No, in fact there are not.
Let's look at the so called, "Scientific Dissent from Darwinism" petition circulated by the Discovery Institute. As of the August 2008 update, it contained 761 signatures and it continues to be used by the Discovery Institute in an attempt to discredit evolution by claiming that evolution lacks broad scientific support.
This represents less than 0.00023 of the world's scientists In their 2010 book
Biology and Ideology from Descartes to Dawkins,
science and religion scholar
Denis Alexander and
historian of science Ronald L. Numbers notes that, "On the scientific front of the much ballyhooed "Evolution Wars", the Darwinists were winning handily. The ideological struggle between (methodological) naturalism and supernaturalism continued largely in the fantasies of the faithful and the hyperbole of the press."
The reality is even worse for the Discovery Institute than that anemic showing. Many signatories coming from wholly unrelated fields, such as aviation and engineering, computer science and meteorology, medicine and dentistry and thus have no more expertise to be applied to evolution that your average stock clerk.
In 1999 there were just shy of a million biological scientists in the United States. Only about 1/4 of the less than 800 Darwin Dissenters are biologists, about 40% of the Darwin Dissenters are outside of that million cited, as they do not reside in the USA. Bottom line is that there were only about 100 US biologists among the Darwin Dissenters, that's one in ten thousand. Rather hard too describe, with a straight face, one in ten thousand as "plenty scientists who doubt evolution."
The theory of
evolution is
overwhelmingly accepted throughout the
scientific community. Professor
Brian Alters of
McGill University, an expert in the
creation-evolution controversy, is quoted in an article published by the
NIH as stating that "99.9 percent of scientists accept evolution". That is a conservative underestimation.
Barbara Forrest and Glenn Branch say the Discovery Institute deliberately misrepresents the institutional affiliations of signatories of the statement
A Scientific Dissent from Darwinism. The institutions appearing in the list are the result of a conscious choice by the
Discovery Institute to only present the most prestigious affiliations available for an individual. For example, if someone was trained at a more prestigious institution than the one they are presently affiliated with, the school they graduated from will more often be listed, without the distinction being made clear in the list. This is contrary to standard academic and professional practice.
For example, the institutions listed for Raymond G. Bohlin, Fazale Rana, and
Jonathan Wells, were the
University of Texas at Dallas,
Ohio University, and the
University of California, Berkeley respectively, the schools from which they obtained their Ph.D. degrees. However, their present affiliations are quite different:
Probe Ministries for Bohlin, the
Reasons to Believe Ministry for Rana, and the
Discovery Institute's
Center for Science and Culture for Wells. Many of those who have signed the list are not currently active scientists, and some have never worked as scientists. Also, if a signatory was previously the head of a department or the president of an institute, their past and most prestigious position will be listed, not their current position.
Visitors at prestigious institutions will have that affiliation listed, not their more humble home institutions. For example,
Bernard d'Abrera, a writer and publisher of books on butterflies, appears on the list as "Visiting Scholar, Department of Entomology British Museum (Natural History)", in spite of the fact that this museum had become independent of the
British Museum three decades previously and had formally changed its name to the
Natural History Museum almost a decade before the petition. d'Abrera's primary affiliation is with his publishing company, Hill House Publishers. d'Abrera does not have a PhD either, nor any formal scientific qualification (his undergraduate degree was a double major in History & Philosophy of Science, and History), although creationists have called him "Dr. d'Abrera."
At least one other signatory,
Forrest Mims, has neither a PhD nor any formal academic training in science. Additionally, at least seven signatories have their advanced degrees from outside the areas of "engineering, mathematics, computer science, biology, chemistry, or one of the other natural sciences" that are currently being recruited: Ronald R. Crawford has his Ed.D. in Science Education,
David Berlinski has his PhD in Philosophy, Tom McMullen has his PhD in the History & Philosophy of Science, Angus Menuge has his PhD in the Philosophy of Psychology, and
Stephen C. Meyer has his PhD in the Philosophy of Science; and at least six,
Jeffrey M. Schwartz, Ricardo León Borquez (incorrectly listed as "Ricardo Leon"), Gage Blackstone, Daniel Galassini, Mary A. Brown and Thomas C. Majerus, have
professional doctorates (such as an
MD,
DVM or
PharmD), rather than holding a
research doctorate (such as a
PhD).
Also, in early editions of the list,
Richard Sternberg was described as "Richard Sternberg, Invertebrate Zoology,
National Museum of Natural History,
Smithsonian Institution" though Sternberg was never a Smithsonian staff member, but an unpaid research associate. At the time of signing the list Sternberg was the outgoing editor of the
Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, a minor biology journal, where he played a central role in
a peer-review controversy. Later versions of the list mention Sternberg's affiliation with Sternberg's
alma maters,
Florida International University and
Binghamton University.
Critics also say the Discovery Institute inflates the academic credentials and affiliations of signatories such as
Henry F. Schaefer. The institute prominently and frequently asserts that Schaefer has been nominated for the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Barbara Forrest and others allege that the Discovery Institute is inflating his reputation by constantly referring to him as a "five-time nominee for the Nobel Prize" despite that Nobel Prize nominations remain confidential for fifty years and there being about 250-300 nominations per prize per year.
Responding in the form of a humorous parody, the National Center for Science Education launched Project Steve, a list of scientists named "Steve", or its equivalent (such as "Stephanie" or "Esteban"), who had signed a pro-evolution statement. As of 9 July 2015, the Steve-o-meter registered 1,371 "Steves."
After the Discovery Institute presented the petition as part of an amicus curiae brief in the Kitzmiller v. Dover intelligent design court case in October 2005, a counter-petition, A Scientific Support For Darwinism, was organized and gathered 7,733 signatures from scientists in four days.
(thanks to wiki)