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Is ID considered compatable with TE since it doesn't define a young earth?
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Darwinian Evolution in Nature (This is the heading of the last section of the article.)
I love this section. I'll be using it to complete my history.
Dembski said:The lesson, then, for intelligent design is that natural causes can synergize with intelligent causes to produce results far exceeding what intelligent causes left to their own abstractions might ever accomplish (this view is, of course, highly congenial to an incarnational theology).
Amen!!! This is very consistent with theistic evolution. It's interesting to see Dembski saying that intelligent causes may actually need natural causes to enhance their results.
Too often design is understood in a deterministic sense in which every aspect of a designed object has to be preordained by a designing intelligence. Evolutionary algorithms underwrite a nondeterministic conception of design in which design and nature operate in tandem to produce results that neither could produce by itself.39
Exactly!!!
I close with a quote by Michael Polanyi very much in this spirit:
"It is true that the teleology rejected in our day is understood as an overriding cosmic purpose necessitating all the structures and occurrences in the universe in order to accomplish itself. This form of teleology is indeed a form of determinism-perhaps even a tighter form of determinism than is provided for by a materialistic, mechanistic atomism. However, since at least the time of Charles Saunders Peirce and William James a looser view of teleology has been offered to us-one that would make it possible for us to suppose that some sort of intelligible directional tendencies may be operative in the world without our having to suppose that they determine all things. Actually it is possible that even
Plato did not suppose that his "Good" forced itself upon all things. As Whitehead has pointed out, Plato tells us that the Demiurge, looking toward the Good, "persuades" an essentially free matter to structure itself, to some extent, in imitation of the Forms. Plato appeared to Whitehead to have modeled the cosmos on a struggle to achieve the Good in the somewhat recalcitrant media of space and time and matter, a struggle well known to all souls with purposes and ends and aims."40
Do you ever have the experience of thinking something through to a conclusion and then finding that someone else has thought through to the same conclusion and published it already? That's how I felt when I read this quote from Polanyi. This is exactly the sort of thing that makes sense in a paradigm of theistic evolution. Since Dembski sees it as also making sense in the paradigm of ID, I expect the two concepts are actually very close and not mutually exclusive.