Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Baker’s dozen: Thirteen questions for Dr. Hunter

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

The purpose of today’s post is to ask Dr. Hunter thirteen questions regarding his views on human origins. I hope he will be gracious enough to respond. Without further ado, here they are.

1. Dr. Hunter, in your original article over at Darwin’s God, you put forward eleven arguments against the hypothesis that humans and chimps had a common ancestor, before going on to critique Professor S. Joshua Swamidass’s evidence for human evolution as “just another worthless argument,” which was “not about science,” but about metaphysics, and for that reason, “unfalsifiable.” Why did you subsequently revise your post, by deleting a key premise from your very first argument, and then deleting eight paragraphs which contained your sixth and seventh arguments? Do you now reject those arguments? Let me declare up-front that I have absolutely no wish to impute any bad motives to you for editing your own blog post. I just want to know where you stand, that’s all. (Curious readers may go here to see what the old version of Dr. Hunter’s post looked like, and here to view the new one. For more details, please see the Appendix below.)

You also assert that Professor Swamidass’s case for human evolution is based on metaphysical assumptions, rather than science. Bearing that in mind, I’d like to ask you the following questions.

2. Can you name a single branch of science which isn’t based on metaphysical assumptions, to at least some extent? For instance, don’t even the so-called “observational sciences” assume the reliability of induction – an assumption which is grounded in a metaphysical worldview of things (or substances) possessing determinate natures, which guarantee that they will behave in a uniform fashion? (Even if essentialism is dead in the biological realm, it continues to hold sway in the fields of physics and chemistry: lower-level entities such as molecules, atoms, sub-atomic particles and fields are still envisaged as having a fixed nature, which is the same at all times and places.)

3. That being the case, instead of trying to purge metaphysics from science, shouldn’t we focus on making our core metaphysical assumptions as simple, non-controversial and commonsensical as possible?

4. Do you accept that if hypothesis A readily explains an empirical fact F and hypothesis B does not, then F (taken by itself) constitutes scientific evidence for A over B? Or putting it another way, if a fact F is predicted by hypothesis A, and compatible with hypothesis B but not predicted by B, then do you agree that F constitutes scientific evidence for A over B? If not, why not?

5. Do you also accept that the hypothesis that humans and chimps share a common ancestor is not a hypothesis about mechanisms as such (or what Aristotle would describe as efficient causes) but rather, about material causes – i.e. the raw material from which the human body was originally derived, regardless of the process involved, with the “raw material” in this case being the body of the supposed common ancestor of man and chimp? What I’m saying here is that the hypothesis of common ancestry, taken by itself, is agnostic as to whether the human mind originally arose from matter, or whether human evolution was guided or unguided. Do you agree? If not, why not?

6. If you accept 4 and 5, then why do you not agree that the profound genetic similarities between humans and chimps constitute at least prima facie (scientific) evidence for the hypothesis of common ancestry? And why do you not agree that the discovery of fossil hominins such as Australopithecus, Homo habilis and Homo ergaster, which appear to be transitional in form, constitutes additional scientific evidence which bolsters this hypothesis, even if it’s incomplete evidence?

7. Am I correct in understanding you as claiming that there exists no scientific evidence whatsoever for the hypothesis that humans and chimps share a common ancestor, and that all of the arguments put forward for human evolution are in reality metaphysical arguments?

8. Do you claim that (a) it is impossible, in principle, to mount a purely scientific argument for the common ancestry of humans and chimps, or merely that (b) no-one has yet succeeded in putting forward such an argument?

9. If you chose (a), would you also agree that it is impossible, in principle, to mount a purely scientific argument for the human race (or the world) being more than 6,000 years old?

10. If you chose (b), then can you show me a purely scientific argument (devoid of metaphysical assumptions) for the various races of man sharing a common ancestor – and for that matter, for modern humans and Neanderthals sharing a common ancestor? If so, please specify.

11. If you chose (b), then what kind of scientific argument for humans and chimps having a common ancestor would satisfy you?

12. I’d like to draw your attention to the following quote from the young-earth creationist, Dr. Todd Wood, commenting on Dr. Fazale Rana and Dr. Hugh Ross’s demand, in their book, Who was Adam?, that before they recognize the evolution of humans and chimps from a common ancestor as an established fact, there would have to be “a clear evolutionary pathway from this supposed ancestor to modern human,” as well as hominid fossils documenting “the gradual emergence of the anatomical and behavioral traits that define humanity, such as large brain size, advanced culture, and the ability to walk erect,” with “transitional forms” readily discernible in the fossil record. Dr. Wood comments:

Given the spotty and fragmentary hominin fossil record, expecting any clarity for any model is unrealistic. Even if human evolution were true and the fossil record preserved wonderful and numerous fossils of every descendant of the hypothetical human/chimpanzee last common ancestor, there is no guarantee that we would be able to recognize any “clear” lineage from nonhuman to human.

Would you care to comment?

13. In the comments to one of your posts, you thanked a reader for linking to an article stating that the protein vitellogenin confers several beneficial effects upon bees, in addition to being used to make egg yolks. Humans possess a broken copy of the gene which makes this protein; they no longer need it. So my final question is: why do you not consider this gene to be vestigial – especially when Dr. Jeffrey Tomkins’s claim that the remaining gene fragments in human beings are functional has been soundly refuted by Dr. Dennis Venema?

I would also welcome readers’ comments on the questions I posed to Dr. Hunter.

A trip down history lane: the 1864 Declaration of Students of the Natural and Physical Sciences

In 1864, a group of young London chemists, led by a young chemist named Herbert McLeod (1841-1923) and calling themselves ‘Students of the natural and physical sciences’, put together a statement titled the Declaration of Students of the Natural and Physical Sciences, expressing their belief that “it is impossible for the Word of God, as written in the book of nature, and God’s Word written in Holy Scripture, to contradict one another, however much they may appear to differ,” and expressing their confident belief that “a time will come when the two records will be seen to agree in every particular.” The statement, which was published in 1865, attracted the signatures of 717 people (most of whom were scientists), including 86 Fellows of the Royal Society. James Joule and Adam Sedgwick were among its signatories. Other scientists, however, attacked the wording of the statement as divisive, and urged that it was high time to “let men of science mind their own business, and theologians theirs.” The most prominent critic of the Declaration was the British mathematician Augustus De Morgan, who argued in his work, A Budget of Paradoxes (section O), that scientists should not be called on to approve or disapprove, in writing, any religious doctrine or statement, and who put forward an alternative declaration of his own. What is remarkable, historically speaking, is that both documents fall afoul of what scientists now refer to as methodological naturalism. Even the alternative version put forward by de Morgan expressed a belief in the “Word of God, as correctly read in the Book of Nature,” as well as expressing “faith as to our future state.”

The dissenters from the 1864 Declaration of Students of the Natural and Physical Sciences carried the day, and by 1872, the Declaration was all but forgotten.

The Declaration read as follows:

We, the undersigned Students of the Natural Sciences, desire to express our sincere regret, that researches into scientific truth are perverted by some in our own times into occasion for casting doubt upon the Truth and Authenticity of the Holy Scriptures. We conceive that it is impossible for the Word of God, as written in the book of nature, and God’s Word written in Holy Scripture, to contradict one another, however much they may appear to differ. We are not forgetful that Physical Science is not complete, but is only in a condition of progress, and that at present our finite reason enables us only to see as through a glass darkly, and we confidently believe, that a time will come when the two records will be seen to agree in every particular. We cannot but deplore that Natural Science should be looked upon with suspicion by many who do not make a study of it, merely on account of the unadvised manner in which some are placing it in opposition to Holy Writ. We believe that it is the duty of every Scientific Student to investigate nature simply for the purpose of elucidating truth, and that if he finds that some of his results appear to be in contradiction to the Written Word, or rather to his own interpretations of it, which may be erroneous, he should not presumptuously affirm that his own conclusions must be right, and the statements of Scripture wrong; rather, leave the two side by side till it shall please God to allow us to see the manner in which they may be reconciled; and, instead of insisting upon the seeming differences between Science and the Scriptures, it would be as well to rest in faith upon the points in which they agree.

It strikes me that a creationist could conscientiously sign this Declaration, affirming a belief in the special creation of man, while at the same time acknowledging that the scientific evidence appears to contradict this view at the present time, but trusting nevertheless that at some future time, a resolution of this conflict of evidence will be found. To my mind, that sounds like a fine, manly position for a special creationist to take. I wonder what Dr. Hunter thinks of it. And what do readers think?

Is Dr. Hunter misreading Professor Swamidass?

In the course of his reply to my post, Dr. Hunter accuses Professor Swamidass of the following charges:

(a) dogmatically drawing conclusions when he states that the evolutionary story “is by far the best scientific explanation of our origins”;

(b) suggesting that microevolution is sufficient to explain the evolution of humans from a small, ape-like creature;

(c) adopting a scientist-versus-theologian, Warfare Thesis perspective, and demanding that theologians must adjust their sights, drop their denial, and grapple with the undeniable truths of evolution;

(d) writing in a confrontationist tone, by castigating as “lawyerly” those who would explain the similarities between humans and chimps by appealing to common “design”; and

(e) presenting a patronizing story in his article, in order to “reduce the fear some feel when encountering evidence that might contradict their understanding of the Bible.”

I believe that Professor Swamidass is innocent of these charges.

To begin with (e): in presenting the story of the 100-year-old tree, Professor Swamidass expressly states that his aim is simply to get theologians to acknowledge that “for some reason, God chose to create humans so that our genomes look as though we do, in fact, have a common ancestor with chimpanzees.” And that’s all. He then goes on to say: “If we allow for God’s intervention in our history, it is possible we do not share a common ancestor with apes. Adding God into the picture, anything is possible.” This is not patronizing, and it I certainly not an attempt to bulldoze theologians into accepting evolution.

Regarding (d), Swamidass does indeed use the term “lawyerly” to characterize those who would explain the similarities between humans and chimps in terms of common design. That’s because the explanation is too vague: it fails to account for the extraordinary fact that our DNA is only about 1.5% different from a chimp’s. Nevertheless, Swamidass’s tone is far from confrontationist, when he writes: “What design principle can explain why humans are 10 times more similar to chimpanzees than mice are to rats? No one knows.” He isn’t saying that an appeal to common design is wrong; rather, he’s saying that if it is true, it’s not the whole story. There must be some additional reason why we are so similar to chimps.

Regarding (c), it is important to note that Professor Swamidass repeatedly describes himself as a Creation Pacifist. He rejects the view that science and religion have to be at war with one another, as well as the condescending view that scientific truth trumps religious dogma. The Creation Pacifist movement which he belongs to includes people who are creationists. It would be utterly absurd to describe such a man as adopting a “Warfare Thesis” perspective.

Regarding (b), Professor Swamidass does not say that microevolution is sufficient to explain the evolution of humans from a small, ape-like creature. Rather, what he says is that the degree of similarity between humans and chimps puts them in the same Biblical “kind,” genetically speaking, and that microevolution explains the genetic similarities (but not necessarily the differences):

In fact, if “microevolution” (a concept many religious leaders affirm) can explain the similarity between rats and mice, it is reasonable to infer it explains the similarity between humans and chimpanzees. Genetically, humans and apes are the same “kind.”

Nowhere in his article does Professor Swamidass claim that the entire suite of differences (psychological, behavioral, morphological and genetic) between humans and chimps can be accounted for by random, step-by-step mutations. His article leaves open the question of how we became human.

Regarding (a), Professor Swamidass does indeed assert that the evolutionary story “is by far the best scientific explanation of our origins,” but he qualifies his assertion by inserting the word “scientific” in front of “explanation,” and by remarking: “Maybe this evolutionary story is false.” I would hardly call that dogmatic; would you?

Finally, let me quote an excerpt from a comment made by Professor Swamidass in response to a reader:

“Strong scientific evidence for common descent exists, but when taking God into account it is not definitive.” This is not a religious statement. It does not presume that evolution is true. And it does not end all our disagreements. And it should not be controversial.

That was all Professor Swamidass was really trying to say. It’s a real pity that some people took umbrage at his remarks.

APPENDIX: Dr. Hunter’s curious deletions

I mentioned above that Dr. Hunter had edited his original post on Darwin’s God, removing two of his eleven arguments and substantially watering down his first argument. Fortunately for readers, Dr. Hunter left another post online, which was virtually identical to his original post.

To see what Dr. Hunter’s original post looked like, readers can view his article, Stunning Evidence for Common Ancestry? S. Joshua Swamidass on the Chimp-Human Divergence over at Evolution News and Views. This article is virtually identical to Dr. Hunter’s original post over at Darwin’s God, except that: (a) the offensive last sentence of that post (“Like that old baseball card, it’s just another worthless argument”) is missing (and yes, I do think it’s “curtly dismissive” in tone); (b) the second paragraph has been split into two paragraphs; and (c) the heading near the end of the article has been changed, from “Swamidass arguments and evidences” to “Swamidass Explains?” One or two words in the post have also been changed.

Let me be quite clear: I’m not accusing Dr. Hunter of doing anything wrong here, in editing his original post. He has included a short note at the end of his revised post over at Darwin’s God: “Ed; Removed sentence about the orangutan, 1-Mb segments section, and the gene functionality section.” That’s fine. After all, it’s his blog, and he can edit it as he sees fit. For my part, I sometimes correct typos and sloppy wording on my own posts, especially within the first day after I publish them, although when I do amend my posts, I tend to expand them slightly, rather than deleting stuff.

However, I am very curious as to why Dr. Hunter dropped two of his arguments against human evolution from his original post, and weakened the force of another of his arguments by removing a key claim about orangutans. Why would he do that, if he actually believed those arguments? Or has he changed his views on the merits of those arguments? In that case, why doesn’t he just come out and say so?

Let me add that I have changed my mind in the light of new evidence, and openly acknowledged my errors on Uncommon Descent. My 2014 post, When I’m wrong, is a good example. Previously, I had put forward certain arguments (see here, here, here, here and here) against the neutral theory of evolution, which I later came to recognize as flawed, after an exchange of views with Professor Larry Moran.

Since I have publicly acknowledged my own mistakes on previous occasions, I would ordinarily expect other contributors to Uncommon Descent to do likewise, in similar circumstances. But I’m happy to let Dr. Hunter speak for himself.

Dr. Hunter’s original arguments

To help readers see what I’m talking about, here are the eleven arguments Dr. Hunter put forward in his original post, in summary form, along with my replies.

1. The genetic evidence cited in favor of common descent is not congruent with the other data: “in its morphology and behavior, the orangutan is closer to humans than the chimpanzee.”
[My reply: Dr. Hunter is probably relying on out-of-date 2009 paper by Grehan and Schwartz, which claimed that orangutans were morphologically closer humans than chimps were. However, another more recent study using a larger dataset found that chimpanzees are morphologically closer to humans than orangutans are (see also here.]

2. Mutations are random, and natural selection doesn’t help, either: “it cannot induce or coax the right mutations to occur.” According to Dr. Hunter, “this makes the evolution of even a single protein, let alone humans, statistically impossible.”
[My reply: this is an argument against evolution occurring purely via undirected processes. It is not an argument against common descent.]

3. Random mutations cannot create human consciousness, and evolutionary attempts to deny the reality of consciousness or explain it away as an “emergent property” are tantamount to anti-realism.
[My reply: this is an argument against materialistic theories of evolution. It is not an argument against common descent.]

4. It makes little sense that the relatively tiny genetic difference (1 or 2%) between human and chimpanzee DNA could be responsible the enormous design differences between the two species.
[My reply: this is incorrect. Scientists now know that the vast majority of genetic changes are either neutral or nearly neutral, whereas morphological changes (including the “design changes” referred to by Dr. Hunter) are often subject to natural selection, and are therefore either beneficial or deleterious. Neutral or nearly neutral mutations dwarf beneficial mutations in frequency, and the ratio of the former to the latter is not fixed. Hence the degree of genetic divergence between two species tells us nothing about how different they are, morphologically.]

5. To makes matters worse, according to the widely accepted neutral theory of evolution, the vast majority of the mutations occurring in the human line would have led to “neutral and slightly deleterious alleles.” Dr. Hunter comments: “This is no way to evolve the most complex designs in the world.”
[My reply: It has been calculated that out of the 22.5 million (mostly neutral) mutations that occurred in the human line, a mere 340 beneficial mutations would have been enough to turn the common ancestor of man and the chimp into a modern human being. The hypothesis of common descent does not specify whether these mutations were intelligently designed or not.]

6. What’s more, when evolutionists search for genes in the human genome that do show signs of selection, rather than neutral drift, they only find relatively unimportant ones: one 2005 study found only “genes involved in the sense of smell, in digestion, in hairiness, and in hearing.”
[My reply: Dr. Hunter is relying on outdated information here. A more recent 2013 paper by Capra et al. found that brain enhancers were actually the most common of the 773 developmental enhancers that they analyzed, in the non-coding human accelerated regions (ncHARs) of the human genome.]

7. If you look at large segments of DNA, corresponding in the human and the chimp, you find unexplainable variations in the chimp-human differences, which evolutionists can only explain away by resorting to a “then a miracle happened” hypothesis. Dr. Hunter remarks: “Under evolution there is no scientific reason, beyond hand-waving speculation, for such variations.”
[My reply: the differences in the rate of divergence which Dr. Hunter refers to are relatively minor. If we look at the median figures for chromosome pairs 1 to 22, we find that the genetic difference between humans and chimps varies from about 1.1% to a little under 1.4%, with an average overall difference of 1.23%. See also Professor Swamidass’s remarks on the subject here.]

8. According to Dr. Hunter, “The supposed divergence rate between chimps and humans … also has an unexplainable variation towards the ends of most chromosomes. This is another problem that seems to make no sense under evolution.”
[My reply: even near telomeres (the ends of chromosomes), the level of divergence between human and chimp DNA never gets above 2.1%, and elsewhere in the genome, it never falls below 1.0%. In other words, we’re talking about a two-fold variation in the rate at which the molecular clock ticks, in the worst possible case. This is hardly earth-shattering news. See also Professor Swamidass’s remarks on the subject here.]

9. Dr. Hunter writes: “This supposed divergence rate between chimps and humans also has an unexplainable variation that correlates with chromosomal banding. Again, this makes no sense under evolution.”
[My reply: neither evolution nor creation explains this observation well. In any case, it is fatal to neither theory. Dr. Hunter is making much ado about nothing. See also Professor Swamidass’s remarks on the subject here.]

10. Dr. Hunter observes: “The mouse-rat [genetic] divergence is about an order of magnitude greater than the chimp-human divergence. Yet the mouse and rat are much more [morphologically] similar than the chimp and human. It makes no sense under evolution.”
[My reply: there’s no correlation between the frequency of morphological changes and the frequency of genetic mutations. In the beginning, Darwinian evolutionists mistakenly assumed that the genetic difference between rats and mice would be small, because the morphological differences between these animals are slight. But we now know that the vast majority of the genetic differences between any two species are neutral or near-neutral mutations, which dwarf beneficial mutations by a factor of about 100,000 to 1 (see above: 340 beneficial mutations to 22.5 million neutral ones). Morphological differences, by contrast, are frequently caused by beneficial mutations, which are screened by natural selection.]

11. Finally, since mice and rats are supposed to have diverged long before humans and chimps did, and since mice and rats have a much shorter lifespan and generation time than chimps and humans, “one would conclude that the mouse-rat genetic divergence should be … at least two orders of magnitude greater than the chimp-human genetic divergence. But it isn’t.”
[My reply: Dr. Hunter’s figures are wrong. In reality, the neutral molecular clock ticks twice as fast for rats and mice as it does for primates. Multiply that by the three-fold difference between the 18-million-year-old mouse-rat divergence date estimated by evolutionists and the 6-million-year-old human-chimp divergence date, and you get an expected level of genetic divergence which is just six times greater – and not two orders of magnitude (or 100 times) greater, as calculated by Dr. Hunter. See also Professor Swamidass’s remarks on the subject here click on the hyperlink, “How does common descent explain the differences between chimps and humans?”]

Dr. Hunter’s amendments to his original post

Here’s the crucial sentence which Dr. Hunter deleted from his first argument against evolution, in his original poston his Darwin’s God Website:

Furthermore, in its morphology and behavior, the orangutan is closer to humans than the chimpanzee.

Take this sentence away, and the force of Dr. Hunter’s conclusion in that argument is vastly weakened: “Simply put, from an evolutionary perspective the genetic data are not congruent with the other data.” Why not, exactly?

And here are the eight paragraphs which Dr. Hunter deleted from his original post:

When evolutionists search for genes in the human genome that do show signs of selection, rather than neutral drift (again, under the assumption of evolution), they find only a limited repertoire of functionality. For example, one study found genes involved in the sense of smell, in digestion, in hairiness, and in hearing. In other words, evolution is suggesting that we differ from the chimp mainly in those functions. It is a silly conclusion and another problem for Swamidass to explain.

But that’s not all.

That 2005 paper also found a host of chimp-human comparisons that are nonsensical in evolutionary terms. In other words, if you are forced to interpret the genetic comparisons in terms of evolution, you end up with contradictions. For example, if you look at large segments of DNA, corresponding in the human and the chimp, you find unexplainable variations in the chimp-human differences:

Nucleotide divergence rates are not constant across the genome… The average divergence in 1-Mb segments fluctuates with a standard deviation of 0.25%, which is much greater than the 0.02% expected assuming a uniform divergence rate.

To explain these nonsensical findings evolutionists have to resort to a “then a miracle happened” hypothesis. The usual explanatory devices do not work, so they are left only with the claim that local variations in the mutation rate did it — which amounts to special pleading:

[W]e suggest that the large-scale variation in the human-chimpanzee divergence rate primarily reflects regional variation in mutation rate.

Under evolution there is no scientific reason, beyond hand-waving speculation, for such variations. This is the equivalent of epicycles in geocentrism and so we have yet another problem for Swamidass to address.

But that’s not all.

These arguments have now vanished without a trace and without an explanation. And I am left wondering whether Dr. Hunter still believes them or not.

But enough of that. What do readers think? Over to you.

Comments
mike1962 @223: Correct. Jerry has been proposing some initial conditions, some law-like process, some boundaries, that would channel an otherwise random process to a particular end. As I mentioned earlier in the thread, the only reason that seems to work at first blush is that the example given is so vague and unspecified that it can accommodate a wide variety of results and an essentially random outcome. As soon as we start talking about real biological systems -- information-rich, complex, specified structures -- the analogies of rain falling in a valley and pooling into lakes by gravity, and so forth, come up far short.
Is it fair to assume you are not including a heavily front-loaded FUCA in this boundary condition?
I don't have any problem, in principle, with the idea of an initial designed, engineered system that could respond to environmental cues and turn into other organisms over time, using its pre-programmed capabilities. There is precious little evidence that this is what happened, but at least it is a rational proposal. We should also note that such a system might have a broad set of pre-programmed potential outcomes, but it would not be random in any real sense, certainly not in the sense that evolutionists understand evolution to be. No, the claim on the table was that some (conveniently vague and undefined) boundary conditions or laws could be set up to channel the randomness of evolution into a pre-determined result. One imagines some as-yet-undiscovered natural law or principle of physics that could perform this amazing feat . . . Unfortunately, that is all it is -- imagination. There is no reason to think there is such a thing. Rather, there is plenty of reason to think there is not. ----- BTW, sorry I previously missed your post among all the comments.Eric Anderson
June 4, 2016
June
06
Jun
4
04
2016
08:31 AM
8
08
31
AM
PDT
Hi, juwilker # 293; sorry I have not replied sooner, my desk-top has just been undergoing a major upgrade. Indeed, as you say; God's will may be changed, delayed or cancelled: no doubt by our prayer for one thing. However, His will for His overall plan and His purpose; it seems that is fixed.mw
June 4, 2016
June
06
Jun
4
04
2016
06:46 AM
6
06
46
AM
PDT
Ted Davis @295: Thank you for your professional and thoughtful comments and for taking the time to share. Your piece regarding "Owen Gingerich’s approach to designed evolution" is impressive and well written. It also provides a decent summary of some of the key thought processes engaged in by proponents of theistic evolution. In doing so, your piece (whether intentionally or inadvertently) underscores the mental gymnastics that are required to mesh the "scientific" consensus about Darwinian evolution, with a belief in a creator. As has been pointed out clearly above in this thread, the options are somewhat limited in logical scope: either (a) adopt a definition of evolution that is different than what nearly every textbook, professional association, and evolutionary scientist uses, or (b) push the creator far enough back in time and interaction as to be essentially irrelevant to the "scientific" enterprise. Approach (a) is all well and good, and is probably something that nearly every supporter of intelligent design could support or at least applaud. But we would then hope that the proponents of (a) would be very clear when discussing the subject that they do not share or support the common, popular consensus on what evolution is or how it works. To profess (a) with a nod and a wink whenever a creator is mentioned, while at the same time supporting, hook-line-and-sinker, the traditional purely materialistic evolutionary narrative in one's professional or academic life would be both too convenient and intellectually inconsistent. Approach (b) is not necessarily irrational either. Indeed, if one were under the mis-impression that purely natural processes, such as Darwinism's random mutations and natural selection, were responsible for the origin and diversity of life we see around us, then one would be required to come up with some kind of narrative to keep the creator from being wholly irrelevant to the creation. Unfortunately, all such attempts are strained at best: vague assertions about evolution being guided, claims about undefined initial boundary conditions that allegedly move evolution in a specific direction, fanciful and currently-vogue assertions about secret and invisible action through quantum interactions, and so on. Furthermore, and ironically, all such proposals bring us right back to (a). Meaning, what we are talking about is not "evolution" as understood in the science textbooks and the academies, but is some kind of purposeful design, whether front loaded or interactive over time. So we are back to where we started and the questions on the table remain for theistic evolutionists: 1- Do you think purposeful design played a role in the origin and development of life on Earth? 2- If so, why? 3- If so, is there any way that we could detect that purposeful design in biology? Presumably a theistic evolutionist must answer "yes" to #1, if she is being forthright. The answer to #2 will tell us whether she is talking about science or her personal theological beliefs. The answer to #3 will tell us whether she is open to even considering the possibility of design detection in biology (as is common in numerous other fields) or whether her mind is unwilling to consider the possibility in the particular case of biology. What we have seen time and time again, unfortunately, is a refusal to consider #3, often based on the exact same kinds of red herring roadblocks thrown up by the most ardent materialist zealots: we simply cannot consider design; it isn't science; we must stick to methodological naturalism; and on and on. The reasons are no better; the thinking is no clearer. Just roadblocks thrown up to avoid considering the unthinkable: that a creator was involved in the design of life, not just vaguely and distantly, but directly and specifically and intimately. The possible motives for such unwillingness to consider design as a live option are many, and I'm sure we all would do better to not speculate on them in a particular instance, but they tend to revolve around a certain set of religious and philosophical, rather than logical or scientific, issues -- none of which are particularly thoughtful, even if wholly sincere.Eric Anderson
June 3, 2016
June
06
Jun
3
03
2016
11:10 PM
11
11
10
PM
PDT
A little while ago I said more about naturalism, in response to the flurry generated by a paper by Chinese authors that was withdrawn from publication b/c many objected to its over references to a creator: http://biologos.org/blogs/ted-davis-reading-the-book-of-nature/reviewing-creatorgate-is-god-a-scientific-proposition I wrote this about Boyle there: "Revered by those who knew him for the depth of his faith, Boyle was among the most pious Christians in the history of science, and he did not take God or the Bible lightly. He even wrote a full-length treatise defending the language of Scripture against religious skeptics, in addition to numerous books about specific theological topics. However, he did not regard those works as belonging to “natural philosophy,” that is what we would call “science” today. To see more fully what I mean, consider the two very large books of experimental observations that he published in 1664-65, one of more than 400 pages about light and the other exceeding 800 pages about cold temperatures. In both works taken together, we find the word “God” only eight times, almost always in a trivial expression, such as “God permitting,” and never in a way that added substance to his scientific conclusions. He cited the Bible just twice, once in a long passage about God’s curse on Ham (Genesis 9:25), as part of a discussion of skin color among humans. He didn’t need God or the Bible in his experiments, so he left them out." I also talk about Newton, God, and natural philosophy. Go to the link for more.Ted Davis
June 3, 2016
June
06
Jun
3
03
2016
05:29 PM
5
05
29
PM
PDT
Hi mw and juwilker, I'm off to work shortly, but I'll try to get back to you tonight. Cheers.vjtorley
June 3, 2016
June
06
Jun
3
03
2016
04:14 PM
4
04
14
PM
PDT
Hi Ted Davis, I very much appreciate your kind comments on this thread. I think you're right: we seem to have different definitions of methodological naturalism. For my part, I have difficulty seeing someone who writes about God in a science textbook as a methodological naturalist, when doing that sort of thing would get you shunned nowadays. I think you are right in highlighting the Hippocratic treatise, "On the Sacred Disease," as a forerunner of modern-day MN. Hippocrates doesn't actually say that appealing to the divine is not kosher when doing science, but he does say that people in his day call epilepsy divine because of their inability to comprehend it. Even today, 2,400 years after he wrote, his treatise has a strikingly modern tone. I was interested to read what you said about Boyle: "At the same time, Boyle didn’t believe that appeals to divine agency ought to be used as scientific explanations. Rather, he thought that 'mind' (NOUS, following Anaxagoras) was essential to explaining nature as we find it. That’s not the same thing as explaining this given phenomenon as it takes place." If you could point me to a link where I can read where he says that in his writings, I'd be very grateful. By the way, I'd agree with you about Boyle and Paley. Thanks again for the exchange.vjtorley
June 3, 2016
June
06
Jun
3
03
2016
04:08 PM
4
04
08
PM
PDT
Many thanks to VJ for handling this particular subject so competently, and to Joshua for taking so much time to answer as many questions as he reasonably could. Having interacted here and in other spaces with armies of people skeptical of or wholly against my views, I admire his patience. Some folks seem to have unlimited time for online conversations, but most folks don't. As a result, in any large online community there will always be good questions that go unanswered--which signifies only that there will always be good questions that go unanswered. I'd love to jump in and engage VJ @120 on Boyle and MN (and SB @96 on related matters), but time is not at a premium and what's really needed is a full history of "naturalism" in its various forms. I know of just a few articles on that general subject (probably there are more that I ought to know about), and I wrote one of them (with philosopher Robin Collins). That doesn't make me right, obviously, but it does mean that I got invited to a recent conference aimed at producing a whole volume of essays on the history of MN. Overall, I will say only that (pace SB and VJ) MN does go back to the Greeks, especially the Hippocratic treatise "On the Sacred Disease," but that it was also basically enshrined in the practices of the medieval universities, which forbade arts masters (the science teachers) from teaching about God and theology, while allowing the theologians to teach about anything, including natural philosophy (Science). A lot more can be said, obviously, but this isn't the place to say it. As for Boyle, VJ is right that Boyle brought God into the picture a lot. Nothing I wrote about Boyle in my columns for BL (or anywhere else) says otherwise. Indeed, Boyle was basically the founder of ID, and flat no one has ever given stronger support to the design argument than Boyle. It's not a stretch to say that Paley is basically an elaboration of Boyle in much clearer, more readable form. At the same time, Boyle didn't believe that appeals to divine agency ought to be used as scientific explanations. Rather, he thought that "mind" (NOUS, following Anaxagoras) was essential to explaining nature as we find it. That's not the same thing as explaining this given phenomenon as it takes place. So, it comes down to definitions of MN. On that, at least, VJ and I might well agree. I also comment on Joshua's admiration for Owen Gingerich's approach to designed evolution. My review of his book, "God's Universe," (published more recently than the work Joshua quotes) might help clarify where Owen is coming from: http://www.firstthings.com/article/2007/05/300-all-things-bright-and-beautiful. He was basically a modern Asa Gray. I too admire Owen's very careful delineation of the limits of current science and his deep belief in the reality of divine action, coupled with a reluctance to jump to premature conclusions about how the science must or ought relate to the faith. Finally, I note the umbrage taken by some here, both at VJ for raising serious questions about Hunter's writings and at Joshua for making respectful, honest statements about his convictions. Similar things happened to me on multiple occasions here, and insults about people's motives have often been made--such as those directed at Steven Barr simply for writing a brilliant piece called "Chance, By Design." It's one thing to disagree with someone; it's another entirely to say that they simply want to be "cool" and not rock the boat. If ID wants to find support from more people in the scientific community, the motives of those who articulate other thoughtful responses to the challenges of evolution must not be equated with gutlessless.Ted Davis
June 3, 2016
June
06
Jun
3
03
2016
01:53 PM
1
01
53
PM
PDT
Thanks, Justin. I appreciate you taking time to comment and I respect that you have put some careful thought into this. If I may, perhaps I can offer just a couple of initial reactions, which I fear may come off as more abrupt and critical than intended, so please forgive my bluntness. It seems your examples speak more to your unique conception of God than to the logical and scientific issue at hand. You seem set on a false dichotomy, namely, that it is impossible to know what will happen without encumbering your ability to do something about it. Yes, one possible resolution is to jettison the omniscience -- to eliminate the "knowledge" part of the equation -- but that isn't the only option. First of all, you are thinking very linearly about time and about possible outcomes. I don't know whether this flows from, or is the source of, your idea that God is not really omniscient. Regardless, I don't want to get into too much of a debate about anyone's particular conceptions about God. But it simply does not follow that knowing the future means not being able to do anything about it. In the first place, the future -- rather than being static -- may be a series of possibilities which can very much be chosen and influenced. It may be possible for God to see very clearly that series of possibilities. After all, even in our own lives we see a set of possibilities before us every time we make a decision -- from decisions where the possibilities are hazy and unresolved, given our intellectual limitations, to decisions where the possibilities are extremely specific, bounded, and well-known, like my decision to press certain keys on the keyboard to produce this comment. Knowing the possibilities and knowing the precise outcome of those possibilities certainly does not hamper our ability to choose between them. Indeed, the very concept of intelligence, both practically and etymologically, harks to our ability to choose between contingent possibilities. Second, even in your claim of knowledge encumbering omnipotence, you gave away the store: "it seems to me that God did not, could not, and chose not . . . [emphasis added]" In other words, there was a choice made. The being has the ability to choose to act. And if he had wanted to make a different choice, then he could have. What you are really getting hung up on is not the ability to act, or even the ability to see the future. It is the classic time-travel dilemma: "If I see x in the future, but then make a choice to change that outcome, then -- in theory -- I shouldn't have seen x in the future in the first place." But this assumes I am stuck in a particular immutable timeline and am seeing from a particular moment in that timeline. The classic resolution to this dilemma is simply to posit that what was glimpsed in the future was a contingent possibility, one that would occur if certain events were to continue in motion -- in other words, if a different choice is not made. If we are getting hung up on the chicken-and-egg question of knowing something before it happens (due to the time-travel dilemma or some particular conceptions of what it means to be omniscient and omnipotent), then we can simply make the event contemporaneous for purposes of the issue at hand. If I see something occurring right now, does it necessarily mean I am causing it to occur? Of course not. Knowing something is happening and causing something to happen are different concepts. I think we agree on that point, which is the key for this thread and for analyzing certain TE positions. By the way, why do you feel more comfortable getting rid of omniscience than getting rid of omnipotence? :)Eric Anderson
June 2, 2016
June
06
Jun
2
02
2016
08:45 AM
8
08
45
AM
PDT
EA @ 288 “We can cut to the chase by asking a very simple question: Is it possible for someone to know what an outcome will be and yet for that someone to choose not to do anything about it?” This is a great question. And I will answer “no”. Two possible agents have this power you propose. Agent 1 is a human. Let’s assume Agent 1 does not have clairvoyance, but has “knowledge” using everyday predictable methods. For example, a mob boss has a pair of loaded die that he knows will NOT land “7” when two dice are rolled by an unsuspecting gambler. Here the mob boss has knowledge and culpability. Knowing is causing. Agent 2 is God who we ascribe as “knowing” the choices of other freewill agents. Now this is key. How can God “know” what the freewill agent will choose while at the same time NOT encumbering His ability to change the outcome? From my perspective, this is impossible. This makes no sense to me. I repeat from a previous post that I’m a small mind trying to understand concepts beyond my ability. But I try nonetheless. Let’s use an example. Human B is going to kill Human C in 5 minutes. Supposedly God somehow “sees’ or “knows” this event (this scenario reminds me of the movie Minority Report). Let’s further assume that 5 minutes later, human B actually kills human C. The paradox here is that God has encumbered His own omnipotence. By seeing the death of human C, it seems to me that God did not, could not, and choose not to stop the killing. And here’s the rub: the actual “seeing” of this event encumbered His omnipotence to act!!! So EA, in essence I am agreeing with you that knowledge is NOT causation, but I’m proposing that God does not have that knowledge and therefore can not be culpable. MW @ 289. I understand there are passages in scripture that imply God knows beginning from end. I get that. There are also scriptures indicating that God’s will is changed. I’m trying to reconcile these two very different concepts, just like people much smarter than me throughout history have attempted to do. I don’t oppose what you are saying, just trying to make sense of it. And the best I can come up with is that God does not KNOW the future, but CREATES the future according to his irresistible will, which can change. Hope that makes sense. By the way, I'm a YEC who thoroughly discards the idea of TE.juwilker
June 1, 2016
June
06
Jun
1
01
2016
08:39 PM
8
08
39
PM
PDT
Hi StephenB @ 290, thank you for your hard hitting comments: ------------------- “Christian Darwinism represents the worse kind of intellectual schizophrenia, and it survives only because its adherents are duplicitous and relentless. At stake is nothing less that the spiritual and intellectual health of believing Christians, all of whom are regarded as mission territory for these partisan hacks.” ------------------ In conjunction; initially, vjt, wrote: “The dissenters from the 1864 Declaration of Students of the Natural and Physical Sciences carried the day, and by 1872, the Declaration was all but forgotten.” . . . . “It strikes me that a creationist could conscientiously sign this Declaration, affirming a belief in the special creation of man, while at the same time acknowledging that the scientific evidence appears to contradict this view at the present time, but trusting nevertheless that at some future time, a resolution of this conflict of evidence will be found. To my mind, that sounds like a fine, manly position for a special creationist to take. I wonder what Dr. Hunter thinks of it. And what do readers think?” ------------------ Are we saying, that improved evolutionary science will eventually resolve or dissolve more the Word of God from Sinai by intellectually sorting out God’s seemingly ‘dog rough’ statement (according to some of our highest intellects) that God Personally created in six days? What then if we head towards the suggested course by vjt? Would we be in reality, wanting and waiting to be ‘saved’ by some superior unprovable science, or should we just accept the word of an unprovable God, whom we claim as our Master/Jesus, in terms of the Christian movement? Verbatim, Christians’ have become largely embarrassed of an unalterable divine law (Matt 5:17-19) which Jesus fulfilled as truth (Jn 14:6), one with the Father (Jn 10:30), and the truth of the Father (Jn 17:17): “Saviour” (Isa 43:3). Today, from a Christian perspective, we have Christians’ for Darwin; Christian Intelligent Designers, and Christian Six Day Creationists; including long and short age, gap age belief and some others. We would agree, all are brothers and sisters in Christ, acknowledging He is Master/God. How do we know such, only through Judaeo-Christian Scripture! In no other way can we possibly know such, but only from personal witness statements, historically recorded, including miraculous unbelievable events. God/Jesus set datum essential for consistency, warning against deleting or adding words in scripture (Deut 12:32) and (Rev 22:18-19); including: “Every word of God proves true; he is a shield to those who take refuge in him. Do not add to his words, or else he will rebuke you, and you will be found a liar.” (Prov 30:5-6) St Paul said: “I have applied all this to Apollos and myself for your benefit, brothers and sisters, so that you may learn through us the meaning of the saying, ‘Nothing beyond what is written’, so that none of you will be puffed up in favour of one against another.” (1 Cor 4:6) Are we not in danger of puffing ourselves up greater than Darwinist Christians? Are we intending to substitute more knowledgeable, provable origins, greater and above the word of God, which he wrote and stated, plain and clear - no messing, in stone and personal. Or, if we are simply teaching, if so, just in what way exactly is our solution better than the word of God? Faith in his word must please such a God. “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Indeed, by faith our ancestors received approval. By faith we understand that the worlds were prepared by the word of God, so that what is seen was made from things that are not visible.” (Heb 11:1-3) Unverifiable ‘science so-called,’ cannot be greater that faith in the unseen God’s word; nevertheless, who spoke “face to face” with Moses, “clearly, not in riddles” (Num 12:8). Based is the faith on historic evidence, albeit limited. Darwin scoffed at such, proclaiming such is ignorant and insane: “By further reflecting that the clearest evidence would be requisite to make any sane man believe in the miracles by which Christianity is supported—that the more we know of the fixed laws of nature the more incredible do miracles become—that the men at that time were ignorant and credulous to a degree almost incomprehensible by us—that the Gospels cannot be proved to have been written simultaneously with the events—that they differ in many important details, far too important as it seemed to me to be admitted as the usual inaccuracies of eyewitnesses—by such reflections as these, which I give not as having the least novelty or value, but as they influenced me, I gradually came to disbelieve in Christianity as a divine revelation.” (Barlow, Nora ed. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins) http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?viewtype=text&itemID=F1497&pageseq=1 Yahweh/Jesus, therefore, is cast among the ignorant by Darwin. It is beyond belief that any Christian can even begin to hold to any testimony of such a blind observer of documented history; and when his own observations clearly told him transitional forms do not exist. Darwin then goes blindly with his new found faith in his natural selection stripped of intelligence and direction, full of copying errors and blind chance. Surely a recipe for eventual disaster, especially when Darwin cut out from its heart the Holy Spirit, the giver of Life in the first place. How can a Christian therefore, place an iota of trust in even one iota of any type of common descent proposal when compared to the divine word, in stone. Such support makes God lie in stone. Nevertheless, Jesus teaches face to face with the perfection of evil; we live by every word from the mouth of God (Matt 4:4). With clarity, God spoke to Moses, the meekest man on earth (Num 12:3-9). And bear in mind, God used “uneducated men,” added by the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, creating words everyone could plainly understand: still, some sneered (Acts 2:10); others amazed (Acts 4:13). The word of God is alive and active (Heb 4:12), therefore, the word of God from Sinai must be alive and active, or it has died, which is an absurdity. In my own country, it would seem the date for the termination of Christianity, is 2067. http://www.spectator.co.uk/2015/06/2067-the-end-of-british-christianity/ Why the descent of Judaeo-Christianity, it is because of a powerful delusion: if one section of a divine law is ‘proved’ wrong, the rest must be left a suspect. But none have! Most just want to believe that it is proved wrong. As a Catholic, and Christians in general, we may believe God has always something up his sleeve, as prophesied at Fatima. In Catholic terms then, what is the meaning of “My Immaculate Heart will triumph”? http://www.fatima.org/ Will there be a triumph over Darwinism, embedded in communism, and now democratic secularism: the opium of evolutionary science? Of course, as a side issue, there is a concern that the instructions of the BVM have not been carried out; though the Vatican says different, http://www.catholictradition.org/Mary/fatima19.htm However, one Vatican astronomer priest, declared six day creation is almost blasphemous!!! Think about it, God is almost made a blasphemer by ‘intelligent’ Christian interpretations of a dark night sky. What in the world have we come to? http://www.christianpost.com/news/vatican-astronomer-says-young-earth-theory-is-almost-blasphemous-argues-bible-should-not-be-used-as-science-book-128136/ The Bible is not a science book; it is superior, providing light, giving an account of the miraculous; it is a super scientific book containing super scientific evidence, beyond our knowledge; willed by God as an almost insignificant means to communicate knowledge, give warnings and guidance of the upmost importance. Nevertheless, the Pontifical Academy of ‘evolutionism’ (so to speak), clearly rejects ID and Six Day Divine Law Creation interpretations of evidence: favouring, ‘never proved facts’ that an unguided worm will evolve into a monkey, all en-route to becoming human; and not even planned intelligently! However, Sinai is the start of a major historic unbroken link of Judaeo-Christian worship where God asked us to remember that he created in six days (Exod 20:8-11). Judaeo-Christian sabbath/seventh day worship no longer basically acknowledges such. Yet, miracles upon miracles surrounded Sinai and for over forty years, through Jesus, One in essence with the Holy Trinity. At the end of the Judaeo-Christian scripture, a timely instruction in spiritual warfare is given: “Then the dragon was angry with the woman, and went off to make war on the rest of her children, those who keep the commandments of God and hold the testimony of Jesus.” (Rev 12:17) Keeping the commandments means keeping the commandments; those clearly revealed, not distorting any to suit our purpose of disbelief (Matt 15:3-9). When with our ‘science’ we climb Mount Improbable, we will find a divine law still written in stone to face, and the word of St Paul echoing: “nothing beyond what is written.” I am sorry if this sounds like preaching, but from my point of view, it is a by-product, a consequence of trying to answer more fully the suggestion put forward by vjt at the beginning of another of his skilfully crafted posts.mw
May 31, 2016
May
05
May
31
31
2016
10:38 AM
10
10
38
AM
PDT
StephenB, thank you for your comment. You've made some excellent points on this thread as well. I'm not sure. however, about the duplicitous nature of theistic evolutionists, broadly speaking. Sure, there are some who are really interested in the materialism and are only trying to shoehorn in the theism to reach a broader audience. Folks like Eugenie Scott, for example, love the theistic evolutionists, because they serve as "useful fools" for the materialistic cause. However, in my efforts to understand people's actions and motives, I find that the underlying cause is much more often incompetence than conspiracy. I think there are many (likely most) theistic evolutionists who have adopted their position with sincerity, not because they desire to deceive others and erode theism, but because they mistakenly believe that the materialistic creation story has legs. Consider the position they are in. If a person were under the mis-impression that the materialistic molecules-to-man storyline were true, and at the same time the person believed in a creator, then they would end up adopting some kind of narrative to try to reconcile this cognitive dissonance. Yes, such a narrative is unnecessary; yes, it suffers from significant logical problems; yes, it is an intellectually weak position. But it seems in most cases it is borne more of an unfortunate misunderstanding of the science, than of a conscious desire to conspire. There is additionally a large swath of individuals who have bought into the theistic evolution approach due to outside peer pressure: a desire to remain in good standing in the science community and to approach science from a standpoint of methodological naturalism. Again, such approaches are misguided, but they are understandable in the context of human foible, rather than conscious effort to deceive.Eric Anderson
May 30, 2016
May
05
May
30
30
2016
04:16 PM
4
04
16
PM
PDT
Eric, I am grateful that you are speaking up on this vitally important topic. The TE initiative to recruit Christians is a true scandal. As you well know, Christian Darwinism is based on the illogical notion that God's omniscience can produce a specified result that God’s omniscience did not provide for. Of course, this is nonsense. You are dead right: To know is not to cause. God knows if and when the stock market is going to crash. That doesn't mean that He caused it to happen. This is a deadly error because so many people are involved, including mainstream Christians, their ministers and educators, and even my church, the Catholic Church (that is--the human element). Christian Darwinism represents the worse kind of intellectual schizophrenia, and it survives only because its adherents are duplicitous and relentless. At stake is nothing less that the spiritual and intellectual health of believing Christians, all of whom are regarded as mission territory for these partisan hacks.StephenB
May 30, 2016
May
05
May
30
30
2016
01:28 PM
1
01
28
PM
PDT
Hi Justin #287: ------------ 'I believes (sic) that God does not “know” the future, but causes it according to his irresistible will.' ------------ God said; he is a God: "declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My purpose shall stand, and I will fulfil my intention’, calling a bird of prey from the east, the man for my purpose from a far country. I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have planned, and I will do it. (Isa 46:10-11) He planned creation in six days. He confirmed, spoke and wrote it at Sinai. If he did not bring it to pass, God is a failure in divine law, and worse. Jesus said, for God nothing is impossible (Mk 10:27), and we err in not knowing the power of God and scripture (Matt 22:29).mw
May 30, 2016
May
05
May
30
30
2016
11:12 AM
11
11
12
AM
PDT
Justin, thanks for your kind message. Couple of thoughts: Whether or not some savages have thought predestination was true in their lives at some level is separate from whether everything is caused by God. Even those who believe in predestination broadly would not necessarily deny some level of free will in certain situations -- what should I have for dinner? should I hunt the deer or the antelope today? should I participate as an effective member of the community or lie, cheat and steal? can I seek mercy from God and receive a reprieve? More importantly, just because some savages thought X, does not make it so. The closer analogy is pure materialistic determinism, where free will is an illusion, thought is just a product of random particle collisions, love is nothing more than chemical reactions. There is no truth, no falsehood, no good, no evil -- just a bunch of particle collisions interacting over time, their cause inevitably traced back to that first explosion so long ago. We must take the view -- we do so as a matter of practice and our experience with reality -- that we have choices, that certain things matter, that decision A can lead to a different outcome than decision B. We also, as a matter of scientific inquiry, take the position that certain events are caused by specific interactions: what caused the fire? what caused the canyon to form? what happens when I mix these two chemicals? can I store an electrical charge in a gate on this hard drive? To argue, as some have on this thread, that God causes all these things, just because he knows about them, is nonsensical. It makes every other inquiry for causation futile and meaningless. Furthermore, even if we were to argue, that God causes everything at some very vague and high level, it still wouldn't help us one whit in determining what actually happened in the real world. It is just completely useless and meaningless as a matter of practice, both in our personal lives and in science. Additionally, and of particular interest for many on this site, such an approach would prevent us from drawing a principled distinction between design and non-design. We would be left to argue that, for example, God "caused" the leaf to fall in the forest and he also "caused" the nucleotide sequence for the bacterial flagellum in the DNA. These are fundamentally different kinds of events, so we would have to then start talking about causation type 1 versus causation type 2. It would be a pointless exercise, all based on a semantic mistake and a poorly-thought-out conflation of two very different concepts: knowledge and causation. We can cut to the chase by asking a very simple question: Is it possible for someone to know what an outcome will be and yet for that someone to choose not to do anything about it? If that someone happens to be omnipotent, as has been argued, then by definition that being must have the ability to choose not to do anything about it, to not intervene, to let natural events run their course. Indeed, this is precisely the complaint so often leveled at God when bad things happen -- "Why didn't he step in and do something?" ----- There are indeed interesting worldview issues, as you allude to. But the narrow point we are discussing here is quite simple and is just a matter of basic language usage and logic. The reason we have different words for these things -- to "know" something, and to "cause" something, or even to "allow" something to occur -- the reason we have different words is because they are different concepts. There is no inevitable logical tie between knowledge and causation. One can have knowledge and yet choose to not intervene. Knowledge does not equal causation.Eric Anderson
May 30, 2016
May
05
May
30
30
2016
09:03 AM
9
09
03
AM
PDT
EA @ 281 “God causes everything…which is completely meaningless”. Actually, sages throughout history that have argued such. And though we don’t understand it, it is not meaningless. It’s a valid conclusion for certain forms of predestination. But I don’t want to argue that point here. I do want to explore the idea or belief that knowledge is not causation. The nexus of cause and effect is not as clear as we might think. Consider to the events of David and Uriah in 2 Samuel chapter 11 and 12. David helped bring about the death of Uriah, but he personally did not murder him. But God indicts David as the killer saying “You killed him with the sword of the Ammonites” (2 Sam 12:9). Technically David did not kill Uriah, but God said he did. Culpability was attached to his knowledge. This analogy is weak, I know. But I cite this story as an example that blurs the lines of cause and effect. This same story goes on to show that God struck down David’s first child with Bathsheba. Who killed the baby, God or David? I think if we asked God he would say David (his sin) killed the baby, not God, although we know that technically God killed the child. I believes that God does not “know” the future, but causes it according to his irresistible will. And His will can be changed. But we are getting off topic. Eric, I do value your comments and opinions. So don’t think of me as someone opposed to your worldview. Just challenging a few assumptions here and there. Justinjuwilker
May 29, 2016
May
05
May
29
29
2016
09:19 PM
9
09
19
PM
PDT
Forgive me vjt, for having another go at your "manly" thing to do (in relation to consensus science and divine law from Sinai) which you base on a students' "Declaration," as cited in your opening, that we should accept the theory, and divine law, until 'better' results come along for such science, if I understand you correctly. What then? From the teaching of Master and Lord Jesus (Jn 13:13), who fulfilled divine law in divine sinless flesh (Matt 5:18-19); did Jesus fulfill modified Darwinism. No he did not. If he did, God would cast out God, as the teachings of Jesus was soley based on the Father, as Jesus regularly said in his divine/human kenosis. According to the Judaeo-Christian scripture, of which, Jesus facing the perfection of evil, fought using scripture (also prayer and fasting) against Satan; that scriptural lesson should speak volumns (Matt 4:4). Does the fossil record reliably show when various species diverged? No, it shows that species appeared on on top, or underneath each other with no perceived transitional forms, as Darwin lamented, and that stasis is the overwhelming evidence on face value for all life forms. A question is, is it possible that God could create a kind that is permanent, when, it is believed, he is permanent and does not change in essence (Mal 3:6). An equally important hypothetical question; did abiogenesis occur in heaven to produce St Michael the Ark Angel, or any angel? Surely, the only realistic, God given theory of everything, is six day divine law, amplified metaphorical with key truth of the cosmos in Genesis,which is above a theory, it is a statement of truth by the Highest Truth and Intelligence, as may be believed? Darwin dismissed such as preposterous. Nothing "sane" in Judaeo-Christianity he said, dissmissing recorded history for non recorded, non provable history of common descent, and a monkeys uncle ansestory. Basically, it may be said, common descent, albeit powerful at present, is yet an intellectual assertion of an interpretation. The God of Sinai, asked us to remember he created in six days, and to remember him actually in the Eucharistic Host, Personally: as do many Catholics and Orthodox, and which, a few Protestants also believe. There is absolutely no way science can every accept such a statement of belief. Human science, cannot identify spirit, yet, there is documented evidence of such a powerful concept. What Sinai theology implies is, a Personal God generated our spirit from his Spirit. That same fittest unchangeable God, created us in his image. He gave us life, he gave us his life, loved us to his death, then allowed us to eat and drink of the fittest in order to re divinise us in free will. The Master, Jesus/the Holy Trinity, said; flesh profits nothing, it is the spirit that gives life (Jn 6:63). Yet, consensus science would have us believe that a single cell, exquisitely created every complex life form on earth. Indeed, a miracle of materialism, rased from the dead that incredible miraculous cell devoid of spirit; creating animals/simian types that sing and speak, similar to Balaam's ass? You say, vjt, something to the effect of being a real man; "manly." What, the manly thing to do, is to further corrupt scripture with evolutionist consensus theory, which makes a nonsense of why Jesus needed to be crucified for the 'mythical creatures' of Adam and Eve, created by death, through simians in theistic evolutionist terms. Surely, in Catholic terms, in Christian terms in general, Jesus, and in the Holy Eucharist, is a real Man, who told the real truth at Sinai, that Jesus/God created in six days, dying in that fact, maintaining that fact to save? Or that those who believe in six day creation are not man/woman enough: yet, more often than not, able to withstand all the scoffing that goes with it, as St Peter propesised, gifted with the Holy Spirit, scoffers would come! As a Catholic vjt, I respectfully ask you, how can Jesus 'evolve' instantly into the form of a consecrated biscuit or droplets of consecrated wine? Surely, if we believe one impossibility according to materialistic human standards, we can just about believe that same Jesus Co created in six days, as he said as God at Sinai, which frankly, is easier to believe of the two. As for being manly/womanly where divine law is under attack; let's substitute those students for Job to whom Yahweh said: "Who is this that darkens counsel by words without knowledge? "Gird up your loins like a man, I will question you, and you shall declare to me. "Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Tell me, if you have understanding. "Who determined its measurements—surely you know!" (Job 38:1-5) There was only One God at the Creation, One Truth, One Word. The question then becomes, how can God, with the greatest intellect, be so stupid as to make us believe he could and did create in six days! Let me see; God can see ahead and therefore plan ahead. It is impossible to believe fully in divine law combined to any form of Darwinism, unable to see by the phantom-like natural selection, any end whatsoever. Therefore, the God of Sinai, created and stated in such a manner to make the matter simple, clear, and so plain, that a child could understand in belief. In other words, ultimately we have no excuse against such believed divine law encasted in truth. Thank you vjt for giving me the opportunity for a rant. ????mw
May 29, 2016
May
05
May
29
29
2016
01:42 PM
1
01
42
PM
PDT
We have to retain some semblance of normal English language usage, as well as basic logic. :DMung
May 29, 2016
May
05
May
29
29
2016
10:49 AM
10
10
49
AM
PDT
Natural selection: "Last time out, we looked at Darwin's theory of natural selection, alleged by some to be the single best idea anyone ever invented. The mere process of eliminating unfit examples of a type in a given environment builds up information over time, resulting in huge new layers of complexity. "But if no one can say what is fit or unfit according to natural selection, because nature has no direction, why must we pay attention to claims about natural selection? Why is there supposed to be anything to know? "Then there is Darwin's theory of sexual selection, with its famous exemplar: the peacock's tail. An illustration may help us see why reasonable persons continue to doubt." http://feeds.feedburner.com/yahoo/zPErmw
May 29, 2016
May
05
May
29
29
2016
06:40 AM
6
06
40
AM
PDT
As anyone ever captured in a test tube Darwinian type natural selection, distilled it, then by artificial selection, all requiring intelligence, synthesised a new life form, I do not mean, for example, a variation of an existing bacteria kind, I mean a completely new 'alien' life form, with no end product in mind, stirred with the 'spoon' of chance? Ref Richard William Nelson: including, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycoplasma_laboratorium http://us7.campaign-archive2.com/?u=00931ef9e25fa77f7511cb443&id=f28253909e&e=f24d4f99b2mw
May 29, 2016
May
05
May
29
29
2016
12:07 AM
12
12
07
AM
PDT
Origenes @276:
If natural selection is to be understood as a process of elimination, as Mayr says, then existent organisms are the ones that got away. Instead of being created by ‘natural elimination’, exactly the opposite is true: they are untouched by ‘natural elimination’. Existent organisms are those organisms on which natural selection has precisely no bearing whatsoever. They are the undiluted products of chance.
Thanks for sharing your additional thoughts. A valuable way to look at it, and well said.Eric Anderson
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
10:37 PM
10
10
37
PM
PDT
juwilker @278:
I know you are summarizing StephenB thoughts. But would you still agree with that statement if we assume omnipotence as well as omniscience? When ascribing God as the only agent “knowing” this future with the power to change the future, then wouldn’t this statement be false? Knowing is causing.
Only if by "cause" you actually don't mean "cause," but instead mean "didn't actively prevent." In which case, since God doesn't actively prevent anything that happens from happening, then God causes everything. Which is completely meaningless. No. We have to retain some semblance of normal English language usage, as well as basic logic. We must not fall down the rabbit hole into an absurdity and claim that just because a being knows something that the being caused it. Even if the being had the ability to do something about it and chose not to. Knowledge is not causation.Eric Anderson
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
04:01 PM
4
04
01
PM
PDT
Hi vjt, thank you for another thought provoking post. You say: ------------ "It strikes me that a creationist could conscientiously sign this Declaration, affirming a belief in the special creation of man, while at the same time acknowledging that the scientific evidence appears to contradict this view at the present time, but trusting nevertheless that at some future time, a resolution of this conflict of evidence will be found. To my mind, that sounds like a fine, manly position for a special creationist to take." ------------ The "Manly" God/Jesus, never took such a position, and on his return will never take that position, which is against himself, having co-wrote in stone at Sinai that he created in six days. Natural science has no such power at hand to see if such a statement is true or not. That fact he wrote in stone, as Moses witnessed; as the whole house of Israel witnessed two stone tablets carried with the utmost holy respect, and as historic documents confirm; such is worthy of utmost consideration to what words written in stone signify, and which should need no further explanation. The human race is not above falling for a powerful delusion, and alas, Paul prophesied, Jesus would reinforce such in free will; surely following the new modern master Darwin, who cast out powers in high places beyond the material plane, both good and bad in order to substitute his own agnostic Gospel on origins, while disowning Judaeo-Christianity as a divinley revealed religion. The same principle operated, so it is believed, at the Fall, now on overtime with Darwinian common descent and its elasticated derivatives. A resolution will never be found, because the law of Sinai is divine, unalterable by fallen humanity; and as may be believed; by faith we are justified. That is, are we convinced of the worthiness of the Word of the Judaeo-Christian God or not? The short answer is, today many are not convinced. Still, if divine truth is not true, by comparison, nothing is.mw
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
02:41 PM
2
02
41
PM
PDT
Justin @278 I think we agree. It seems to me that if God can skip a few pages ahead and see what's going to happen, then what's going to happen is already written, or predestined. One might complain that that puts a limit on God, but to my mind, that He could create beings who truly have free will such that it's impossible for even Him to know for sure what they're going to do is more awe-inspiring than omniscience. And I definitely agree that it's very easy for us to think we know a lot more than we really do as we ponder such things.Andere Stimme
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
01:55 PM
1
01
55
PM
PDT
Heks @ 227 "Knowing an outcome is not at all the same thing as causing, guiding, or directing an outcome." I know you are summarizing StephenB thoughts. But would you still agree with that statement if we assume omnipotence as well as omniscience? When ascribing God as the only agent "knowing" this future with the power to change the future, then wouldn't this statement be false? Knowing is causing. A thought experiment from God's perspective (futile, I know). If I can somehow see the movie being played out from start to finish, have I not encumbered my own omnipotence? I don't think you can argue that knowing is not causing because what I know is ultimately due to my cause. I'm a small mind trying to understand concepts that I might not be privy to understanding. Maybe we should all keep that in mind as we debate how God would or would not have done something and just believe the His revelation the best we can. Justinjuwilker
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
11:38 AM
11
11
38
AM
PDT
What Darwin called natural selection, was actually a product of his mental state. First a God substitute, then a lesser phantom of his imagination, that he had to downsize and make more nebulous, in order the God of Sinai could not retake his gains.mw
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
11:21 AM
11
11
21
AM
PDT
Eric Anderson, thank you for your comment. I would like to offer a few additional thoughts on natural selection:
EA: They [Darwinists] fancy that they have stumbled upon a law or principle that can channel purposeless randomness into amazingly useful and sophisticated products of engineering. Namely, natural selection. This is of course nonsense.
Yes. Indeed it is. Hugo de Vries said it exactly right:
Natural selection is a sieve. It creates nothing, as is so often assumed; it only sifts. It retains only what variability puts into the sieve. Whence the material comes that is put into it, should be kept separate from the theory of its selection. How the struggle for existence sifts is one question; how that which is sifted arose is another.
What Darwin called natural selection is actually a process of elimination. [Ernst Mayr]
EA: Yet we regularly hear Darwinists claiming that Darwinian evolution is not really random because natural selection somehow channels the results toward some (conveniently undefined) end.
The “greatest idea ever conceived” boils down to the notion that, the going out of existence of X, explains the existence of Y. Unfortunately for evolutionists this is not the case. What elimination explains is only why some things are not, not why some things are. If natural selection is to be understood as a process of elimination, as Mayr says, then existent organisms are the ones that got away. Instead of being created by ‘natural elimination’, exactly the opposite is true: they are untouched by ‘natural elimination’. Existent organisms are those organisms on which natural selection has precisely no bearing whatsoever. They are the undiluted products of chance.Origenes
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
09:52 AM
9
09
52
AM
PDT
StephenB, thanks for your comment.
SB:
Origenes: I see no reason for TE to reject this idea (God guided evolution), in fact, as I understand it, this is their idea.
That was the old-style TE, which is consistent with ID, the Michael Behe variety of God guided evolution. The new-style TE takes the insane position the God guided unguided evolution. Remember, TEs claim to follow the “science,” which to them, is defined by Neo-Darwinian ideology and the unlimited capacity of naturalistic forces acting alone. At the same time, they are also trying to say that those forces are not acting alone. God is involved.
“Naturalistic forces acting alone” is consistent with God’s involvement only if design predates evolution and if the naturalistic forces involved follow predetermined paths. If TE doesn’t hold that then it is incoherent.
SB: Thus, TEs, insofar as the accept MN, are committed to the naturalistic Neo-Darwinistic framework of unguided, undesigned, natural causes acting alone to create the “illusion of design.”
TE cannot coherently hold that the laws of nature are themselves undesigned and unguided, as you seem to suggest.
SB: Then, they follow by saying that God designed this undesigned process, which just happens to leave no clues about the existence of the designer. It is an intellectual madhouse.
We are in agreement. If TE claims that evolution is an undesigned process, then TE is incoherent.
SB: Under the circumstances, I would also say that it is irrational to assume that science cannot detect the effects of God’s designs. There is no reason to assume that. Design often leaves clues.
I agree.
SB: It is even more irrational to say, as the TEs do, that God’s designs can be detected in cosmology (fine tuning of the universe etc.) but cannot be detected in biology (DNA molecule).
Indeed. BTW here you seem to acknowledge that TE is open to the possibility that the universe and its laws are designed. That is consistent with the concept of a designed lawful deterministic clock-like hands-off evolutionary process. To be clear: TE, as I understand it, is committed to “unguided evolution” in the sense that evolution is a hands-off self-assembling clock-like process. However it is not committed to the view that evolution is “unguided” in the sense that the initial conditions — such as the universe and the laws of nature — are undesigned, random and/or unguided. IOWs TE is ok with frontloaded evolution which unfolds lawfully and autonomously. In our discussion “unguided”, in the sense of autonomously unfolding predated by frontloading, is continually mixed up with “unguided” in the sense of undesigned and/or random. --- Notice that naturalism must hold that evolution unfolds guided by natural laws. After all we are talking about a deterministic process involving matter and natural laws. What the heck is “unguided” about that? All this talk about “random”, “unguided” and “purposeless” is unfounded atheistic gibberish.
SB: That is completely irrational. Why would God reveal himself in the macro marvels and then hide himself in the micro marvels?
Beats me.Origenes
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
05:51 AM
5
05
51
AM
PDT
Is human life based on a prior design? Or, are we an experimental cosmos, engineered by a higher life form using designed chance to see what the outcomes will be? In terms of the Judaeo-Christian faith, it is believed, we are generated from a God on whose image we are formed. Design and detail, from the first creative act from nothing in instant material chaos, followed in the same creative act, to create the humanly impossible; instant design in all life forms, and in matured surroundings. As much as people would like to speak of more science, other knowledge strongly suggests we must pay due respect to the supernatural and the knowledge therein. Tabernacle, furniture, and priestly costume, to the first stone Temple, were created according to an intelligent design in accordance with divine plans. The whole Jewish system from Sinai was built on divine plans. Nothing left to chance as such. Of course, reactions to chance, environment, stress and other factors, is surely inbuilt in all life forms, that is in the way they may react and evolve within the limits of their life form, according to prior inbuilt designed programmes allowing for such outcomes. However, if such a God based his programming on chance, that is, removed his intelligence, while allowing for blind deterioration in system functioning, and deterioration in programming and copying errors; then we, in those terms, are nothing more than an experiment of Yahweh, equal in essence to a meaningless creation. However, the same God, through documented evidence, did not leave anything to chance, guiding miraculously for forty years in Person, and then after, intervening to keep people on his way and path. And why should he wait billions of years to create when it is evident that no sooner had Moses gone up Mount Sinai, than people were sacrificing to a golden calf, led by a priest! Yes, free will allows for chance events with a broad spectrum of possibilities. However, in Judaeo-Christian terms, only two major eternally significant outcomes are possible in accordance with the parameters set. Do we believe such a God or not? Darwin crucified and buried the miraculous in order to ascend in his and our intellect, dismissing and conjuring the elastication of a major divine law in terms of theistic evolutionary concepts. But let’s not totally blame Darwin: in our free will, do we not feed the golden calf(s) of common descent in their various forms with shredded scripture. Be honest. Why should an intelligent designer, having all power, knowing all outcomes, knowing that, in Judaeo-Christian terms, that his law, his word, would be rejected in a short while after the creation and after giving the Sinai divine law - have to wait billions of years to become finally crucified? Rather, let’s get that part over and done with, surely, so that we may have life and life in eternal abundance. However, it is also abundantly clear that there are grave limits to free will.mw
May 28, 2016
May
05
May
28
28
2016
03:01 AM
3
03
01
AM
PDT
rhampton7
I had thought I made it sufficiently clear.
If you want to make yourself clear, then putting words in my mouth is not a good place to start. I am well aware of the argument that you are trying to make, or better, the argument that you are trying to get others to make for you, but it has nothing to do with my argument.
Again, what I am presenting is not new nor unique to me, as it has been argued for within the history of Christian theology.
It is not new to me either, so please stop carrying on as if it was. I have put several specific arguments on the table. Please try to address them. I am not interesting in entertaining any further quotes from someone who has no idea of what I am saying.StephenB
May 27, 2016
May
05
May
27
27
2016
08:59 PM
8
08
59
PM
PDT
StephenB: In that context, it makes no sense for rhampton7 to start using the phrase, “specified free will.” What could it possibly mean? Specified man named Adam and specified woman named Eve. What could it possibly mean? Was it God's predestined specified in advance intent that they have free will?Mung
May 27, 2016
May
05
May
27
27
2016
08:59 PM
8
08
59
PM
PDT
1 2 3 4 12

Leave a Reply