Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Hope, not Proof

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

In my prior post I said (actually, as one commenter pointed out, I meant to say), ID gives us reason to hope for freedom from Darwinism and its implications with respect to objective morality. One commenter asked what ID has to do with establishing an objective basis for morality. The answer, of course, is nothing. ID is a scientific theory. It is not a system of ethics or even the basis for a system of ethics. As has been pointed out many times, ID says nothing about the nature of the designer or his/her/its ultimate purposes. The designer may be supernatural, but the theory does not posit a supernatural designer; nor is the existence of a supernatural designer necessary for its validity.

That said, ID does have implications for ethics and morality.

Because while ID does not depend upon a supernatural designer, it does not exclude a supernatural designer either. ID does not speak of – far less prove the existence of – the God in which I believe, but it is not incompatible with His existence. And therein lies the basis for my hope. Maybe, just maybe I say, the designer is in fact a supernatural God, and maybe that God has established a transcendent moral standard that gives us a firm foundation for ethics and principles of justice. I personally believe both of these things, but I believe them on faith, a reasoned and reasonable faith, but faith nevertheless.

I am firmly convinced that the God I worship exists, but I candidly admit I could be wrong. Over the centuries many philosophers have tried to prove the existence of God, and while many of their proofs are quite impressive, none is logically compelling. There is no ultimate or final “proof” – in the apodictic sense of that word – of God’s existence, and at the end of the day we must admit that, if He exists, God has given us freedom to doubt or even deny Him.

Logically, therefore, I am forced to admit at least the possibility that metaphysical naturalism (and its handmaiden Darwinism) could be true. And if naturalism is true, the cold, dark and frightening nihilism of Nietzsche and his intellectual progeny is the only clear-eyed way to look at the world.

Many people say Darwinism is a scientific theory, and as such does not speak to morality or ethics. Strictly speaking, this is true, but like ID, Darwinism also has profound implications for morality and ethics. It is not for nothing that Dawkins said Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist. And as Nietzsche was honest enough to admit, an atheist is compelled to say that morality, ethics and justice are illusions. The only thing that exists is a brutal competition of wills. There is no right and wrong. There is only strong and weak. The 20th century was one long bloody lesson in the practical application of Nietzsche’s ideas.

We must always be very careful to distinguish between our science and our metaphysics. ID is science and Darwinism is science. Neither ID nor Darwinism addresses morality, ethics or justice, but both have implications for these matters. ID is consistent with my hope that a loving God exists Who has established a transcendent moral order. Darwinism is consistent with atheism, which in turn is inconsistent with the very idea of objective morality.

In summary, naturalism may be true, but ID gives me reason to believe that it is not necessarily true. Unlike Oliver Wendell Holmes, I have reason to hope. This is a fairly simple distinction, and it never ceases to amaze me that so many people seem unable to grasp it.

Comments
Barry: "That said, ID does have implications for ethics and morality." Very true. I think it was said many times before, but let me say it again: if it hadn't been for the obvious implications, ID would have been accepted side by side with other scientific enterprises. In fact, ID has been part of science for a long time. Consider how archeologists do design detection, and comtemplate the SETI scientific research. They have no problems in using ID science in their fields of knowledge. As Dr Dembski said in Kansas, "ID is only problematic if the intelligence cannot be explained by Darwinian evolution", and/or (if I might add) if the Intelligence cannot be bound by the known laws of nature (the interaction of matter and energy, filtered by natural law). Barry said "This is a fairly simple distinction, and it never ceases to amaze me that so many people seem unable to grasp it." Oh, I think they do grasp it. In fact, they grasp it so well that they oppose it with a vengeance. The issue here is one of authority. If militant Darwinists allow an "Un-evolved Foot" at the door of science, where does it stop? To whom will the common people look for answers if they see that "they [scientists] can't even agree with one another!" ? Militant Darwinists have to show a united front under the banner of "science" no matter what. Militant Naturalists need the tag of "scientific explination" behind their speculation or people will see right thru their facade. Given the recent polls showing that the American people want to hear/read/see more about Darwinism, we can conclude that people have in deed been alerted for the fact that most of what we hear as "scientific explination" is just a worldview masked as science. Just put yourself in the Darwinian shoes for a second. Imagine that you know that your view is just like any other view, but you wanted it to be "official". Isn't it safer to put the tag "scientific view" behind your opinions? To make scenario worse, imagine that you know that your speculation has no evidence to suport it, apart from philosophical claims, how far would you go to defend your "lady"? Very far in deed, considering the implications: "if life is the result of Intelligence then....." (you know the rest, right?) We should not be surprised with the type of anti-ID polemics brought about by the Darwinists. A lot is at stake, and in this war there are no prisioners...Mats
March 26, 2006
March
03
Mar
26
26
2006
06:02 AM
6
06
02
AM
PDT
Thanks for saying it so well. ;) It seems baffling to the informed why so many people misunderstand such a basic thing about ID, but it shouldn't be surprising. The average person doesn't care much about the evolution debate, they know their positions and they know some facts, and they're told by the media that one is religion and the other is science. Mockeries of ID such as the infamous Flying Spaghetti Monster help us see what the Darwinists aren't seeing. They can't possibly comprehend, if ID were to be accepted, anything besides a supernatural creator as the origin of design. The unwritten fact that 99% of anti-ID arguments portray ID as religious shows both the weakness of the case against ID and the power of this wrong but easy to understand argument against it to influence the uninformed. On the bright side, with overwhelming support amongst youth for opening up evolution to be criticized, it's only a matter of time before millions of high school students are introduced to the theory now sweeping the globe. I wonder how the Darwinists sleep at night.jasonng
March 26, 2006
March
03
Mar
26
26
2006
02:57 AM
2
02
57
AM
PDT
1 2

Leave a Reply