Redirected from Intelligent Design
The relationship between ID and creationism is not entirely clear, and may well depend on who is talking. (Beware: this article is, at this point, mostly certainly not consistent in its usage of the term ID.) Some people take ID and creationism to be synonyms.
Others argue that ID is a coherent concept with a separate existence from creationism. Some argue ID refers to the view that the various forms of life show signs of having been created, from which it must be deduced that there is an "intelligent designer". This is supposed to be in contrast to creationism, in which faith in God is a starting premise, from which the falsity of standard evolutionary theory can be deduced.
ID is sometimes said to differ with creationism as to the age of the Earth. Thus, for some people, calling yourself a supporter of ID is incompatible with taking the literal Biblical view that the Earth is only about 6,000 years old. Others who fly the ID banner, however, such as John Mark Reynolds and Paul Nelson, do take this literal position with regards to the Earth.
Similarly, ID is sometimes said to differ with creationism as to the importance of the fossil record. According to some, ID either ignores or is compatible with biologists' fossil-inspired estimates of when the various species of life appeared and disappeared. Again, however, some flying the ID banner are Biblical literalists, and do not agree.
Opponents of ID tend to dismiss ID's claim of differentiation from creationism, seeing it as a way of dressing up religious claims in scientific guise. Some opponents of ID say it serves primarily as a big tent under which to rally all sorts of creationists; the godfather of the ID movement, the UC Berkeley law professor Phillip Johnson (now emeritus), is quoted as saying that issues such as the age of the earth can be taken up once the common enemy of evolution has been done away with.
A key problem for opponents of ID is that ID does not explain where the "intelligent designer" comes from. These opponents say that instead of reducing the problem of evolution it has greatly expanded it and made it much more difficult, since now explanations have to cover a newly introduced supernatural entity while evolution does not need to.
|
Intelligent Design accepts much of evolutionary theory, but differs in one crucial aspect -- it insists that there is empirical evidence that an intelligent designer or designer has been at work in the history of life. ID proponents are typically avoid identifying the designer, but for most of them there is no serious doubt that it is the Judeo-Christian-Islamic concept of God.
ID accepts that fact that there has been microevolution, i.e., populations of species have changed and diverged over time. It may or may not accept that there is speciation, the creation of more than one species out of a single species. Some proponents of ID accept the fossil record as an accurate representation of the history of the evolution of species, and accept that analysis of the fossil record gives accurate and useful results; others do not.
It accepts that there is a process of natural selection, although it may insist that the results of this process must be limited. Once the variation has been caused due to deliberate acts of God, or the unnamed intelligent designer, the survival or extinction of a newly arisen species is believed to then be subject to natural selection, although further acts of God are not ruled out.
In the scientific view, genetic variations occur randomly, and environmental stress selects against those variations that are not as advantageous as others. In the Intelligent Design viewpoint, these random variations exist but are not the explanation for the appearance of new species. Instead, new species arise when God steps in and causes significant variation to occur. (Actually, this expresses what's usually called progressive creationism[?])
Adherents of Intelligent Design call the idea that God causes new species to come into being a viable scientific hypothesis (see scientific creationism). Nearly all scientists consider it pseudo-scientific [pseudoscientific?], on the grounds that it is an amalgam of false or unsupported claims within the realm of science and of philosophical or religious claims which are outside the realm of science.
To underscore the pseudo-scientific nature of ID, in the mid-1990s George W. Gilchrist[?] of the University of Washington looked through thousands of scientific journals searching for any articles on intelligent design or creation science -- he didn't find any. Other more recent surveys have also failed to find articles on these subjects in the primary scientific literature (not to mention that only a handful of these articles were even submitted).
Advocates of intelligent design argue that the biological evidence presents serious problems for macroevolution. For example, they claim that all the major types of animals appeared at the same time in the fossil record, with no evidence of common ancestry--a pattern they say is inconsistent with Darwin's theory of evolution. However, modern evolutionary biologists' concept of evolution goes beyond the gradual mechanism proposed by Darwin in the 19th century. Better evidence gathered since the time of Darwin has shown that evolution occurs at a steady Darwinian rate until a large environmental change occurs (such as an ice age, asteroid impact, or very large volcanic eruption). Evolution then occurs at a greatly accelerated rate. Those that adhere to the concept of intelligent design seem to ignore the modern concept of evolution, say many scientists.
They also argued that complex organs that cannot function without all their parts provide evidence for a cause having intelligence. Usually, this intelligence is attributed to God. This may be considered an outgrowth of the idea, held by some, that some biological developments are too complex to have come about without having been designed. This idea is particularly pressed by Michael Behe under the rubric irreducible complexity in his Darwin's Black Box (1996; see reference above). See also : argument from design.
Proponents of Intelligent Design point to complex biological structures such as the eye, birds' wings, the existence of mitochondria, etc., arguing that such structures could not possibly have developed due purely to random mutations, even with the aid of natural selection. Symbiotic relationships, such as plants who can only be pollinated by a specific species of insect, which in turn can only reproduce by using the plant, could not have arisen, they argue--a typical chicken and egg problem. It is argued that these kinds of biological features are by their very nature too interdependent to come into existence independently through a natural process and then become so intricately intertwined.
Intelligent design does not necessarily claim that living things came together suddenly in their present form through the efforts of a supernatural creator. William A. Dembski, a major ID writer, has claimed that intelligent design is not a doctrine of creation. Intelligent design merely concerns itself with features of natural objects that reliably signal the action of an intelligence, whatever that intelligence might be.
For some Intelligent Design arguments later a evolutionary explanation has been found, critics say.
For example, the development of mitochondria was once puzzling, but Lynn Margulis's theory of their evolution from endosymbiotic bacteria, once rejected even by biologists, has amassed enough evidence that it is now widely accepted.
Critics say that evolutionary development of such structures as eyes and wings has been simulated in computers. Studies of fig wasps have revealed how symbiotic species can evolve.
A particularly famous example is the "watch argument".
The apparent "miracle" of the human eye, along with other body parts and organs, has often been used as proof by both creationists and intelligent design proponents that a higher power must be responsible for creating such a complex organ. Scientists, however, have devised working hypotheses on how certain body parts and organs have evolved.
For example, many biological cells not associated with the senses respond to the presence of light. Most notable of this group are photosynthetic cells of algae and plants. Other very primitive organisms have very rudimentary photoreceptive cells that can only tell the difference between light and dark. These organisms use this primitive sense to orient themselves correctly toward light. Yet other organisms have clusters of these photoreceptive cells that can distinguish crude shapes. Increasing the complexity, number and arrangement of these cells will then yield rudimentary eyes that can recognize certain objects by shape and so on until an eye capable of seeing in color and three dimensions is produced (this has happened at least twice in evolution with the advent of the cephalopod eye and is currently under way with many other animal groups). Each of these steps in the development of a fully functioning eye has modern analogues in the animal kingdom, and each step need only develop through nothing more than natural selection: those animals with a better ability to sense their environment with photoreceptive cells will survive to produce more young than those that don't have this ability, and so on. There is no need for divine intervention of intelligent design, say scientists.
Richard Dawkins in particular has vigorously challenged ID arguments similar to Paley's. Furthermore, he points out that a hypothetical evolutionary path such as that given above for the eye need not even be correct; in order to refute the argument from design it need only be plausible, thus demonstrating that there are other ways in which such an organ could have come about. The title of Dawkins' book The Blind Watchmaker is a reference to Paley's example of the pocket watch.
Further, say scientists, a body part or organ that has a modern function does not necessarily have to had the same function in the past. Evolution works on chance and opportunity, they say, with gill bones of mouth-less fishes evolving into jaws, fish air bladders becoming vertebrate lungs, and fin support structures becoming fingers and toes.
Not all people who believe that God was involved in the design of the Universe also adhere to the specifics of the Intelligent Design belief as proposed by Creationists.
External links:
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|