Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Responding to Dr Liddle’s challenge as to whether science can study “the supernatural”

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In Gil’s recent ANNOUNCEMENT thread, Dr Liddle has made a summary of her core challenge to design thinkers, at no 6:

Science necessarily involves an a priori commitment to the proposition that natural causes are the reason for everything.

It does not possess the methodology to discover any other kind of cause.

What methodology would you recommend for investigating an un-natural/supernatural cause?

I have thought this is sufficiently focussed to respond on points (currently awaiting moderation, on I think number of links . . . ). I augment that response here where I can use colours [Dr Liddle’s remarks are in bolded green], fill in diagrams and links:

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>>Science necessarily involves

a: This is a claim of MUST, i.e this is already a commitment that suggests that apart from this no science, so how do you account for the facts of the founding of modern science and the views of the actual founders thereof, as I have documented say here?

an a priori commitment to the proposition that natural causes are the reason for everything.

b: NIX. Science only implicates the study of empirically observable and testable phenomena, which in turn implicates the question of inference from well-tested sign to signified cause.

c: We may and do categorise these as tracing to chance, necessity and choice, whereby we may further cluster the first two as material or natural, and the latter as artificial. This categorisation is for instance used by Plato, by Newton and by Monod [cf his, Chance and Necessity]

d: We may characterise and study each of these causal factors on their general signs, and further investigate on the specific observed object or phenomenon. To wit, we may see that:

i: by mechanical necessity, we get lawlike regularities — i.e. low contingency of outcomes — under sufficiently similar starting conditions (a dropped heavy object falls at g), a common enough goal of scientific investigation being to identify such laws, e.g. F = m*a

ii: by chance, under similar initial conditions, we have highly contingent outcomes (a dropped die will tumble and settle to various readings) in accordance with a statistical distribution. Sometimes scientific investigations try to characterise such distributions and their roots, e.g. the Weibull distribution of wind speeds etc.

iii: by choice, we will also get highly contingent outcomes under similar starting conditions, but credibly linked to purpose not chance, e.g. the pattern of symbols in messages as opposed to noise — studied in and foundational to information theory.

It does not possess the methodology to discover any other kind of cause.

e: This is premised on an assumption that the only way we may categorise the world is on natural vs supernatural, where the later may be derided.

f: In short, this is an implicit — perhaps unrecognised — assumption of a priori MATERIALISM, not an open-minded, empirically based investigation of the world as is, in light of empirical facts and observations, explained without ideologically censoring possibilities

g: Do we know that all that there is, is “natural,” or that science may only study and explain by the “natural”? That depends, crucially on what you mean by “natural.”

h: If you mean a smuggling in of materialism by assumptions and definitions, that is a major begging of the question, for what science studies is the EMPIRICALLY OBSERVABLE in a world that credibly had a beginning.

i: Such a cosmos, is credibly contingent, i.e. it entails a cause external to itself, as if something may not exist or had a beginning, it has conditions under which it may/may not exist.

j: In turn that points to a causal root in a necessary being, that has no external causal dependency. Such a being has no beginning, and has no end. By logic. (Formerly, until it was recognised that the evidence points to a beginning for the cosmos we live in, the Steady State type view assumed the wider observed cosmos was that necessary being, but now Humpty Dumpty has fallen. [We need not go into the wider discussion of contingency, contingency on a credible beginning is enough to force consideration of possibilities, then.])

k: Multiply by the evident fine tuning of our observed cosmos, that supports C-chemistry cell based life; which is also relevant even in the case of an assumed or speculated wider multiverse, as LOCAL fine tuning is enough. As John Leslie put it:

. . . the need for such explanations [[for fine-tuning] does not depend on any estimate of how many universes would be observer-permitting, out of the entire field of possible universes. Claiming that our universe is ‘fine tuned for observers’, we base our claim on how life’s evolution would apparently have been rendered utterly impossible by comparatively minor [[emphasis original] alterations in physical force strengths, elementary particle masses and so forth. There is no need for us to ask whether very great alterations in these affairs would have rendered it fully possible once more, let alone whether physical worlds conforming to very different laws could have been observer-permitting without being in any way fine tuned. Here it can be useful to think of a fly on a wall, surrounded by an empty region. A bullet hits the fly Two explanations suggest themselves. Perhaps many bullets are hitting the wall or perhaps a marksman fired the bullet. There is no need to ask whether distant areas of the wall, or other quite different walls, are covered with flies so that more or less any bullet striking there would have hit one. The important point is that the local area contains just the one fly.

[[Our Place in the Cosmos, 1998. The force of this point is deepened once we think about what has to be done to get a rifle into “tack-driving” condition.That is, a “tack-driving” rifle is a classic example of a finely tuned, complex system, i.e. we are back at the force of Collins’ point on a multiverse model needing a well adjusted Cosmos bakery. (Slide show, ppt. “Simple” summary, doc.)]

l: That points to functionally specific, complex organisation of a cosmos [and associated complex information], something that is habitually and empirically associated with choice and purpose, i.e. design. Indeed, in every case where we directly know the cause for such FSCO/I, it is designed.

m: So, we have as a reasonable possibility — and, arguably a best explanation — that the observed cosmos is externally caused by a purposive, powerful, necessary being, which has no beginning, no ending, and that based on scientific observation and the logic of contingency. Such a being is warranted on our contingent world, and is causally self-sufficient, i.e. self-explanatory. The real issue is the nature of the necessary being, not its existence, once we have a contingent cosmos to be explained. And, blind necessity or a chaos are vastly inferior to intelligence as explanations of FSCO/I, absent imposition of a priori materialism — i.e. we here see the censoring effect of the materialistic question-begging above.

n: Since, too, we have here a case in hand where science has indeed studied origins, and the beginning of our world, and — absent question-begging censorship — a serious alternative points beyond the contingent “natural” world we inhabit to root cause by an entirely different category of being, we already see that science can not only study natural vs artificial, but design by an entirely different category of being that can credibly be termed, supernatural. That is, beyond nature in the sense of our observed cosmos. (The proposed multiverse we hear about so often today is UN-observed.)

What methodology would you recommend for investigating an un-natural/ supernatural cause?

o: First, stop begging metaphysical questions by imposing a priori materialism, or going along with such imposition, not hard as that evolutionary materialism (aka scientific materialism aka [scientific] naturalism etc etc) is already self-referentially incoherent, self refuting and necessarily false, by undermining mind itself. As Haldane summed up the challenge it faces:

“It seems to me immensely unlikely that mind is a mere by-product of matter. For if my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true. They may be sound chemically, but that does not make them sound logically. And hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms.” [“When I am dead,” in Possible Worlds: And Other Essays [1927], Chatto and Windus: London, 1932, reprint, p.209.]

p: Then, recognise that it is more useful to scientifically study natural and artificial causes on an empirical basis, and so to focus their characteristic signs, than to beg metaphysical questions.

q: Nor should we allow ideologues to rattle us with their Alinskyite uncivil bully-boy tactics of distortion, denigration, censorship and intimidation.

r: For instance, this pattern as follows is reasonable and quite often actually used, tracing to say Hippocrates of Cos and early medicine, and also reflecting Peirce’s more recent logic of abductive inference:

I: [si] –> O, on W

(I infer from a pattern of observed signs, to an objective state of affairs, on a particular warrant [often, inference to best explanation], each to be specified case by case, cause by cause.)

s: Then, proceed on the understanding that we commonly observe causal patterns that may be described with profit as natural or material [= chance and/or necessity], and intelligent [= art or design or choice contingency].

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. A: the Explanatory Filter algorithm [framework] for empirically warranted per aspect inference to design, chance and necessity  on empirical signs.  (Courtesy IOSE)

t: In that light, identify and test characteristic reliable signs of these causal processes for aspects of phenomena, processes or objects.

u: Just as, in say studying a pendulum [a case of direct manipulation as experimental design], we identify what is caused by the experimenter manipulating the string’s length, what is or is not due to varying the mass of the bob, what is chance-based random scatter around a line that characterises a law of mechanical necessity, and what is due to the dynamics of a pendulum swinging across an arc in a gravity field. (And similarly, how — using ANOVA — we isolate factors in a control vs treatment study across blocks and plots.)

v: In short, we routinely apply the explanatory filter algorithm in doing scientific studies, so it is not unreasonable to identify general signs of the relevant causal factors, and to trust them if they pass reasonable tests, e.g. necessity produces lawlike regularities, chance produces statistical scatter, and choice produces FSCO/I.

(If you see a pendulum experiment set up with apparatus fitted to the purpose of adjusting length of string, arc, and mass, with a timer sitting nearby and a record of results on say a coded digital tape, do you infer to chance or choice or necessity? Why?)

w: Now, the hard step: have the courage to trust the patterns of warranted inference beyond where we have direct access to observe the causal process. This is the step taken by Newton when he said, in his General Scholium to Principia:

. . . This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and comets, could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being. And if the fixed stars are the centres of other like systems, these, being formed by the like wise counsel, must be all subject to the dominion of One; especially since the light of the fixed stars is of the same nature with the light of the sun, and from every system light passes into all the other systems: and lest the systems of the fixed stars should, by their gravity, fall on each other mutually, he hath placed those systems at immense distances one from another . . .

x: In short, if we see a tested, reliable pattern of inference from sign to signified state of affairs, we have good reason to trust that it will expend to cases where we cannot directly check.

y: Now, simply apply to the origin of our cosmos, as above. We see signs of art, i.e FSCO/I, in the context of fine-tuning that facilitates C-chemistry, cell based intelligent life. We see also that we have an evidently contingent cosmos that cries out for a root cause in a necessary being.

(You will note that I do NOT use the case of evidence pointing to design in life, as this is a case where, from the very beginnings of modern design theory [i.e. Thaxton et al in TMLO in 1985] — as utterly contrasted to the caricatures being used by objectors — it has been recognised that design of cell based life on earth would be sufficiently accounted for by a designer within the cosmos. Say, a molecular nanotech lab several generations beyond Venter et al.)

z: That is as far as science and logic proper will take us, but:

1: that is far enough to see that a very viable candidate will be an intelligent, extra-cosmic, powerful, purposeful and deeply knowledgeable necessary being;

2: this being a case of empirically based, observationally anchored inference to design or art, as opposed to

3: a priorism-driven inference to or against “the supernatural.”

4: Philosophy and theology will take the ball and run with it from there.

5: Such a being would be a very good example of the super-natural, pointed to by investigations of nature on empirically well warranted patterns of cause and effect.

6: So, we see that science needs not essay to study “the supernatural” only to study natural vs artificial causes on empirically tested warrant.

7: It therefore is high time that the materialists’ favourite “natural vs supernatural” strawman caricature of our alternatives, was laid to rest, with a stake through its heart.

8: We only need to study, on empirical signs, natural vs artificial causes. As was pointed out by Plato, 2,350 years ago, in The Laws, Bk X. Namely:

[[The avant garde philosophers, teachers and artists c. 400 BC] say that the greatest and fairest things are the work of nature and of chance, the lesser of art [[ i.e. techne], which, receiving from nature the greater and primeval creations, moulds and fashions all those lesser works which are generally termed artificial . . . They say that fire and water, and earth and air [[i.e the classical “material” elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art, and that as to the bodies which come next in order-earth, and sun, and moon, and stars-they have been created by means of these absolutely inanimate existences. The elements are severally moved by chance and some inherent force according to certain affinities among them-of hot with cold, or of dry with moist, or of soft with hard, and according to all the other accidental admixtures of opposites which have been formed by necessity. After this fashion and in this manner the whole heaven has been created, and all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only . . . .
Then, by Heaven, we have discovered the source of this vain opinion of all those physical investigators; and I would have you examine their arguments with the utmost care, for their impiety is a very serious matter; they not only make a bad and mistaken use of argument, but they lead away the minds of others: that is my opinion of them . . . .
all of them, my friends, seem to be ignorant of the nature and power of the soul [[ = psuche], especially in what relates to her origin: they do not know that she is among the first of things, and before all bodies, and is the chief author of their changes and transpositions. And if this is true, and if the soul is older than the body, must not the things which are of the soul’s kindred be of necessity prior to those which appertain to the body? . . . .
when one thing changes another, and that another, of such will there be any primary changing element? How can a thing which is moved by another ever be the beginning of change? Impossible. But when the self-moved changes other, and that again other, and thus thousands upon tens of thousands of bodies are set in motion, must not the beginning of all this motion be the change of the self-moving principle? . . . . self-motion being the origin of all motions, and the first which arises among things at rest as well as among things in motion, is the eldest and mightiest principle of change, and that which is changed by another and yet moves other is second . . . .
If, my friend, we say that the whole path and movement of heaven, and of all that is therein, is by nature akin to the movement and revolution and calculation of mind, and proceeds by kindred laws, then, as is plain, we must say that the best soul takes care of the world and guides it along the good path. [[Plato here explicitly sets up an inference to design (by a good soul) from the intelligible order of the cosmos.]

___________

In short, the matter pivots on breaking a powerfully institutionalised strawman caricature of the scientific method, and our investigatory and warranting options.

Our real, as opposed to strawman options are to study:

Natural vs supernatural artificial causes.>>

=============

In short, I argue that the whole issue being raised of inference to natural vs supernatural as opposed to the reasoning on natural vs artificial causes and signs thereof, is a strawman fallacy, and so also a red herring distractor.

What are your own thoughts, on what grounds? END

Comments
NR: See what I mean? A standard metric of information used since the days of Shannon is the start point, one as close as your computer file sizes. Relevant criteria of specificity are applied, commonsense ones like what happens if digits are randomly disturbed, or does this use codes under a grammar. These deliver a result quite directly, and with a consistent message that stands the test of billions of known cases. What is the response: it is vague, so brush it aside. My point is proved; the problem is not that there are no good answers, but that hey are unacceptable for fundamentally ideological reasons. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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I'll add - science is capable of investigating natural causes, full stop? Again, alright. Last thursdayism is an entirely natural possibility. It's a natural possibility that the laws of nature changed in the past or distant past - perhaps briefly, perhaps permanently. It's a natural possibility that the act of observation itself alters or determines the results we observe (depending on your interpretation of quantum physics, this can be regarded as an actuality too.) How does science investigate such claims?nullasalus
June 21, 2011
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Science is perfectly capable of investigating artificial causes, full stop? Really? Alright. How would science go about determining whether we are brains in a vat? How would science determine whether or not we're living in a computer simulation? These are two of many possible examples.nullasalus
June 21, 2011
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kairosfocus (#33):
You have already seen a description of how that filter can be put to work, reduced to a mathematical formula.
Right. But it is a vague description. It needs to be completely specified, so that the filter can be put to work with no possibility of human bias. It needs to be so specific, that an ultra-Darwinist and an extreme creationist will get exactly the same results from applying the filter. That needed specificity is still missing.
But then, objectors spent months finding every species of way to avert the force of that result, which fits in quite simply into the above, and indeed results in hand strongly indicate its power. For instance take ASCII text in English in t5his thread.If we are beyond about 72 characters, we have confidence to infer that no chance process on the gamut of our solar system will be able to produce such a string. If we bump the threshold up to 143 characters, we will be confident that no chance process on the gamut of our observed cosmos can access it.
I can watch on TV, and see a purely mechanical application of random data select a winner for the state lottery. And now you are trying to tell me that it could not have been completely mechanical. Sorry, but those probabilistic arguments to design are mistaken.Neil Rickert
June 21, 2011
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NR: You have already seen a description of how that filter can be put to work, reduced to a mathematical formula. A fairly simple one, that only requires processes for identifying informational capacity, and a means for identifying empirically, sufficient specificity that accessible resources will not credibly access it on chance. But then, objectors spent months finding every species of way to avert the force of that result, which fits in quite simply into the above, and indeed results in hand strongly indicate its power. For instance take ASCII text in English in t5his thread.If we are beyond about 72 characters, we have confidence to infer that no chance process on the gamut of our solar system will be able to produce such a string. If we bump the threshold up to 143 characters, we will be confident that no chance process on the gamut of our observed cosmos can access it. this sort of case is one of many billions of tests the EF has passed. There are no credible counter examples. DNA in t5he living cell is similarly funcitonally specific and well past the threshold, by 100 - 1,000 ties at he lower end of unicellular life. That is the basis for pointing to design for such cells, but the intensity of denial has to be seen to be believed. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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Mung: We can best clarify cases of chance, necessity and design by concrete cases and family resemblance thereto. We may never be able to identify genus-difference categories, or necessary and sufficient descriptive statements to identify all cases. Think about the definition of "life," the subject of biology. This is yet another aspect of the irreducible complexity and need for rational, intuitive judgements in the practice of science. BTW, I recall a case of a scientist who spent years studying the Cichlids. He says he got to a point where he could see a fish out the corner of his eye and instantly judge that it was a cichlid. This is of course a case of judgement on a cluster of weightings enforced by an apprenticeship of experience. The same obtains across vast swathes of pure and applied science, and it is why when I see someone suggesting that key scientific inferences are being made by computers, I shake my head. We have increasingly lost touch with and humility before reality. Including that of genuine expertise. Think about Einstein's thought experiments, or Newton watching an apple fall while the moon swings by in the sky, or Kekule's dream of a snake eating its tail. Or Lorentz playing with some equations and noticing that the simulation could not be accurately backed up and rerun. Science is in the end an exploration by those who have developed skill and insight on years of experience, not something simply reducible to a blind step by step procedure. Maybe, that is another aspect of the profound difference going on here. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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JDH: Well done!William J. Murray
June 21, 2011
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kairosfocus (#22)
Certain experimental or observational procedures can be automated, the process of inference and that of hypothesis/theory formulation cannot. Such processes are irreducibly complex, intuitive and fuzzy.
I am not asking for a mechanistic account of how you (or Dembski and others) came up with that explanatory filter. I don't expect an automatable process for that. Now that you have the explanatory filter, I am asking how to mechanize and/or automate the application of that filter. If that cannot be done, then the filter is not science in its current form.Neil Rickert
June 21, 2011
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PS: Theories [and more broadly explanatory models], precisely are based on abductive inferences to best explanation -- BTW, Peirce was a philosopher-scientist one of a long and distinguished tradition now often despised by a largely philosophically illiterate generation, whereby the cluster of material facts F1, F2 . . . Fn are subject to explanation by alternative models E 1, E 2, . . . Em. Where Ek => F1 . . . Fm, but is not equivalent to them, i.e. the facts observed provide provisional empirical support not proof, on pain of affirming the consequent. These are evaluated per factual adequacy, coherence and explanatory power, leading to a judgement of the collective. That process is non algorithmic, and deeply unstructured, i.e. judgemental.kairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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WJM @ 24 Precisely.JDH
June 21, 2011
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*Rather, and the location of its interventions into the othwerwise "natural" universe - human beings.William J. Murray
June 21, 2011
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It does not possess the methodology to discover any other kind of cause.
This implies that science has a methodology in place to discover natural causes. It does not.Mung
June 21, 2011
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Dr. Liddle, Please forgive me, but i think you are foolish. You seem to be confused about some terms, but overall, it just appears that you are desperate for there not to be a supernatural explanation necessary, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Nevertheless, I feel you are intelligent, and a formidable debate opponent, and I respect your thinking processes. So I ask you to find the hole in the following argument. 1. Science purports to be a search for rational solutions. 2. Rational solutions imply a choice between two or more explanations that has some arbitrary nature to it, other beings are perfectly able to make the other, irrational choice. 3. This implies that at least scientists can make arbitrary choices. 4. But arbitrary choices ( read rational choices ) can not be necessary or random. Otherwise they are not arbitrary and not rational. 5. Therefore by the a priori assumption of the practice of science, there exists some beings ( scientists ) who are able to take actions that that are not necessary and not random. 6. These actions which are not necessary and not random are by definition supernatural in nature. 7. Since some class of beings ( scientists ) can take supernatural actions, they must have a supernatural basis for their creation. QEDJDH
June 21, 2011
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When a single causal agent - a human being - can produce artifacts with FSCO/I that exceeds the computational capacity of the entire known natural universe to otherwise acquire, and can do so trivially - I think we have at least one reasonable definition of "supernatural" and it's intervention into the otherwise "natural" universe.William J. Murray
June 21, 2011
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Well, it may be that the problem is in the definition of “supernatural”.
It may well be that the problem is in the definition of "natural."
Science is perfectly capable of investigating artificial causes...
I don't even know what an artificial cause would look like. 1. Is there an operational definition out there for "natural cause" that science has decided upon? 2. Is there an operational definition out there for "artificial cause" that science has decided upon? 3. I thought we agreed that science studies effects. So why are we now going back over this same old tired ground?Mung
June 21, 2011
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NR: Certain experimental or observational procedures can be automated, the process of inference and that of hypothesis/theory formulation cannot. Such processes are irreducibly complex, intuitive and fuzzy. Similarly, many aspects of the process of evaluation are not subject to such automation by a machine, hard or soft ware. In short they are intrinsically non-algorithmic. (That is where the idea that once you can precisely describe a process it can be automated fails. There are many, many processes that cannot be reliably so reduced. That is why there is a premise that insightful, deeply intuitive judgement is one of the key distinctives of professional grade jobs.) GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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kairosfocus (#18):
Scientific methods are precisely based on the action of intelligent, imaginative reasoning creatures so it exactly cannot be reduced to an automatic exercise.
Scientific methods are carefully specified so that, at least in principle, they can be automated. It is by insisting on precise formulations, that we avoid the kind of biases that have led to "Clever Hans" and "polywater" kinds of false trails. On the other hand The Scientific Method has never been precisely specified, and some of us suspect that there is no such thing as a singular scientific method.
Scientific inferences and explanations are not even subjects of mathematical proof, much less reducible to automation.
These days, most scientific inferences are done in a computer. Perhaps you were referring to "inference to the best explanation" (or abduction). As best I can tell, scientists don't use that terminology. That kind of talk mostly comes from philosophy. And when philosophers say that something is "an inference to the best explanation", I don't know what they are talking and I seriously doubt that they know what they are talking about. Science works with theories. Where theories come from is contentious, and I agree that the creation of theories seems to depend on intelligent humans. But once we have the theory, then what is done in accordance with that theory is rather precisely specified. Proofs and inferences are carried out within the specifications of a theory. There is a separate question, that of how well the theory fits the world. That's where there are no proofs, and where science is tentative. Getting back to the explanatory filter that you presented, I am taking that as intended to be comparable to a scientific theory. For that, we require two things: (1) the theory should fit the world well enough to be useful; (2) the theory should be precise enough in its specification that we can automate or mechanize it, at least in principle. My previous comment was with respect to point (2). I wasn't asking about point (1). We cannot even hope to make judgments about (1), until the "theory" is in a form that meets the requirements of (2).Neil Rickert
June 21, 2011
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Dr Liddle: As I pointed out the key problem is that the claim that design thought is trying to improperly inject "the supernatural" into science is false. All that science needs to study is the empirical signs that warrant inference to cause that traces per aspect to chance, necessity, and art or choice. And, there is no reverse strawman. Sciences, pure and applied, routinely involve themselves in inferences to design, but many tie themselves up in knots if such an inference process just might possibly allow "a Divine Foot" in the door. That is there is a problem of being tied up in the coils of a priori materialist ideology. It is in that context that the claim of trying to inject the supernatural, creationism etc is used as a verbal smear designed to excite emotions and shut off reasoned discussion. Careers have been unjustly busted over it, and it is only that here are a few cases recently where fines have had to be paid, or compensation or apologies, that have led to some pullback. Six years ago, when this was in full cry, there was a raw, ugly triumphalism in enforcing the politically correct ideology of materialism by indefensible means, while casting guilt and blame on the victim that I recall all too vividly. As I said, I have seen all of this before, in dealing with the communists in my youth. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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PS: What can be warranted and expressed in a "mechanical" formula, up to direct or indirect empirical tests needed to evaluate the proper value of a dummy variable, is this:
Chi_500 = I * S - 500, bits beyond the solar system complexity threshold.
I is of course an explicit or implicit information metric, and S is a metric of specificity on a dummy variable set to 1 based on criteria such as observed vulnerability to perturbation, or use of a defined code [think of what random changes to the ASCII code behind this post would do] etc. The expression is that if Chi_500 goers positive sand the scope of resources is within our solar system [our effective cosmos], then we have good reason to infer that the entity with that value is designed not a credible product of chance. That is because the number of Planck-time quantum states for our solar system's ~ 10^57 atoms is at most 10^102, where 10^30 such states are required for the fastest chemical reactions.kairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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NR: Perhaps, I used a word in an improperly suggestive fashion when I spoke of algorithm, meaning only step by step exercise. Scientific methods are precisely based on the action of intelligent, imaginative reasoning creatures so it exactly cannot be reduced to an automatic exercise. How do you automate the creation of those educated, inspired guesses that are the cores of the explanatory scenarios that are evaluated on inference to best explanation? How do you automate the judgement based evaluation across an undefined cluster of possible factors, as to which of competing explanations is "best"? Scientific inferences and explanations are not even subjects of mathematical proof, much less reducible to automation. And, BTW, mathematics is itself a creative process, of inherently irreducible complexity. It too is a product of mind, not a subject of automation. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
June 21, 2011
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Neil, I don't think it can be mechanized (at least for use in every situation of an attempt at design detection) as you say, because it's a model, which can be used in various situations. It works as a model IMHO. The issue is: is it a model that can be used scientifically or not? If the answer is "yes," then I think we can reasonably work on the issue of "mechanizing" or "automating" it to specific situations where we want to know if there is design. I'm asking the question because Lizzie stated that the detection of design is legitimate science. Here's a model for the detection of design. Is it a scientific model or not? And if not, why not?CannuckianYankee
June 21, 2011
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CannuckianYankee (#14)
How do you feel about the explanatory filter that KF highlighted in the OP?
Automate it. Mechanize it. Specify the steps in complete detail, so that it can be followed in ways that avoid human biases. If you can do that, then you might have the basis for a scientific research program.Neil Rickert
June 21, 2011
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My personal take on "supernatural" and how it applies to science is that supernatural events CAN be studied by science but it is their source mechanism that science cannot know of. For example if we were to see a man being created out of dust ex nihilo, we could perhaps observe and describe and study the process where by that dust was transforming into a man, but the source of the event, the agency and organized power from which is comes, science probably cannot investigate. My other thought on the supernatural is that there is nothing in science or philosophy that rules out supernatural events. In fact, one can argue that the big bang was indeed a supernatural event, as it resulted in the most incredible effect and its source and origin is beyond the comprehension and pure rationalization of scientific inquiry. And so the existence of supernatural events is perfect permissible in science so long as Occam's razor and the like are applied first.Frost122585
June 21, 2011
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Lizzie, "So to detect 'art' is to detect 'design'." How do you feel about the explanatory filter that KF highlighted in the OP? Do you think it's a legitimate instrument for detecting design? Do you think the methodology highlighted in the EF is scientific?CannuckianYankee
June 21, 2011
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Elizabeth Liddle: "Well, it may be that the problem is in the definition of “supernatural”." Exactly. Any rational discussion of the topic depends upon a clear agreed-upon definition of the item in question.Eric Anderson
June 21, 2011
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Elizabeth you state; 'Just because a whole is more than the sum of the parts does not mean that anything extra has been added.' And yet, despite your protestations to the contrary, it does, In Evolution, the Sum Is Less than Its Parts. Excerpt: Both studies found a predominance of antagonistic epistasis, which impeded the rate of ongoing adaptation relative to a null model of independent mutational effects. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/06/new_research_on_epistatic_inte047151.html ,,,, As to that 'emerged' word,,, It is very interesting to note that quantum entanglement, which conclusively demonstrates that ‘information’ in its pure 'quantum form' is completely transcendent of any time and space constraints, should be found in molecular biology on such a massive scale, for how can the quantum entanglement 'effect' in biology possibly be explained by a material (matter/energy) 'cause' when the quantum entanglement 'effect' falsified material particles as its own 'causation' in the first place? (A. Aspect) Appealing to the probability of various configurations of material particles, as Darwinism does, simply will not help since a timeless/spaceless cause must be supplied which is beyond the capacity of the material particles themselves to supply! To give a coherent explanation for an effect that is shown to be completely independent of any time and space constraints one is forced to appeal to a cause that is itself not limited to time and space! i.e. Put more simply, you cannot explain a effect by a cause that has been falsified by the very same effect you are seeking to explain! Improbability arguments of various 'special' configurations of material particles, which have been a staple of the arguments against neo-Darwinism, simply do not apply since the cause is not within the material particles in the first place! Yet it is also very interesting to note, in Darwinism's inability to explain this 'transcendent quantum effect' adequately, that Theism has always postulated a transcendent component to man that is not constrained by time and space. i.e. Theism has always postulated a 'eternal soul' for man that lives past the death of the body. Further notes: The Unbearable Wholeness of Beings - Steve Talbott Excerpt: Virtually the same collection of molecules exists in the canine cells during the moments immediately before and after death. But after the fateful transition no one will any longer think of genes as being regulated, nor will anyone refer to normal or proper chromosome functioning. No molecules will be said to guide other molecules to specific targets, and no molecules will be carrying signals, which is just as well because there will be no structures recognizing signals. Code, information, and communication, in their biological sense, will have disappeared from the scientist’s vocabulary. http://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/the-unbearable-wholeness-of-beings The ‘Fourth Dimension’ Of Living Systems https://docs.google.com/document/pub?id=1Gs_qvlM8-7bFwl9rZUB9vS6SZgLH17eOZdT4UbPoy0Y Quantum no-hiding theorem experimentally confirmed for first time - March 2011 Excerpt: In the classical world, information can be copied and deleted at will. In the quantum world, however, the conservation of quantum information means that information cannot be created nor destroyed. http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-03-quantum-no-hiding-theorem-experimentally.htmlbornagain77
June 21, 2011
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Dr Liddle, Wouldn't your time be better spent writing the promised simulation demonstrating that the origin of information is not artificial? :)Upright BiPed
June 21, 2011
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Well, my position, ba77, is that complex high level phenomena, such as minds, do not "reduce" to fundamental material forces - they have properties that are not shared by the forces from which they emerge. But I do not call them "supernatural". "Superfundamental" might be a better description. Just because a whole is more than the sum of the parts does not mean that anything extra has been added.Elizabeth Liddle
June 21, 2011
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of related note on the irreconcilability of General relativity and Quantum Mechanics: Quantum Mechanics and Relativity - The Collapse Of Physics? - video - with notes on plausible solution materialists have missed http://www.metacafe.com/watch/6597379/bornagain77
June 21, 2011
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Elizabeth you state: 'ba77 seems to include minds and quantum effects as “supernatural” in which case, science certainly has the tools to investigate them.' When I posit 'supernatural cause', I am positing a cause which is not reducible to any of the reductive material entities within the space-time matter-energy constraints of General Relativity, whereas a materialists, and neo-Darwinists in particular, have, a-priori, chosen to operate solely within those materialistic constraints. ,,, Thus explaining my delight upon learning of quantum non-locality in molecular biology!!! ,,,bornagain77
June 21, 2011
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