I used the word “designed” in the sense of “created” because we are talking about Intelligent Design. My apologies for not being clearer.
OK - but I’m confused about why you identified the 2 forms of ID as you did then.
To quote William Dembski:Although ID as a scientific program stands logically prior to ID as cultural movement, this logical priority does not imply temporal priority.andThat said, we need to be very clear when we are doing the nuts-and-bolts scientific and conceptual work on ID and when we are engaged in cultural and political activity. What’s more, these aspects of ID need to keep pace. We have done amazingly well in creating a cultural movement, but we must not exaggerate ID’s successes on the scientific front.
Source:
Becoming a Disciplined ScienceID
is a combination of science and politics/culture.
So you agree that it is at least partly scientific? Good. Since a logical person would conclude that only what we call God could possibly be the designer, of course it has cultural aspects as well.
And evolution is not also a cultural thing? (I think it is).
I do not. That is why I have been generally careful to phrase things as “ID is not currently science” or “At the moment …” Every scientific result is open to change so it is very unwise to predict the future of science. I am not talking about the future, I am talking about whether or not ID is science now. At the moment I do not see it as meeting the required standard.
I just want to clarify this…are you saying that it does not meet the standards of being a theory, or that the research, math, analysis, etc. itself is not science?
He did not. That is how we know that the literal 6 x 24 hour day interpretation of Genesis is wrong. The Creator also tells us, through science, that He designed the universe in such a way that life would self-assemble.
The universe is designed. ID agrees with you wholeheartedly. Welcome to the party. We still have a minor disagreement over a few divine tweaks here and there (perhaps out of love for his creation, not out of necessity), and that tracks might exist.
So you still insist that God designed a self-assembling universe (but one that he doesn’t want us to scientifically find out that he designed?) That’s interesting, but not a scientific observation.
ID is looking at far too small a scale for far too small a Creator. If God dropped a stone from the top of a cliff, He would know exactly where it would land because He created gravity. ID is trying to look for God’s finger pushing the stone downwards in its fall.
There may be some instances where the finger of God was directly involved, but certainly ID does not say that God’s finger is involved in every stone dropping off a cliff. If you could find such an example on the
Discovery.org web site I will drop my objection.
An astrologer uses a telescope. Is astrology science? An alchemist uses chemicals and a Bunsen Burner, is alchemy science?
I don’t know much about astrology. As I recall, they did map the motion of moon & planets, and are responsible first defining the length of a year. And came up with good times to plant crops, predict eclipses, etc. They got some things wrong no doubt. They also got some things right. Do we throw it out because it wasn’t done formally by the scientific method? Was it WRONG because they didn’t do it formally by the scientific method.
And alchemists came up with a lot of good stuff before the scientific method was formalized. Some of them probably used the scientific method without realizing it.
No. Science advances by proposing hypotheses, and then doing its best to knock those hypotheses down. Any hypotheses that are left standing are provisionally accepted as theories. Abiogenesis is science, it currently has a lot of hypotheses and not enough data to knock most of them down.
Dark matter & dark energy? Black holes? Multi-verses? These are all generally accepted as “science” but there is no way to falsify them. No way to knock them down. Well, we just haven’t actually found any dark matter etc. yet. As soon as we do, we’ll let you do some experiments with it to falsify our theory. Oh, right. But it’s science.
I haven’t thought about the philosophy of science to know if the “must be falsifiable” thing is a new requirement invented just for this occasion. It seems to me that a lot of good science was done without regard to having a definition of falsifiability. If you want to make falsifiability part of the definition of a theory, OK, I already said that I agree with that.
A lot of scientific observation, experimentation, modeling, etc. can be done without a formal theory, and it’s still science.