Posted on 11/13/2005 6:21:50 AM PST by ml/nj
To me, the most fascinating aspect of the debate over Darwinism versus Intelligent Design is that neither side understands the other sides argument. Better yet, no one seems to understand their own sides argument. But that doesnt stop anyone from having a passionate opinion.
Ive been doing lots of reading on the subject, trying to gather comic fodder. I fully expected to validate my preconceived notion that the Darwinists had a mountain of credible evidence and the Intelligent Design folks were creationist kooks disguising themselves as scientists. Thats the way the media paints it. I had no reason to believe otherwise. The truth is a lot more interesting. Allow me to set you straight. (Note: Im not a believer in Intelligent Design, Creationism, Darwinism, free will, non-monetary compensation, or anything else I cant eat if I try hard enough.)
First of all, youd be hard pressed to find a useful debate about Darwinism and Intelligent Design, of the sort that you could use to form your own opinion. I cant find one, and Ive looked. What you have instead is each side misrepresenting the others position and then making a good argument for why the misrepresentation is wrong. (If you dont believe me, just watch the comments I get to this post.)
To make things more complicated, both sides have good and bad arguments lumped into them. If you make a good argument on your side, I respond by attacking your bad argument instead. If it were a debate contest, both sides would lose.
For example, Darwinists often argue that Intelligent Design cant be true because we know the earth is over 10,000 years old. That would be a great argument, supported by every relevant branch of science, except that it has nothing to do with Intelligent Design.
Intelligent Design accepts an old earth and even accepts the fact that species probably evolved. They only question the how. Creationists have jumped on that bandwagon as a way to poke holes in Darwinism. The Creationists and the Intelligent Design folks have the same target (Darwin), but they dont have the same argument. The average person who has a strong opinion on this topic doesnt understand that distinction because the political agenda of the creationists makes things murky.
On the other side, Intelligent Design advocates point out a number of flaws in the textbooks that teach Darwinism. Apparently both sides of the debate acknowledge that the evidence for evolution is sometimes overstated or distorted in the service of making it simpler to teach. If you add to that the outright errors (acknowledged by both sides), the history of fossil frauds, the subjectivity of classifying fossils, and the fact that all of the human-like fossils ever found can fit inside a small box, you have lots of easy targets for the opponents. (Relax. Im not saying Darwinism is wrong. Im saying both sides have lots of easy targets.)
The other problem for people like me is that the good arguments on both sides are too complicated for me to understand. My fallback position in situations like this has always been to trust the experts the scientists of which more than 90%+ are sure that Darwin got it right.
The Intelligent Design people have a not-so-kooky argument against the idea of trusting 90%+ of scientists. They point out that evolution is supported by different branches of science (paleontologists, microbiologists, etc.) and those folks are specialists who only understand their own field. Thats no problem, you think, because each scientist validates Darwinism from his or her own specialty, then they all compare notes, and everything fits. Right?
Heres where it gets interesting. The Intelligent Design people allege that some experts within each narrow field are NOT convinced that the evidence within their specialty is a slam-dunk support of Darwin. Each branch of science, they say, has pro-Darwinists who acknowledge that while they assume the other branches of science have more solid evidence for Darwinism, their own branch is lacking in that high level of certainty. In other words, the scientists are in a weird peer pressure, herd mentality loop where they think that the other guy must have the good stuff.
Is that possible? I have no way of knowing.
But let me give you a little analogy. One time in my corporate career I was assigned to lead a project to build a 10 million dollar technology laboratory. The project was based on the fact that hundreds of our customers wanted a place to test our technology before buying our products. I interviewed several managers who told me the same thing. Months into the project, I discovered that there was in fact only one customer who had once asked for that service, and he had been satisfied with another solution. The story of that one customer had been told and retold until everyone believed that someone else had direct knowledge of the hundreds of customers in need. If you guessed that we immediately stopped the project, youve never worked in a big company. We just changed our reasons and continued until funding got cut for unrelated budget reasons.
Id be surprised if 90%+ of scientists are wrong about the evidence for Darwinism. But if you think its impossible, youve lived a sheltered life.
And I found this.
Most amusing comment among those I read:
ML/NJBoth Darwinism and Intelligent Design are preposterous. Obvously you can't get somthing from nothing, life can't come from non-life. And if the world had been designed intelligently, we wouldn't all need to spend our time reading cartoonist's blogs to keep our day interesting.
The only possible soloution here is Unintelligent Design. We were created as some kind of half-assed science fair project that probably got a D-minus.
After the fair was over, the janitor just tossed us away into the unfashionable part of the galaxy, to spin around until we eventually decompose with all of the other crap floating around. Hot, loose, alien women, on the other hand, that would be an example of intelligent design.
bump for later.
I guess really it all boils down to faith. You have to have "faith" to believe in a Darwinism explanation of how we got here with the extreme complexity of the life forms and coincidental enviroment and amount of DNA variances. As far as if God created the earth (as stated in genesis) you only have to believe in one simple thing - the omnipotence of God. If He has the ability to create the universe and all life in it, just how difficult would it be for Him to make the universe appear "older" for whatever reason.
First of all", its called evolution, not Darwinism. Thats like calling ID Creationism.
Second, theres no point in debating a 100% faith based ideology. A faith can not be disproved. ID's only hope of evidentiary support its to disprove every alternative, and it has had no success in disproving the scientific theory of evolution nor the evidence supporting it.
Both are fine to teach in public school. But ID belongs in social studies, not along side evolution in science.
I think you are wrong. The thing that people nowadays call evolution is Darwinism or neo-Darwinism. All share natural selection as the driving force which produced the variety of life forms we observe today.
ML/NJ
This is a silly notion.
I believe that G-d gave the Torah to Moses, and Moses gave the Torah to the nation of Israel. This is an article of faith that Jews repeat every time (well almost) the Torah is read publicly.
Is it really true that this cannot be disproved?
Couldn't evidence turn up somewhere in a sort of anti-Josephus tome that depicts the entire history of the near-east in a completely different fashion; and then some more evidence that shows that the Torah was created sometime around the time of Jesus; or maybe by Jesus himself; and then maybe more evidence that forces most reasonable people to conclude that Moses is a fiction? I don't expect any of this to happen. Maybe that's faith. But there is some reason mixed in with it all.
ML/NJ
A primitive faith or even elements of a sophisticated one have contradictory evidence, but AFAIK, no major faith is ever disproved. Debating faith may be educational, but resolves nothing.
Actually Darwinism is a subset of Evolution. De Veries and Bateson are evolutionists but not Darwinists. As I understand the conventional wisdom, their ideas are rejected while Darwin's are embraced - or at least revered.
As for ID vs Creationism, I wasn't commenting on that. But Creationism is obviously a subset of ID. Suggesting that ID is restricted to Genesis is just wrong.
ML/NJ
De Veries and Bateson are as irrelevant to evolution as animism is to ID. Labeling evolutionary science Darwinism is an attempt to discredit it through its first 19th century proponent. Calling ID a superset of Creationism is just an attempt to mask its Christian origins, motivation and backing.
If there was a a case for ID, its proponents wouldnt have to sink to misrepresentations.
I picked De Veries (1906) and Bateson (1922) because they are mentioned by Coyne and Orr in their introduction to Speciation. Is there something that troubles you about Darwin? Or his idea of natural selection? (It was his idea, wasn't it?)
ML/NJ
Darwin is to evolution as the Write brothers were to flight. Darwin was the first to discover and integrate principles to create a reasonable evolutionary model.
If I had a problem with opponents of flight trying to rename aeronautics Writeism so that they could imply that it was just as subjectively faith based as their alternative, it wouldnt be because Write troubles me.
Those kind of tactics are evidence that ID belongs in social studies, not science.
It's the W-r-i-g-h-t brothers, and BTW they didn't invent aeronautics. They were the first to achieve powered flight. But no one is ashamed to be associated with them. For quite some time "Curtis Wright" was one of the largest corporations in America.
You didn't answer my question about natural selection. Do you think it has anything, or everthing, to do with the variety of species we observe, or does it not?
ML/NJ
Thats another thing Wright and Darwin have in common.
Did you ask if I thought evolution was responsible for species diversity? I think its the most reasonable explanation to date. Ive yet to see an ID claim of evolutions inability to breach species that approached the improbability of the creation of a God to manage it. I dont have a biology background which enables me to easily follow the debates details, but from what I can see from those ho do, all attempts by ID proponents to develop their first piece of evidence by painting part of evolution as impossible have been reasonably refuted.
No, I didn't. I asked if you thought natural selection was reponsible for species diverity. But thanks for playing.
ML/NJ
Oh, I ee now. Youre referring to aking if I was troubled by Darwin or his ideas. I luv playing like that.
Regards
For the science room, no free speech
By Bill Murchison
Dec 28, 2005
Will the federal courts, and the people who rely on the federal courts to enforce secular ideals, ever get it? The anti-school-prayer decisions of the past 40 years -- not unlike the pro-choice-in-abortion decisions, starting with Roe vs. Wade -- haven't driven pro-school-prayer, anti-choice Americans from the marketplace of ideas and activity.
Neither will U.S. Dist. Judge John Jones' anti-intelligent-design ruling in Dover, Pa., just before Christmas choke off challenges to the public schools' Darwinian monopoly.
Jones' contempt for the "breathtaking inanity" of school-board members who wanted ninth-grade biology students to hear a brief statement regarding Darwinism's "gaps/problems" is unlikely to intimidate the millions who find evolution only partly persuasive -- at best.
Millions? Scores of millions might be more like it. A 2004 Gallup Poll found that just 13 percent of Americans believe in evolution unaided by God. A Kansas newspaper poll last summer found 55 percent support for exposing public-school students to critiques of Darwinism.
This accounts for the widespread desire that children be able to factor in some alternatives to the notion that "natural selection" has brought us, humanly speaking, where we are. Well, maybe it has. But what if it hasn't? The science classroom can't take cognizance of such a possibility? Under the Jones ruling, it can't. Jones discerns a plot to establish a religious view of the question, though the religion he worries about exists only in the possibility that God, per Genesis 1, might intrude celestially into the discussion. (Intelligent-designers, for the record, say the power of a Creator God is just one of various possible counter-explanations.)
Not that Darwinism, as Jones acknowledges, is perfect. Still, "the fact that a scientific theory cannot yet render an explanation on every point should not be used as a pretext to thrust an untestable alternative hypothesis grounded in religion into the science classroom or to misrepresent scientific propositions."
Ah. We see now: Federal judges are the final word on good science. Who gave them the power to exclude even whispers of divinity from the classroom? Supposedly, the First Amendment to the Constitution: the odd part here being the assumption that the "free speech" amendment shuts down discussion of alternatives to an establishment-approved concept of Truth.
With energy and undisguised contempt for the critics of Darwinism, Jones thrusts out the back door of his courthouse the very possibility that any sustained critique of Darwinism should be admitted to public classrooms.
However, the writ of almighty federal judges runs only so far, as witness their ongoing failure to convince Americans that the Constitution requires almost unobstructed access to abortion. Pro-life voters and activists, who number in the millions, clearly aren't buying it. We're to suppose efforts to smother intelligent design will bear larger, lusher fruit?
The meeting place of faith and reason is proverbially darkish and unstable -- a place to which the discussants bring sometimes violently different assumptions about truth and where to find it. Yet, the recent remarks of the philosopher-theologian Michael Novak make great sense: "I don't understand why in the public schools we cannot have a day or two of discussion about the relative roles of science and religion." A discussion isn't a sermon or an altar call, is it?
Equally to the point, what does secular intolerance achieve in terms of revitalizing public schools, rendering them intellectually catalytic? As many religious folk see it, witch-hunts for Christian influences are an engrained part of present public-school curricula. Is this where they want the kids? Might private schools -- not necessarily religious ones -- offer a better alternative? Might home schooling?
Alienating bright, energized, intellectually alert customers is normally accounted bad business, but that's the direction in which Darwinian dogmatists point. Thanks to them and other such foes of free speech in the science classroom -- federal judges included -- we seem likely to hear less and less about survival of the fittest and more and more about survival of the least curious, the least motivated, the most gullible.
Exactly. For such a supposedly intelligent bunch, the cattle/lemming clone mindset runs rampant, just as much as it does in any other religion. (IMO, this lack of independent thinking is the defining hallmark of mindless religion, as opposed to true Christianity.)
Probably why they are so quick to skewer us lowly un-anointed regular folks, the non-scientists, who think they are full of crap on this issue.
Why is the burden of proof solely on ID? Why the double standard?
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