Gregory,
There is no reason to be provocative and hijack my email for your purposes.
My point was clear that crossing MN (by introducing a Designer into science) will cost you your credibility in the scientific community and this should not be controversial. I was not implying that Cameron has no credibilty or that he is not ahead of me in this debate.
This is the perpetual disconnect here between ID and TE. TE respects MN and ID doesn't. Keep in mind that I agree with all the inferences about God that Cameron makes from ID, I just don't believe they are scientific inferences (due to MN). And they don't need to be either. TE seems to be ok with this but ID insists that they can have the imprimatur of science on their faith, which I disagree with. Again, working backwards from YEC and where it leads should make this obvious. ID is making the same mistake.
Thanks
John
--- On Sun, 4/26/09, Gregory Arago <gregoryarago@yahoo.ca> wrote:
> From: Gregory Arago <gregoryarago@yahoo.ca>
> Subject: Re: [asa] ID/Miracles/Design (Behe vs. Behe)
> To: "Cameron Wybrow" <wybrowc@sympatico.ca>, john_walley@yahoo.com
> Cc: "AmericanScientificAffiliation" <asa@calvin.edu>
> Date: Sunday, April 26, 2009, 8:01 AM
> Hi John, I'll have to make a short answer to this post
> before getting back to the other longer post from Jon in
> the earlier thread. The main points, however, still remain.
>
> Here, you write:
> "I think MN serves a valid purpose in science even for
> believers. At the heart of this debate, the ID camp has its
> issue with MN and what we currently consider science and
> non-science...You [Cameron] have crossed MN and are no
> longer on scientific ground. You have lost all credibility
> with non-believers and with believers who respect MN which
> would include most TE's." (my bolding)
>
> What does it mean to 'cross MN'? Simply to not
> believe in it as a valid philosophical assumption? Goodness
> knows there are many religious persons who would rather be
> holistic than divisive using the silly ideology of MN, which
> clings to an outdated philosophy of science. What happens to
> all of the human-social sciences if MN controls
> 'science'?
>
> John, have you read Feyerabend and Lakatos? Doing so would
> start to help you get up to date...and then there is still
> much more in the contemporary philosophy of science and
> likewise in the sociology of science, which reveals many
> things about the 'pseudo-mysterious'
> behaviours/actions/systems of the 'new priests' i.e.
> the natural scientists of our day.
>
> What 'valid purpose' does MN serve, other than to
> discredit YEC and to try to discredit ID, the latter which
> is wise to the MN pseudo-philosophy?
>
> And who really cares if Cameron is not always 'on
> scientific ground' IF he is at the same time still
> speaking the truth? Science has no monopoly on
> 'truth,' does it John? You seem to elevate
> 'science' way out of proportion to reality, though
> let me say that I don't blame you for this given that we
> live in 'a scientific age,' which is what it has
> been called by many people. How could you possibly put
> 'science' in a balanced perspective with philosophy
> and theology given this bias of our epoch (and being an
> American - the most scientific nation - citizen especially
> amplifies this tendency toward 'scientism')?
>
> Let's get serious about MN, John. I'll soon open
> another thread about this, but for now we can ask two
> things: 1) is science limited *only* to natural things? and
> 2) are any scientific methods of study (i.e. methods
> which are possible to consider 'scientific')
> possible to apply to humanity? If you answer affirmatively
> to the first and negatively to the second of these
> questions, then a lesson in philosophy of science is direly
> called for on your behalf. If you accept the second or
> reject the first, then at least you're not entirely
> lost for navigation in the contemporary
> conversation. Cameron is obviously well ahead of you in
> this area, John, and yet you claim that he is the one who
> has 'lost all credibility.' This is a strange and
> rather ironic situation!
>
> Surely there are some responsible philosophers of science
> out there that ASA could recruit to educate its
> participants!
>
> Gregory
>
>
>
> --- On Sun, 4/26/09, John Walley
> <john_walley@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> From: John Walley <john_walley@yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: [asa] ID/Miracles/Design (Behe vs. Behe)
> To: "Cameron Wybrow" <wybrowc@sympatico.ca>
> Cc: "AmericanScientificAffiliation"
> <asa@calvin.edu>
> Received: Sunday, April 26, 2009, 5:46 AM
>
> Cameron,
>
> I will attempt to respond to your questions below:
>
> 1. I have always accepted the Mt. Rushmore, Easter Island,
> and John Loves Mary
> on the beach as being valid examples of detecting human
> design in nature.
> However I think we cross the boundaries of MN when we try
> to extend this to
> detecting divine design. We have no way to know what the
> criteria for divine
> design would be. Case in point would be irreducible
> complexity. Is that divine
> design? I am not sure. It is not conclusive at the very
> least. And it is
> entirely possible that God hid Himself in His creation to
> avoid detection just
> like He hid Himself from the unbelieving in His parables
> and miracles and signs
> and wonders. In fact it is consistent with His hiding
> Himself to avoid your
> divine design detection so the short answer to your
> question is no I don't
> think we can scientifically detect design and have
> emperical proof. I think the
> evidences of divine design in nature are the same as His
> other miracles, they
> are subjective and valid only in the eye
> of the beholder. You are kicking against the pricks to
> state otherwise in my
> opinion. Jesus said of the pharisees that He could rise
> from the dead and some
> people still wouldn't believe and He was right. It is
> naive to think that
> you have stumbled upon some proof more powerful than that.
> And I think it is
> futile and counterproductive to even pursue it. That is how
> we got YEC,
>
> In fact, working backwards from why YEC doesn't work,
> it is easy to see
> that its entire genesis was due to this desire to have a
> nice tidy packaged
> systematic theology that proved their belief system and
> effectively removed the
> need for faith. I think that is the same mistake being made
> by proponents of
> strong ID. Again, I agree ID reveals God's fingerprints
> in nature but only
> to believers, not to school boards and court districts and
> secular and
> unbelieving cultures, and it is a mistake to try to make it
> so.
>
> 2. I have repeatedly said I believe it is reasonable,
> rational, logical, even
> obvious to infer a designer and even a Designer in the
> universe, just that it is
> not a scientific inference because this would fall afoul of
> MN and I think MN
> serves a valid purpose in science even for believers. At
> the heart of this
> debate, the ID camp has its issue with MN and what we
> currently consider science
> and non-science.
>
> 3,4 & 5. No. See above. You have crossed MN and are no
> longer on scientific
> ground. You have lost all credibility with non-believers
> and with believers who
> respect MN which would include most TE's.
>
> Thanks
>
> John
>
>
>
>
>
> --- On Sat, 4/25/09, Cameron Wybrow
> <wybrowc@sympatico.ca> wrote:
>
> > From: Cameron Wybrow <wybrowc@sympatico.ca>
> > Subject: Re: [asa] ID/Miracles/Design (Behe vs. Behe)
> > To: asa@calvin.edu
> > Date: Saturday, April 25, 2009, 9:42 AM
> > Dear John:
> >
> > Thanks for your gracious manner of disagreement in the
> post
> > below.
> >
> > I am not sure that you and ID are far apart. You
> accept
> > the notion of intelligent input. You question how far
> > science can go in establishing that the designer is
> God. Is
> > that correct?
> >
> > Let's see if we can isolate exactly where your
> doubts
> > begin.
> >
> > 1. ID says that we can establish at least the fact
> there
> > is design, i.e., that chance is not a sufficient
> explanation
> > for certain biological phenomena. Do you reject this
> idea
> > even in principle, or are you open to the possibility
> of
> > design detection in this very limited sense? (Note:
> Being
> > "open to the possibility" leaves you free to
> > reject any particular argument put forward by design
> > theorists, if you think it's weak. It requires
> only
> > that you allow that such arguments might be valid, and
> > therefore should not be rejected by TEs out of hand.)
> >
> > 2. Most ID proponents would say that design implies a
> > conscious designer (or something with an instinct
> > approaching consciousness) -- e.g., a human being, an
> > intelligent alien, a beaver, or God. But even this,
> > strictly speaking, is not required by ID theory. For
> > example, Aristotle's God does not appear to be
> conscious
> > of the universe, even though he is in a sense the
> cause of
> > its existence and of the end-seeking tendencies of the
> > various things in it. So, do you accept that it is
> > reasonable to infer the existence of something
> > "intelligent" in the universe -- if only in
> a very
> > broad sense of "intelligence?"
> >
> > 3. The majority of ID proponents would say that, in
> the
> > case of living things (as opposed to beaver dams), the
> > designer is, as Aquinas says "what men call
> God".
> > (And Aquinas means a generic God there, not the God of
> > Christian revelation.) But this identification,
> though
> > quite plausible, and natural for Christians (most ID
> people
> > being Christian), is *not* part of the theory proper.
> Do
> > you accept that ID has made a proper distinction here,
> > between inferring a designer on the basis of nature,
> and
> > identifying the designer with God on philosophical,
> > religious or other personal grounds?
> >
> > 4. *All* ID proponents agree that, even if the
> designer is
> > indeed God, design theory can establish nothing
> whatsoever
> > about the nature of God *other than what is implied in
> the
> > design itself*, i.e., that God is extremely
> intelligent, and
> > powerful. Do you agree that ID people have been very
> > cautious in inferring only a minimal natural theology
> from
> > design in nature? Have you ever seen any of them
> trying to
> > infer anything more? If so, what, and where?
> >
> > 5. *All* ID proponents agree that the knowledge of
> God
> > arrived at by design theory does not contain the
> truths of
> > special revelation, and therefore is not salvific.
> > Therefore, faith is still required for salvation. Do
> you
> > agree that ID has been very careful in acknowledging
> that
> > knowledge of design is not saving knowledge?
> >
> > Think about these questions. You may be closer to
> being an
> > ID proponent than you think. At the very least, you
> may be
> > less hostile to ID (when it is properly formulated)
> than you
> > thought you were.
> >
> > Cameron.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message ----- From: "John
> Walley"
> > <john_walley@yahoo.com>
> > To: <asa@calvin.edu>; "Cameron Wybrow"
> > <wybrowc@sympatico.ca>
> > Sent: Friday, April 24, 2009 9:56 PM
> > Subject: Re: [asa] ID/Miracles/Design (Behe vs. Behe)
> >
> >
> > >
> > >
> > > Cameron,
> > >
> > > I agree with your two paragraphs below but the
> problem
> > is that the
> > > evidence for how God interacted with evolution in
> His
> > creation is vague.
> > > That is the best we can do from the evidence. In
> > contrast ID may be razor
> > > sharp in where it draws the line but that is
> > unsupported by science. I
> > > think most TE's here would say that this
> > demarcation eludes scientific
> > > verification. I accept that input conclusion but
> it is
> > a matter of faith
> > > and not science in my opinion.
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > >
> > > John
> > >
> > > The problem with TE (at least in most of its
> > formulations) is that it is
> > > simply unclear about the extent of the
> > complexity-building powers it
> > > allows to chance. To read TE writers, the cause
> of
> > mutations etc. is sort
> > > of chance, and sort of God's action, and sort
> of
> > neither, and sort of
> > > both -- that's what TE sounds like, to an
> > outsider seeking theoretical
> > > clarity. It sounds vague.
> > >
> > > ID, on the other hand, is razor-sharp in clarity
> on
> > that point. It draws
> > > a line in the sand. It says that chance is
> simply not
> > sufficient. It
> > > says that there must be an input of intelligence.
> The
> > input might be
> > > before the Big Bang, with no further inputs
> necessary
> > (front-loaded
> > > naturalistic evolution). It might be at one or
> more
> > points after that
> > > (intervention, quantum-concealed or otherwise).
> ID
> > does not specify. But
> > > it says that the input is necessary.
> >
> >
> > To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu
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> > message.
>
>
>
>
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Received on Mon Apr 27 06:41:27 2009
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