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Court Case Threatens to 'Drag Science into the Supernatural'
LiveScience.com ^ | 9/22/05 | Ker Than

Posted on 09/22/2005 8:25:42 PM PDT by Crackingham

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To: In veno, veritas

>so where did you get your sample to make such a bold statement?

A number of surveys conducted over the years. That, and basic scientific principles. Anyone competant in science knows that when you can't explain something, the supernatural is a childish way to fill in the gaps. What's more likely is that you simply don't have sufficient data, or aren't smart enough. "God did it" is a cop-out.


301 posted on 09/25/2005 8:43:24 PM PDT by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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To: Dark Knight

> Are you accepting them as phenomena?

I accept that some people seem to believe that they exist. But the convincing, objective evidence is wholly lacking.

> You dismissed them as supernatural without any such exploration.

Well, except for the past several hundred years worth...

> Calling a phenomena supernatural is just a way of saying I don't want to look at it, but I want to shut down the discussion anyway.

You're describign the ID/Creationism camp. "God did it, end of discussion."


302 posted on 09/25/2005 8:45:55 PM PDT by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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To: orionblamblam
All, that typing, and you left out the basics: unless ID explains the origin of not only life as it curretnly is, but also the origin of that putative Intelligent Designer, then it's useless. It's nothign better than "turtles all the way down." So, for ID to be able to stand, it must posit a God of some type. And thus, by definition ID is Creationism.

Sigh... Post 268 is as clear as I can possibly make it.

Once again for emphasis: the intelligent design hypothesis - like the theory of evolution - is not a theory of origins.

BTW, neither is the theory of relativity, Newtonian physics, quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, Shannon's mathematical theory of communications and a lot of other theories and hypotheses that are quite useful.

303 posted on 09/25/2005 8:52:42 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Dark Knight
If God has no effect in the world, then there is no phenomenon to describe. And there is nothing for science or man to look at. If God can produce phenomena in the natural world, it is phenomena, and subject to scrutiny. Until man can explain ALL phenomena (omniscience) God cannot be dismissed. (I think at that time an introduction is in order)

LOLOLOL! Thank you so much for the chuckle!

And yes, I do assert that man cannot dismiss God without having an explanation for all phenomenon.

304 posted on 09/25/2005 8:56:32 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop
Thank you oh so very much for all of your encouragements!

ID is a "non-reductive" approach to explaining nature that directly opposes the "reductive" approach of methodological materialism. That's the real issue, the main point of dispute.

I agree! And I suspect there is a misreading of that aspect as well because removing the presupposition of naturalism does not mean that science will be investigating the supernatural. Rather it means that biology and other such disciplines will be more like mathematics and physics - not stipulating axioms and postulates beyond the investigation at hand and also being open to the non-corporeals: mathematical structures, geometry, information, etc.

305 posted on 09/25/2005 9:04:56 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: orionblamblam

> Are you accepting them as phenomena?

I accept that some people seem to believe that they exist. But the convincing, objective evidence is wholly lacking.<<<<

So you do not accept they are phenomena. Make a decision, don't waffle. You are arguing people's beliefs. If they are not a phenomena, science is an inappropriate tool.

> You dismissed them as supernatural without any such exploration.

Well, except for the past several hundred years worth...<<<<

Your words dismissed them as beliefs. If someone does actually try to examine them as phenomena, they are usually labelled crackpots. And some clearly are.

> Calling a phenomena supernatural is just a way of saying I don't want to look at it, but I want to shut down the discussion anyway.

You're describign the ID/Creationism camp. "God did it, end of discussion."<<<<

And yours says "God does not exist and has no impact in the world as a phenomenon."

You dismissed out of hand elves and fairies. But they generated billion dollars of activity with only the LOTR and HP. People have a strong need for these things.

But I don't believe they are phenomena.

Do you?

DK


306 posted on 09/25/2005 9:09:52 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: betty boop; Coyoteman
Thank you both so very much for your posts!

coyoteman, your basis for equating creationism and intelligent design is "correlation". But correlation is not causation - ever.

The example I used earlier on this thread is that a correlation between the presence of storks and the arrival of babies does not mean there is a causal relationship.

I do appreciate reading all the creation myths of the various cultures. Mankind is unique in searching for spiritual answers to life, why am I here, what happens after death and so on. Other evidence of this uniqueness is man's tendency to honor (or dishonor) the dead: burial, ceremonies, memorials, etc.

betty boop: Unless you want to say that the pursuit of understanding of what constitutes the overall "system" in which discrete events in nature take place is somehow to be equated with religiosity. The "reductive" approach of materialist science looks only at the discrete events themselves, not at the overarching context in which they occur. ID is saying that the meaning of the events cannot be fully grasped without regard to the system in which they occur. It is in this respect that ID is "non-reductive" in its approach.

So very true, betty boop!

307 posted on 09/25/2005 9:14:04 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl

betty boop: Unless you want to say that the pursuit of understanding of what constitutes the overall "system" in which discrete events in nature take place is somehow to be equated with religiosity. The "reductive" approach of materialist science looks only at the discrete events themselves, not at the overarching context in which they occur. ID is saying that the meaning of the events cannot be fully grasped without regard to the system in which they occur. It is in this respect that ID is "non-reductive" in its approach.<<

Do you think that is why philosophy is being ignored by second tier scientists?

I've been hearing crickets for an hour. This thread may be dead.

DK


308 posted on 09/25/2005 10:00:39 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: jennyp; betty boop
Er, if you don't mind, I'd like to make a few comments wrt your excerpts!

First of all, yes of course the objective of the Intelligent Design movement has always been to rid science of "scientific materialism" - or if you'd rather, the presupposition of naturalism.

The objective is shared by others who are not in the ID community, such as Whitehead who himself coined the term "scientific materialism".

The assumption of scientific materialism is effective in many contexts, says Whitehead, only because it directs our attention to a certain class of problems that lend themselves to analysis within this framework. However, scientific materialism is less successful when addressing issues of teleology and when trying to develop a comprehensive, integrated picture of the universe as a whole.

Whitehead's hypothesis was that the world is organic not materialistic.

Beyond the material are the non-corporeals, the universals, the mathematical structures, geometries, information (success communication) and so much more.

I frequently assert that physics and mathematics are epistemologically zealous. They would never sweep such considerations off the table in the interest of materialism. Indeed, mathematics looks in the mirror and sees physics and vice versa. That is the "unreasonable effectiveness of math" (Wigner, Vafa)

God cannot be measured or observed. Ridding science of the presupposition of naturalism doesn't open the door to the supernatural, it opens the door to the universals. It would make biology epistemologically more like physics!

Secondly, the intelligent design hypothesis does not stipulate the "intelligent cause" at all - whether by type (phenomenon or agent) or by name (emergent, fractal, God, collective consciousness, aliens, Gaia, etc...)

Our attention must turn to the hypothesis itself to see if it has merit as science - not the objectives or agenda of the Intelligent Design movement.

This is the same argument others here have asserted: that Einstein must still be respected for his physics even though he was a socialist.

I would however argue that Dawkins' atheism has become so entwined with his biology that he has not earned the same respect as Einstein. But I do not see any ideological/theological entwining whatsoever in the Intelligent Design hypothesis. Please see post 268

Third, I happen to agree quite strongly that objective truth cannot be known "in" space/time simply because everything in space/time is relative. It is the observer problem and it touches science, philosophy, politics, ethics, etc.

This is epistemology - how we know what we know and how sure we are that we know it. Freeper Investigation

309 posted on 09/25/2005 10:06:19 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Dark Knight; betty boop
I can see now I should have pinged you to my post at 309 (LOL!)

Yes, this thread is in a crickets cycle - but it is apt to pick up tomorrow. Sadly, I'll be gone most all day so I won't be able to catch up until late.

And yes, there is a very strong tendency among many to disregard epistemology - as if such a thing were even possible.

This is what betty boop often calls a "second reality" which as she has said is "hermetically sealed against any impressions or experiences that come from 'outside.'" Human Rights and Second Realities

But I shall leave it to her to speak more of this.

310 posted on 09/25/2005 10:13:38 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl

I recalled something from Stephen Hawkings about the emission of black holes. IIRC he posited that black holes could emit anything, cows, radiation, etc.

Cows.

Physicists were stunned.

They thought he was not being translated correctly.

He reiterated it.

Physicists took him seriously.

Cows coming out of black holes...scientists taking that seriously.

Cows coming out of black holes is okay as a phenomenon.

But ID is rediculous.

Science is hilarious.

DK


311 posted on 09/25/2005 10:15:36 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: Dark Knight
LOLOLOL! Thanks for yet another chuckle!

On a serious note (and then I must go to bed) - Hawking was quite disturbed about what happens to information in the black hole. It seemed to him that information cannot (or shouldn't be) lost even when the laws of physics break down.

IMHO, he had an "impoverished" view of what information "is".

More tomorrow (if you are interested in that sort of thing)...

312 posted on 09/25/2005 10:23:49 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl

On a serious note (and then I must go to bed) - Hawking was quite disturbed about what happens to information in the black hole. It seemed to him that information cannot (or shouldn't be) lost even when the laws of physics break down.<<

I believe Stephen Hawking was disturbed, because he was aware the the philosophical implications. Unlike second or third tier scientists.

I was reading a compilation book my friends gave me. One author suggested adding to the peer review journal ideas. The thought was some scientists are beyond peer review. Don't match Einstein to a PhD. If the scientist in question can find a patron Nobel Laureate that says publish, publish.

It would break a pardigm bottleneck and serve science well.

Good night Alamo-Girl.

I am so happy to bring humor to your life in these very pompass and devolving threads.

DEVO RULES!!!!

DK


313 posted on 09/25/2005 10:45:25 PM PDT by Dark Knight
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To: Dark Knight
when the laws of physics break down.

Bump for later

Wolf
314 posted on 09/25/2005 11:01:06 PM PDT by RunningWolf (U.S. Army Veteran.....75-78)
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To: Coyoteman
An Eskimo tale: http://www.worldandi.com/public/1998/cljul98.htm

Well I was hoping for more than that, but is what it is.

Wolf
315 posted on 09/25/2005 11:17:04 PM PDT by RunningWolf (U.S. Army Veteran.....75-78)
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To: Alamo-Girl; betty boop

Beyond the material are the non-corporeals, the universals, the mathematical structures, geometries, information (success communication) and so much more.

I frequently assert that physics and mathematics are epistemologically zealous. They would never sweep such considerations off the table in the interest of materialism. Indeed, mathematics looks in the mirror and sees physics and vice versa. That is the "unreasonable effectiveness of math" (Wigner, Vafa)

God cannot be measured or observed. Ridding science of the presupposition of naturalism doesn't open the door to the supernatural, it opens the door to the universals. It would make biology epistemologically more like physics!

Secondly, the intelligent design hypothesis does not stipulate the "intelligent cause" at all - whether by type (phenomenon or agent) or by name (emergent, fractal, God, collective consciousness, aliens, Gaia, etc...)

Our attention must turn to the hypothesis itself to see if it has merit as science - not the objectives or agenda of the Intelligent Design movement.

I understand that you two are trying to defend ID on some sort of rarefied philosophical level. (At least I THINK I understand. :-)

But especially this week - what with the latest creationism ID trial happening in a Harrisburg courtroom with loads of press covering it - the sad fact remains: Your side owns the Discovery Institute and their agenda. The DI is the animating force for ID as a movement. Their millions of dollars have been spent on supporting a cadre of tireless polemicists and spin doctors. They are a press-release machine of the first order. They are always available on the talk show circuit whenever something comes up in the news with a possible evolution angle. They are very professional and competent at what they do: Spin doctoring.

The Discovery Institute is the public face of ID, and they always will be. As far as public policy is concerned, they will forever be your spokespeople and will always control your movement's agenda.

Which, betty, is why I found your claim that you can't detect any religious or spiritual elements to intelligent design at all to be impossible to swallow. But it actually does make sense when I remember that you are, like I said, trying to defend ID on a rarefied philosophical plane that's completely divorced from the rough & tumble political world which birthed ID in the first place, and in which it's making all the noise.

316 posted on 09/26/2005 12:08:32 AM PDT by jennyp (WHAT I'M READING NOW: Seeing What's Next by Christensen, et.al.)
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To: jennyp

The Discovery Institute has some pretty good lawyers on staff, and they have elected to steer clear of this court case, which promises to be a rout.

There are a few people in the ID movement who accept the fact of evolution and are mulling over what amounts a sophisticated version of the anthropic principle.

This is an extreme minority position within the movement trying to get ID in the classroom. It amounts to about two percent of of the people posting on crevo threads, maybe five posters altogether.

In the mean time, the typical FR crevo posters are at each other's throats over which literal reading of Genelis is literally literal.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1491250/posts?page=151#151

This is on the news forum.


317 posted on 09/26/2005 12:19:10 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: js1138
Well okay 1138 are you an atheist or not?

And what about this thread? Where are you on this?
A coalition of homosexual activists and atheists plan to march on a Boy Scout camp


Wolf
318 posted on 09/26/2005 12:45:16 AM PDT by RunningWolf (U.S. Army Veteran.....75-78)
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To: RunningWolf

I was a Boy Scout. My children were scouts. Brother-in-law was a troop leader for over a decade, and my sister was a Silver Beaver. It's a private club. Scouts can have any rules they want, but all the troops I know of have been sponsored by churches. I don't know how they can avoid the problems that happen when you use schools for meetings.

I don't believe in a literal reading of the Bible. I accept Christian morality, but really don't have any interest in dogma. It seems trivial and childish to me. Take a look at the thread with people arguing over how many people were directly created in Genesis, and where the children of Adam and Noah got their mates. This is pathetic. These stories were borrowied from other cultures.


319 posted on 09/26/2005 12:58:21 AM PDT by js1138 (Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.)
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To: Dark Knight
I find your method of citing other people's writing almost impossible to follow. Why don't you learn to use html tags?

js1138 is correct. Most scientists don't think about philosophy from one decade to the next. Philosophers spend a lot of time wondering how science can be explained, and undoubtedly it's an interesting question for them, but the impact on science and scientists has been truly minimal.

The name of the doctoral degree in science, 'Doctor of Philosophy', is a historical artifact. If you think it's a meaningful term, do you expect people with bachelor's degrees to be unmarried men?

320 posted on 09/26/2005 4:58:10 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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