity we find in the DNA. To say that happened by chance is just plain insane.bornagain77
May 25, 2007
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SeekAndFind - Gonzalez is appealing the decision, so the university may have decided not to make a full statement about the reasons until that has been decided. So be patient. BobBob O'H
May 25, 2007
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I have been reading these back and forth about Gonzalez's being denied tenure these past several days but cannot for the life of me find an official explanation from the University as to WHY he was denied tenure. What were their stated reasons ? No one in this board on any Gonzalez/ISU related thread has provided an explanation of reasons the university provided either. The University has a STATED criteria for accepting tenure. Based on my understanding they relate to --- Published Work in peer reviewed journals, Acceptance by peer of published work, volume and quality of publications, teaching ability and ability to draw funding. I don't think there is an openly stated requirement that says you cannot be considered for tenure if you are not a methodological materialist or if you are sympathetic to ID, much less a Christian. So, can someone please enlighted me and other readers -- which one of the stated criteria for tenure of ISU did Guillermo Gonzalez FAIL to live up to ?SeekAndFind
May 25, 2007
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Denyse: If Avalos's anti-ID writings are gaining him tenure and promotion at ISU, then this needs to be brought out. It seems to me unlikely that bringing it out will make any difference immediately in President Geoffrey's decision about Gonzalez's tenure case. But as our issues continue to get taken up in the wider culture, this will be further evidence of hypocrisy on the other side. A hundred years from now Gonzalez's ideas about our place in the cosmos being designed to facilitate scientific discovery will be remembered. Avalos, on the other hand, will be seen as a crank flailing to find justifications for why the evidence of design in the universe is nothing of the sort. A key point to bear in mind: If Avalos is getting promoted for undercutting ID (in popular venues at that), and if ISU denies Gonzalez tenure because of his support of ID, then ISU has not only made up its mind about ID but also undercut academic freedom on this topic.William Dembski
May 25, 2007
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For what it is worth, from the ISU site "news" on 2-06-97. "Avalos was a child preacher and faith healer while growing up in Northern Mexico. A Biblical scholar, he earned his master's degree from the Harvard Divinity School and doctoral degree from Harvard's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences." I wonder at what age he preached.interested bystander
May 25, 2007
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Hey, this isn't the School of Social Work! Why are we sitting around psychoanalyzing Hector Avalos? His recollections of the faith of his cradle are irrelevant to the issue of susbstance here: If Avalos misrepresented a magazne article as an article for a journal whose topic area (astronomy) is DIRECTLY relevant to his attack on Guillermo Gonzalez, his whole record had better be reexamined closely, in the light of the Gonzalez tenure controversy. It is at least possible that he planted this citation in order to inflate his supposed credentials to launch an attack that might endanger Gonzalez' tenure. My goodness, this gets deeper and nastier - reminds me of the Beckwith tenure case ... any thoughts there, Bill?O'Leary
May 25, 2007
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bornagain77:
Avalos is in full rebelion against the, what we might call “Dead Religion” that he grew up with. ... He was raised with a very strict dead religion when he grew up.
Do you have any real information about Avalos' childhood or are you assuming that if he had been raised in an environment of a living faith as a child, he would not have rejected that faith?bFast
May 25, 2007
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Avalos is in full rebelion against the, what we might call "Dead Religion" that he grew up with. This is very understandable for someone who has had "Religion" forced down their throats all their lives. Unfortunately he has not sought God at his points of need in his life so he is unenlightened and does not know that a living God truly does exist who is very much alive and is their for us in our times of need. He was raised with a very strict dead religion when he grew up and now he has come to full maturity in worshiping a dead entity (blind chance) who could care less about him or anything in his life. It truly is tragic.bornagain77
May 25, 2007
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Maybe Avalos was just engaging in a little street theater.Achilles25
May 25, 2007
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I have posted a response to Dembski on Pharyngula.H. Avalos
May 25, 2007
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Avalos is just following the steps of Huxley here. As a former atheist myself, I can understand a bit this Avalosian behavior against a former truth held without brains.Enezio E. De Almeida Filho
May 25, 2007
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Johnnyb hit the nail on the head...I assumed Hector Avalos was raised fundamentalist, only a former fundamentalist could be this angry. In an earlier post I discussed this, in Why are they so angry? .Granville Sewell
May 25, 2007
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According to Avalos’s web page, he has not published a journal article since 2003. And he only has 14 listed in his entire career.
The page heading says (selected) publications.russ
May 25, 2007
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Rigorous academic journal? Has Avalos puts this on his CV as a peer-reviewed article?
Here is how Avalos cites his publication on his web site.
"Heavenly Conflicts: The Bible and Astronomy," Mercury 27 (2, March/April, 1998) 20-24. The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
Of course Mercury and the journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific are two different magazines, the former is a bimonthly magazine for a general audiance and the later is a refereed journal. Clearly, the way the article is cited on Avalos's web page it appears he wrote for the journal, however, it is not listed under "Journal Articles" but under "Other Publications."Jehu
May 25, 2007
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According to Avalos's web page, he has not published a journal article since 2003. And he only has 14 listed in his entire career. http://www.las.iastate.edu/latinostudies/avalospubs.shtmlJehu
May 25, 2007
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William Dembski has just posted yet another distortion of my academic record. He states the following concerning my claim about my article (Heavenly Conflicts: The Bible and Astronomy”) passing the “editorial review” of Mercury: The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific: “That’s why Avalos says it passed editorial muster but not peer-review muster. This way he can fudge on the article’s status but have plausible deniability. This is also evident by his placing in the magazine’s subtitle “The Journal of…” even though it is not there in the actual publication.” Amateur researcher that Dembski is, he probably only looked for the journal on-line. The actual hard-copy I have has “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” right underneath the title “Mercury” on the cover of the issue (volume 27, no. 2) March/April 1998 in which I wrote my article. So, contrary to Dembski’s claims, “The Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific” is in the “actual publication.” Look up the hard copy of this publication in a library, and you will see who is right. I hate to spoil Dembski's witch hunt, but my CV also lists that honestly. Moreover, my claim that my article passed “editorial review” (not “peer review”) is accurate, and Dembski is positively miffed that I did not claim more than what honesty demands. The DI could take a few lessons from atheists about honesty in their own claims.H. Avalos
May 25, 2007
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I have found over and over and over again that the religion professors / students who are the most anti-theistic are the ones who were raised fundamentalist and then went to a secular school without support. These people wind up mad at the world, and especially their parents, whom they think lied to them to indoctrinate them. Then they look at everyone with similar suspicions. I have seen that happen over and over and over again.johnnyb
May 25, 2007
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Bill, There appears to be a blockquoting format error. The following should be blockquoted as it is Avalos speaking, not you.
The Astronomical Society of the Pacific is the same organization that has published, via a sister publication (Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific), some of the work of Guillermo Gonzalez. So the irony is that it is the scholar of religion whose work passed the editorial review of a legitimate astronomical organization, and it is the astronomer who has not published a refereed article on ID in an astronomical journal.
[[Thanks. The error has been corrected. --WmAD]]scordova
May 24, 2007
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