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Proponent of intelligent design denied tenure by ISU
By: William Dillon
05/12/2007
Updated 05/20/2007 12:06:06 AM CDT
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Guillermo Gonzalez, an assistant professor of astronomy and physics who argues for the theory of intelligent design, was denied tenure this semester by Iowa State University.

"I was surprised to hear that my tenure was denied at any level, but I was disappointed that the president at the end denied me," Gonzalez said during a telephone interview with The Tribune Friday.

Gonzalez filed an appeal with ISU President Greg Geoffroy on Tuesday, May 8. Geoffroy has 20 days to respond.

While his work is heralded as "path-breaking" by supporters of intelligent design as a way of offering a new theory supporting design in the universe, Gonzalez has come under criticism by the mainstream science community for incorporating the theory of intelligent design into his work.

Opponents maintain that proving intelligent causes or agents is not science but rather the study of theology and philosophy. Some also have accused Gonzalez, an openly non-denominational Protestant, of thrusting religion into science.

In the summer of 2005, three faculty members at ISU drafted a statement against the use of intelligent design in science. One of those authors, Hector Avalos, told The Tribune at the time he was concerned the growing prominence of Gonzalez's work was beginning to market ISU as an "intelligent design school."

The statement collected signatures of support from more than 120 ISU faculty members before similar statements surfaced at the University of Iowa and the University of Northern Iowa.

According to ISU's policy on promotion and tenure, evaluation is based "primarily on evidence of scholarship in the faculty member's teaching, research/creative activities, and/or extension/professional practice."

In addition to that criteria, Gonzalez's department of astronomy and physics sets a benchmark for tenure candidates to author at least 15 peer-reviewed journal articles of quality. Gonzalez said he submitted 68, of which 25 have been written since he arrived at ISU in 2001.

"I believe that I fully met the requirements for tenure at ISU," he said.

Gonzalez said he would rather not comment on why he believes he was denied tenure.

On Friday, Geoffroy declined comment on why Gonzalez was denied tenure.

"Since an appeal is on my desk that I will have to pass judgment on, it is not appropriate for me to offer any comment," he wrote in an e-mail to The Tribune.

In addition to his research and teaching at ISU, Gonzalez is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, a conservative Seattle think tank leading the intelligent design movement.
      
John G. West, associate director of the Center for Science and Culture at the institute, said he sees this as a clear case of "ideological discrimination" by ISU against Gonzalez. He said he thinks the statement against intelligent design drafted at ISU played a large part in the eventual denial of Gonzalez's tenure.

"What happens to the lone faculty member who doesn't agree and happens to be untenured," he asked. "That is practically, with a wink and a nod, a call to deny him tenure."

Faculty members typically leave a university if they are denied tenure.

ISU considered 66 faculty cases for promotion and tenure during the past academic year. Only three, including Gonzalez, were denied tenure.

William Dillon can be reached at 232-2161, Ext. 361,
or William.Dillon@amestrib.com.


©Mid-Iowa Newspapers 2013

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Reader Comments
Added: Thursday May 17, 2007 at 03:27 PM EST
Is "Open-Minded Darwinist" an oxymoron?
Since I'm not from Iowa I've not been keeping up on this much. Did the school give any reason why Dr. Gonzalez was denied tenure? There seems to be no rational reason I've found.
If it's okay to deny tenure to someone who thinks that a designer can be detected scientifically, shouldn't it also be acceptable to deny tenure to someone who thinks that science disproves a designers existence? (there are plenty of them) After all, if science can be used to disprove a designer then, in principle, it should be used to prove a designer as well.
Nonetheless, even this question is unnecessary. Intelligent Design has been peer reviewed in many scientific journals (of which Dr. Gonzalez has been a part) and deserves to have its scientists who meet tenure requirements to be given tenure.
It's becoming more evident every day how closed-minded far too many Darwinists have become.
Scott Pearl, Nampa, ID
Added: Wednesday May 16, 2007 at 12:42 PM EST
Monopolies are Bad for the Marketplace
The university's ideological discrimination against Dr. Gonzales reflects its attempt to create a monopoly in the marketplace of ideas. Monopolies--which suppress plurality, perspective, and competition--are generally not beneficial to the consumer. It looks like Iowa State University, of which I am an alumnus, merely wants the "uni-" and not the "-versity." Given Dr. Gonzales' pioneering work and prolific publishing, the university's denying him tenure is, quite frankly, childish and makes me ashamed to have graduated from there.

Dr. Gonzales' work in Intelligent Design has been criticized by Dr. Hector Avalos (ironically the Director of Latino Studies at Iowa State) and others as being an exercise in theology or religion rather than science. This is a misconstrual, as it is properly neither. The Intelligent Design position is not a matter of science or of religion, but of philosophy. And the debate which Gonzales' work has sparked at Iowa State is a debate about how we may go about explaining certain natural phenomena--natural phenomena which science itself (in the opinion of many eminent scientists) seems unable to explain.

A university not open to a diversiy of philosophical perspectives isn't worthy of being called a "university," much less of conferring on any of its graduates the degree of "Doctor of Philosophy."

And I'm wondering which is more ironic--the fact that a university has suppressed a philosophical perspective, or the fact that its Director of Latino Studies (Avalos) has suppressed a fellow Latino.

Shane Moe
Graduate Student
Saint Paul, MN
Shane Moe, Saint Paul, MN
View All 4 Comments »

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