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LukeS
Guest
The problem with the second part is, if everything is “designed”, then the argument from design undercuts or deconstructs its own terminology. This is because the definition of design stems from examples of complex, intelligent, human craftsmanship understood *over and against *things which were not designed like piles of rubbish or snow drifts. The former artifacts are understood to be intelligently caused and the latter are not. The examples are paradigmatic of design and non-design.There is a “binary opposition.”. What can be ascertained by science is whether the universe always existed (it did not), **and whether it gives all the appearance of being designed (it does). **
So whats the problem with the argument from design? Well, in seeing the a similar complexity in natural “accidental” phenomena as artifacts, the initial taxonomical binary opposition is undermined. One response, the creationist response, is to say “nature has a intelligent cause”, but another is that “intelligence, and human craftsmanship, have a natural cause and are nothing special.”
Now to Occam. It would seem sthat creationism (“intelligent, supernatural cause”) adds an non-natural element to ones ontology. It would seem that the latter (“intelligence is natural”) makes do with a monistic ontology, yet has similar explanatory power.
What do you think?