Donald45:
You disagree with my statement that “The ‘intelligence’ appealed to in ID theory is necessarily metaphysical/supernatural/immaterial.” Yet, if I’m wrong about this, one must then conclude that the “intelligence” is itself a part of nature, simply one more material cause in a long line of physical phenomena. But this is not what ID contends. Rather, ID’s Intelligent Designer is the ultimate Cause behind irreducably complex biological structures and mechanisms. It is beyond and outside of nature, and thus acts as a supernatural intelligence.
We agree ID does not specify the intelligent agent. I’m not saying I believe they exist, mind you, but if intelligent extra-terrestrial life forms did exist, they would be just as real as you and I - not metaphysical, not supernatural, and not immaterial. So ID leaves open the possibility of a non-supernatural intelligent agent. This is because they do not want to focus on who guided evolution, but rather on the fact that the evolution of certain biological processes and structures is poorly explained by current evolutionary theory.
The main focus, what makes ID fall within the realm of science, and the whole reason it has gotten such widespread attention - from my local liberal newspaper to Time magazine - is that it has made scientific arguments that question whether evolution can be responsible for certain biological processes and structures.
You say that ID’s claims have been “refuted”. Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that you are correct about that. How were they refuted? Philosophically or scientifically?
What I am trying to say is, I already know Who guided evolution. I’m more interested in the scientific reasoning that makes natural selection a poor explanation for the evolution of certain biological processes and structures. This is what ID is saying too.
Maybe God did use evolution to create us. But at this stage in the game we are still allowed to question if He did and, if so, how He did it. It’s been a real pin-prick to the overinflated egos of some atheistic scientists and thinkers who idolize their own intellects and respond to ID with sputtering rage in an attempt to protect their faith in their belief structure. Whatever the outcome, I have to admit I find that hilarious. In a way, there are no atheists, are there? Even the atheists believe in something.
I’m not saying you are an atheist, and I agree with you that, just because a biological process or structure is extremely unlikely to have evolved only by natural selection does not “prove” God guided the process. That is not the immediate goal.
What I am saying - and you have said it too in a way when you said you believe Behe’s claims have been refuted - is that Behe’s claims were scientific in nature. If indeed they have been refuted, ID may refine its claims in the light of new evidence as it becomes available. If current evolutionary theory can stand up to the challenges, it will ultimately become a stronger theory because of it. Or perhaps the holes in evolutionary theory will get bigger in future battles, and ID Theory will gain more credence among more scientists. I don’t think either side has quit the discussion yet. And the discussion is a scientific one as I see it. Maybe we will just have to agree to disagree about that.