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GratiaCorpusChristi
Guest
I wanted to state my feelings on the ID movement without derailing Punchy's thread on the same matter.
First off I would like to say that I don't think the ID movement is the same thing as creation science. Although both overlap, the ID movement has not, as a whole, condemned evolutionary biology or the mainstream scientific consensus on the age of the earth.
But my problem with the ID movement is this:
Intelligent Design advocates basically put forward two arguments for the existence of an Intelligent Designer.
1. Fine tuning (John Polkinhorne, Robin Collins). The universe seems immaculately designed to develop living organisms. This is basically a recapitulation of St. Thomas Aquinas's argument from final cause, or teleological argument.
2. Irreducible complexity (Michael Behe, et al.). Elements in the universe, especially microbiotic cellular structures, are so terribly complex, that only an intelligent designer could keep them working right and allow them to mutate and adapt to new situations. This is essential a God-of-the-gaps argument.
My real problem is that these two arguments are contradictory. On the one hand, we have the argument that the universe is so amazingly self-sustaining and finely tuned that only an intelligent designer could have designed it. On the other hand, we have the argument that the universe and especially biomatter is terribly complex and constantly threatens to fall apart if there isn't an intelligent force to keep it afloat.
See the problem?
Now I like John Polkinghorne. Anybody that's an Anglican philosopher-priest and a leading particle astrophysicist at the same time deserves my respect. And I've taken a class with Robin Collins- he teaches at my school. And although I would never use the teleological argument in a formal setting because I think it has some awful problems (namely, a subjective understanding of purposeful tuning), I respect it's proponents and it's fine history.
But to throw it in with Behe's God-of-the-gaps argument is just nonsense. Not only do I think all God-of-the-gaps arguments are doomed to fail eventually, and not only are they a great insult to God as an intelligent designer (the very thing they seek to prove!), but they so obviously contradict the other philosophical underpinning of the movement as to make it just laughable.
Anyway, that's what I think.
First off I would like to say that I don't think the ID movement is the same thing as creation science. Although both overlap, the ID movement has not, as a whole, condemned evolutionary biology or the mainstream scientific consensus on the age of the earth.
But my problem with the ID movement is this:
Intelligent Design advocates basically put forward two arguments for the existence of an Intelligent Designer.
1. Fine tuning (John Polkinhorne, Robin Collins). The universe seems immaculately designed to develop living organisms. This is basically a recapitulation of St. Thomas Aquinas's argument from final cause, or teleological argument.
2. Irreducible complexity (Michael Behe, et al.). Elements in the universe, especially microbiotic cellular structures, are so terribly complex, that only an intelligent designer could keep them working right and allow them to mutate and adapt to new situations. This is essential a God-of-the-gaps argument.
My real problem is that these two arguments are contradictory. On the one hand, we have the argument that the universe is so amazingly self-sustaining and finely tuned that only an intelligent designer could have designed it. On the other hand, we have the argument that the universe and especially biomatter is terribly complex and constantly threatens to fall apart if there isn't an intelligent force to keep it afloat.
See the problem?
Now I like John Polkinghorne. Anybody that's an Anglican philosopher-priest and a leading particle astrophysicist at the same time deserves my respect. And I've taken a class with Robin Collins- he teaches at my school. And although I would never use the teleological argument in a formal setting because I think it has some awful problems (namely, a subjective understanding of purposeful tuning), I respect it's proponents and it's fine history.
But to throw it in with Behe's God-of-the-gaps argument is just nonsense. Not only do I think all God-of-the-gaps arguments are doomed to fail eventually, and not only are they a great insult to God as an intelligent designer (the very thing they seek to prove!), but they so obviously contradict the other philosophical underpinning of the movement as to make it just laughable.
Anyway, that's what I think.