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Fitting Together the Cosmic Jigsaw Puzzle

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I’ve been thinking about the God of the Gaps argument today.  Proponents of naturalism (of both the philosophical and methodological stripe) use this argument in an attempt to discredit design theory as a means of explaining the physical world.  The argument usually goes something like this:  There are many things we formerly did not understand, such as the law of gravitation.  We might have been content to sit back and say “We don’t understand gravitation and we never will; God must have done it so there is no sense in inquiring further.”  But we were not content to rest in our ignorance, and scientists like Newton kept at it until they discovered the law of gravity.  There only seemed to be a gap that we needed to fill with God.  Similarly today, we can be assured that science will eventually fill in the remaining gaps of our scientific knowledge.  Thus, there is never a need to resort to “God did it” as an explanation for any phenomenon. 

 

Most ID proponents do not insist that a deity must have been the designer.  Nevertheless, the God of the Gaps argument is employed against ID by one of two means:  (1) We don’t care that you don’t posit a deity as the designer in your theory; we have fathomed your heart of hearts and we know that God (especially the God of the Bible) is really whom you have in mind.  (2) Even if we grant that you don’t posit God as the designer, you still posit the act of an agent, which cannot be encompassed by explanations based strictly on mechanical necessity (i.e., the laws of nature) and/or chance.  Since science operates only with explanations based on law and/or chance, for purpose of the “gaps” argument, it makes no difference if you posit a non-deity agent, because an “agent of the gaps” is just as much a scientific show stopper as a “God of the gaps.”

 

The problem with the “God of the Gaps” argument is that it is demonstrably false as a matter of the plain historic record.  Consider the law of gravitation from the example I used above.  No one can seriously doubt that Isaac Newton was a deeply religious man.  Indeed, he saw his work not as the search for knowledge for its own sake, or even for the sake of the practical benefits that would ensue from his discoveries.  No, he saw his life’s work as an inquiry into the nature of God’s design in the cosmos.  Newton believed “God did it.”  So why didn’t this belief bring his scientific inquiries to a screeching halt?  After all, that is exactly what the “God of the Gaps” theory predicts should have happened.

 

Newton did not stop his work for the same reason people work jigsaw puzzles.  Millions of jigsaw puzzles are sold every year to people who know beyond the slightest doubt that the overall picture was “designed” and that each of the individual pieces was cut by a designer in such a way as to fit into a unified whole.  So what is the fascination of a jigsaw puzzle?  At a certain level it seems utterly pointless.  Yet, humans appear to have an innate drive to explore puzzles.  There is something deeply satisfying about working out how a set of complex and seemingly unrelated pieces fit until an elegant, beautiful and unified whole.  The inner drive that motivates my kids to sit on the floor by the tree and put together the puzzle they just got for Christmas, is the same drive that motivated Newton to discover the laws of gravity and Kepler the laws of planetary motion.  Newton and Kepler were working on the grandest jigsaw puzzle of all – the jigsaw puzzle of the cosmos.  It mattered not one wit to them that before they ever began their inquires God had “painted the picture and carved the pieces of the puzzle” as it were.  They were driven to discover how it all fit together.

 

For this reason ID is not a scientific show stopper because it posits design in the universe.  The fact of design means nothing when it comes to continuing to investigating the details of the design – working the puzzle if you like.  With respect to every phenomenon we choose to investigate through the scientific method, we can ask what is its function, how can we model it, how does it fit into a unified whole, and can we use it to improve our material condition?  These are all jigsaw puzzle type questions, questions we are driven to answer by our innate curiosity about the world in which we live.  And at the end of the day it seems to me that it makes little difference in how we approach these questions if we assume the puzzle was made by blind chance and law that came together with such perfection that an illusion of design arises, or if we go one step further and assume the appearance of design gives away the fact of design.  The puzzle of how it all fits together and how we can use it remains to be solved.

Comments
A very simple test just came to mind to find out if they are lying or telling the truth and it has to do with money.Have they ever said or wished to win a lottery or fortune inheritance of any kind?My definition of GOD is that entity that I ask}wish{-thank-and faithfully believe in and praise to be and that I am and so is everyone else also.Who would they expect to give them such a gift if they have the gullibility to ask who we also ask?To ask is no more than to believe beyond your own ability.I call this :Beyond me: GOD.Dr. Time
January 12, 2009
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Barry, I wrote a newspaper commentary about this over a year ago and came to the same conclusion. My analogy, instead of a desire to solve a jig-saw, was the drive of many kids to take things apart to discover how they work; to take various parts, alter and possibly re-combine them to make something new. Unless you can ask the designer for insight, the question of origin is irrelevant to the much more practical and productive "How does it work?" Unlike the question of origin, "How does it work? / What does it do?" can be determined empirically, can yield practical benefits and this knowledge has been used to improve circumstance. As a Christian, I believe man was created in God's image and therefore man's creative efforts model in miniature God's. If that's true, an understanding of our own creative process should give us insight into nature's mechanisms. Many of our best technologies grow from an understanding of biological products and systems. Where technology is produced without a knowledge of a biological parallel, we sometimes later discover one. For example higher quality fiber optics than we use are made by sponges but that was discovered after we were already using that technology.bb
January 12, 2009
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*N.b. 'would stop' - if ID was accepted I mean.Green
January 12, 2009
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On second thoughts... I haven't read The Edge of Evolution yet, but assuming it sets a limit to darwninism, does that mean that research into evolution beyond that level would stop? Would research into the evolutionary relationships between genes and organisms stop? Or does that just depend on whether you accept common descent?Green
January 12, 2009
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DonaldM--a ‘gap’ is ‘an observed phenomenon with no known natural explanation but for which we’ll supply one at a later date”. An atheist has more blind faith than any Christian and probably most Moslems. Maybe a sincere Pastafarian might be an equal :-).tribune7
January 12, 2009
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Jerry ---It is the critics of ID that are absolute in their claims. They claim a 100% non intelligent cause for all phenomena as a given. EXCELLENT POINT!!!!tribune7
January 12, 2009
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Rude wrote: "It’s not ID that would restrict science, it’s the Jacques Monodists who do so every day." I had a chance to read a bit of what Monod wrote concerning chance: "Pure chance, absolutely free but blind, [is] at the very root of the stupendous edifice of evolution." He's using the chance-equals-cause line of reasoning here. He goes on: "Man knows at last that he is alone in the universe's unfeeling immensity, out of which he emerged only by chance." Note that Monod states "by chance." He does what many others do--he elevates chance to a creative principle. However, a dictionary definition of chance is "the assumed impersonal purposeless determiner of unaccountable happenings." Thus, if Monod speaks about life coming about by chance, he is saying that it came about by a causal power that is unknown.Barb
January 12, 2009
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Indeed, as Donald M points out, the God of the Gaps is easily turned on its Chance-and-Necessity of the Gaps head. It’s not ID that would restrict science, it’s the Jacques Monodists who do so every day. Also, as Newton knew, just because one can describe a phenomenon does not mean he has explained it. I believe we’re as far as we ever were from explaining gravity—maybe we’re even further afield if we think Einstein explained it. And last here—I think we have to be careful not to claim that God cannot be discovered by empirical science. How could anyone know that a priori? All ID has said is that detecting design in one thing, identifying the designer is quite another thing.Rude
January 12, 2009
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ID does not say that something is intelligently designed only that there is a probability that it is intelligently designed. The amount of the probability increases with the complexity and functional organization of the phenomena but never becomes one. The probability decreases as naturalistic explanations are proffered that have empirical backing and increases as additional research fails to find empirical backing for a naturalistic cause or new organized complexity becomes apparent. Hence it is not a God of the Gaps argument because it never absolutely concludes a God, only the possibility of an intelligent agent. And that probability of an intelligent agent rises and falls as new evidence is discovered. It is the critics of ID that are absolute in their claims. They claim a 100% non intelligent cause for all phenomena as a given. This assumption can not decrease from a probability of one even with new information. While they accuse ID of invoking a God, they invoke an unknown natural cause. They do not make it an option but a requirement if you want to play their game.jerry
January 12, 2009
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God of the Gaps is when you don’t know how something was done and you say that the answer must therefore be “God did it,” (or if you prefer “some agent did it”) without trying to figure out how he did it.
While every life form is assumed to have evolved, there is no agreement on the mechanism that might have produced the changes, or how it worked. It's okay to accept that the evolution took place while the "how" remains unknown. Who's to say that discovery ends with the detection of design? Perhaps that opens the door for chemistry and molecular biology to investigate further, armed with more knowledge. No one knows how Stonehenge came to be. Are we more or less likely to discover the truth if we abandon our assumption of design just because we don't know the who or the how or the why yet?ScottAndrews
January 12, 2009
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GotG arguments are,as far as I can tell, just another way to sneak philosophical naturalism into science. From the perspective of the anti-ID mavins, a 'gap' is 'an observed phenomenon with no known natural explanation but for which we'll supply one at a later date". For more on this, read William Dembski's The Chance of the Gaps.DonaldM
January 12, 2009
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"God of the Gaps" is not saying that believing in God, or even thinking that he/she/it (from here on just "he" for ease of use) did it in a certain way means that you must abandon all science. God of the Gaps is when you don't know how something was done and you say that the answer must therefore be "God did it," (or if you prefer "some agent did it") without trying to figure out how he did it. This is why Newton figuring out the laws of physics does not fall under the "God of the Gaps." The fact that he believed that God did it did not deter him from trying to determine how it was done. ID falls under the umbrella of "God of the Gaps" because the end result of the theory says only that some intelligent agent did it. Because we are removed from the immediate presence of the designer, we cannot know how or why he did what he did. All we can do is look at the result and say what was done. This intrinsically stifles scientific inquiry. Case in point, the question of why certain biological constructs appear to be designed sub-optimally (sometimes significantly so). ID's answer? "We can't know why the designer did that." The usual addition to this answer is "design doesn't necessarily mean perfect design." That is true. But it doesn't necessarily mean imperfect design, either. In fact, it says nothing whatsoever about the design process. In the end, any question about the design process (why sub-optimal design? why reuse parts?) must be answered by "We can't know that because we don't have access to the designer to ask him." We can possibly make some educated guesses about it (he reuses parts because it's economical to do so), but in the end they are questions answerable only by the designer, to whom we have no access (design does not necessarily mean economical design). No amount of scientific investigation will give us answers to these questions. Science has been stifled by the theory because scientific answers cannot be found in this context.KRiS
January 12, 2009
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pubdef the problem is particularly acute when the ID point of view proscribes inquiry into the how or who/what of design If by that you mean that ID doesn't attempt to form answers that are not supported by empirical data then I agree. No empirical data presents itself that allows discrimination between potential agencies. Designing and building bacteria 3 billion years ago then infecting th earth with it requires only a few specific things of a designer - means, motive, and opportunity. I've asked many times what exactly about the design of life on earth requires any specific agent beyond one having the ability to custom design a bacteria and deliver it to the earth. Going beyond what the data can tell you is nothing but woolgathering. So the designer of the bacteria had to have little beyond what Craig Venter has today in order to design and build a bacteria.DaveScot
January 12, 2009
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Thinking about it a bit more ... the jigsaw analogy is really good, but when I started considering the two-sided jigsaw it made the idea even more astounding: we try to put together a two-sided picture from these three-dimensional shapes, with a picture already presented to us from which to gather data and replicate. The two-sided jigsaw asks for the same result, but with many more degrees of difficulty attached. Both are achievable and, like Dawkins 'Me Thinks a Weasel' program, the outcome - after a number of guesses - is assured. Next, we are presented with a triple-sided jigsaw, a real 3D behemoth, that doesn't give you a plan and doesn't assure you of anything. Also, if it doesn't make sense, it dies. Is that comparable to NDT? Also, a jigsaw is reverse engineering: the parts are already presented and you put back together a working model. How incredible is the biomolecular world: a jigsaw is intelligently-designed and predetermined to become created. It needs an intelligent worker to 'become'. And, even though the two-sided is complex, is is nothing compared to any evo out there who considers that putting together random shapes will create a visible, living, working, energy-consuming and producing, reproducible entity. The “World’s most Difficult Jigsaw Puzzle” is quite simple, now, compared.AussieID
January 11, 2009
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Belief that "God did it" *DID* bring Newton's research to an end in at least one case. He thought that there was no mathematical solution to the motion of the planets, and believed that God needed to step in occasionally to keep the solar system stable. It wasn't until Laplace ("Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là") dispensed with the need for God that there was a proper naturalistic explanation. By outsourcing the work to God, Newton took the lazy man's way out, and in this one case, delayed the advance of knowledge by over 100 years.TheYellowShark
January 11, 2009
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I've got one of those "World's most Difficult Jigsaw Puzzles" where the same design is on both sides, but the cut is different. This one has a bucket-load of near-identical penguins splashed across it. This wasn't made by an Intelligent Designer. It was made by an Evil, Masochistic Manipulator. Barry, you wrote, "They were driven to discover how it all fit together." Not now, not for this jigsaw. Sorry, Barry, but the penguins have got to go ...AussieID
January 11, 2009
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ID isn't the show stopper, chance is.William J. Murray
January 11, 2009
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Actually, there is a difference between assuming ID, and assuming non-ID, when it comes to puzzle-solving; if you actually believed that the puzzle pieces were crafted by chance and utterly without integrated design, there wouldn't be any use in trying to see how they fit together in the first place, because there would be about zero chance of them forming a comprehensible design even in part, much less in whole.William J. Murray
January 11, 2009
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I'm sure it would be denied faster than the Piltdown man hoax, but the modern evo-situation is replete with an apriori assumption of the No-God-Of-The-Gaps type of reasoning. I define it as when science cannot intially explain an observation in nature that points to design....without resorting to some unknown, just-so, ad-hoc or speculative, untested and unobserved hypothesis (which isn't science!)....positing literally anything to avoid design as being a possible explanation. We wouldn't be surprised at some of the things they have come up with. Let's see.....panspermia...Dawkin's intelligent aliens seeding life on earth....Hmmmm.....Steady State, the Oscillating Universe model...Big Crunch cereal model *winks*, Many Worlds/ Multiverse and the newest addition to the fray, String Theory. This remarkable departure from science to what is non-science is understandable, given that those who do this are motivated by their personal, philosophical bias against God existing. Thus, if there is any gap arguments going on, it would have to be on the part of some ID critics. Irrespective of the fact that ID makes no commitment to any particular (G)god, at least we can observe all known coded messages having their source in a mind (inferring the specified message in DNA has its origin in a mind). Darwinism can't say as much for itself, nor can atheism. They have too many gaps to fill.Bantay
January 11, 2009
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Barry, Actually there is a wholesale Darwin of the Gaps mentality in the evolutionary biology community. In one recent book I read, I must have annotated nearly 200 instances where the authors just used the expression "it was selected for" when something came up for which there was no explanation for. I kept on writing BQ in the margins to indicate they were begging the question. In other places I would write JSS for just so stories or imagination for when they made up possible explanations. So to accuse the ID people of God of the Gaps arguments is hypocritical. They probably do not know it when they do it because it is such ingrained behavior. But it is completely accepted.jerry
January 11, 2009
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If people want to claim that science can _only_ propose "natural" explanations and that any explanation that requires an agent is "out of bounds" why not just take them seriously on that point ? Then note that such an understanding of science is no longer a search for truth about how the world works and that science ultimately can't tell us anything meaningful about how the world works because it is artifically blinkered to avoid certain conclusions that cannot simply be ruled out as illegitimate.Jason Rennie
January 11, 2009
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pubdef, You posit something that ID does not recommend or stand for and then criticize ID for the recommendation or the stand that it supposedly takes. What you are claiming in not an issue. What we say about NDE is that it doesn't seem to work for a lot of key areas of evolution and we can identify many of these areas. We actually recommend continued search because we believe the findings will continue to support the hypothesis that there is an edge to evolution through naturalistic methods and the continued research will confirm that. If a finding arise that contradict that conclusion then it would be extremely interesting and lead to a whole host of new research opportunities. But so far evolutionary biology has not found anything to contradict the edge of evolution conclusion or else we would have heard it. Such a thing is Nobel Prize material. In no way is ID a science stopper especially since ID is completely in sync with the findings of the NDE research methodology. ID does not agree with many of the conclusions they make which have no basis in the findings. Such comments by you indicate a lack of understanding about ID and probably represents the misrepresentation that ID is given in the media and on many blogs. Ask questions about ID here and you will get the correct understanding.jerry
January 11, 2009
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ID is anything but a science stopper - if anyone has motive for discovering the inner workings of the cell, it’s design proponents. What's more, by dropping the restrictive and false dogma of evolution, the researcher is free to see the cell as it is. It's as if evolutionists have to make discoveries while swimming upstream. Prediction: 2009 will be the year ID advocates really begin to make a dent at the research level.WeaselSpotting
January 11, 2009
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Nice post. ID is anything but a science stopper - if anyone has motive for discovering the inner workings of the cell, it's design proponents. Not only do humans have an innate desire to solve puzzles, but like Newton, many have a desire to see God's handiwork. Prov. 25:2; It is the glory of God to conceal a matter; to search out a matter is the glory of kings.Green
January 11, 2009
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pubdef, I don't know the context in which Behe said that, but there really is such a thing as knowing when to take "no" for an answer. Even in science. Some of those are obvious now: should we continue to pursue the phlogiston theory of heat? I very seriously doubt Behe's "no" was, "no, we shouldn't pursue further inquiry into how the natural world works." That's what you're implying here, though. If you think that's what he was saying, it would be helpful if you could be more forthcoming with information and context than just to tell us to find it if we can.TomG
January 11, 2009
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And at the end of the day it seems to me that it makes little difference in how we approach these questions if we assume the puzzle was made by blind chance and law that came together with such perfection that an illusion of design arises, or if we go one step further and assume the appearance of design gives away the fact of design.
So what are we arguing about?? What does ID have to do with science? The real problem with GOTG is when some ID argument counsels against looking for an answer within the paradigm of NDE (see, if you can find it, Behe's advice that biologists have to know when to take "no" for an answer); the problem is particularly acute when the ID point of view proscribes inquiry into the how or who/what of design. Where is science to go?pubdef
January 11, 2009
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