mark kennedy said:
Darwin was the first to suggest NS as a (not the, as has been pointed out) mechanism for the origin of species. He makes no bones about the fact that he developed his philosophy as an antithesis for 'special creation', as he calls it. His philosophy is far from irrelevant, its the whole point of his work and its the cornerstone of modern biology and geology. I am amazed that I am not being pressed for a definition of NS or at least confronted with Darwins, or yours for that matter.
No, his philosophy is completely irrelevant. What thought processes led Darwin to evolution is completely beside the point. We are discussing natural selection, an observed physical phenomenon, not Darwin's philosophy.
mark kennedy said:
NS is metaphysics because it makes all living systems desendant from common ancestory, this is metaphysics, since it includes all living systems and it links them to physics. The only way to do this is to claim a substantive element, and thus, metaphysics based on premise.
NS does nothing of the kind. NS is an observed physical phenomenon, a mechanism which is part of evolution. NS by itself says NOTHING whatsoever about "making all living systems descendant from common ancestry".
I've no idea what "substantive element" means in the above paragraph.
mark kennedy said:
Take a look at the satire I was responding to and consider the context I made the quote in. If you want to describe how it rains then there is no need to refute that it rains due to 'special providence'. So why does NS get developed as a response to 'special creation' as an alternative explanation for our origins? Because that is exactly the point, thats why.
NS wasn't developed as a response to special creation. It was discovered and it was realised to be a part of evolutionary theory. Again, whatever reasons led to Darwin coming up with it are completely irrelevant. We are discussing NS, not evolution as a whole.
mark kennedy said:
I appeciate your civil tone and your thoughtfull response. I have offered considerable support for my assertion and if you feel I have failed to make my burden of proof, I can accept that. To say that I have not supported it at all begs the question and puts the discussion in a tail spin. Thanks for your response I allways enjoy a good debate.
I DO say you have not supported it all. As has been repeatedly pointed out, your main points seem to be Darwin's philosophical leanings (which are completely irrelevant) and a strawman of what NS is. Forget Darwin, forget theism, and concentrate on NS - a natural, observed physical phenomenon. THAT's what you purport to be metaphysical, but you haven't given any reasons why.
mark kennedy said:
Let me make one thing clear and I'll get off the soap box. If there is a way of including theistic thought I'd be willing to reconsider some of its tenants. Apart from that we will just go round and round, I'm a patient man, I can do round and round if that's the only option.
I don't understand this. A way of including theist thought in what? Do you mean a way of including theistic thought in NS? If so, do you find that there is a way of including theistic thought in scientific explanations of why/how it rains? If not, what's the difference?
mark kennedy said:
Maybe I am being a little hardheaded, I don't know, but attributing the origin of all species in the ultimate sense is a metaphysical construct. I honestly believe that, and I feel I have good reason. You think I'm being ignorant then I suppose you are entitled to your opinion. I'll see you all later.
Once again, you seem to be attempting to change your contention. NS does not attribute the origin af all species. It says nothing about that at all. It is merely a physical mechanism which forms PART of evolutionary theory. Are you arguing that NS is metaphysical, or that evolutionary theory is metaphysical?
mark kennedy said:
If you want a tangible example Darwin offers a number of them. Dawkins is supposeing a large number of transitional forms that he cannot find. He insists that they must have, in fact existed, this is presumption. Dawkins is speculating based on his premise, he is talking about non-existant transitional forms
No, Dawkins is doing nothing of the kind. Have you actually read the passage? He is neither speculating nor insisting that these mythical creatures ever existed. All that he is doing is pointing out that of all possible creatures (including 'monstrosities'), evolution has led to a vanishingly small subset of these creatures actually existing on the earth. He likens it to something he calls "design space", which contains every possible creature...and further likens evolution's path on earth to a winding path through this design space, making 'real' SOME members of that design space - the actual creatures that have existed on the earth. His entire point is that of the possible creatures, virtually all have NEVER existed. I honestly think you've completely missed the point of Dawkins' passage.