Hi Ben Reid. As promised, something of a reply to your excellent post:
DS:
I could recommend ...
BR:
My initial recommendation was just a starting point. I was surprised at your response since you had already suggested www.asa3.org.
Yes, I hadn't realized that this particular article was available there. I read it, along with a couple of other Plantinga
tours de farce in Robert Pennock's
anthology devoted to "intelligent design." asa3.org also has an article by Pennock, I see. I'm impressed by asa3.org and any other believers that are unafraid to deal with what, in Pennock's case at least, is fairly strenuous and compelling opposition (far more compelling than Plantinga's arbitrary presuppositionalism).
BR:
In listing the other responses above (along with it being a poor attempt at humour) I was trying to illustrate that the McMullin "rebuttal" was not some final debunking of Plantinga's claims like you seemed to indicate. Au Contraire.
I didn't mean to imply that at the time, but now that you mention it, I do consider McMullin's response a "final debunking" of Plantinga's fundamental error: conflating methodological and ontological naturalism. Like many creationist errors of definition this one has been "finally debunked" more times than I care to enumerate, nonetheless it continues to be perpetrated
ad nauseam. Really, the crusade against the unusual and remarkable concept that nature should be studied according to naturalistic principles is based on that glaring category error.
Of course following immediately on the heels of this error come the claims
equating Darwinism with philosophical materialism and with atheism and the Decline of American Morality and so on and so forth, usually bolstered by some amusing tidbit from Richard Dawkins (see below). Plantinga's project of course reflects a desire to reconcile his revealed scripture with the ongoing deluge of information obtained in accordance with methodological naturalism. If McMullin, who I understand is an equally devoted Christian, can deal with it all, he's a living counterexample that negates the need to adopt whatever it is that Plantinga is proposing.
BR:
There was a whole series of dialogues and McMullins "rebuttal" was followed by a response from Plantinga (see here: http://www.asa3.org/ASA/dialogues/Faith-reason/CRS9-91Plantinga2.html) which, IMO, adequately answers any objections or misunderstandings between the two of them.
Plantinga's subsequent replies concentrate more on theological disagreements. He seems to have abandoned that for which McMullin had taken him to task, at least in that series of articles. For the purposes of this discussion, those particular theological disagreements are about as interesting as anyone else's theological disagreements, i.e., not at all.
BR:
There was no follow-up response from McMullin (that I am aware of).
That's true. McMullin nailed it the first time around.
BR:
Anyway, if you look at it closely, you will see that there is a deeper conflict going on between McMullin and Plantinga -- the original and most serious dichotomy between Catholics and Protestants: Sola Scripture. Plantinga's appeal to Scripture as a primary source of authority is something which McMullin objects to.
Right. But whether the issue is "deeper" rests in the perception of the observer, I suppose.
DS:
if you think "evolutionists" recommending talkorigins ... is analogous to recommending atheists.org as a source for info on Christianity, you might not trust me.
BR:
Maybe the analogy was a little harsh. I still think that for a Christian, talkorigins is the wrong place to start looking at the issue, just as AiG or trueorigins might be the wrong place to start for an atheist.
I had no idea this so-called "controversy" even existed until I came across several creationist websites a few years ago. So for me it was the right place to start. I can honestly say that I have never come across a creationist objection to evolution that has not been either debunked or fallen prey to counterexample.
DS:
And as was pointed out talkorigins contains an extensive list of links to creationist sites as well.
BR:
Talkorigins selectively links to creationist sites which they are comfortable with (i.e. don't effectively point out the shortcomings of Evolution).
I can't find any merit to this assertion at all. The talkorigins links are fairly comprehensive. A couple of those links are links to creationist sites that themselves contain dozens of links to other creationist sites. More importantly talkorigins has numerous links to the "intelligent design" websites and discussion boards, which, as far as I can tell, supposedly represent the most formidable intellectual challenge to Darwinism (which isn't saying much).
If you have any creationist links that talkorigins would be uncomfortable with, or especially those that more effectively point out the shortcomings of evolution, please feel free to post them here. In fact the most effective criticisms of Darwinism, as defined by its critics, come from within the community of professional biologists, and are published in peer-reviewed journals. These concern the theoretical aspects of evolution, that is, the molecular and environmental processes by which evolution occurs, obviously a tremendously fruitful area of scientific discourse.
There are numerous objections to the current general consensus within the community of professional biologists, for example those of James Shapiro, a biologist at the University of Chicago. However Shapiro's alternative views do not appeal to supernatural intervention. After all, he is a scientist.
I can't imagine that the proprietors of talkorigins would be "uncomfortable" with Shapiro's views. But like I said if you have any previously unaddressed sources that might cause discomfort to "evolutionists," by all means post them here.
BR:
I'd hardly call it an unbiased website, though their bias has become more subtle over the years.
I have no idea what you mean by that. Over the years, it seems to me, talkorigins has taken to engaging the "intelligent design" movement, and in fact the proprietors have established a new site, talkdesign.org, in order to deal specifically with this latest incarnation of creationism.
BR:
Just to save you the hassle of rebuttal, I will freely admit that many Creationist sites are biased as well, and many of them contain inaccuracies and so forth.
What an understatement that is!
DS:
Indoctrination involves the systematic presentation of ideas that are expected to be accepted uncritically ...
BR:
I used the word indoctrination with respect to the discourse on these forums. I still stand by that.
I don't understand that. Maybe I haven't read enough threads here, but I haven't seen any "evolutionists" expecting the information they provide to be accepted uncritically. That's like a Plantinga objection, where he characterizes Michael Ruse as screaming, "Fact, FACT,
FACT!"As far as I can tell the creationists here for the most part don't know what they're talking about. Many don't understand the differences among "theory," "fact," "proof," and "evidence." I find this remarkable, and amusing. Call me crazy, but I have this wacky notion that an evolution denier should display at least a passing familiarity with that which he seeks to deny, but I don't see any evidence of that around here.
As for "creationists" posting nothing more than Bible verses and/or pictures and essentially demanding adherence on penalty of eternal torture to whatever statement of "fact" they claim the verses and/or pictures represent, I have seen quite a bit of that. Thankfully I didn't feel the least bit indoctrinated by these Bible verses and pretty pictures, unlike many others, apparently.
DS:
it's pretty obvious that if anyone is involved in "indoctrination" here it's the creationists, and that includes the attorney Phillip Johnson and the "intelligent design" crowd as well
BR:
Of course, anyone who believes in creation or ID must be indoctrinated, right?
To take a series of myths clearly derived from a much earlier series of "pagan" myths literally, and to insist that the documentary hypothesis is false in the face of hundreds of years of scholarly analysis certainly does require a certain degree of indoctrination, no doubt about it. As for ID I see it trumpeted about here occasionally, but I've never seen it demonstrated that the trumpeters understand what the argument entails. That's not surprising since, for example, William Dembski's "argument" is so thoroughly cloaked in pseudo-scientific jargon (not to mention a certain mean-spirited petulance) I wouldn't expect too many creationists are able to make head nor tail of it.
I thought the argument from design (or
to design, as many would have it) was struck dead by Hume and ultimately interred by Darwin but it still seems to be kicking around in certain theological quarters, whose inhabitants are hopefully currently forging ahead into the 19th century.