There is really no such thing as “pure science” – and certainly not with regards to Darwinian theory. Science relies on a philosophical foundation – one that doesn’t come from science (and one that can be questioned for good reason).
The philosophy upon which science rests is known as Methodological Naturalism. It does not rely upon any religious or supernaturalist philosophy of divine immaterial beings or causes.
This is something I don’t understand. First of all, your use of the term “disingenuous” makes it sound like there’s something sinister going on – some sneaky trick. I can’t see it that way, myself.
Why not? It’s a matter of public record, after all. ID’s religious agenda was carefully kept from the public, and only came to light when one of their foundational documents (the so-called Wedge Document)----which unequivocally states that the “Designer” is the biblical God----appeared on the internet. This clear duplicity was brought up and exposed repeatedly at the Dover trial in 2005, as is outlined in recent book-length accounts, for example:
Barbara Forrest & Paul Gross,
Creationism’s Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design (Oxford, 2004)
Edward Humes,
Monkey Girl: Evolution, Education, Religion, & the Battle for America’s Soul (HarperCollins, 2007); ISBN 0-06-088548-3
Kenneth R. Miller,
Only a Theory: Evolution & the Battle for America’s Soul (Viking, 2008); ISBN 978-0-670-01883-3
Gordy Slack,
The Battle Over the Meaning of Everything: Evolution, Intelligent Design, & a School Board in Dover, PA. (Jossey-Bass, 2007); ISBN 978-0-7879-8786-2
Every Catholic must embrace some form of creationism or Intelligent Design theory.
Yes----
as a theological conviction,
not as a scientific conclusion.
We affirm every Sunday at Mass that God is the creator of all that is seen and unseen.
Yes, this is
a Christian doctrine that we affirm together, not a scientific concept.
Therefore, every Catholic scientist must accept that God is our creator and The Creator.
Yes, they accept this as a
doctrine of their faith (Heb. 11:3), not as a scientific idea.
What follows from this is that we can recognize God’s work within nature itself. This is evident through aspects of nature that show indications of intelligent design.
Indeed, we can. But this is a
theological conviction based upon faith (Heb. 11:3), not a scientific conclusion based upon empirical data.
In essence, it really doesn’t matter.
In essence, it matters very much whether the “Designer” is himself a part of the natural world (and thus was himself “designed”), or transcends nature (i.e., is *super-*natural). The former would be within the scope of scientific investigation, while the latter would clearly be beyond the purview of science.
In our current paradigm, we have an “evolution of the gaps” theory – where evolution is the default position. So, when we see something that evolution cannot explain (and there are many such things in nature), the “solution” is: “it must have evolved”. This solution is reached even when there is no evidence.
The reality is that evolution is a demonstrable fact of science, and that no other natural (that is, scientific) explanation fits the data as well. Perhaps (at least in principle) a better scientific model could be developed at some future time, but at present evolution serves as the central organizing principle of the sciences, and has done so for a century-and-a-half.
So, evolutionary theory (for many of its practitioners) cannot be falsified.
Sure it can, in a hundred different ways. The fact that, in a hundred-and-fifty years, no such falsification has been forthcoming is extremely significant for the strength of the theory.
No matter what is found that contradicts the theory, some explanation is offered that preserves the notion that “everything in nature is a product of evolution”. But this is merely conjecture and wishful thinking.
If you wish to propose an alternative theory which is genuinely scientific (that is, which involves empirically-based natural causality), then feel free. Unfortunately, ID does not qualify as such.
Additionally, SETI does not know what the intelligence will be like. They’re looking for extraterrestials – they may assume that those creatures share our nature, but they could be of an entirely different natural order.
Nevertheless, they would be natural contingent beings, not a supernatural self-existent Being.
As Catholics, we cannot accept that every living being is composed of matter. We know that there are angels and saints who are entirely spiritual.
Science, however, is self-restricted to
natural objects and phenomena. Thus, such immaterial entities as angels and disembodied souls (not to mention deities and supernatural causes) are simply beyond the scope of science’s ability to investigate, and fall within the category of religious faith.
This goes against St. Paul’s teaching that God’s power is readily seen in nature, and in fact, even pagans had no excuse for not recognizing it.
Paul is making a
theological point, not a scientific one. Yes, in light of Paul’s preaching which they had repeatedly heard, his pagan audience had no excuse for not exercising faith in the “Unknown God.”
Gaudium de veritate,
Don
+T+