Fair enough, but then it would be good if you could trust someone familiar with the distinctions. Schonborn, while he would be agreeable with much of ID, is in no way apart of ID.sandy_mcd wrote:This is getting into precise definitions and meanings of words and phrases and I am not comfortable enough to argue such subtleties.Kurieuo wrote: Just because "design" is mentioned, it does not mean ID is being refered to.
Perhaps I misunderstood the point Schönborn was trying to make.[/quote]sandy wrote:The statement which suggested ID to me was
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/07/opini ... [quote]the human intellect can readily and clearly discern purpose and design in the natural world, including the world of living things. ... Any system of thought that denies or seeks to explain away the overwhelming evidence for design in biology is ideology, not science.
I believe you have misunderstood, but that it is not you fault for many news articles have misrepresented the issue and appear to not know the difference between "design" as discussed within philosophical circles, and Intelligent Design (as advocated by the likes of the Discovery Institute). Nor do many appear to know distinctions between "neo-Darwinian" evolution, and more general theories of common descent. Then again, perhaps they do and they were simply being purposely misleading to generate more hype.
As I mentioned earlier in relation to this NYTimes article, Schonborn never at any point rejected evolution as incompatible with belief in God, nor did he reject evolutionary theories in general. Infact, he quite willingly says that "Evolution in the sense of common ancestry might be true." If this might be true, then assumably he is basing this possibility off the often accepted Darwinian form of evolution. Therefore he never rejects Darwinian evolution. The only thing Schonborn rejected as being impossible for Christians to affirm is the neo-Darwinian form which strictly leaves no space at all for God since it is "an unguided, unplanned process of random variation and natural selection."
How one can know it was all unplanned? Well I'm sure neo-Darwinists if we say it was planned, then that isn't science. But then by the same token if we assume that it isn't planned, that also doesn't belong in science. Why not leave the question open, and admit science doesn't provide us with the priviledge of knowing such a thing? Anyway, I'm beginning to rant and go off track.
I believe the way in which Schonborn has been portrayed as a foremost champion of the ID movement, for example within http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9589656/, is quite misleading. Sure, there much Schonborn would have in common with ID. But so what? You have a lot in common with ID also, as does Swinburne, as does Paul Davies, but this doesn't make them "champions of intelligent design." It is also worth mentioning the Discovery Institute would also never go as far as to say God is responsible for any design, since the area they wish to remain within is simply trying to detect patterns of intelligence, chance, and necessity, and for this one doesn't need to know who did it.sandy wrote:More persuasive to me was the involvement of the DI as mentioned in the NYT article http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/09/scien ... nd&emc=rss...One of the strongest advocates of teaching alternatives to evolution is the Discovery Institute in Seattle, which promotes the idea, termed intelligent design, that the variety and complexity of life on earth cannot be explained except through the intervention of a designer of some sort.
I had originally assumed from the involvement of the DI that the "design" referred to by Schönborn was of the DI variety. Rereading the last paragraph, I am no longer so sure. Maybe the DI was just interested in his opposition to atheistic evolution, but that is not his personal opinion alone but the position of the Catholic Church.
Most of the reaction was to Schonborn's comments regarding evolution, and as we have seen, he never once ruled out evolutoin. What he did rule out was neo-Darwinian evolution which makes the positive assertion that "an unguided, unplanned process of random variation and natural selection," and in so doing leaves no room at all for the personal God as advocated by Christians.
Kurieuo