For sure, and I apologize for not being clear if I implied that evolution or evolutionary history was somehow not reflective of reality.As far as fossil evidence is concerned, there is abundant fossil evidence to validate in broad outlines evolutionary history
What I meant to say is that if we require science to require all theories to be empirically testable, then philosophical naturalism is not a scientific view, and further under the same arguments for why ID should be kept out of the classroom apply to naturalism as well.
Furthermore, the claim that all life came about by unguided evolution is therefore not scientific either, as it cannot be falsified. Assertions of teleology, and similarly, lack of teleology, would fall under this umbrella. — Paulm12
What I meant to say is that if we require science to require all theories to be empirically testable, then philosophical naturalism is not a scientific view, — Paulm12
And science, or at any rate ‘modern’ science, operates from certain assumptions about what is real, what counts as evidence, and so on. It’s implicitly physicalist in outlook - ‘implicitly’ because physicalism may not be explicitly stated or defended as a philosophical tenet, but simply assumed. — Wayfarer
If we are talking about beginnings- nothings becoming something's, why does nothing auto become the universe? — Varde
started to fall into question. That's why many of the first-generation of modern physicists — Wayfarer
In his book "Wholeness and Implicate Order" he gives us a glimpse in his fascinating holographic universe. — Hillary
I for example find that in a different possible world where the prevailing cultural view is that of idealism, the empirical sciences would still be indispensable for optimally appraising the truth of that which is universally observable by - and which universally affects - all in principle if not also in practic — javra
I'm dubious about his hidden-variables theory, but let's not get into that - it's a guaranteed de-railer. — Wayfarer
"Philosophical naturalism" – a speculative principle – is not a hypothetical explanation whereas Intelligent Design purports to be a "theory", so they are not epistemically comparable and, while neither is falsifiable, the latter claims to explain facts of the matter which is does not explain – thus, is pseudo-science at most.Neither philosophical naturalism nor Intelligent Design can be empirically falsified via observable data that is necessarily replicable by all others. — javra
Good point of contention. In math, there is a point at which we cannot determine an exact answer to a problem due to the enormity of the amount for which we don't have the proper device to calculate -- at least not yet. I forget the terminology they use. But, maybe @jgill knows something.The most common objection to ID seems to be that it does not produce any testable hypothesis, and thus is “outside” of science (thus perhaps it would better be argued in a philosophy class). However, what bothers me about this is if science must be testable, then much of cosmology would also be considered inappropriate for a science classroom (no multiverses, no accounts for natural laws-all those would similarly be outside of science and therefore not belong in a science classroom either). — Paulm12
Not necessarily. The big bang does not have falsification qualification, but it's scientific.For intelligent design to become a scientific model, there would have to be falsification criteria, the more the better. — jorndoe
I was typing up a follow up post to mine and meant to say that people should stop cutting corners by inserting "god" as their conclusion if they want their theory to be accepted. It doesn't mean that they have to sacrifice their belief that it is god. But they have to rework their thesis if they want to be taken as scientific. I mean, they should write it so that the only logical conclusion is god (that is, if they want other thinkers to follow this conclusion). I don't know. I'm throwing some ideas here.By the way, I don't think it's in the cards that intelligent design can (ever) derive, say, the 10 commandments, that one should pray to the Sun for inspiration and atonement, that Muhammad was the (final) messenger of Allah, or whatever. That's the marked gap from these sorts of apologetics to the (elaborate) religions that have adherents. — jorndoe
The big bang does not have falsification qualification — L'éléphant
But you're forgetting, relativity does not prove the big bang, it only supports some testable hypotheses. I said this in another thread, there is no proof for the big bang. Only evidence that's testable.By the way, we already know that the theory only can go so far (at the moment), since it relies on relativity for the most part. If relativity was to be falsified, then it could take big bang with it. — jorndoe
Agreed. One of the assumptions that is made by methodological naturalism is that nothing "supernatural" will happen during the time in which an experiment is conducted. However, I think even most people who believe in the supernatural would find this to be a fair assumption. The issue becomes whether this assumption can be applied to everything within the world, for all time. At the end of the day, metaphysical naturalism involves an assumption of ergodicity about the state of the world, which to me is difficult to philosophically justify. That's not to say I think metaphysical naturalism is an indefensible position, or shoudn't be held, or anything like that-instead that the claim "nothing supernatural has ever happened" is unfalsifiable and probably shouldn't be held with complete certainty.the distinction that has to be made is between methodological naturalism, and metaphysical naturalism
. A useful model is one that not only describes the events of an experiment, but can extend to other observations about the world too. But to me, these models are always an approximation of reality to a useful degree, not a claim to describe it exactly as it is (the latter is the job of philosophy).All models are wrong, but some are useful
I think the same could be said for naturalistic accounts for abiogenesis, the multiverse, an account for the natural laws, etc. However I also think if intelligent design explains certain aspects of reality better than purely naturalistic accounts, regardless if it makes reliable predictions or not, then it should be taken seriously. Once again, I don't claim to know anything about ID theory or biology. However, from what I've heard, the modern formations of the teleological argument for the existence of God take a probabilistic approach (I believe it was Swinborne, who I admit I haven't read, along with others), that argue the existence of intelligent life is better explained through a design argument than pure naturalistic accounts.For intelligent design to become of much use, it would have to (stabilize and) make reliable predictions.
One of the assumptions that is made by methodological naturalism is that nothing "supernatural" will happen during the time in which an experiment is conducted. — Paulm12
However I also think if intelligent design explains certain aspects of reality better than purely naturalistic accounts, regardless if it makes reliable predictions or not, then it should be taken seriously. — Paulm12
But that is where the observer effect in physics has put a cat well and truly among the pidgeons, as it attributes to the act of observation a fundamental role in the experimental outcome — Wayfarer
naturalistic accounts for abiogenesis — Paulm12
That is similar to the much-vaunted 'principle of causal closure', which is that every event has a physical cause. — Wayfarer
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