RE: [asa] STATEMENT ON INTELLIGENT DESIGN BY IOWA STATE

From: Alexanian, Moorad <alexanian@uncw.edu>
Date: Tue Jun 05 2007 - 15:26:20 EDT

For natural agents, say humans, the notion of designer can be separated from that of creator, which is strictly not applicable for humans, since here design means doing or making. However, for a supernatural agent, the notions of designer and creation are one and the same. For instance, one cannot say that an electron is not designed since the possibility of its creation may obey some already existing, fundamental laws. The latter are mimicked by quantum electrodynamics, which are only descriptive and not prescriptive.

 
Moorad

________________________________

From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of George Murphy
Sent: Tue 6/5/2007 3:07 PM
To: Randy Isaac; asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] STATEMENT ON INTELLIGENT DESIGN BY IOWA STATE

The point can perhaps be made in an even simpler way in response to Johnson's claim about the creatow who supposedly "left his fingerprints all over the evidence."
A fingerprint left at the scene of a crime of course identifies the criminal only if you have an independent sample of someone's fingerprint with which it can be matched. The ID argument assumes that we have some a priori knowledge of the "fingerprint" of the Designer.
 
Shalom
George
http://web.raex.com/~gmurphy/

        ----- Original Message -----
        From: Randy Isaac <mailto:randyisaac@comcast.net>
        To: asa@calvin.edu
        Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2007 9:00 AM
        Subject: Re: [asa] STATEMENT ON INTELLIGENT DESIGN BY IOWA STATE

        That's an excellent point and well stated. The argument that there is an analogy between detectable design of human agents and detectable design of supernatural agents falls short precisely because we have no reference design known to be the result of a supernatural agent. Other than, of course, the entire universe itself but that's no longer a scientific design analysis.
         
        Randy
         
         

                ----- Original Message -----
                From: Keith Miller <mailto:kbmill@ksu.edu>
                To: American Scientific Affiliation <mailto:asa@calvin.edu>
                Sent: Monday, June 04, 2007 11:15 PM
                Subject: Re: [asa] STATEMENT ON INTELLIGENT DESIGN BY IOWA STATE

                        So why not start with what the ID folks point to: SETI, identifying
                        hominid/human fabricated tools, forensics that lead to a conviction
                        vs. those that don't, etc.? Are any of these "scientific"? Why or why
                        not? How, in principle, do they differ from the ID enterprise in
                        molecular biology? What about Sagan's fanciful example in Contact--
                        wasn't it something like the digits of pi communicating some message?

                The critical comparison is between natural agents and supernatural agents.

                It is central to any coherent understanding of design that the purposes and capacities of the designer be known. However, ID advocates argue that design can be recognized in the absence of any knowledge of the designer. They further argue that human and divine designers are effectively equivalent from a scientific perspective. Our ability to detect design by humans is used as a demonstration that supernatural design can be similarly recognized scientifically.

                However, this claim is clearly false. We must have some conception of the capabilities (and limitations) of potential causal agents before they can be invoked. We do in fact know much about human designers as a class of potential agents, even if we do not know the specific individuals. We recognize human artifacts because we understand human capacities and purposes. Similarly, we recognize the products of other natural volitional agents such as non-human animals. We can search for the signals of ETs, but only to the extent that we assume some specific capabilities and purposes on their part (usually modeled after our own). Divine agents on the other hand have no constraints, and their purposes and capabilities cannot be defined. We do not know a priori how a divine agent might work in nature. An agent that can do anything, does not provide any explanatory power to a scientific hypothesis. It is effectively equivalent to current ignorance.

                Keith

                
                

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Received on Tue Jun 5 15:27:35 2007

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