I agree that ID uses materialistic arguments to counter materialism. From empirical evidence, they reach the same conclusion as materialists : "it's turtles all the way down". Or as they prefer : "irreducible complexity" can only be resolved with a leap of faith. Therefore, faced with a brain boggler, they add a hypothetical black box to absorb the infinite regression : "God is the big turtle to end all turtles".So, I feel that ID arguments mirror the materialist arguments they’re wanting to disprove. Lean one way, then you’re tending towards religious fundamentalism which is the literal interpretation of mythological truths. Lean the other way, you’re tending towards materialism which is the metaphysical interpretation of methodological naturalism. A ‘middle path’ is able to accommodate a religious sensibility and a thoroughly empirical attitude, by recognizing something like Gould’s non-overlapping magisteria (which is accepted by neither Dawkins nor his ID antagonists .) — Wayfarer
Yes. That's the point of the BothAnd philosophy. Materialist Science and Spiritualist Religion serve well in their own Magisteria : physical vs emotional welfare, But when they stray into the opposition's domain, the inherent limitations of their methods run into roadblocks. For example, as you noted, the materialist approach of Science cannot explain the emergence of "comedy or music", which have little to do with survival of the fittest. And Religion's resort to divine revelation to resolve philosophical mysteries leaves it open to various interpretations, and no way to weed-out false prophets, except politically-motivated inquisitions.I am not a believer in ID either, but I think the field is at least a required counter-balance to mainstream evolutionary science. — Devans99
My question is - can the idea of irreducible complexity be interesting philosophically?
And also, philosophically speaking, can there be anything that is truly irreducibly complex? — Wheatley
Perhaps ironically, 'irreducible complexity' is - or ought to be - the null hypothesis of all evolutionary science. That is, it ought to be the methodological starting point from which any empirical investigation ought to take it's lead - the idea that such and such a feature cannot be accounted for by evolutionary means just is the base hypothesis from which scientific evidence is marshalled to counter. So 'irreducible complexity' should not be seen as something extra-scientific. It lies at the heart of the scientific method without which science would simply become dogma. — StreetlightX
I don't think that any evolutionary scientists ever start from the assumption that something is irreducibly complex — SophistiCat
If one understands IR as simply a negative thesis ('X cannot be explained by means of Y') then it amounts to nothing but a base statement of fallibilism. — StreetlightX
But no one takes seriously the possibility that some biological feature is not evolved — SophistiCat
If one is committed to science being an empirical discipline, rather than an ideological one, one had better take it seriously. Alternatively, you're welcome to set up your altar in the corner and join the rest of the fanatics. — StreetlightX
My question is - can the idea of irreducible complexity be interesting philosophically?
And also, philosophically speaking, can there be anything that is truly irreducibly complex? — Wheatley
So should we also have a cancer-denying field of study to counter-balance mainstream cancer research?
Perhaps ironically, 'irreducible complexity' is - or ought to be - the null hypothesis of all evolutionary science. — StreetlightX
the whole point of science is to break the reality into smaller and smaller bits in the attempt to better understand how the bits all work together to make the whole. — Siti
Not in the slightest. The 'point of science' is to follow the evidence, and not make a priori assumptions as to what reality ought to be like. — StreetlightX
the "null hypothesis" should be the assumption that nothing extraordinary (i.e. 'supernatural') is going on — Siti
No. The null hypothesis is that nothing is going on at all. It has nothing to do with the supernatural, and nothing to do with the 'extraordinary'. That one's theory explains nothing at all is indeed an assumption, an assumption that all science must take seriously without which it gives up its right to call itself science at all. — StreetlightX
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