T
tonyrey
Guest
What causes biological processes to work?I agree that the idea of biological Intelligent Design does not work.
What causes biological processes to work?I agree that the idea of biological Intelligent Design does not work.
That is quite obviously not what I meant. Think again.Then science lacks a **rational **foundation!
This is in itâs way true. Design can of course explain anything. I can explain my being late to work this morning via an unknown agent who using unknown means for an unknown purpose set up events such that I stayed up later than usual last night hence overslept this morning. This is of course not evidence that such an agent exists.*
- Design explains all the most important aspects of existence: truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty, love, the order of the universe, the origin of life, the progressive development and existence of rational, autonomous, moral beings who have the capacity for unselfish love and the right to life, freedom and self-determination.
I see no evidence of design here. Some of the items you have listed are things for which purely naturalistic explanations already exist and are well established. ie 3, which is well explained by evolution.**Scientific evidence for design consists of:
What are your views?
- The laws of nature which are necessary for life and a rational existence.
- The directiveness of living organisms.
- The progressive nature of development.
- The information system contained in the DNA code.
- The survival of life despite overwhelming odds.
- The development of the most complex phenomenon in the universe: the human brain.
- The existence of rational, autonomous, moral and responsible beings with a capacity for unselfish love.
My point is that scientific evidence of any description amounts to metascientific evidence because science presupposes metascientific principles!*Then science lacks a **rational ***
Design is not a substitute for explanations. It is an explanation of explanations!
- Design explains all the most important aspects of existence: truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty, love, the order of the universe, the origin of life, the progressive development and existence of rational, autonomous, moral beings who have the capacity for unselfish love and the right to life, freedom and self-determination.
God cannot be used to explain fortuitous events or human decisions.The same thing applies with God. He can be used to explain absolutely everything and anything and âthe lord moves in mysterious waysâ is perfectly adequate when things that happen seem to make no sense. Of course any number of supernatural constructs can provide the same function.
Scientific evidence for design consists of:I see no evidence of design here. Some of the items you have listed are things for which purely naturalistic explanations already exist and are well established. ie 3âŚ
- The laws of nature which are necessary for life and a rational existence.
- The directiveness of living organisms.
- The progressive nature of development.
- The information system contained in the DNA code.
- The survival of life despite overwhelming odds.
- The development of the most complex phenomenon in the universe: the human brain.
- The existence of rational, autonomous, moral and responsible beings with a capacity for unselfish love.
No one has ever explained the increase in complexity.
On the contrary. All the laws of the universe require a rational explanation.And some are things which we donât know yet. ie 1, we donât really know why the laws of the universe are the laws of the universe, for that matter we arenât even entirely sure theyâre really laws. This is essentially a âGod of the gapsâ argument.
If theyâre not laws how do explain the success of science?
Iâm not** positing any being. I am inferring **that rational, purposeful activity has a rational, purposeful cause.One of the key problems with trying to claim evidence of design is that if you posit an omnipotent, omniscient God who designed the entire universe then there is nothing you can point to which is not âdesignedâ.
Why do you think SETI is doing?So it is impossible to test any âdesign detection systemâ (whether that system is a thought experiment, axiomatic system, technological device or anything else). This is because we cannot*detect anything to which we can ascribe the term ânon-designedâ to test any âdesign detection systemâ against.
The DNA language is a good example of design.I donât think there is any evidence of a designer, and I can think of tons of examples that patently contradict the idea of a designer of any description. Of course, the answer will always be, well, youre not God so you dont know WHY He did it like that, but there must be a reason, as God did it
So, my views? ⌠no, I see no evidence for a designer
This will be my full and total contribution to this thread - these threads tend to degenerate quite quickly. So, thanks for the short question, and not asking for the views to be justified
Interesting the courts decided Intelligent design was just Creationism by another name though.
Sarah x![]()
Sounds like this is a non-sequitur to me.âI can think of nothing that supports the idea of a designer of any description. Therefore there is **no **reason why anything existsâŚâ
This is a conflation. Soul is an epistemological consideration, to some a cosmological one. âLifeâ is, regardless of âarrivalâ at some state. The court decision re âdesignâ is simply a recognition of equivalency.The courts are fallible and have sentenced innocent persons to death⌠Would you stake your life on a legal decision?![]()
I agree with all of the above â and itâs a very good explanation of the topic.Scientific evidence for design consists of:
- Design explains all the most important aspects of existence: truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty, love, the order of the universe, the origin of life, the progressive development and existence of rational, autonomous, moral beings who have the capacity for unselfish love and the right to life, freedom and self-determination.
What are your views?
- The laws of nature which are necessary for life and a rational existence.
- The directiveness of living organisms.
- The progressive nature of development.
- The information system contained in the DNA code.
- The survival of life despite overwhelming odds.
- The development of the most complex phenomenon in the universe: the human brain.
- The existence of rational, autonomous, moral and responsible beings with a capacity for unselfish love.
Metaphysics established the principles (and judges the principles) by which physics exists.âMetascienceâ has just as little to do with science as metaphysics has to do with physics!
I think you have to start by accepting that design exists. Thatâs an axiom or starting point.Design can of course explain anything.
Thank you, Reggie, for your kind words. :tiphat:
- Design explains all the most important aspects of existence: truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty, love, the order of the universe, the origin of life, the progressive development and existence of rational, autonomous, moral beings who have the capacity for unselfish love and the right to life, freedom and self-determination.
Unsubstantiated assertion!Code:*"I can think of **nothing***
This is a conflation. Soul is an epistemological consideration, to some a cosmological one. âLifeâ is, regardless of âarrivalâ at some state. The court decision re âdesignâ is simply a recognition of equivalency.The courts are fallible and have sentenced innocent persons to death⌠Would you stake your life on a legal decision?![]()
No court decisions are infallible if they refer to matters of fact rather than logical consistency with established laws.
Tony - if you can somehow prevent this thread from being shut down, then youâll deserve much more than a tip of the hat.Thank you, Reggie, for your kind words. :tiphat:
Certainly, but my problem is the confusion of terms. In my first post on the thread, I objected to the confusion around the term âscientificâ with detailed analytical objections.Metaphysics established the principles (and judges the principles) by which physics exists.
Ok, sorry I didnât see your initial post.Certainly, but my problem is the confusion of terms. In my first post on the thread, I objected to the confusion around the term âscientificâ with detailed analytical objections.
Sloppy terminology begets sloppy analytical thinking, and vice versa.
Could we say that all evidence from science requires a philosophical interpretation? Without the interpretation, itâs just data without conclusions.I agree with
But this is not scientific evidence (science proper can say nothing about divine design), but evidence from science, philosophically interpreted.
- The laws of nature which are necessary for life and a rational existence.
I also agree with
7. The existence of rational, autonomous, moral and responsible beings with a capacity for unselfish love.
Rationality, moral responsibility and altruism are observable phenomena.But this is neither scientific evidence, nor evidence from science. It refers to an immaterial soul, which lies outside the scientific method that employs methodological (not metaphysical) naturalism, so science has nothing to say about that. It is purely philosophical evidence (and there is nothing wrong with that; science has no monopoly on rational knowledge).
No, scientific theories like the atomic theory or the Big Bang theory are conclusions from the data, but within the realm of science (the natural sciences), which is looking for natural causes to natural effects (methodological naturalism). Any philosophical interpretations beyond that are outside the realm of science.Could we say that all evidence from science requires a philosophical interpretation? Without the interpretation, itâs just data without conclusions.
Rationality, moral responsibility and altruism are observable phenomena.
Science today (the vast majority of it) already claims to be able to explain all of those things as natural processes.
Again, science is bound by methodological naturalism. This is its method, otherwise it would not be science â by definition.Some scientists find those attempts to be unconvincing â and this is evidence of the non-material source of those observable things.
This is a different story. I am a scientist, and I also find, for example, a naturalistic explanation of rationality unconvincing. I believe rationality requires an immaterial component of the mind (a soul), in addition to the brain.Some scientists find those attempts to be unconvincing
Is science willing to state that there is something (anything) outside of the realm of science? Have you ever seen that in any scientific papers â namely, that there is something outside of science that exists?No, scientific theories like the atomic theory or the Big Bang theory are conclusions from the data, but within the realm of science (the natural sciences), which is looking for natural causes to natural effects (methodological naturalism). Any philosophical interpretations beyond that are outside the realm of science.
Does the fact that you find the scientific evidence unconvincing contribute to your belief in the immaterial component of the mind?This is a different story. I am a scientist, and I also find, for example, a naturalistic explanation of rationality unconvincing. I believe rationality requires an immaterial component of the mind (a soul), in addition to the brain.
What? you canât think of *any *other scenarios, right or wrong? You surprise me. No court decisions are infallible if they refer to matters of fact rather than logical consistency with established laws.Well, no in either case. But the design=creationism is a gimme, whatever specious sliced hair arguments attempt to distinguish it. But so many people were being SO silly that it actually came to a court case. Those amazing Americans!!!Unsubstantiated assertion!.