Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Don’t use the D word. It’s being eliminated.

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‘It’s a beautiful thing, the destruction of words. Or course the great wastage is in the verbs and adjectives, but there are hundreds of nouns that can be got rid of as well…Don’t you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought? In the end we shall make thought-crime literally impossible, because there will be no words in which to express it.’

— Syme, the Newspeak editor, in George Orwell’s 1984

Biologists should no longer use the word “design,” urges evolutionary biologist Walter Bock of Columbia University, in a newly-published article, as this word and its related concepts bring with them “connotations that are undesirable or unwanted” (p. 8). Biologists should “drop all usages of design from evolutionary biology” (p. 9) and find some other term to express — well, that idea, for which we will no longer be using that word.

Bock contends that the original error of usage stems from Charles Darwin, who should not have expressed that idea “in the form he used” (p. 9):

In spite of the nice contrast between ‘accident versus design’, the term design carries with it too many undesirable connotations, such as the existence of a creator, and should not be used in evolutionary theory. Design could be replaced with non-accidental or non-stochastic, but these substitute terms are awkward and not really informative. Darwin developed his theory of organic evolution in part as an explanation of the appearance and perfection of adaptations to counter the idea of design as advocated by Paley and accepted then by almost everyone in the western world, including biologists… Unfortunately in this respect there is no solution to the paradox posed by Darwin which should not have been expressed in the form he used; his query was expressed in a letter to a colleague and not in a manuscript intended for publication. Actually the living world as we see it is the result of chance because all of the attributes of these organisms evolved and the process of evolution is stochastic.

Darwin set up an illegitimate contrast, because that idea actually refers to nothing, and thus cannot be expressed in ordinary language. The word ‘chance’ has no proper antonym.

As Syme puts it,

‘After all, what justification is there for a word which is simply the opposite of some other words? A word contains its opposite in itself.’

Comments
The term "stochastic" is part of the problem, here. It comes from the Greek word stokhos, meaning "a target for archers to shoot at". When one shoots at a target, one rarely if ever hits the target in exactly the same place. The deviations between hits are "stochastic"; that is, they are deviations from the aiming point. However, the whole idea of aiming at a target is entirely teleological. Oddly enough, the term "stochastic" has come to mean just the opposite: it now is generally used to mean "random" (i.e. "unaimed"). In the context of my previous comment on your post, I think it is a fallacy to conflate the idea of something that is designed with something that is supernatural. Living organisms are clearly "designed" by their genomes and their environment, neither of which is "supernatural".Allen_MacNeill
February 19, 2009
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Allen, I believe your definition of "design" is off its actual meaning. According to the American Heritage Dictionary definition of design, design is: "de·sign (d?-z?n') v. de·signed, de·sign·ing, de·signs v. tr. 1. a. To conceive or fashion in the mind; invent: design a good excuse for not attending the conference. b. To formulate a plan for; devise: designed a marketing strategy for the new product." Design is very literally the product of a mind, and not the result of some random processes and/or non-random natural laws of nature.Domoman
February 19, 2009
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Oddly enough, Peter, an entire course in statistics and biometry is a requirement for a bachelor's degree in biology at Cornell. Please lay off the ad hominems and stick to the argument.Allen_MacNeill
February 19, 2009
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Greetings, Paul, from snowy/soggy Ithaca! As you probably know from our conversation last time you were here, I completely disagree with attempts to eliminate the term "design" from biology. No less an authority than Ernst Mayr himself argued strongly for the legitimacy of teleology in biology. For this reason, I assign his landmark 1974 paper on "Teleology and Teleonomy: A New Analysis" to all of my evolution students here at Cornell. [1] Mayr argued (and I agree) that the genome of an organism constitutes a "plan" or "program" for the assembly and operation of that organism. As such, every living organism carries a "design" for its assembly and operation in its genome. Furthermore, Mayr argued (and I again agree) that the "programs" in the genomes of all living organisms are themselves "designed" via various evolutionary mechanisms: natural selection, sexual selection, genetic drift, founder effects, genetic bottlenecks, and so forth. The "design" process by which the ecosystem of an organism "specifies" the genotype (and therefore the phenotype) of the organism constituted the core of Darwin's theory of evolution, and in somewhat expanded form remains the core of evolutionary biology today. The place where I part company with ID supporters is the insistence by some of the latter that this "design" process must be "foresighted" (a term I much prefer to "intelligent", which is so vague as to be operationally useless), and that as such, the "designer" is ipso facto "supernatural". The difference between the generally accepted scientific model of this process and that proposed by ID theorists such as yourself is not with respect to the concept that organisms are "designed". Clearly, they are (i.e. by their genomes, interacting with their environment during their development). The difference is the mechanisms by which such "designs" themselves originate. Like Darwin, I find the empirical evidence that they arise from the operation of "general laws" operating in changing ecosystems over geological time compelling. As to the source of such "general laws", I strongly believe that is beyond the scope of any conceivable empirical science. I like Newton's phrase: "I make no hypotheses!"...at least not when I'm doing science. I am currently working on a book on this general topic, entitled On Purpose: The Evolution of Design by Means of Natural Selection, or the Proliferation of Intentional Agents in the Struggle for Existence". Im aiming for having it published in 2011; wish me luck! [1] You can download a copy of Mayr's paper here: http://evolution.freehostia.com/course-packet/?PHPSESSID=1fdaf76f0af9ca66db7ddc7956b275cc The password is "evolutioncp", without the ". Just scroll down to the entry for Mayr/1974 and click on the title to download a .pdf of the paper.Allen_MacNeill
February 19, 2009
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Someone should tell Bock that Darwin was a theist until his dying day. He probably never read The Origin of the Species. It sounds like he unreflectively believes what his atheistic colleagues have spoon fed him. These biologists should read a statistics book sometime too, but they probably don't have the brains for that either. Statistics does not describe a mechanism. It is merely a way of describing a range of possible outcomes. The odds of flipping a coin is 50/50. That does not mean that there is no underlying mechanism. It just means we are not able to learn or control the mechanism. With perfect muscle control, or the use of a robot, there would be no randomnes in flipping a coin. Likewise, in evolution randomness does not explan the mean of speciation, just the fact that biologist don't understand it.Peter
February 19, 2009
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QuadFather, Thanks for the explanation. A lot of confusion can happen when terms are not precisely defined.Collin
February 19, 2009
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I recently wrote something that is very relevant here: In one sense, we can understand "natural" as anything that is not the product of intelligence. This is why we refer to some things as "man-made" and other things as "naturally occurring". In another sense, we can understand "natural" as all-encompassing. Intelligence is merely one category of natural things. In this second sense, we would have to speak in terms of "intelligent" causes and "unintelligent" causes, since both of these fall under the umbrella of "natural". In the first sense, we could speak of intelligent causes as an antonym for natural causes. To me, this is the most convenient since this is generally consistent with the way these terms are used outside of this debate. EITHER way is valid, but it can become confusing if we aren't using / understanding these terms in the same way. ----- The same goes for "design". Isn't this guy tackling a problem that is solved all the time when we say things like "man-made" or "naturally occurring"??QuadFather
February 19, 2009
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First of all, why is "the existence of a creator" considered "undesirable"? I thought science was supposed to be "pure reason" without any ideological committments. Obviously, many biologists have made the leap from methodological study of natural phenomena to simply naturalism (all there is is natural law). That is further reinforced if you saw what I posted at #80 in the thread on Part 1 of Message Theory: "Well, from a scientific perspective, life must have arisen from non-living physiochemical systems."
Design could be replaced with non-accidental or non-stochastic
No they couldn't. Here is an example: The nanotechnology found in the cell is beautifully designed. The nanotechnology found in the cell is beautifully non-accidental. Huh? Okay, I'll try again... A blood clotting system is designed to prevent excessive bleeding. A blood clotting system is non-accidental to prevent excessive bleeding. Still doesn't make any sense. Why not use the word that best describes what is found all throughout biology: DESIGN. It has been used all of these years not because Darwin used it, but because it most accurately describes what is found. It is iniftinitely more accurate now than in Darwin's time because of what we discovered once we could actually look into the cell, explore DNA code, etc. Eliminating it would only reinforce a naturalist's worldview and would have absolutely nothing to do with science.uoflcard
February 19, 2009
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THE LAST RANT Now, children, what you may see here in the cell and its incredible complexity is apparent evidence of non-stochastic. Non-stochastic what, you may ask? I haven’t the foggiest idea. I’m a biologist, not a bloody linguist. No, it doesn’t have to be non-stochastic x or non-stochastic y. I don’t care if “non-stochastic” is an adjective. That’s not how I’m using it! Believe me, if I could come up with another word to avoid saying the word that obviously wants to insert itself after the modifier “non-stochastic,” I would! But I can’t! So cut me some slack! You know, Darwin wasn’t so perfect either. “Natural selection”—what the hell is that? And “survival of the fittest” is even worse! See, there was no way to say the deep things Darwin was trying to say, which is why he wound up saying them the way he did. And the same is true of me! (Martha, why has my watch stopped? It hasn’t? O, look! The little hand is running backwards.)allanius
February 19, 2009
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Not to miss the point, but ... 1) Bock admits that Darwin, and like-minded biologists to follow, present ToE as the counter to "that word". He admits then that there are two proposals on the table, and only two. Proof again that negative evidence against the one is positive evidence for the other - being that each "contains its opposite on itself". 2)
Actually the living world as we see it is the result of chance because all of the attributes of these organisms evolved and the process of evolution is stochastic.
Question-begging aside, he has just refuted the modern mantra "evolution is anything but random".Charlie
February 19, 2009
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I actually read this somewhere a few months ago, during a few days when I was actually reading 1984. It is such a powerful book, and then to simultaneously hear that from a Darwinist - I was blown away at the audacity of it. I can't remember if it was Walter Bock that I heard it from, though.uoflcard
February 19, 2009
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