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Alternative Darwin Awards

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Bill asked me to introduce myself, and to describe an idea that came to me recently.

I am a graduate student, working on philosophy of biology (at a university that shall remain nameless), nearing the dissertation stage.

I am sure that everyone knows about the odious “Darwin Awards.” I have been concerned about this phenomenon for some time, because they seem to be catching on with the broader public. I encounter references to them increasingly frequently among the mostly liberal crowd I hang out with. I guess this is not too surprising, as their cynicism is certainly in tune with the times and the culture.

I even had a public school teacher of my acquaintance tell me recently about a child who fell off a cliff on a school outing. She was laughing about this incident and saying that the little boy should get a Darwin Award!

Well, I had a light bulb go off recently about how to fight fire with fire—satire with satire.

I was reading a book called Clockwork Garden, by Roger J. Farber (Amherst: UMass Pr, 1986). The book contains the following startling image (the passage pertains to the author’s critique of selectionism as a basis for reductionism of teleology to mechanism; in particular, he is distinguishing true selection—which is intentional—from mere sorting), on page 16:

“Consider a swimming coach who selects her team by throwing the entire freshman class into the pool and signing up those who float.”

When I read this passage, I suddenly had this vision of a cartoon depicting this situation—as an illustration of the tender mercies of the Darwinian philosophy.

The thing is, people laugh at the Darwin Awards because they feel superior to the people being ridiculed by the awards. But perhaps, through a more subtle (and more accurate) form of satire, they could be brought to see that the human form of life stands in dedicated opposition to the “natural”, especially as conceived of in Darwinian terms.

So, what do you all think? Worthy of a T-shirt? A regular comic strip? With a little imagination, the permutations on the theme are endless . . .

Comments
I like satire. Everyone that knows me knows that I like satire. I've written numerous satires in my life. I used to write for a satirical newspaper. Naturally (or maybe by design), I like this idea. I do, however, have one drawback. You wrote: "I even had a public school teacher of my acquaintance tell me recently about a child who fell off a cliff on a school outing. She was laughing about this incident and saying that the little boy should get a Darwin Award!" If this is the degree to which they have taken the Darwin Awards, I would careful about satiring them. A child who fell off a cliff during a school outing is no laughing matter (Baylor lost a student last year due to this). I would proceed with caution. Consider, before we go forth, what benefit this has to the entire debate and weigh that against the time and effort. Otherwise...I love satire.SChen24
January 19, 2007
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Theodosius, I think you are on to a wonderful idea. Anything that can get the public thinking and asking questions without us having to pointedly bring up a conversation about it is great. T-shirts are awesome because people comment about them and it opens up an opportunity to share your point of view. As long as we are not poking fun of people, but rather pointing out the inconsistencies and flaws surrounding the ToE, then I'm all for it! I bought the ID/evolution game that Bill pointed out a few weeks ago, and brought it to a 7th & 8th grade Wed. night class I teach. The kids really got into it, and the trivia questions spurred lots of conversation about the issues in the debate. The only downside to the game was the dvd included (kinds of hokey). But, I'd like to see more of these type of products. Anyway, I'd certainly stock up on the T-shirts!Forthekids
January 19, 2007
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Hi Theodosius and thanks for joining UD! Philosophy of Biology- Any particular aspect or are you examining the broad aspects of what philosophical biases have on biology? But anyway- Is slapstick the same? IOW do we laugh at the "Three Stooges" because we feel superior? What about the people who look at the "Darwin Awards" as life lessons learned without the cost. I know I will never try to rob a place by crawling on a drop ceiling with a flashlight in my mouth. I will never go ice fishing by driving out onto the lake with my faithful retriever and throw dynamite to make a hole in the ice. There are so many things that I never even thought of doing but now, if such a thought ever arises, I can deal with it. ;)Joseph
January 19, 2007
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I'm more than willing to take a shot at creating such a cartoon. I'm a graphic designer and illustrator and ID "enthusiast". Which is funny to say… can you imagine a graphic designer who is "opposed" to intelligent design? Print materials designed by such a person would likely be chaotic, unorganized and illegible! Anyway, the only down side is that I'm insanely busy with work presently. But I would LOVE to take a shot at it as soon as I put another project or two behind me. I have a couple of other good cartoon concepts, too, which I'd like to get "out there." How can I get my e-mail address to you without posting it here?TRoutMac
January 19, 2007
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