tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post2644310592469814228..comments2024-03-24T12:43:16.575-04:00Comments on Truthbomb : Socrates: Is Intelligent Design Science?Chadhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16449550583016519343noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-38663052162370140622009-12-10T23:28:39.339-04:002009-12-10T23:28:39.339-04:00As someone who has actually studied forensics (and...As someone who has actually studied forensics (and is majoring in social science), "To claim that science must be the search for natural causes also eliminates archeology, forensics, and cryptography as legit sciences."<br /><br />When we examine forensic evidence we aren't positing metaphysical entities. We ARE looking for naturalistic explanations.<br /><br />As sociologists we don't look to understand people's behavior in terms of how God made them (or how a designer designed them to be) - but rather we study what humans actually do. Granted, we aren't always talking about impersonal natural causes - but we don't think stonehenge or civilizations just build themselves ex nihilo.<br /><br />The problem with ID is that it can't say anything about the designer or the causal mechanisms.<br /><br />As for being open to intelligent or non-intelligent causes - I don't think scientists would refuse to accept intelligent causes as an explanation - except that there is NO evidence for an intelligent cause.<br /><br />I think Hume's critiques of Natural Theology apply equally to ID (from a philosophical standpoint) - because ID is pretty much a modern re-birth of Natural Theology (e.g. Paley's Watch).<br /><br />I feel like I'm clogging the comments, if you want to talk via e-mail we can do that.Samuelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06102533726798834757noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-67447694831492458402009-12-10T16:12:50.511-04:002009-12-10T16:12:50.511-04:00Hey Samuel,
Thanks again for taking the time to o...Hey Samuel,<br /><br />Thanks again for taking the time to offer your thoughts-<br /><br />I think we should be careful not to attack a “straw-man” here. No one is talking about God specifically. We are discussing ID, which the proponents themselves admit cannot tell us who or what did the designing. As Dembski’s explanatory filter dictates, natural explanations should be consider first; however, ID does not limit itself to ONLY natural explanations. Science is a search for causes- IDers are opened to intelligent and non-intelligent ones.<br /><br />I agree that science is limited in its methods (observation of the natural world); however, just because its methods use, and are limited to, natural measurements and explanations does not mean that I am unable to infer an intelligent cause of the mechanism being observed. To claim that science must be the search for natural causes also eliminates archeology, forensics, and cryptography as legit sciences.<br /><br />Finally, I’ll leave you with the words of Socrates from the article:<br /><br />“Philosophy comes prior to Science in history, and it comes prior to it logically. The definition of Science is not a scientific question. It is a philosophical one.”<br /><br />I agree that science can only tell us so much; however, I do not agree that it is incapable of detecting design, nor do I believe that intelligent causes should be eliminated from the live pool of options. I think one should be free to follow the evidence wherever it leads, even if it leads to design. <br /><br />RespectfullyChadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16449550583016519343noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-73267892410037365762009-12-10T14:45:53.941-04:002009-12-10T14:45:53.941-04:00Materialism is a philosophy.
Science is concerned...Materialism is a philosophy.<br /><br />Science is concerned strictly with material things. The method is inherently empirical - and to change that is to do something other than science.<br /><br />Philosophy (and theology) are concerned with immaterial things (in addition to material things).<br /><br />ID is philosophy couched in scientific language.Samuelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06102533726798834757noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-92108874445080646892009-12-10T08:46:40.508-04:002009-12-10T08:46:40.508-04:00Hey Samuel,
"Metaphysics is philosophy my fr...Hey Samuel,<br /><br />"Metaphysics is philosophy my friend."<br /><br />I can't argue with that. However, would you also agree that materialism is a philosophy?<br /><br />RespectfullyChadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16449550583016519343noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-44762573439207927902009-12-09T20:52:02.799-04:002009-12-09T20:52:02.799-04:00"Socrates:
Well, then Science cannot also be ..."Socrates:<br />Well, then Science cannot also be the search for truth. If Science is restricted to methodological naturalism then a more accurate definition would be: Science is the search for exclusively materialistic theories of the world. That is much more narrow and agenda driven than simply “the search for truth.”"<br /><br />Precisely. Except it's not "agenda" driven unless your agenda is to actually find information about the natural world - which is what science does.<br /><br />Science doesn't explain illnesses in terms of non-natural explanations. You don't get sick because of sin or the anger of god. You get sick because of pathogens.<br /><br />Science doesn't explain weather in terms of gods and whether or not we have done the rain dance. You get weather due to natural forces.<br /><br />Science doesn't explain speciation in terms of "god made all the animals according to their kind." Science explains speciation in natural terms - natural selection, genetic drift, and to a small part random mutations.<br /><br />Science is limited to methodological naturalism. That's its scope. That's where its effective. That's what it is.<br /><br />No one has ever claimed science is the search for all sorts of truth. It's not. It's the search for information about the natural world.<br /><br />When you try to take science outside the context of methodological naturalism you aren't doing science. To say this is agenda driven is actually backwards.... to take science outside of this context is agenda driven.Samuelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06102533726798834757noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-117970412806233818.post-7976547603426858192009-12-09T20:42:29.519-04:002009-12-09T20:42:29.519-04:00problem:
"
Hector:
I would say that Science i...problem:<br />"<br />Hector:<br />I would say that Science is the search for truth."<br /><br />Science is an empirical method for finding out information about the natural world.<br /><br />It can't help you in the world of forms, if you consider those to exist and to be Truth.<br /><br />Science is limited to natural explanations. They must be observable and repeatable.<br /><br />Metaphysics is philosophy my friend.Samuelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06102533726798834757noreply@blogger.com