Barbarian observes:
Dawkins also admits that science can't rule out God
That observation is incorrect
It's exactly right. As you saw, Dawkins says that he can't be be sure that there is no God.
Barbarian observes:
Their new religion is ID, as the Wedge Document makes clear
Their religion is Christianity,
This is wrong. For example, ID is the official doctrine of the "Unification Church" founded by Rev. Myung Moon, who considers himself an improved version of Jesus Christ. One of Moon's ministers is a fellow of the Discovery Institute, which invented this religion.
their philosophy is creationism
No. Behe, for example, asserts that common descent is a fact, and Michael Denton, like Dawkins, says he's an agnostic, and that all things were made by natural processes. They worship a designer, whom some of them think might be God, but they also acknowledge that they think it could also be a "space alien." Very weird religion.
and ID is a scientific theory.
Nope. A theory is a hypothesis, which has been repeatedly tested and confirmed by evidence. ID is a religion whose self-proclaimed "governing goals" are:
- To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural, and political legacies"
- "To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are created by God"
A religion, as you see. Just a rather unusual one with scientific pretensions. But declaring so doesn't make it a theory, any more than the denomination of Christian Science is based on theory.
ID isn't religion anymore than the theory of general relativity is.
Obviously, general relativity is not governed by a need to promote the idea that everything was "designed" by God. That's the difference between science and religion.
"The theory of
intelligent design holds that certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as
natural selection."
http://www.intelligentdesign.org/
That's what they say in public. As you see, they say quite different things when they think no one is listening.
Barbarian observes:
That's already settled. It's been examined in court. The fact that IDers copied a Creationist tract word for word, only erasing "God" and substituting "designer", makes that clear. And as you know, they inadvertently released a document making it clear that their motivation is religious, not scientific.
The court decided whether it would be taught in a public school.
The court's decision noted that it was a religion, and not a scientific theory. It was, as the evidence made clear, based loosely on YE creationism, and as such, it could not be taught in public school.
Scientific theories, like ID theory, is based on empirical evidence.
Wrong. It's based on a desire to make belief in a "designer" (which many IDers think is God) mandatory.
Barbarian said:
↑
If you think that sounds like a scientific theory, rather than a religion, then we've located the problem. But there's another reason:
IDer Michael Behe, testifying at the Dover trial:
Q And using your definition, intelligent design is a scientific theory, correct?
A Yes.
Q Under that same definition astrology is a scientific theory under your definition, correct?
A Under my definition, a scientific theory is a proposed explanation which focuses or points to physical, observable data and logical inferences. There are many things throughout the history of science which we now think to be incorrect which nonetheless would fit that -- which would fit that definition. Yes, astrology is in fact one, and so is the ether theory of the propagation of light, and many other -- many other theories as well.
Q The ether theory of light has been discarded, correct?
A That is correct.
Q But you are clear, under your definition, the definition that sweeps in intelligent design, astrology is also a scientific theory, correct?
A Yes, that's correct.
"Science is like that. It is methodologically naturalistic, but not ontologically naturalistic. It's just limited by its methodology to the natural. It does not deny that supernatural causes might exist, but it has no way of approaching them."
Since you said science is not ontologically naturalistic nor denies that supernatural causes exist, your definition doesn't rule out astrology either.
That's not a definition. It's just one facet of science. But of course, depending on evidence rules out astrology and ID, as Behe admitted under oath.
From the Dover trial, (Behe's testimony)
Q And the definition by the National Academy, as I think you testified is, a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences and tested hypotheses, correct?
A Yes.
Barbarian observes:
That's easy to refute. Scientists base the theory of evolution on evidence. And as you see, IDer's base their religion on their unusual interpretation of God. ID, as Behe admits, is no more science than a superstitious belief like astrology.
This is from the transcript:
Q But you are clear, under your definition, the definition that sweeps in intelligent design, astrology is also a scientific theory, correct?
A Yes, that's correct.
No mention of an unusual interpretation of God.
Note their governing goals, and Johnson's acknowledgement that ID would allow a "space alien" in place of God.
Barbarian Observes:
Remember, a hypothesis, when tested and supported by evidence, is a theory. Hence, Darwinism is a theory.
As Behe admitted, evolution (which he acknowledges to be true) is a scientific theory, but ID is not a theory under the scientific definition of a theory.
Creationism is a belief. Astrology is a belief.
Yes.
Philip Johnson:
"It certainly could be God, a supernatural creature, but in principle it could be space aliens of high intelligence who did the designing," he says.[/quote]
Sorry, I thought you were quoting Dembski, not Johnson. Johnson says he is an ordinary Christian who regularly attends the First Congregational Church in Berkeley.
If so, it's rather odd. I don't personally know any Christians who think that God is a designer who might be a space alien. But I'm not familiar with the doctrines of Congregationalists.
ID is whether design is detectable, not an attempt to define or discover the designer.
Seems odd then, that they would take a creationist book, replace "God" with "designer" and then publish it as a science book. This is just a rather unusual religion that seems to take beliefs from agnostics, Moonies, Creationists, and others. It seems to have mangled both science and faith, to make this new religion. It's a clumsy mash-up of both things.
It was an intriguing idea, making the "invisible things clearly seen" approachable by science. But it didn't work. Those of us who work in science often have those moments when we can see how His creation reflects His power and glory. For me, it's often when I'm alone, in the stillness of an early morning pond, or on the slope of a bluff overlooking a valley. But science won't do that. If your faith won't bring you there, science can't help you.
There's the real thing out there, and it's accessible to everyone willing to stop and listen. ID is a cheap imitation, that distracts one from the real thing. Man's shoddy imitation of the truth. How unfortunate.