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Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
As far as I can tell, "intelligent design" is the assertion that natural selection and other currently known physical mechanisms of evolution cannot account for certain complex structures that we observe in different organisms.
The problem with "intelligent design" as a hypothesis is not exactly "unfalsifiability" so much as just that it posits a non-physical mechanism for evolutionary change, and non-physical stuff is not (so far) open to any kind of scientific investigation or theorizing.
About "falsifiability," the idea that gets thrown around so often in this kind of discussion: It works okay as a criterion if you're dealing with "hard reductionist" disciplines like physics and chemistry, but not as good when you're talking about something like evolutionary science. The philosophers of science who developed the falsifiability "test" were mostly interested in explaining how physics worked as a discipline. Later philosophers would note that biology, though certainly a science, just doesn't fit the "physics model of science" that well. If you want to keep falsifiability as a test, you can either throw out much of biology, OR water down to the point of meaninglessness what counts as a "prediction" or "experiment," OR just accept that maybe different sciences operate in different ways, that not all of them conform to the neat "physics model." Reductionism in the "hierarchy of sciences" may not always be very tractable or conceptually useful. But who knows, it might eventually turn out to be useful if technology advances far enough.
A lot of people on both sides of the debate take "criterion for science" as a settled issue when it is far from that. The judge in the Dover case did that, and this was also commented on in the philosophical literature. But not many people have the time for that literature, which admittedly can be pretty dry.
So, do you think "intelligent design" is scientific? Why or why not? And what do you think about the "falsifiability" criterion?
you know what would be really great? if a place existed here where we can discuss this kind of topic. a place for religion and politics. that would be really something.
It's not science because in the end it is a matter of faith. When confronted by empirical proof that an alternative - evolution - does exist, the continuation of that faith is somewhat counter-intuitive.
Accepting something on faith is one thing. But that typically means that there is no evident explanation. When an alternative explanation is found that is backed by credible evidence, I think faith can be misplaced.
ID is nonsense, akin to 9/11 theories.
they spend so much time and effort attempting to illustrate "holes" in evolutionary theory (ie, whenever an intermediate fossil is found, the IDer doesnt see a hole filled, but 2 more holes opening
) and nothing actually advancing positions backed by EVIDENCE.
america is the only country that takes IDing seriously, and only because there's too many moronic christians in that country.
Science is all about abstraction of the observed natural phenomena into laws that relate causes to their effects. The theory of evolution fits into this structure. I don't think the theory of ID does.
Does the evolutionary theory address the primordial cause of our existence ? I don't think so. Does the ID explain how we evolve ? I don't know. We cannot make a prediction of the primordial cause based on the evolutionary laws. And even if there is a creator, it is obvious that we are evolving in a way that we understand and which is based on natural laws. If the theory of ID is true then evolution will be a subset of this theory. If evolution can determine the primordial cause, then we have to abandon the theory of ID. Surely if we are able to understand the cause of our own existence, we have understood the mind of the "creator" which will make us intellectually equal to the creator himself.
Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles So, do you think "intelligent design" is scientific? |
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| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles Why or why not? |
Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Lira Now, Intelligent Design proponents want to add a superfluous AND supernatural variable simply because it thinks evolution threatens their religion. |
I was watching a documentary on intelligent design on Nova in PBS a few weeks ago. There was a huge debate going in Pennsylvania whether Intelligent Design should be added into school textbooks or not. Apparently, the Pro-Evolution side found an old document that proved that the proponents of Intelligent Design had simply given Creationism another name. The Evolutionists won and Intelligent Design was thrown out.
I can't help but agree. Intelligent Design is not science, it can't be proven or disproven by scientific evidence. And who is to say what life forms or components of life forms are considered to be "irreducibly complex?" It is a religious assertion, an attempt by religion to explain what we as of now do not know, and should only be taught in churches and private schools.
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| Originally posted by DJ Itchy Tits you know what would be really great? if a place existed here where we can discuss this kind of topic. a place for religion and politics. that would be really something. |
Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Lira No. Because, in order to be scientific, it must:
Now, Intelligent Design proponents want to add a superfluous AND supernatural variable simply because it thinks evolution threatens their religion. And, worse yet, they do it all in spite of the fact that this "theory" isn't able to give more accurate predictions. |
Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 reading this post reminded me of the whole gay marriage debate where religious folks are saying that marriage is between members of the opposite sex....so it was a question of what is the definition of marriage. Now IDers (they could or could not be the same people in the gay marriage thingie) say that ID is scientific. well by definition it is not, and we cannot change the definition.....although actually science does change definitions, but I am thinking some other thing/issue doesn't change |
This discussion would be more fun if there'd be someone who actually belives in this crapp discussing 
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| Originally posted by rawbound This discussion would be more fun if there'd be someone who actually belives in this crapp discussing |
ok, just because i read through this thread and all these unformulated thoughts are making my brain bleed, can i ask the following -
are you guys arguing whether or not ID should be accepted as a scientific theorem??
http://www.venganza.org/about/open-letter/
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| Originally posted by Aristronica are you guys arguing whether or not ID should be accepted as a scientific theorem?? |
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 I am 68% positive that it is. |
Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles what do you think about the "falsifiability" criterion? |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by DJ Itchy Tits you know what would be really great? if a place existed here where we can discuss this kind of topic. a place for religion and politics. that would be really something. |
Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Lira Once a theory has been accepted as being right, |
Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 im also thinking of a something Ive learned whereas if a theory explains everything, it is useless. |
Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 I cringed at this. We can never prove anything right, |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN if we cannot prove anything right, how do you explain working technology? |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 Huh? you mean getting something to work that does not currently work? this is what i meant this is an example from my stats book I teach from. Say you want to prove that all dogs have 4 legs. So you go and get a dog with 4 legs, then another one, then another one....however there is no end to this proving your theory correct. Now imagine you wanted to prove that the theory that all dogs have 4 legs is false. It's pretty simple, you just find a 3 legged dog and you have proven a theory wrong. this is what science has adapted as their method. They setup their own hypothesis and an opposing one (null hypothesis), then they experiment to prove the null hypothesis is false, thereby lending support to their theory. |
I believe there is a super-intelligence outside of our own reality that could have "designed" the laws of nature. But, we'll never scientifically know because this "being" exists outside of space and time, unobservable to us, unmeasurable. I agree ID is not scientific. It is more of a philosophy more than a science. That's where I think the ID debate belongs, not science. IDer's go into their "research" already biased towards the existance of "god". Scientists really can't do that going into an experiment. But as a philosophy, it's something I believe. I also believe humans are sensitive a higher plane of existance, call it heaven, call it whatever you like..
I'm not a bible-thumping evangelical though..
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