There are also many divergent views from within science about the overall adequacy of darwinian principles — Wayfarer
There are certain core evolutionary principles that no scientist seriously questions. Everyone agrees that natural selection plays a role, as does mutation and random chance. But how exactly these processes interact
How does one test such an argument? — Wayfarer
There are very few things with a stronger scientific consensus than evolution. — flannel jesus
Evolution, theory in biology postulating that the various types of plants, animals, and other living things on Earth have their origin in other preexisting types and that the distinguishable differences are due to modifications in successive generations. The theory of evolution is one of the fundamental keystones of modern biological theory. — Britannica
It's been controversial but TBH I see at least some elements of it likely becoming part of the mainstream in the future. — Count Timothy von Icarus
That's not to say these arguments have convinced people of the need for God to explain the universe, but rather that "there are things we need to explain that we currently cannot." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Intelligent design comes in many forms. In general, the ones that center on biology haven't been particularly successful at convincing biologists — Count Timothy von Icarus
How do I find out if this argument holds water? I am willing to accept a conclusion either way:
It is confusing to me, on the one hand Michael Behe, a mainstream Biologist with maybe not mainstream views, and those on the other side.
Are they agreed on the facts?
Are they agreed on the conclusions?
Can I tell if they are indeed agreed on facts and how their conclusions differ?
One problem I face is that a lot of the arguments are mixed in with the fine tuning argument. To be clear, my position on the fine tuning argument is this: If the existence of God is not a settled one way or the other, then the fine tuning argument is circumstantial evidence for the existence of a God and Creator, however, it does not conclusively prove anything. Why? Because we are obviously here, despite the odds, as a sort of anthropomorphic argument, and theories could emerge in the future that make the existence of the universe inevitable. It is possible. Conclusive proof is a different thing altogether. — FreeEmotion
Physicists pay a good deal of attention to the "Fine Tuning Problem," and it's mentioned in virtually all popular science books on cosmology these days. That's not to say these arguments have convinced people of the need for God to explain the universe, but rather that "there are things we need to explain that we currently cannot." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Scientific theories have to limit themselves to natural processes and observations. Is this correct? In that case, any scientific theory cannot include any supernatural actions, a 'God of the gaps' or any types of miracles. If we take that as given, then it follows that the theory of evolution, in whatever corrected modern formulations even, is the only choice scientists have when it comes to a theory of origin of biological entities. Is this correct? — FreeEmotion
Science accepts evolution because we have a preponderance of evidence of evolution. — flannel jesus
Now, evolutionary biology has a clear and unambiguous answer to that question: we exist in order to propagate. — Wayfarer
Of course. I mean, duh. — Wayfarer
No, I definitely do not think that the only reason science accepts evolution is because there's no other option. — flannel jesus
If the evidence counterfactually pointed to it, scientists today would say "The fossil records show humans spontaneously appeared on the earth 6000 years ago." The evidence doesn't point to that, so scientists don't say that — flannel jesus
The assumption that human evolution occurred preceded the evidence. That is how science works, you may say, very well. Without getting into scientific study myself, then I will have to make a guess as to whether the accepted scientific view is justified. — FreeEmotion
Science accepts evolution because we have a preponderance of evidence of evolution.
— flannel jesus — Wayfarer
One has to prove God does not exist in order to prove that He did not create the universe, doesn't that follow? — FreeEmotion
Only semantically. :roll: Rather, we only have to show by the preponderance of the evidence that the universe observed is just as predicted by theory without a "creator". Deep time, deep space, initial conditions of low entropy, nucleogenesis, accelerating cosmic expansion, etc are features of cosmic self-organization which is, of course, inconsistent with "creation by divine fiat". There is no evidence of a "creator" and yet there must be (some) manifest in the observable physical universe iff the observable physical universe was "created". Also, "goddidit" doesn't explain anything. As Laplace told Napoleon when the Emperor had asked about "God":One has to prove God does not exist in order to prove that He did not create the universe, doesn't that follow? — FreeEmotion
:fire:Je n’avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là.
That the majority of scientists accepted evolution without much fossil evidence of a lineage of humanoids leading to homosapiens? — flannel jesus
The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle argued that the world must have existed from eternity in his Physics as follows. In Book I, he argues that everything that comes into existence does so from a substratum. Therefore, if the underlying matter of the universe came into existence, it would come into existence from a substratum. But the nature of matter is precisely to be the substratum from which other things arise. Consequently, the underlying matter of the universe could have come into existence only from an already existing matter exactly like itself; to assume that the underlying matter of the universe came into existence would require assuming that an underlying matter already existed. As this assumption is self-contradictory, Aristotle argued, matter must be eternal.[1] — Wikipedia Eternity of Universe
Well, I’ll bow out, then. — Wayfarer
A few scientists started with a with a hypothesis. This hypothesis was since confirmed, but to the acceptance of this 'fact' had to depend on the assumption that this hypothesis was possibly correct, though ruled out by religious beliefs. They 'accepted evolution' based on evidence, but what compulsion should the church have for accepting it? Suppose someone came up with a natural explanation for the 'virgin birth' of Jesus? Would the church be bound to accept that 'scientific view?'. — FreeEmotion
Only semantically — 180 Proof
Deep time, deep space, initial conditions of low entropy, nucleogenesis, accelerating cosmic expansion, etc are features of cosmic self-organization which is, of course, inconsistent with "creation by divine fiat" — 180 Proof
There is no evidence of a "creator" — 180 Proof
I have no idea why you're asking these questions or how they're relevant to the conversation we had — flannel jesus
Creationism is linked to American Protestant Fundamentalism and is a religious ideology. — Wayfarer
The philosophical issue comes down to one word: purpose. Any ideas of purpose, and therefore meaning, were jettisoned by early modern science, associated with the dreaded scholasticism. The only admissable kinds of causes were what the scholastics would call material and effiecient causes. So, in the Aristotelian sense, nothing happens in evolutionary theory for any reason, other than to propogate. And all behaviours are subordinated to, and explained by, that requirement. — Wayfarer
But what about more subtle qualities that one could argue make little sense any other way. For example the human eye by physics must be a certain shape to focus light correctly. — TiredThinker
Ok, what do you mean by "God"?
What is wrong with having a religious ideology? Has some law been broken here?
What is wrong with having a religious ideology? Has some law been broken here? — FreeEmotion
I'm also extremely dubious of the vague notion that chemical components basically ravelled themselves into DNA and thereafter the enormous variety of living forms through something like a spontaneous chemical reaction. I'm more inclined to sympathise with Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasighe's panspermia thesis, although I'll go with the Hindu aphorism for now: life comes from life. — Wayfarer
Your laugh at what I said seem to imply that you feel what I said was nonsense, but now I can't find that response anymore? — Christoffer
Nothing is wrong with it (although there are dubious religious ideologies.) — Wayfarer
The consensus view of secular culture (and on this forum) is, I think, that there's nothing necessarily wrong with religious ideologies, but that they're based on articles of faith, for which neither philosophical nor scientific justifications can be given. A scientific account of a natural process can't take those principles into account as they're not scientifically verifiable. — Wayfarer
was the fact that your post misunderstands confuses the existential question of purpose with the functional sense of purpose assumed by physics. — Wayfarer
The existential sense of purpose I'm referring to, is the kind of question philosophers and the religious ponder - is there a purpose to existence, other than pro-creating and 'passing on our genes'. — Wayfarer
With experiments and findings of chemical reactions actually forming potential sources for self-correcting structures, abiogenesis is still the most logical solution to the question. In the context of entropy, it also makes sense. — Christoffer
we attribute further ideas of meaning and purpose to all of this is out of existential dread and fear. We cannot cope with this sense of meaninglessness and therefor seek comfort in ideas that makes us feel special. — Christoffer
this is exactly what I wish to put forward, that beliefs that are rational defensible are philosophically justifiable. — FreeEmotion
However, methods that result in the creation of basic life forms and the explanations accompanying those do not preclude, out of logical necessity, the creation of life by a God. — FreeEmotion
In the next ten thousand to a million years, there is no doubt that increasingly complex and elegant theories might be proposed, however the basic human act of faith in the existence of the yet unknown, be it God or be it future explanations, the acts of blind faith may continue to be committed far into the distant future. Therefore I do not think there can be a rational argument against religious faith. — FreeEmotion
Makes me wonder what you think you have to contribute to a philosophy forum. — Wayfarer
But still, I find that questioning of my contribution to the philosophy forum to be rather awkward. Like, do people need to accept your specific philosophical ideal in order to be valued as a contributor? Is not even my questioning of certain ideas a contributing factor on a philosophy forum? Sounds a bit weird to imply a lack of contribution in that way? — Christoffer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.