L
levinas12
Guest
I agree that intelligent design belongs in philosophy … the issue has been with us since the pre-Socratics … and it does not always implies a “designer” … for example, Aristotle saw design in nature but for him there was no designer … his God was blissfully unaware of the rest of the universe …That would take us out of the realm of science (and, as such topics tend to gravitate toward, politics) and back into philosophy (metaphysics), theology, and faith. And it is in these realms, my friend, which are no less significant than science, that I believe Intelligent Design belongs.
But philosophy has fallen upon hard times … for example, Hawking in his latest book (“The Grand Design”) dismisses it. For many people, philosophy no longer has a purchase on the “truth” - because it does not follow scientific protocols. What is an experiment or hypothesis in philosophy? How can it be tested?
So in what sense do you think philosophy significant? Why should it be taught at all?
Does it have a “truth dimension”? Should it be allowed in the public square?
A lot of the postings in this forum are meant to discredit a number of philosophical arguments (both assumptions and logic) and maybe even the very possibility of philosophical argumentation. So where does it stand with philosophy? Has it been superseded by science? If philosophy goes down the tubes, does it drag with it intelligent design?
Now I am an advocate of philosophy. And I think that, without philosophy, you cannot account for what science does. But the question whether philosophy can “earn its keep” must be confronted. Specifically, we need to clarify how philosophy goes about its business. And this might shed some light on the intelligent design controversy.