No, it shows that Catholics aren't doubling down on stupidity. There's so much evidence for each that you would have to be completely ignorant not to realize how well these two theories are proven. But, you, aren't you quadrupling down at this point?
Don't you find it somewhat contradicting that he's saying "we risk
imagining God as a magician, with a wand able to make everything.
But it is not so", while holding that view that God can literally turn a cracker and wine into the literal body and blood of Jesus?
Transubstantiation is clearly the act of a "magician", and so is Divine Revelation, Virgin Birth, the Resurrection of a man dead for three days, and they all hold these as
factual happenings.
Scientifically, those things are no more plausible than God directly creating man
without recourse to evolution.
So no, they aren't refusing to double down on stupidity, or they would abandon their belief in those many other other "magical" things their religion teaches that
contradict science. Its clear that people are becoming more secular, and churches aren't as packed as the used to be. Something needed to be done about that.