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Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

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Page 1: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Being Smart About Intelligent

Design

David BanachDepartment of Philosophy

St. Anselm College

Page 2: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

What is Intelligent Design?

Agreements with Evolution Disagreements with Evolution Accepts Geological Time scale for age of Earth.

Natural selection working upon random variation cannot produce some complex features of living organisms.

Accepts common descent of all organisms on Earth.

Some type of Intelligence (natural or non-natural)is the source of some features of living organisms.

Accepts the importance of natural selection driven evolution in micro-evolution and the evolution of many, if not most species

Page 3: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Central Works and Figures Behe, Michael J. Darwin's Black Box.

Simon & Schuster 1996 Dembski, William. Intelligent Design:

The Bridge Between Science and Theology. InterVarsity Press, 1999.

William S. Harris and John H. Calvert. “Intelligent Design: The Scientific Alternative to Evolution” (National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly, Autumn 2003) .

Page 4: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Intelligent Design in the News

Kansas:    Discovery Institute

1999 and 2005 State Science Standards Pennsylvania:

Thomas More Law CenterDiscovery Institute.Pandas and People. Edited Creationist text.

Page 5: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The WedgeThe 1998 manifesto of the Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of

Science and Culture Governing Goals To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and

political legacies. To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that

nature and human beings are created by God. Five Year Goals To see intelligent design theory as an accepted alternative in the sciences

and scientific research being done from the perspective of design theory. To see the beginning of the influence of design theory in spheres other

than natural science. To see major new debates in education, life issues, legal and personal

responsibility pushed to the front of the national agenda. Twenty Year Goals To see intelligent design theory as the dominant perspective in science. To see design theory application in specific fields, including molecular

biology, biochemistry, paleontology, physics and cosmology in the natural sciences, psychology, ethics, politics, theology and philosophy in the humanities; to see its influence in the fine arts.

To see design theory permeate our religious, cultural, moral and political life.

Page 6: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lesson 1 Stick to the Science and not the Politics. Much of the debate on ID is a reflection of

the larger Postmodern debate about the roles of reason and power in determining the True and the Good.

Page 7: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Is it Science? Is it Scientific Discourse?

YES. It makes statements of fact and reason that can be verified or falsified.

Is it a Scientific Theory?NO. It does not provide a systematic matrix of theoretical statements that allow useful predictions in a wide range of cases.

Is it Good Science?NO. It’s main arguments do not establish their claims.

Page 8: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lesson 2 ID should be refuted as Scientific

Discourse, using the facts and argument. It should not be dismissed as non-science.

This has the appearance of a institutional power play, and invites response in kind.

Page 9: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Key Arguments:Life cannot be the result of random physical

forces. Evolution is random.

Specified Complexity (Dembski). Irreducible Complexity (Behe) Darwin’s Black Box: Newly discovered bio-

chemical complexity. The Origin of Life.

Page 10: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lesson 3 Understand how Evolution Works.

Page 11: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Evolution is NOT Random Systems involving

1. Inheritance2. Variation3. Differential Survival (Selection)function as algorithms that naturally act in very non-random ways, tending inexorably towards higher fitness.

Evolution agrees that complex objects could not have arisen randomly.

The source of variation is normally thought to be random, or undirected, mutations, but this is not the essential feature of Evolution.

Not all natural activity that is undirected or non-intelligent is random. Undirected≠Random.

Page 12: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Adaptive Landscapes and Evolutionary Algorithms

Page 13: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The Argument from Probability

Complex objects have1. Many Parts, with many, many possible combinations.2. One of which, specifiable in advance, is the right or functional one.

It is vastly improbable, then, that complex objects arise from a random combination from their parts.

Page 14: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Specified Complexity An event exhibits specified complexity if it

is contingent and therefore not necessary; if it is complex and therefore not readily repeatable by chance; and if it is specified in the sense of exhibiting an independently given pattern." (p. 4)

(Dembski, William A. (2003). ”Gauging Intelligent Design?”

Equivalent to Dawkins definition of complex.

Page 15: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Complex

Page 16: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Not Complex

Page 17: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College
Page 18: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College
Page 19: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College
Page 20: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College
Page 21: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Irreducible Complexity Irreducible Complexity (Behe):

By irreducibly complex I mean a single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning. An irreducibly complex system cannot be produced directly (that is, by continuously improving the initial function, which continues to work by the same mechanism) by slight, successive modifications of a precursor system, because any precursor to an irreducibly complex system that is missing a part is by definition nonfunctional. An irreducibly complex biological system, if there is such a thing, would be a powerful challenge to Darwinian evolution. (p. 39)

Page 22: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

E. Coli Flagellum

Page 23: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Darwin’s Black Box : Newly discovered bio-chemical

complexity. Explanations of the evolution of gross anatomical features leave out explanations of the even more complex microscopic mechanisms that lie hidden within them.

Page 24: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Blood Coagulation Cascade (Behe)

Page 25: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The Evolution of the Eye

Page 26: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Our Intuitions are Bad Judges

Given the lengths of time and the probabilities involved, our intuitions mislead us about what is or is not possible.

We would not say it was impossible to fit all of the information in the bible into a square centimeter, even though we cannot imagine it.

Page 27: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

100 to 99 80% in 1000 generations100 to 95 80% in 200, 98% in 1000 generations(Mark Ridley, Evolution, p. 95)

Page 28: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Self-Organization.5 .48

Page 29: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Self-Organization.6 1.2

Page 30: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Self-OrganizationVarious Ratios near .6

Page 31: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Self-OrganizationBenard Convection Patterns

Page 32: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The Eye Without Intelligence

Page 33: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lesson 3 Genes evolve, not gross anatomical

structures. We should ask how the genes that give rise to complex structures can evolve, not the parts of the structures themselves.

Mechanical processes with no intelligence give rise to complex structures in development.

Page 34: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The Problem of the Origin of Life

Since the conditions that allow natural selection require Self-Replicating molecules, Natural Selection cannot explain the origin of these molecules.

Fred Hoyle compared the probability of a protein forming randomly from amino acids to the chances of a tornado assembling the parts of a 747 passing through a junkyard.

Page 35: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Time Scale of Life’s Evolution

Page 36: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Time Scale of Life’s Evolution

If the age of the earth (4.6 billion years) were condensed into one year ...

Jan. 1 -- Earth was born Early Feb. -- Oldest known rocks formed Late Mar. -- First primitive life formed Mid Nov.-- First complex life with shells or skeletons formed Late Nov. -- First land animals Dec. 25 -- Extinction of the dinosaurs Dec. 31 -- Humans evolved in the evening Dec. 31 -- one second before midnight, humans first set foot on the Moon

From Davidson et al., 2002

Page 37: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

The Vicious Circle DNA requires a number of complex

enzymes to replicate and to maintain its integrity. But these enzymes, being complex, could not have evolved without natural selection and some system of replication.

Page 38: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

DNA Replication(The Way Life Works, M. Hoagland, Bert Dodson)

Page 39: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lesson 4 Be careful what you ask for. The type of design envisioned by ID is not

intelligent.

Page 40: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

What is Design? Design directly manipulates and uses the

natural properties of objects to serve a novel purpose.

No manipulation, no design. Throwing a log on the fire or bringing into existence a pre-existing form is not design.

No direct manipulation, no design. The manager who puts the engineers together on a project is not the designer.

Page 41: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Problems with Design Envisioned by ID

Must have occurred at many different times during the history of life.

Requires the direct intervention into naturally evolving system.

Requires design of genes not structures. Can be altered by subsequent evolution. Frequent intervention in natural processes

is incompatible with omniscient, omnipotent designer.

Page 42: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

2 Designs One works without intelligent intervention

based only on the natural properties of the mechanism.

The other cannot perform its function through its natural properties alone, and requires the intervention of intelligence.

Which is the better design?

Page 43: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lessons for the Scientist:Being Smart about Intelligent

Design

ID should be refuted as Scientific Discourse, using the facts and argument.

It should not be dismissed as non-science. This has the appearance of a institutional power play, and invites response in kind.

Scientists should be state clearly the scientific consensus about what we know and don’t know about the history of life. They should be clear both about what ID concedes and about what problems evolutionary theory faces and their best probable solutions.

Scientists should be smart (and not glib) about the problems posed for human value and meaning by a world devoid of purpose and plan. The problems of the meaning of Life are no more trivial than those of the meaning of (biological) life.

Page 44: Being Smart About Intelligent Design David Banach Department of Philosophy St. Anselm College

Lessons for the Religious Person:

Being Smart about Intelligent Design

Be clear about how natural selection works as well as the different meanings of random and purposive.

Don’t trust your intuitions about what natural selection can and can’t do.

Don’t put too much hope in a set of speculations that may be empirically disproved.

In attempting to gain the authority that comes with scientific method, do not forget the underlying differences between what the methods of science and religion reveal about the world. If you want to attack mechanism, you can’t do it through science.

Be Clear about what kind of design you are envisioning and whether it is appropriate to the God you believe in.