I apparently was not clear enough.Wall-dog wrote:Let me play devil's advocate for a minute and follow this line of thought.I think in the long run we're making a mistake by attempting to reintroduce religious thought in the realm of science rather than allowing it to be what it is.
What if science shows that there must be a god-like entity? Should we then as a society say, "Well, we know this to be a truth, but we can't teach it to our children because the Supreme Court has ruled that the freedom of religion prevents us from talking about such things in public schools."
Should we really use the Constitution as an excuse to ignore fundemental truths? Should we really teach evolution as fact in spite of the huge hurdles in front of it just because any other view calls for the need of intelligence?
I'm all for the seperation of church and state in things that are purely a matter of religion but to use it as a banner against legitimate theories and to use it to forward things we know to be untrue - well, that's just silly. And yet as a society we do that anyway...
I disagree with the Separation of Church and State in the manner in which it is applied currently. I do not believe the framers ever intended to separate religious thought and theistic philosophy from education. I believe the primary intent was to avoid the establishment of a State Church and the context of the framer's concern was to avoid favor of one particular Christian Denomination over another.
Nevertheless, the consitution was designed to be flexible and change and adjust with the needs of our society and country. I accept that the USA is not a per se Christian country and therefore the government and our education system should not use the education system and tax dollars to promote the establishment of one particular religion or line of philosophic thought over another.
In our education system, I think this line of thought has been stretched to near absurdity to avoid the acknoledgement of even the existence of religion or theistic philosophy and it's presence and implications in our society. Existence and implications can be and should be taught without official endorsement.
Intelligent design, in my humble opinion, is a very carefully designed approach, designed itself by Theist scientists and not so surprisingly at the fore-front, a Christan lawyer, to try to make religion and theism fit a scentific definition in order to provide a platform by which it must be introduced back into the schools. It is a very deliberate and practical attempt to force the courts to arrive at a favorable conclusion by using the very arguments of those who oppose religion and theistic philosophy in education back against them. As such, it is very clever and has a specific end in mind.
I happen to be a pretty staunch evangelical Christian who believes that God exists and that He in fact created this world and designed it by direct intervention and interaction within the natural order that he established when He so chose. I believe that this set of beliefs, the history of its existence and current influence in our society can be and should be taught and acknowledged in our public schools and it can be done without establishing a state sponsored religious entity. Other beliefs are present and can and should be referenced as well. They have not been as prevelent and influential to this point, and so their emphasis should reflect that in my opinion.
Mystic is not particularly being as kind about it as I would like, but his ultimate point is correct. Science is not the vehicle to "prove" intelligent design. I believe intelligent design is inferred. However, the presence and influence of the supernatural by definition cannot be proved by using the scientific method. Inference is not the realm of science. Inference can influence future research and exploration, but inference can never dictate ultimate conclusions.
True science deals only with that which is material and as such is measurable, observable, repeatable etc. A key element to the Sceinctific Method is that any hypothesis or theory must be falsifiable. In other words, a hypothesis, or theory must be defined in such a way that it can conceivably be proven wrong. Intelligent design fails that test. I agree with those who oppose Intelligent Design being introduced as Science into our schools even while I disagree with their goals.
I believe by attempting to introduce intelligent design into the schools as pure science we are effectively conceding and accepting that those who have stretched separation of Church and State to the level of near absurdity have won. Therefore we are adopting their methods and weapons to attempt to beat them back. By doing so we are conceding too much. We're using the ends to justify accepting their means.
I would love to see Intelligent Design taught in the public schools in the proper manner, as a philosophy, not pure science. Scientific discovery can impact philosophy. Look at the crop of philosophy that evolution spawned. Materialism, Communism, Nihlism, etc.
Does that help to clear up what I'm saying?
Science "cannot" and "never will" prove that there is a God-Like entity. All science could theohetically do is establish that there is a point of irreducable complexity, beyond which there has been no satisfactory, naturalistic explanation "yet." ID ultimately is the old "God of the Gaps" argument dressed in new clothes. The God of the Gaps argument is ultimately damaging to our cause because when we take a stand that Science can go no further in its explanation of this world and God is the ultimate solution, then when Science does go further we have set the rules by which others can then claim that God doesn't exist. We've planted the seeds of our own failure. We're foolish to do so.
I happen to personally believe that there is a point of irreducible complexity beyond which it is reasonable to leap to the existence of God. I recognize however that once I do that, I am no longer in the realm of pure science. I also recognize that I don't know what that point is.
Hope that clears it up at least as far as what I'm saying. I'm fine if you don't agree with it. I'm still learning and progressing in my thinking and faith.