granny
I have to admit that I do not know the official philosophy of Intellectual Design.
The official term is Intelligent Design.
That the universe appears to reflect evidence of a design is as old as Plato and Aristotle. It was emphasized again in Augustine and Aquinas. In modern science even Isaac Newton subscribed to it in a very forceful way, even to pointing to animal life as reflecting signs of an ordering intelligence. Einstein said he wanted to know the mind of God, by which I believe he meant that there is order in the universe, rather than chaos, and therefore there must be an ordering Intelligence which for want of a better word he called God, since he didn’t believe in a personal God but rather in a sort of Deist God like Spinoza’s.
Darwin also spoke in this way, or at least hinted at some ordering Intelligence.
“There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.” Origin of the Species, 1872 (last edition before Darwin’s death).
But many of Darwin’s followers, right up to modern times, have taken the theory of evolution as an excuse to espouse atheism (certainly Richard Dawkins is the foremost of them today, having said that the theory of evolution finally made atheism respectable).
The molecular biologist Michael Behe, the mathematician William Dembski and others have explored in depth the peculiar qualities of life that make it seem unlikely that even the first form of life could have come to be without extraordinary circumstances coming together in such a way to make an organism all at once (without evolving since there was nothing to evolve from) that this organism could not only breathe and nourish itself, but also reproduce itself.
This principle of abiogenesis Behe likened to a mousetrap, which if any one of its parts was missing, could not be a mousetrap. This is what is meant by
irriducible complexity. Now a mousetrap is designed. Mousetraps don’t come into existence by accident. If anything so simple as a mousetrap must be designed, how much less likely is it that anything as complex as the first living organism could have suddenly popped into existence without the circumstances being arranged for it to do so (Intelligent Design).
The reason intelligent design is so threatening to evolutionists is not that it is illogical, but that it threatens the comfort zone many of them have built up around themselves that fits nicely their atheistic world view. Richard Dawkins is an evolutionists, but he is also an atheist, and there is nothing so fascinating as to watch him philosophically self-destruct in his debates with those who see merit in the idea of Intelligent Design.
In the meantime, Intelligent Design theorists have taken a pounding the likes of which no one in the scientific world has taken since Galileo.
Isaac Newton Laws of Thermodynamics, Optics, etc.
“This most beautiful system [the universe] could only proceed from the dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being.” Isaac Newton
**Seriously, I find the concept of an intelligent designer philosophically limiting. **
It would be interesting to know why.
