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"If people think God is interesting, the
onus is on them to show that there is anything there to talk about.
Otherwise they should just shut up about it.” --
Richard Dawkins
I hesitate to take my time to answer anything
that comes out of Richard Dawkins’ mouth. First, he is such a high profile
person that probably nearly every intelligent rejoinder that can be made has
been, and several times over. Secondly, most of his statements—at least his
more famous ones—are of a sort that don’t bear refuting. Like the quote
above, they are mainly insults instead of reasoned arguments.
However, having recently seen the excellent
movie Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, I could not help but notice
a common theme amongst the various Darwinists, one that is epitomized by
this Dawkins quotation. Neo-Darwinists (NDs) insist that the burden of proof
is on Intelligent Design (ID) advocates to show "that there is anything to
talk about.” The implication is that if there actually were the evidence to
back ID up, then the open-minded Darwinians would be happy to pay attention.
Since there apparently isn’t anything forthcoming, though, they expect
people to "just shut up” about ID.
The issue here isn’t so much in what the NDs
say, but in what they don’t say. They lead their listeners to make certain
assumptions on implied grounds. So, while they give the appearance of the
essence of intellectual virtue, they are in fact stacking the proverbial
deck in a very unscientific way by creating artificial standards of evidence
for ID and then failing to subject their own theories to similar scrutiny.
The result is a drive-thru epistemology where science is defined primarily
by what NDs personally want to be true.
The first assumption NDs allow is that they
are appealing to objective reality, and that if ID is proven in that
reality, science will accept it. In fact, NDs see themselves as the final
arbiter of truth. Whatever convinces them must, by default, be "fact” and
until they are personally swayed, those with competing theories should just
"shut up.” Any divergent position is universally derided as "unscientific”
and "worthless”. In this context, labels like these actually mean nothing
more than "this doesn’t tickle my Neo-Darwinian fancy.” A prime example of
this appeared in Expelled, when Dawkins expressed a willingness to
accept evidence of cellular intelligent design if it came from aliens, but
not if it implied that God existed. While there is manifestly less proof to
support the idea of extra terrestrial life than a supernatural God, the
general concept at least fits in with Dawkins’s naturalistic biases, and so
he finds it acceptable. Evidence has nothing to do with it.
The second assumption is that NDs have a real
standard of evidence in mind and, if ID could meet it, they would allow ID
into the hallowed realm of science. Asking that ID provide proof of course
implies this, and the NDs’ apparent openness suggests that they will
actually give the evidence a fair hearing. Intentionally and notably absent
from most of these statements is any indication of how much or
what kind of data would be "sufficient” to convince them. The
straightforward answer is that for most NDs, no amount of proof could ever
be enough because their main objection to ID has nothing to do with reason,
logic, or facts. They are opposed to ID on emotional/worldview grounds; the
trappings of scientism are often nothing more than an emotional crutch: Vox
Day called Sam Harris’ book The End of Faith "a profoundly
non-scientific expression of hope wrapped up in an emotional plea.” In fact,
Dawkins’s willingness to admit that ID evidence did exist if it was not
attributed to God shows how far he is willing to go, so long as religion and
the supernatural are left out of the picture.
As C. S. Lewis pointed out in the beginning
of Miracles, before we can begin a discussion of whether a particular
miracle has occurred, we must settle the question of whether miracles
can occur. If we do not accept that a miracle is even possible, no
amount of evidence could ever convince us that any particular miraculous
event took place. NDs are in a similar boat. They can confidently assert
that they would be willing to admit ID was science if the proofs are there,
since their assumptions have set such an artificially high standard that no
amount of evidence for ID would ever be enough.
Taken together, these two points are
self-evidently wrongheaded, but are also illustrative.
The idea that I have to convince Dawkins or
Christopher Hutchens or any particular class of people of a premise before a
statement or idea magically becomes "scientific” is clearly erroneous.
Reality continues on whether or not I (or anyone else) choose to satiate
their particular prejudices, just as the earth kept revolving around the sun
while Galileo faced the wrath of the church. It is a testament to ND
arrogance, however, that they see themselves as the exclusive gate-keepers
of scientific objectivity. Since ND itself is part of the "definition” of
science, NDs can make what amount to arbitrary judgments, such as the ones
we see above, while simultaneously giving their own theory a break on sticky
points, as we’ll see below.
Regarding whether or not there could ever be
enough evidence behind ID to qualify it as legitimate science, we must
remember an aspect of the scientific method itself. In order for a question
to be genuinely interrogative (i.e. "Is there sufficient evidence to prove
ID as a viable hypothesis?”), it must be open-ended to some extent. In other
words, we must be able to answer it honestly. To simply presume the answer
ahead of time and then use this "answer” to evaluate the evidence is not
only counterproductive, it is intellectually dishonest. In this way, NDs
conveniently overlook various limitations in their own theory and
application: How does experimental science prove or disprove a specific
creation method for the universe, given that the laws that govern science
only came into existence after the initial creation moment? Why are they not
willing to allow that other intelligent people should be permitted to hold
to a position that critiques Neo-Darwinism from a profoundly different
perspective, when NDs can question anything they like? Where are the
millions of transitional fossils we’ve been told to expect for over a
century?
Whatever standard of evidence NDs apply to
their own theories they should also apply externally and consistently to
other competing propositions and to the evidence as a whole. Any criticisms
they level at other premises they should also apply to their own. In the
end, a "scientific theory” or "method” that is merely internally coherent is
of no more practical explanatory use than Star Trek’s "Heisenberg
Compensator” or "Warp Drive.” |