hecd2:
Neo-darwinism then, gets its pre-eminent position as the foundational theory of biology not because it is a default atheistic view, but because it is a scientific theory overwhelmingly supported by evidence and therefore accepted by biologists on that basis
.I believe you exaggerate the case of neo-darwinism’s “overwhelming evidence” in its favor. By a wide margin.
You can believe whatever you like, but the fact is that the Modern Synthesis is the foundational theory of modern biology because it is consistent with and overwhelmingly supported by the evidence from a wide range of disciplines including palaeontology, biogeography, systematics and phylogenetics, ecology, comparative anatomy, comparative physiology, molecular biology, genomics, population genetics, quantitative genetics, mathematical biology, systems biology, biochemistry, immunology, developmental biology and so on - described in hundreds of thousands of research papers in hundreds of journals and summarised in university texts such as Ridley’s Evolution and Futuyama’s Evolutionary Biology.
As to the impartiality of scientists - that’s really the question, isn’t it? How can you possibly assert that “No scientist of my acquaintance has a world view that implies that neo-darwinism must account entirely for the origin of all species on the planet” when some variation of neo-Darwinism is the only complex, completely naturalistic explanation of life that has ever been put forth?
I can assert it because it is true. No scientist of my acquaintance has a world view which necessarily entails neo-Darwinism. They accept neo-Darwinism because the evidence for it is, as I have pointed out, overwhelming. You are wrong to say that some variation of neo-Darwinism is the only possible natural explanation - after all, neo-Darwinism as a theory has only existed since the 1930s and 1940s. Before that natural selection and genetic theories were opposed to one another and still earlier, Lamarckian and other theories of inheritance of acquired traits were considered. Today, “classical” neo-Darwinism is being refined by various epigenetic and ecological effects which are being shown to have a substantial influence. Nevertheless, neo-Darwinism holds sway because it is supported by the evidence in much the same way as any other well supported scientific theory. You are conflating cause and effect here - the Modern Synthesis is the foundational theory of modern biology not because it is the only possible game in town - conversely it is the consensus because it is supported by the evidence.
Once again, for the scientist who is convinced either that (a) there is no God or (b) He does has never acted in the natural world in a “direct” fashion", there is no other alternative. Such scientists - and this is certainly the prevailing mindset among modern biologists - have no choice whatsoever but to accept on faith that evolution driven by random mutation explains everything. More than a few atheistic biologists have been honest enough to admit as much.
As I have pointed out, ALL scientists, whether they are Catholic, Protestant, Mormon, Muslim, Buddhist, Taoist, animist, worshippers of Baal or Apollo or Artemis, agnostics or atheists seek *natural *explanations for phenomena when they are doing science. That’s what science is. Scientists of all worldviews therefore accept neo-Darwinism because it is a natural explanation with an overwhelming degree of evidential support. Any explanation that involves supernatural entities fiddling around with the natural world lies outside science.
So, in short, as I said, I simply think you’re exaggerating the evidence and ignoring the glaring issues that exist.
I am certainly not exaggerating the evidence which overwhelmingly supports the Modern Synthesis as a scientific explanation for the origin of species. As for the so-called glaring issues, what are they? I would never claim that any substantial scientific theory is complete or free of issues altogether - but those who claim that there are “glaring issues” in the Synthesis which discredit it need to show what they are, and to put forward scientific (not miraculous) alternatives that better fit the data, otherwise they are indulging in a God-of-the-Gaps argument.
First of all, you obviously missed the whole point in the Hubble reference. It wasn’t so much that Hubble was opposed after his discovery, it was that before overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the prevailing scientific view was that the universe had no beginning, and that this was rooted in nothing other than atheistic faith.
Well, no: the prevailing scientific view was based on a view that the universe was static. When it was shown to be expanding, Big Bang theory for the origins of the observable universe was accepted. This was not the replacement of an atheistic view by a theistic one, but the replacement of one natural theory by another.
It was clear that your point was to make an analogy between Behe’s position and that of Hubble in opposition to the point that Behe is universally rejected by his peers. My point was that although scientific revolutions occur they are, in almost every case, not led by people whose reputations are as poor as that of Behe.
to be continued