Why do so many americans believe in Intelligent Design?

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Americans are open to intelligent design because they have been beaten too frequently with the Darwin stick by reform-minded people.

It’s reflexive, self defense, really. It has nothing to do with science and everything to do with control.
 
Because GOD is the Intelligence of existence, and the Creator.

If you need proof of GOD, instead be-it.

If GOD had set his face in the sky instead of the sun, you would lie prostrate as a slave to him and never lift your nose from the dirt.

If you care for scientific method so much that it is required, know that it has provided scant little in the way of proof of its most basic provisions and principals as to the visible universe, i.e., cosmology, gravity, quantum gravity, etc., and huge, as yet incompatible explanations for basic elemental units such as the photon (highly recommend reading Roger Penrose’s “The Emporer’s New Mind”). YET! When theoretical physicists reach the end of their multi-black-boarded calculations and find, inconsolably, the dreaded symbol for “infinity,” they do not thank THE ALMIGHTY for HIS gentle HAND and subtle WIT. They assume failure and take out the eraser to start again.

Consider, (from “TERMS”) to reach the complexity of a moth that has the ability to vary its coloration to evade predators, is so far removed from the initial complexity of the idea of the existence of ANYTHING, that you cannot build a probabiltiy matrix to reach it. Sleep peacefully in the now that your CREATOR has apportioned you, together we fallen children of GOD by Adam & Eve, and thank HIM everyday for the great bounty of this place which HE has made for us that is unimaginably less than Eden, and so much more so, by HIS people in Heaven.

THE VERY HAIRS ON YOUR HEAD ARE COUNTED, HE HAS CARVED YOU IN THE PALM OF HIS HAND, START ACTING LIKE THE CHILD OF GOD THAT YOU ARE.
 
Because GOD is the Intelligence of existence, and the Creator.

If you need proof of GOD, instead be-it.

If GOD had set his face in the sky instead of the sun, you would lie prostrate as a slave to him and never lift your nose from the dirt.

If you care for scientific method so much that it is required, know that it has provided scant little in the way of proof of its most basic provisions and principals as to the visible universe, i.e., cosmology, gravity, quantum gravity, etc., and huge, as yet incompatible explanations for basic elemental units such as the photon (highly recommend reading Roger Penrose’s “The Emporer’s New Mind”). YET! When theoretical physicists reach the end of their multi-black-boarded calculations and find, inconsolably, the dreaded symbol for “infinity,” they do not thank THE ALMIGHTY for HIS gentle HAND and subtle WIT. They assume failure and take out the eraser to start again.

Consider, (from “TERMS”) to reach the complexity of a moth that has the ability to vary its coloration to evade predators, is so far removed from the initial complexity of the idea of the existence of ANYTHING, that you cannot build a probabiltiy matrix to reach it. Sleep peacefully in the now that your CREATOR has apportioned you, together we fallen children of GOD by Adam & Eve, and thank HIM everyday for the great bounty of this place which HE has made for us that is unimaginably less than Eden, and so much more so, by HIS people in Heaven.

THE VERY HAIRS ON YOUR HEAD ARE COUNTED, HE HAS CARVED YOU IN THE PALM OF HIS HAND, START ACTING LIKE THE CHILD OF GOD THAT YOU ARE.
Your post is interesting, but permit me to note that the topic of this thread is not on God but on Intelligent Design in particular.
 
As Bill Nye indicates - ID belief is such an American phenomenon.

I agree with Bill, why is it being taught to kids and where are the future engineers and scientists going to come from.

youtube.com/watch?v=gHbYJfwFgOU

Or as Lawrence Krauss puts it, is this child abuse to validate such ignorance.

Why is this state of affairs so peculiar to America

youtube.com/watch?v=UTedvV6oZjo
This has zero to do with science and engineering. Right now, American scientists are leading the world in nanotechnology. This is just fear-mongering.

Intelligent Design just makes sense. If I find a home hidden deep in the woods and enter and find it well-ordered, do I assume it all happened by chance or that someone who is not there, put it in a particular order?

From the atom to the human being to the structure of the universe, there is an order, and it is not accidental or not the province of laws that just happened to be applied from nowhere. There is obvious design, from the flower to the bee.

Peace,
Ed
 
Do not conflate religion with anti-science, or science with anti-religion.

There is nothing in either that precludes the other, as my family of scientists, doctors, civil engineers and teachers could tell you. 🙂

Personally I am, like the Catholic church, enthusiastic to see humanity discover more about our world using the tools at our disposal - physical sciences being some of the exciting ones. One of the things that fascinates me at the moment is how our science gives us tantalising hints about the what the nature of God would have to encompass, how our universe was created etc.

There is nothing to intelligent design that need preclude any scientific explanation.

God created it all. This does not preclude wanting to know every fact we can ethically uncover about it!
You say don’t conflate religion with anti-science, but as US schools don’t ‘teach’ religion, the anti-science must come from the teachings of the fundamentalist churches. I’m just saying they’re too literal and seem to be searching for clear-cut simplicity. Your and my views on religion will differ hugely but I have no problems with your beliefs if you embrace scientific enquiry! Like I said, Catholicism never clashed with my science education.
I guess the ’ devil is in the detail’ with ID but from what I’ve seen, it seems like dressed up creationism but I’ll stand corrected if I’m mistaken…I guess there are different versions?
 
As Bill Nye indicates - ID belief is such an American phenomenon.

I agree with Bill, why is it being taught to kids and where are the future engineers and scientists going to come from.

youtube.com/watch?v=gHbYJfwFgOU

Or as Lawrence Krauss puts it, is this child abuse to validate such ignorance.

Why is this state of affairs so peculiar to America

youtube.com/watch?v=UTedvV6oZjo
The cultures in the US and in Europe/UK are different. Here in the US, we spring from people who wanted to continue to be reigious in their own way. In Europe, there was a constant push to get away from religion. Then the World Wars totally devastated Europe and parts of England, which caused an existential despair, while in the US, few of us were exposed to the realities of those wars.

Also, Americans tend to be very individualistic, and thus skeptical, and because we are not very philosophical, most of these ideas have come from Europe and are not really a part of our culture. It is about the French that one says they are either Pascalian or Cartesian: we have nothing like that here!
 
You say don’t conflate religion with anti-science, but as US schools don’t ‘teach’ religion, the anti-science must come from the teachings of the fundamentalist churches. I’m just saying they’re too literal and seem to be searching for clear-cut simplicity. Your and my views on religion will differ hugely but I have no problems with your beliefs if you embrace scientific enquiry! Like I said, Catholicism never clashed with my science education.
I guess the ’ devil is in the detail’ with ID but from what I’ve seen, it seems like dressed up creationism but I’ll stand corrected if I’m mistaken…I guess there are different versions?
I believe there are different versions (or dresses) of ID. The question, to me, is what is the intent of those who are pushing it? Conservatives are always talking about leftist, atheist, secular, and gay agendas; what about a conservative, religious agenda in this case?
 
To clear up the difference between creationism and ID, look to the discovery institute, the creators of the ID theory:

intelligentdesign.org/whatisID.php
What is intelligent design?
Intelligent design refers to a scientific research program as well as a community of scientists, philosophers and other scholars who seek evidence of design in nature. The theory of intelligent design holds that certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection. Through the study and analysis of a system’s components, a design theorist is able to determine whether various natural structures are the product of chance, natural law, intelligent design, or some combination thereof. Such research is conducted by observing the types of information produced when intelligent agents act. Scientists then seek to find objects which have those same types of informational properties which we commonly know come from intelligence. Intelligent design has applied these scientific methods to detect design in irreducibly complex biological structures, the complex and specified information content in DNA, the life-sustaining physical architecture of the universe, and the geologically rapid origin of biological diversity in the fossil record during the Cambrian explosion approximately 530 million years ago.
 
America was founded on freedom of religion so I don’t think it’s that big of a deal.[BIBLEDRB][/BIBLEDRB]
 
Americans are open to intelligent design because they have been beaten too frequently with the Darwin stick by reform-minded people.

It’s reflexive, self defense, really. It has nothing to do with science and everything to do with control.
Well that’s not good is it?? A purely emotional self defence against something they don’t understand, instead of a rational response to knowledge?
 
The cultures in the US and in Europe/UK are different. Here in the US, we spring from people who wanted to continue to be reigious in their own way. In Europe, there was a constant push to get away from religion. Then the World Wars totally devastated Europe and parts of England, which caused an existential despair, while in the US, few of us were exposed to the realities of those wars.

Also, Americans tend to be very individualistic, and thus skeptical, and because we are not very philosophical, most of these ideas have come from Europe and are not really a part of our culture. It is about the French that one says they are either Pascalian or Cartesian: we have nothing like that here!
You make it sound like we are like sheep in following a ‘fashionable’ idea - and are not skeptical too!!! I’m not sure what you mean about not being philosophical? Science is not philosophical - altho’ I guess people get philosophical about what science finds out!
 
The cultures in the US and in Europe/UK are different. Here in the US, we spring from people who wanted to continue to be reigious in their own way. In Europe, there was a constant push to get away from religion. Then the World Wars totally devastated Europe and parts of England, which caused an existential despair, while in the US, few of us were exposed to the realities of those wars.

Also, Americans tend to be very individualistic, and thus skeptical, and because we are not very philosophical, most of these ideas have come from Europe and are not really a part of our culture. It is about the French that one says they are either Pascalian or Cartesian: we have nothing like that here!
What do you think about Krauss and Nye’s point that teaching of psuedo science will hold back American children in the future as they have to compete with the rest of the world, who will have a better understanding of the natural world.?
 
April,
Part of productive discourse in both science and culture is to be careful to define your terms. Unclear definitions is a significant part of problem in this issue. “Intelligent Design” means different things to different people.

Myself, I am either a supporter or a critic of ID depending on which definition you use.

I support: “There is no evidential conflict between the observations of biologists and the religious idea of a Creator who brought the world forth from nothing via supernatural power. Indeed as catholicism teaches that man is created in God’s image it is not surprising that we might be able to gradually discover more and more of the rational means by which God brought forth life. This in no way diminishes God or raises our stature to his, for these laws of nature ARE his design that He created from nothing.”

I do not support: “We’re so smart and advanced in science these days that we know all we need to to declare that certain organ systems are so irreducably complex that they could never have gradually developed because the partial development of those systems would have conveyed no competitive advantage for survival or reproduction. Therefore, we’ve proven that God stepped in and created these complex systems via a miraculous process that requires no further investigation (since miracles can’t be explained).”

See the difference? Which one are you asking about? As a catholic, I absolutely believe in miracles. But as a scientifically trained engineer, I believe that we need to look for natural explanations for what we observe and not just give up if at first we fail to find them.

As someone who works with architects and structural engineers, I find it fascinating that many of these guys can look at a bridge or a building and tell you who designed it just by it’s structural attributes. And yet when biologists get together, they uncritically accept as a truism that similarity implies descent. (I suppose it DOES imply that if your bias causes you to rule out a designer before even thinking about the issue…)
 
I thought this was a pretty good response to the Bill Nye video:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qxqnfk9MtMU
I watched it. I think the video maker was so intent on pulling Bill’s video apart he missed the point.

Bill was talking about science, technology, engineering and the requirement for the economy in the US to keep growing, if it can produce skilled scientists in the future.

His concern is how can America maintain it’s position as a world leader in this area if future generations learn ‘pseudo-science’ and religious beliefs as though they were science.

It is OK to study ‘pseudo science’ in religious or philosophy class, but it won’t solve problems in the future in the real world.
 
April,
Part of productive discourse in both science and culture is to be careful to define your terms. Unclear definitions is a significant part of problem in this issue. “Intelligent Design” means different things to different people.

Myself, I am either a supporter or a critic of ID depending on which definition you use.

I support: “There is no evidential conflict between the observations of biologists and the religious idea of a Creator who brought the world forth from nothing via supernatural power. Indeed as catholicism teaches that man is created in God’s image it is not surprising that we might be able to gradually discover more and more of the rational means by which God brought forth life. This in no way diminishes God or raises our stature to his, for these laws of nature ARE his design that He created from nothing.”

I do not support: “We’re so smart and advanced in science these days that we know all we need to to declare that certain organ systems are so irreducably complex that they could never have gradually developed because the partial development of those systems would have conveyed no competitive advantage for survival or reproduction. Therefore, we’ve proven that God stepped in and created these complex systems via a miraculous process that requires no further investigation (since miracles can’t be explained).”

See the difference? Which one are you asking about? As a catholic, I absolutely believe in miracles. But as a scientifically trained engineer, I believe that we need to look for natural explanations for what we observe and not just give up if at first we fail to find them.

As someone who works with architects and structural engineers, I find it fascinating that many of these guys can look at a bridge or a building and tell you who designed it just by it’s structural attributes. And yet when biologists get together, they uncritically accept as a truism that similarity implies descent. (I suppose it DOES imply that if your bias causes you to rule out a designer before even thinking about the issue…)
I suppose I am talking about the various forms of ID and creationism in the sense of the alternatives to evolution. But in particular, why are these theories so prevalent in the US, that scientists (e.g. Nye) express a concern that it will hold america’s children back, and krauss believes it is tantamount to child abuse to teach pseudo science.
 
Simple, it’s a reaction to all the Dawkins sorts of jerks in the world who have attempted to hijack science and use it as a weapon against religion. It can only be used that way by dishonest men. People who hold religious convictions sometimes over-react and reject science, not just the hijackers of science. I honestly had a biology professor in a Big Ten university formally teach in a 101 level class that modern biology factually disproved the existence of God. Men like that give science a bad name.

Here’s the problem. Science has been an excellent servant of mankind for a millenia and has tremendously helped us answer the “what, where, when, how” questions that life poses. Divine revelation (Scripture and Sacred Tradition) has always provided the best answers for “who and why” questions.

In the distant past, some churchmen made the mistake of trying to force revelation to answer “how and what” types of questions. But God hasn’t revealed much of those sorts of things, so horrible mistakes can and have been made by men who thought they had revealed answers to those questions when they didn’t.

Today, similar and WORSE mistakes are being made by men who have rejected God and are trying to make science competent to answer “who and why” questions. This is where the horrors of Eugenics and Marxism came from (and why secularists rarely question abortion, embryonic experimentation and other modern horrors).

So while Nye is in part right to worry about the threat posed by fundamentalism, he’s ignoring the even greater threat posed by the scientismists (possibly because he is one). Both are dangerous sorts of fellows. Just look where it’s going. It’s VERY short step between proclaiming certain sorts of religious parenting to be “abusive” to enforcing a state directive to remove children from homes with such “unfit parents.” If you really believe a behavior is abusive, calling DCFS in is the logical next step. So who’s the bigger threat to civilization, Krauss or the Creationists? 😦
 
Simple, it’s a reaction to all the Dawkins sorts of jerks in the world who have attempted to hijack science and use it as a weapon against religion. It can only be used that way by dishonest men. People who hold religious convictions sometimes over-react and reject science, not just the hijackers of science. I honestly had a biology professor in a Big Ten university formally teach in a 101 level class that modern biology factually disproved the existence of God. Men like that give science a bad name.

Here’s the problem. Science has been an excellent servant of mankind for a millenia and has tremendously helped us answer the “what, where, when, how” questions that life poses. Divine revelation (Scripture and Sacred Tradition) has always provided the best answers for “who and why” questions.

In the distant past, some churchmen made the mistake of trying to force revelation to answer “how and what” types of questions. But God hasn’t revealed much of those sorts of things, so horrible mistakes can and have been made by men who thought they had revealed answers to those questions when they didn’t.

Today, similar and WORSE mistakes are being made by men who have rejected God and are trying to make science competent to answer “who and why” questions. This is where the horrors of Eugenics and Marxism came from (and why secularists rarely question abortion, embryonic experimentation and other modern horrors).

So while Nye is in part right to worry about the threat posed by fundamentalism, he’s ignoring the even greater threat posed by the scientismists (possibly because he is one). Both are dangerous sorts of fellows. Just look where it’s going. It’s VERY short step between proclaiming certain sorts of religious parenting to be “abusive” to enforcing a state directive to remove children from homes with such “unfit parents.” If you really believe a behavior is abusive, calling DCFS in is the logical next step. So who’s the bigger threat to civilization, Krauss or the Creationists? 😦
Do Americans feel that by having people that believe in ID and Creationism that that helps prevent a perceived threat to civilization? Surely, ‘knowledge’ should not be used that way. That is a form of indoctrination. But is that true, I would love to hear other views.

I don’t think scientists are rejecting Gods. They just don’t see evidence for them. If some one found evidence, it would be global news AND the scientific community would welcome it, they probably more than anyone love a discovery.
 
Do Americans feel that by having people that believe in ID and Creationism that that helps prevent a perceived threat to civilization? Surely, ‘knowledge’ should not be used that way. That is a form of indoctrination. But is that true, I would love to hear other views.

I don’t think scientists are rejecting Gods. They just don’t see evidence for them. If some one found evidence, it would be global news AND the scientific community would welcome it, they probably more than anyone love a discovery.
I would assume that the scientists that are involved in verifying miracles see evidence of some extra-scientific activity (they are not all Christians or even believers in God). The problem with miracles is that they are not repeatable. And the scientific method looks for repeatable, experimental activity so they can control the (name removed by moderator)ut parameters and provide a framework to explain the outcome.

God’s activities do not fall under the scientific rubrics.

The work of the ID fraternity is to find places in the history of the universe where

  1. *] the probabilities of random events can be computed (ie origin of life, creation of universe)
    *] examine the theory that could reproduce these events, given the same starting conditions
    *] compute the probabilities for the known results
    *] examine the time allowed for the results to occur
    *] then raise the question: is it possible?

    So if life should appear on earth and the probabilities show it should occur on the order of 50000 years. And it took 2,000,000 years, then this is probably a case of random chance.

    If the probabilities show it should take on the order of 10^250 years (ie trillions of years longer than the age of the universe) and it only took 2,000,000 years, perhaps

    1. *] the theory is wrong or
      *] there was more perhaps an outside entity (designer) that may have been forcing the
      result.

      Note: ALL the number I give above are made up.
 
Well that’s not good is it?? A purely emotional self defence against something they don’t understand, instead of a rational response to knowledge?
It’s a response to something they understand all too well - a culture war. It has nothing to do with scientific thought and it in no way prevents students from learning actual science. Americans are simply tired of pseudo-scientific bullying of which Darwinism as presented in school is very much a part. Since you are from the UK you perhaps are not familiar with our public schools. They were designed with one purpose - to turn out “good citizens”. Once a student catches on that his elders are full of beans, he can’t help but look for flatulence everywhere - including in evolution as popularly explained or personified by Darwin, for example.

Spend five minutes reading Darwin and you will see what I mean. He is full of wind and all sorts of nonsense (vice: his views on race). Hardly the secular saint presented in school.
 
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