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Larry Moran commits the genetic fallacy

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Professor Larry Moran’s latest post on Sandwalk criticizes Jonathan McLatchie for claiming that Intelligent Design is a legitimate scientific investigation. On the contrary, declares Moran, Intelligent Design is a movement whose members are motivated by a desire to discredit materialism and defend their belief in a Creator. 99% of ID activities, he claims, are attacks on evolution, rather than attempts to scientifically identify which objects were designed. Moran respects McLatchie for his solid grasp of evolutionary biology, but regards him as having “fallen in to the trap of deceiving himself about his true motives.”

But even if Professor Moran’s characterization of the motives of ID proponents were entirely correct, it would be utterly irrelevant. The reason is that science is a methodology – a point highlighted by McLatchie in a recent video on Uncommon Descent. As McClatchie aptly puts it:

“Well, I think Intelligent Design certainly is a science, because it’s based on the standard principles of scientific methodology, with respect to the past: it’s basically an historical abductive method, which is the methodology employed even by Charles Darwin, in his formulation of the theory of evolution by natural selection. Charles Darwin, of course, was influenced by the work of the famed nineteenth century geologist Charles Lyell, in his Principles of Geology, where Charles Lyell basically insisted that … if you want to explain events in the remote past, one should let one’s present experience of cause and effect guide one’s search for the best explanation. So I would argue Intelligent Design is a science by virtue of the fact that it’s … predicated upon historical standard scientific principles.”

Because science is defined by its methodology, any attempt to discredit a field such as Intelligent Design by casting aspersions on the motives of its leading practitioners completely misses the point. No matter what their motives might be, the only question which is germane in this context is: do Intelligent Design researchers follow a proper scientific methodology, and do ID proponents support their arguments by appealing to that methodology? The answer to this question should be obvious to anyone who has read works such as Darwin’s Black Box, The Edge of Evolution, Signature in the Cell and Darwin’s Doubt. Intelligent Design researchers and advocates commonly appeal to empirical probabilities (which can be measured in the laboratory), mathematical calculations (about what chance and/or necessity can accomplish), and abductive reasoning about historical events (such as the Cambrian explosion) which bear the hallmarks of design.

In his endeavor to smear the reputation of Intelligent Design as a discipline, Professor Moran commits the genetic fallacy, which can be defined as the attempt to “discredit or support a claim or an argument because of its origin (genesis) when such an appeal to origins is irrelevant” (Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, article Fallacies). Moran tries to discredit the claims of the ID movement by arguing that these claims have their origin in the religious motivations of their leading proponents. However, the appeal to origins is irrelevant because it is methodology, not motivation, which determines what counts as good or bad science.

When Moran writes that “it’s just a bald-faced lie to claim that Intelligent Design Creationists are motivated by a genuine scientific search for evidence of design,” he is engaging in propaganda, by portraying scientists as dispassionate researchers who are totally devoid of personal motives in their research. This is nonsense. The question of whether life on Earth was designed or not is one which we are all, to some degree, motivated to either accept or reject, on temperamental grounds. Nevertheless, most of us are capable of putting our feelings aside when we have to.

I suspect that many evolutionary biologists are not only skeptical of God’s existence, but actually don’t want there to be a God. In particular, they may feel nauseated by the idea of a Being who produced human beings by a bloody, messy process such as evolution, killing billions and billions of animals in the process. But even if a visceral opposition to the notion of a Deity were the driving force animating their research, it would in no way invalidate that research. The only thing that could undermine these scientists’ work would be poor methodology.

Creationism, on the other hand, makes no attempt to follow a scientific methodology in arriving at its conclusions. In creationism, the conclusions are dictated by the Bible, and what it says trumps any scientific findings which may point to a contrary conclusion. Hence it is highly misleading of Professor Moran to argue that Intelligent Design is no different from creationism, because its main goal is simply “to provide scientific justification for the belief in a creator god.” Intelligent Design, unlike creationism, has no “higher authority” which can dictate the scientific conclusions it reaches.

As for Professor Moran’s claim that Intelligent Design proponents’ focus is primarily aimed at discrediting unguided evolution rather than building a positive case for design, I can only reply that a design inference in ID can only be made after other explanations have been ruled out, so as a matter of necessity, much of what ID researchers do will be negative, and aimed at eliminating conventional explanations, before any positive conclusion can be reached that a given object was designed.

I shall stop here, and throw the discussion open to readers. What do you think?

Comments
Questions: Can you cite research by ID researchers (about ID) which has been published in peer-reviewed journals and replicated and verified by others, including non-ID researchers? What kind of experiments can an ID researcher do? Other than poke holes in evolution, what kind of experiment advances the idea of an intelligent designer? How would a skeptic verify the results? It’s not clear to me what your phrase “support their arguments by appealing to that methodology” means. If someone supports their arguments by appealing to the results of a scientific experiment, that’s support from the evidence; what an “appeal to the methodology” means is opaque to me. Sean, apply the same question to Moran. I don't know if you read his blog but he does the exact same thing he accuses the ID movement of doing. He takes the works of others and picks it apart to fit his position. He may be right, I'm not qualified to say but it's strange none the less.beau
October 20, 2015
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First, strangely absent are substantial quotes from Moran. From the post...
There are some ID proponents who attempt to do what Jonathan McLatchie describes. The most notable is Bill Dembski who claims to have developed a method to distinguish things that are designed from things that arose naturally. His schtick is information theory and computer science. Nobody believes that Bill Dembski can actually tell whether bacterial flagella were designed or evolved and his arguments have been thoroughly dissected and refuted by experts in the field of information science.
This seems to be a valid criticism of the supposedly scientific component of ID. Namely, Dembiski's method of detection has been severely criticized in the very field he appeals to: Information theory and computer science. Second..
But even if Professor Moran’s characterization of the motives of ID proponents were entirely correct, it would be utterly irrelevant. The reason is that science is a methodology – a point highlighted by McLatchie in a recent video on Unommon Descent.
Science is about explaining phenomena. However, as Moran points out, not only is ID's detection method highly questionable, at best. It's simply uninterested in actually explaining biological complicity in any significant way. IOW, it's a response to the idea that there can be an explanation in a meaningful sense. Not only does it not add to the explanation, but ID's designer is employed as a means to deny that we can make genuine progress on the issue. And that's where the motivation comes into play. If ID was genuinely driven by the science, it would put forth more than a method that supposedly shows a theory that is so fundamental and explains so much about biology happens to be merely "wrong", without explaining even more of the same phenomena significantly better. That seems to be what Moran means when he calls ID an attack on a theory theists find objectionable, not science. Under ID, we're limited to making "progress" about what is supposed designed (though identification), but can make no significant progress about the designer itself, the origin of the knowledge that actually brings about the concrete features that organisms exhibit, etc. That limitation would come as no surprise if theory was motivated on the belief that a inexplicable mind in an inexplicable realm was the designer.Popperian
October 20, 2015
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He probably thought he was committing the genius fallacy.Mung
October 20, 2015
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Do any ID proponents make a genetic fallacy like, "Richard Dawkins is an atheist activist, therefore his arguments in supporting a belief in Darwinism are wrong"?StuartHarris
October 20, 2015
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“What kind of experiments can an [sic] ID researcher do? Other than poke holes in evolution, what kind of experiment advances the idea of an intelligent designer?" All biological research is both Darwinian research and ID research, since they are two sides of the same coin. Poking holes in pet theories is a vital part of science. Instead of attacking ID proponents, you should be thanking them.mike1962
October 20, 2015
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sean samis, "Can you cite research by ID researchers (about ID) which has been published in peer-reviewed journals and replicated and verified by others, including non-ID researchers?" This sounds like the "you aren't legitimate because you haven't been published -- you haven't been published because you are not legitimate" trap. The scientific world is determined to keep ID outside the fold. sean samis, "What kind of experiments can an ID researcher do? Other than poke holes in evolution, what kind of experiment advances the idea of an intelligent designer? How would a skeptic verify the results?" Specific experiments establishing what exactly evolution can do was well documented in "The Edge of Evolution". A recently published experiment by a non-IDer has hooted and hollered about how it produced a positive result -- only to demonstrate that it lived with Behe's defined "Edge of Evolution".bFast
October 20, 2015
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Certainly on the face of it, Professor Moran’s complaint is harsh. Whether it’s actually a genetic fallacy or not is not significant; it seems more of an ad hominem to me. But that’s a small point, it is harsh. That however, does not make it wrong. It’s a common mistake (a fallacy?) to regard every comment by a scientist as needing to model the methodology. Science is an activity that humans engage in; one need not follow the methodology in every aspect of their lives. Moran’s comments seem clearly to be about the general behavior of intelligent design creationists; they are not put forward as the results of an scientific effort. Judging non-scientific comments by the standards of science is as inappropriate as judging a waltz “scientifically”. “Was that Promenade into a Left-Turning Box supported by the evidence?” And on this site, it is common to see intelligent design creationists utilize very similar comments about their opponents. What is fair for one is fair for all. You ask a pair of questions (rhetorically?):
... do Intelligent Design researchers follow a proper scientific methodology, and do ID proponents support their arguments by appealing to that methodology?
Questions: Can you cite research by ID researchers (about ID) which has been published in peer-reviewed journals and replicated and verified by others, including non-ID researchers? What kind of experiments can an ID researcher do? Other than poke holes in evolution, what kind of experiment advances the idea of an intelligent designer? How would a skeptic verify the results? It’s not clear to me what your phrase “support their arguments by appealing to that methodology” means. If someone supports their arguments by appealing to the results of a scientific experiment, that’s support from the evidence; what an “appeal to the methodology” means is opaque to me. sean s.sean samis
October 20, 2015
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'Moran respects McLatchie for his solid grasp of evolutionary biology, but regards him as having “fallen in to the trap of deceiving himself about his true motives.” Did Moran use the 'scientific method' to arrive at that conclusion concerning McLatchie's motives, I wonder? Here is a very fundamental a corrective to Moran's materialism - must be 80 years old now, if a day: http://www.christiantoday.com/article/what.god.does.when.we.pray.how.quantum.theory.helps.us.understand.intercession/67710.htmAxel
October 20, 2015
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"99% of ID activities, he claims, are attacks on evolution, rather than attempts to scientifically identify which objects were designed." Oh, contraire, monsieur, 99% of ID activities are attacks on evolution, this is true. However, these attacks normally take the form of "this object over here (flagellum, information, etc.) have the hallmarks of design, and cannot have occurred via the RM+NS mechanisms. Ie, we believe that we have scientifically identified specific objects that were designed. I beleive the expression, "well there is that" comes to mind.bFast
October 20, 2015
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Moran: "On the contrary, declares Moran, Intelligent Design is a movement whose members are motivated by a desire to discredit materialism and defend their belief in a Creator. " So if a lot of Darwinists are motivated by their atheism, materialism, or other ism, does that mean Darwinism is not a valid scientific pursuit? "99% of ID activities, he claims, are attacks on evolution" Negative arguments are essential to science. Attacks on a theory are good, proper, and entirely scientific. And, historically, extremely fruitful. Only an ideologue does not try to debunk his/her pet theories. Falsification of one's darlings is an essential part of science. Why does this matter? And how is ID affected by negative arguments against Darwinism? Because it stands to reason that the less likely the blind, naturalistic, a-telic, Darwinian narrative is, the more likely that intelligent agency was involved. They are two sides of the same coin. One cannot be scientific and other not.mike1962
October 20, 2015
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