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Eric Holloway: ID as a bridge between Francis Bacon and Thomas Aquinas

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Eric Holloway, an electrical and computer engineer, offers some thoughts on how to prevent science from devolving into “scientism.” For an example of scientism, see Peter Atkins’s claim that science can answer all the Big Questions. Here’s John Mark Reynolds’s outline of the general problem:

Sometimes a culture takes a right road, sometimes it passes the right way and ends up a bit lost. Western Europe had a chance at the start of seventeenth century to get a few things right, but by the eighteenth century most had taken a worse way: Enlightenment or reaction. Enlightenment lost the wisdom of the Middle Ages, creating the myth of a dark age, and the main enlightened nation, France, ended the seventeenth century in butchery and dictatorship. Instead of the development of an urbane Spain Cervantes might have prefigured, there was a mere reaction away from the new ideas, including the good ones. More.

Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Baconian Science and Thomistic Philosophy

Imagine giving your friend a good book filled with beautiful pictures and stories. Instead of reading it, the friend begins to count the letters, and make theories about which letters predict which pictures will come next, and analyze the types of ink used to print the pages. This does not make sense. Why doesn’t he just read the book? The reason, he claims, is because we do not want to bias ourselves by assuming the ink was arranged purposefully.

Carlo Crivelli 007.jpg
Thomas Aquinas

This story illustrates difference in perspective of the medieval ages and our modern scientific age. The medieval worldview was marked by the voluminous philosophy of Thomas Aquinas (1224/6—1274). The worldview of that time was that God is ultimate existence, and creation is ordered towards maximizing its existence in God. As such, there is a natural law that must be followed for humankind to flourish. Deviation from the natural law results in cessation of existence and death. Due to the ability of the human mind to rationally grasp changeless principles, the medievals thought there was something changeless and immortal about the human soul. Since all other physical creatures do not have this rational ability, they exist to a less perfect degree than human beings. This means that all humans inherently have a higher worth than all the rest of physical creation, and at the same time all humans are equal since it is of the nature of humankind to be rational, even if particular humans are incapable of rational thought
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But, the intricate medieval tapestry begins to unravel. An expanding view of the globe, major diseases and wars, and internal criticisms leads to a breakdown of the Thomistic system. Francis Bacon (1561–1626), a leading popularizer of what we consider modern science, grows impatient with the monks’ philosophizing and debating. Demanding results, Bacon recommends carefully dissecting nature’s mysteries to heal the world’s suffering, instead of wondering about the meaning of it all. And thus was born the modern scientific age, where the perception of meaning is only a biased illusion and truth must be empirically measurable.

Today, Bacon’s view is the dominant view, so much so that we take it for granted. Science and technology have led to a revolution in health, wealth and material happiness throughout the world. In the space of a few centuries it has lifted the majority of the earth’s booming population out of poverty. The rigorous vision of Bacon, spoken with the precision of math, has given us the gift of the gods, but has also resulted in unprecedented death and destruction, horrific human experimentation, mass enslavement, cultural disintegration, and in general left us with a sense that we have lost something of great value that we cannot find again. The core reason for the aimlessness is because the building blocks of science are inert. They are like Legos in a box. You cannot shake the box of Legos and expect a spaceship to fall out. In the same way, mathematical proof and physical evidence cannot explain their own reason for being. Science cannot explain meaning. At the same time, the very inability of science to speak for itself says something of interest.

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Francis Bacon

In medieval language this missing meaning is called function. Function cannot emerge from atoms in motion. It cannot emerge from shaking the Lego box. This claim can be proven mathematically. In information theory, function is a kind of mutual information. Mutual information is subject to the law of information non-increase, which means mutual information and thus function cannot be created by natural processes. Thus, without an organizing force, matter is functionless and void, and there is no meaning.

The fundamental insight of the intelligent design movement is that we can empirically differentiate function from accidental patterns created by natural processes. This means we can describe the Thomistic system with Baconian empirical precision if we really wanted to. Fortunately, humans seem to be pretty good at identifying function without huge amounts of empirical justification, unless they are university trained. The empirical detection of function is a new pair of glasses that corrects Bacon’s vision, and helps us again follow along the path that winds back through the medieval monasteries of Thomas Aquinas, with the mathematical and empirical rigor of science.

But, after hearing this Bacon will say, “it all sounds quite nice, but how is it useful? Function doesn’t feed children or cure cancer.” The answer to Bacon’s question is illustrated with the story of the book at the beginning. If we approach the natural world as if it were arbitrarily put together, then we miss many clues that can help us to understand and use it better.

We are seeing the scientific importance of empirically detecting function now with the ENCODE project. Previously, scientists believed that since the human genome was produced by evolution, most of it would be random and functionless. However, the ENCODE project has shown the majority of the human genome is functional. Now that we understand the genome is mostly functional, we will be better able to decode how it works and programs our body. So, contrary to Bacon, being able to detect function in the human genome can help us improve our lives.

This raises the further question: how would science change if we broaden our detection of function to the rest of the world? Since things work better if they follow their function, does this mean there is a proper order for human flourishing, as the medievals believed? Furthermore, what does science have to say about the creators of function, such as humans? Since matter cannot create function, function creators cannot be reduced to matter. And being more than matter, human beings must be more valuable than any material good. While it is true we cannot go from is to ought, intelligent design does provide a scientific basis for human ontological and pragmatic worth, as well as justify a natural law that must be followed in order for humanity to prosper. So, through the lens of intelligent design, science can indeed talk about the metaphysical realm of value and morals and explain the medieval worldview of function in the empirical language of modern science.

Note: This post also appeared at Patheos (August 30, 2018)

See also: Could one single machine invent everything? (Eric Holloway)

and

Renowned chemist on why only science can answer the Big Questions (Of course, he define th Big Questions as precisely the ones science can answer, dismissing the others a not worth bothering with.)

Comments
bornagain77 @ 5
So Seversky let me get this straight. You think that it is point in favor of Evolution that a large percentage of Engineers, Computer Programmers and Medical Doctors think that your theory is bunk?
No, but I give their views on the theory no more weight than yours or mine. So, let me ask you, suppose you or someone dear to you began to suffer a serious, possibly life-threatening, decline in health, would you consult a plumber or a lawyer to find out what is wrong. After all, they've read some articles on the Internet, visited some medical websites so you'd think they have some idea of what they're talking about. Or would you go to your family physician and maybe subsequently an oncologist because they might actually know more about medicine than your plumber or lawyer or engineers or computer programmers?Seversky
September 3, 2018
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groovamos @ 3
BTW I have thrown up many times in answer to Seversky the research on these substances, which consistently demolishes the utility of scientific materialism in any study of the human mind, and I am about to supply another one; yet Seversky never is able to refute this slant on human experience or even acknowledge that this research exists in his responses on here. So here I will supply another such reference and dare Seversky to comment on its validity vis a vis his own particular philosophical commitment. Here is a review referencing a recent book and also a two volume set on this research:
Has it occurred to you that the fact that a range of subjective human experiences can be elicited by psychotropic drugs or electrical or transcranial magnetic stimulation point to them being epiphenomena of the activities of the physical brain rather than any "spiritual" influence?Seversky
September 3, 2018
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EricMH @ 2
@Seversky I wonder why engineers tend to believe in intelligent design? What is your theory for the Salem Hypothesis? It is certainly mysterious, isn’t it?
Engineers work with known quantities towards optimal design the whole time. If they're designing and building bridges or aircraft or skyscrapers that must work as intended, they have to. Where many lives depend on them getting it right, unanswered questions - saying "I'm afraid I don't know" - don't cut it. Anything less than the highest degree of confidence - in effect, certainty - is rejected. In a sense, the messy uncertainties and unanswered questions, that are meat and drink to cutting-edge science, are anathema to the engineering mindset. But, the old adage, to the man with a hammer everything looks like a nail, applies. To those whose work involves design at the most fundamental level, everything looks designed.Seversky
September 3, 2018
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So Seversky let me get this straight. You think that it is point in favor of Evolution that a large percentage of Engineers, Computer Programmers and Medical Doctors think that your theory is bunk? Funny, I would definitely not consider that to be a point in favor of your theory. :) Only in the twisted pseudo-scientific world of Darwinian reasoning is such a devastating fact against a theory to be considered a point in its favor.
“Biologists must constantly keep in mind that what they see was not designed, but rather evolved.” - Francis Crick - co-discoverer of DNA helix
In the following "guided tour" video of a human cell, it is easy to see why Crick had to live in denial of the design that he saw
Cellscape VR (Virtual Reality) Biology - Guided Tour Final - video (2018) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0A56uOVluNM Cross-section of DNA https://i.pinimg.com/originals/6f/1e/91/6f1e91f1adb21fb9636f51e977eaf69d.jpg
bornagain77
September 3, 2018
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@groovamos #3 You do realize that employers now research a prospective employee's online presence before hiring? Do you want evidence of your "substance" usage posted anywhere that they could find?Deputy Dog
September 3, 2018
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Seversky Another datapoint in support of the Salem Hypothesis The source of the so-called Salem Hypothesis could be this: engineers are not as much subject to the steel trapped, lockstep regimentation as are academic scientists, who are subject to ostracization in the workplace if they are to show any sympathy towards any philosophical stance that does not have an affinity for philosophical materialism or scientific materialism. This is why you have been reading of silicon valley engineers and mathematicians employing entheogens, ("microdosing") in their work when you never seem to hear of academic scientists or mathematicians doing so. BTW I have thrown up many times in answer to Seversky the research on these substances, which consistently demolishes the utility of scientific materialism in any study of the human mind, and I am about to supply another one; yet Seversky never is able to refute this slant on human experience or even acknowledge that this research exists in his responses on here. So here I will supply another such reference and dare Seversky to comment on its validity vis a vis his own particular philosophical commitment. Here is a review referencing a recent book and also a two volume set on this research: https://religionnews.com/2016/04/29/psychedelic-drugs-can-deepen-religious-experiences-commentary/ Here is a link to the details on the book published by Columbia University and I dare Seversky to comment on this: https://cup.columbia.edu/book/sacred-knowledge/9780231174060 Here is a set of reviews from the two volume set by the U of California press. BTW one of the contributors to this anthology is Stanislav Grof who I have mentioned several times on UD: http://nr.ucpress.edu/content/20/2/117 BTW I am an engineer with an MSEE working on a Ph.D thesis. You will not find many hard core Darwinian partisans with an interest in the research into these substances, maybe that is why Seversky refuses to respond.groovamos
September 2, 2018
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@Seversky I wonder why engineers tend to believe in intelligent design? What is your theory for the Salem Hypothesis? It is certainly mysterious, isn't it?EricMH
September 2, 2018
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Another datapoint in support of the Salem Hypothesis.Seversky
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