daniel777
Well-Known Member
3) YES entirely, evolution is accepted by 99% of the scientific community, it is even more accepted by scientists than the Holocaust is accepted by historians. To answer the second part about evolution and falsifiability. Everything is evolving constantly, Darwin said this in the final pages of Origin. Everything is always under environmental pressures. Not so much in humans because we have almost mastered our environment. Such pressures like natural selection and mutation are always happening and always causing evolution. To answer the question about irreducible complexity, I agree no scientist would say that, because science is all about discovering answers. I find things like ID dangerous because it gives an excuse for ignorance among the scientific community. Irreducible complexity isn't really a viable option because you have to say that we will never know about that organ or appendage in order to satisfy that requirement. Science isn't like that.
hmm, actually, here is where most of my questioning would lie also.... well, actually, no, here's where most of my questioning would lie about the scientific theory. to go back to the op though, i think most of the reasons why people mistrust evolution have to do with either the philosophical presuppositions that base themselves within the theory or arise from the theory or are added to the theory (either/or depending on who you ask).
but even still, this third question she asks here borders on the philosophical because it takes a second order approach to the question of evolution by asking "what is science"; it makes the definition of "science" the point of controversy.
ok, this is an obvious appeal to authority. it doesn't matter how many scientists accept x as a valid theory or not when asking whether or not it x "actually is" valid.YES entirely, evolution is accepted by 99% of the scientific community, it is even more accepted by scientists than the Holocaust is accepted by historians.
1. within science, the method of science defines what is a theory, not the scientist.
also, the scientist is only a scientist when he adheres to the method of science, and changing or defining the method of science is second-order to science. . . . . in other words, it's up to the scientist to use science to discover, not to "define" what is and isn't science. the scientist Uses science. he doesn't make it.
2. it would be like saying 99% of all mathematicians believed in a non-limited mathematics. . . . . until gödel came along.
obvious use mention error. she's referring to the theory (mainly how she says it's unfalsifiable), not the process.Everything is evolving constantly, Darwin said this in the final pages of Origin. Everything is always under environmental pressures.
so, you agree that this part of the theory she mentions is unfalsifiable? or are you proposing some kind of instrumentalism? beside the point, i always see naturalists (today at least, and, i'm assuming you are a naturalist forgive me if you're not) going on and on about how science is "real" and how it's the only viable explanation for anything, and whenever someone poses the sort of question that marie posted, whenever some sort of self-reference is attributed to the idea of science, they always at that point revert to instrumentalism. . . . . which to me seems extremely counterintuitive when discussing "actuals" in relation to science.To answer the question about irreducible complexity, I agree no scientist would say that, because science is all about discovering answers.
i think competing ideas are a wonderful idea. asking questions helps to refine both sides. would you deny that id/creationists/whatever have asked good questions? science is about discovery isn't it?I find things like ID dangerous because it gives an excuse for ignorance among the scientific community.
could you elaborate? science isn't like what?Irreducible complexity isn't really a viable option because you have to say that we will never know about that organ or appendage in order to satisfy that requirement. Science isn't like that.
i'm agnostic towards it actually, mainly out of apathy more than anything else. but the 3rd question was a good one imo. it's one i've thought about before too.Don't get me wrong, I think evolution happened. And even if I didn't, the arguments offered by Creationists and ID supporters seem to be based mostly on arguing against evolution, which doesn't really show why their own theories are valid. But I would like these questions (and some others, but I don't want the post to be too long) answered...
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