That's not true at all - there are plenty of heretics and rebels in the history of Evolutionary Biology and modern questioners who were/are "accepted as true scientists". From past luminaries like Ernst Meyer or Stephen J Gould, who's work transformed the frameworks of the field, to modern questioners like Massimo Pigulicci, Eugene Koonin, Kevin Laland and Gerd Muller. These are reptable scientists doing actual research, speaking at conferences, publishing in journals, presenting at conferences, lecturing to students and just, y'know, doing the work.
Okay Gene, let's go through it.
First, you are right that not every contributor to science, especially since the Enlightenment (which was not science) began to infect the minds of some in the scientific community. In the context I wrote, I was objecting to those who reject anything from those who speak contrary to their worldview with the rebuttal that it is not science, whereas accept uncritically anti-creation non-science coming from scientists such as Carl Sagan and Richard Dawkins.
Most recently we've seen a flurry of activity from the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis proponents. Defore that there were the evo-devo theorists (one who ended up with a Nobel Prize) and Gould/Eldredge and punctuated equilibrium. Highly controversial at the time, but no-one is writing them off as theologically motivated.
You seem to be missing the point. ID is in itself not addressing the god-antigod issue but is addressing a limitation or weakness or fault in the neo-Darwinian evolution (NDE) theory about
how life could develop incrementally. Gould might have been one of the first to recognize that incremental development not only does not work, the fossil record of the Cambrian explosion contradicts it. Yet Gould had no solution to the problem posed by ID about NDE. Can you stick to that? If you can, then you are addressing what the ID movement (by whatever name) is addressing.
By contrast, SC Meyer and his ilk aren't doing actual research. They aren't publishing in peer review journals. They aren't even publishing in the Discovery Institute's in-house journal.
Did Einstein do actual research? He did no "actual research" as experimental science, yet he is hailed as a great physicist. As for publishing, the prominent IDers have already addressed this and most of them have book-length publications. The issue they raise is controversial because those controlling the channels of mainstream scientific publication themselves have a bias on this issue and consider, as you do, that there is nothing of value that ID can contribute to the discussion. That is not a scientific but a worldview decision, a demonstration of confirmation bias that did not exist among scientists before the mid-19th century.
Gatekeepers of scientific publications are not merely scientists; they are humans who hold worldviews and this biases their gatekeeping. It is equivalent to the medieval Schoolmen rejecting the heliocentric theory because it clashed with their worldview. You show your own bias by using derogatory language like "Meyer and his ilk". The gatekeepers share your attitude.
This year there has been a single research article in BIO-Complexity. In 2023 there were two. In 2022 there were zero (just three 'Critical Focus' papers). In 2021 there were three (but really one, as it was just a bigger paper split into three parts). In 2020 there were four. 10 research articles.
To put that into context Gerd Muller alone published five different research papers, two books and contributed to another two books in the same period. Eugene V Koonin published 18 research articles.
All you are saying is that evolutionary biology is an active field of study. Great; I am glad that it is because the flaws in NDE need to be addressed, yet few of the mainstream participants are addressing the quite valid questions that the IDers have raised.
And it is not only those who might be identified under the ID label. Have you looked at what the Santa Fe Institute has been doing? They too are raising the same kind of questions that the IDers have been raising, from a computational-complexity standpoint. That is what
Meyer, Gelenter, and Berlinski also were discussing.
Instead of telling us how unscientific these people are, why don't you instead address the
scientific problems they have raised? Or are you of the mind-set that anything coming from someone with an ID label is
ipso facto not scientific? That is a
philosophy of science judgement and not a
scientific judgement.
Meyer has a Bachelors in Earth Science and a masters/PhD in the history of the philosophy of science. I have none of those, I'm just a bloke on the internet.
You are sounding like it!
But, I can also read and book titles like 'The Return of the God Hypothesis' tend to suggest a way of thinking.
Do Carl Sagan and Richard Dawkins and Michael Shermer "suggest a way of thinking"?
Generally speaking, the idea that some deity created the universe and life on earth.
More specifically, the Genesis account is the target because it is the context for creation issues in the West. (Few people in this debate know anything about what Hinduism or the ancient Sumerians or Chinese, or the Mayas said about creation.) The Genesis account, despite what has been read into it, does not give the scope of the creation in that it does not tell us the scope of the
shamayim ("heavens"). Genesis 1:1 can equally be read as referring to the skies (
shamayim) and the land (eretz). By
shamayim it does not necessarily (or probably) mean the modern cosmological model of what we call the universe. So to be more focused, for both myself and the IDers - all of them that I know except one or two who do not believe the genesis account - any reference to "creationism" means to the Genesis (or biblical) account of creation.
It's not my fault that the various sects of theism can't get their stories and timelines straight. Maybe you could all get together and make life easier for the rest of us? The Rainbow Serpent seems like the best compromise, although I'd like to see a run being made at the Five Suns cosmology.
This is like arguing that because there are competing theories in scientific fields, that "science" ought to get its story straight first! And you also appear to not recognize the antithetic relationship between the biblical worldview and Mystery Babylon, the source of the extant pagan religions of your two examples. That is a significant failure to distinguish!
It doesn't. ID was devised as an end run around US judicial rulings banning the teaching of creationism in science classrooms.
ID did not even exist as an identifiable movement back when Judge Overton gave his benchmark ruling against young-earth creationism (YEC) being taught in state-school biology.
It's creationism pretending to be science. See, for instance, the term
Cdesign proponentsist and the Wedge Document.
What can partially confuse the understanding of the ID movement is the
political component of Establishment science. Is there any political diminution of pure science? Where does most of the money come from nowadays to support scientific research? From government? Do you really believe government is objective in funding research grants, with "no strings attached"?
IDers are aware of this because the
scientific issues they raise are ignored by mainstream
Science. (By
Science I mean politically-infested activity that is called science, whether it is or not.) I do not hear ID-bashers addressing this because to do so would not support their position!
I'm asserting that the issues raised by Meyer, Gelernter and Berlinski are not actually issues. And certainly not issues with 'current neo-Darwinian theory' I'm asserting that none of the answers to problems in biology have been resolved by the statment a creator intelligent designer did it.
Of course you are. The medieval Schoolmen made the same kind of assertions about Galileo's contention.
Everything you need to understand for the EES vs NDS debate (up to about early 2020).
Cool, but no-one is arguing blind chance produced the existing complexity of life.
It has taken 40 years or more (or maybe more like 140 years) for evolutionary biologists to realize this, and to also realize that incremental NDE is a failed theory - at least the developmental hypothesis of it. I am glad to see the flurry of activity needed to address it. What ID brings to it is in raising the larger questions about evolutionary mechanisms that are quite relevant to the current state of evolutionary biology (EB) if for no other reason than that most EBists do not know much of anything about control theory and how it applies to structural organic development. It is beginning to diffuse in but so far, only slightly. All the ruckus about "AI" will probably hasten it.
I throughly disagree. Just because we don't have a full solution for abiogensis/diversification of early life, doesn't mean we don't have enough knowledge to come to a highly plausible account of what happened and how and when.
The history beginning with Miller of the major efforts to address this question are generally recognized among EBists to have failed. That is, nobody has a scientific explanation for how life arose. (Do you? Publish it and win the Nobel Prize!) One might appear in the future, but it is not in the present state of knowledge.
Is selection uniform in the face of systems with imbalances in energy gradients?
Why, hello Mr Sun and Mrs Radioactive Decay, I didn't see you there. Oh, and Senor DNA Transcription Error, what are you doing here?
You are making the ID case, that both mutation and selection are not random. IDers would agree. So would I.
Again, no-one is arguing the the present complexity of life is produced by truly random processes.
Agreed, starting historically with Gould.
I don't have a PhD in Mathematics, but i do have a Masters in economics and I know enought statistics to know when someone is using them to lie to me. Here's a challenge: go and calculate the odds likelihood that your parents gave birth to you (or better yet, the chain of heredity that led to you being born), Then come back at me and argue about probablistic arguments about the impossibility of evolution.
Okay, wise guy. The video link I gave above has three people (plus host) discussing the mathematical challenges to NDE (Gelernter and Berlinski from the MIT AI Lab in the past) as was also discussed in an MIT symposium led by Murray Eden in the 20th century. It is known that there are serious mathematical problems with NDE (whether you think MIT is a sufficiently scientific institution or not). Maybe they can be solved. They will not be by being ignored.
One of the prominent IDers, Bill Dembski, has multiple doctorates, one in math, and his doctoral thesis was about probability theory as it applies to these same kinds of NDE problems. He has written a book,
Intelligent Design, where he analyzes the problem about
irreducible complexity in graduate-school detail from a probabliistic standpoint. Have you read anything Demski has written? You might start there before drawing any hasty conclusions.
There's plenty that 'holds up', but no full explanation. But, the gaps keep getting smaller. Have a look at NASA's astrobiology primer, for instance. That got updated this year, because there's been so much new abiogenesis research published since the last version came out in 2016.
Of course one can expect new ideas, but this is an expression of hope, not fact. If and when a credible theory arises, it will probably have implications that a 19th century Enlightenment worldview will find objectionable, and that is the worldview that has infiltrated science in the last two centuries and is why there is an ongoing, never-ending "creation-evolution" controversy.
There may never be a full explanation for the origin of life. But, that does not mean in any way that the door to a Intelligent Designer is opened up.
Again, you fail to understand ID. Have you ever talked to any of the leading ID proponents such as Steve Meyer, Bill Dembski, Mike Behe, Paul Nelson, ...? I have talked with all of them, sometimes into the early morning hours of a conference. You should recognize that when you write "that does not mean in any way the door to a Intelligent Designer is opened up" that this is not a scientific statement and cannot be supported by scientific methods. What if humanity were the result of a bioengineering project? Could that be detected scientifically? It is history, not science, that would give that answer. The scope of ID thinking is wider than your thinking and considers how we might detect such possibilities with our present scientific or mathematical methods. You might not want to consider such questions as falling within the limitations of the methods of science, yet if you've learned any philosophy of science, you would know that they overlap. There is no rigidly defined demarcation of
science.
ID was basically dead-on-arrival as a scientific idea and if Google search trends are any indicator, it has been moribund as a popular alternative to creationism for the last decade (if not longer).
You should run for Congress.