P
Peter_Plato
Guest
I do spend a lot of time on the Feser blog and have encountered his critiques of ID in the past. Your link presents quite a reading list and I plan to spend time going through it because I respect Feser’s ability to see what others (including myself) often miss.It’s interesting that you linked to Feser’s blog, just given his critiques of ID. I’m curious as to what your take would be on his comments on ID in articles such as these: edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2010/05/id-versus-t-roundup.html
I read one article Feser did on Dembski and this paragraph jumped out at me.
My initial response is that I don’t think the critique is entirely valid because for ID theorists the characteristic genetic information IS “internal” to living things written into the DNA that essentially makes living things what they are. It isn’t an imposed order from “outside” but an aspect of the very essential nature of what it is that makes a living being alive.Now, having made this distinction, Dembski goes on explicitly to acknowledge that just as “the art of shipbuilding is not in the wood that constitutes the ship” and “the art of making statues is not in the stone out of which statues are made,” “so too, the theory of intelligent design contends that the art of building life is not in the physical stuff that constitutes life but requires a designer” (emphasis added). And there you have it: Living things are for ID theory to be modeled on ships and statues, the products of techne or “art,” whose characteristic “information” is not “internal” to them but must be “imposed” from “outside.” And that just is what A-T philosophers mean by a “mechanistic” conception of life.
I haven’t read the article completely as I did not want to lose this observation, but this appears to answer how Thomism could be reconciled with ID.