Please define "analytic logic", so that we have a common understanding of your terminology.
Ok, why don't you stipulate what demarcates science from pseudo-science? Also show how analytic logic applies to the biological sciences, for example.mathmystic wrote:This is exactly what natural science (Phys/Chem/Bio - not Archaeology etc)has been striving against, particularly since the beginning of the 20th century with the formalization and use of analytic logic (as expressed in Boolean Algebra) and a large job has been throwing out the junk (or pseudo-science as it has been more politely called).August wrote:I think that "science" is an extremely broad term ... each with it's own unique characteristics and methodologies
Please show the difference between the two, and how it applies to natural science. What is "natural science"?Sorry, that is exactly what natural science is striving against. It's analytic logic now, not this weaker systemic logic.
For someone that claims to have read literature related to ID, you seem to be either quite ignorant, or intent on willfully misrepresenting what ID states to serve your own arguments. If you insist on building up strawmen to knock down, this conversation has no value.No, that's not what we are doing. It is ID that postulates "intelligent design", and thereby an"intelligent designer". You can't have one without the other.
Also, please show why it is neccessary to know the identity of the designer in order to detect design.
Again you misrepresent. In archeology, part of the study would be to distinguish between a rock and an arrowhead, for example. That is where the analogy ends.I have to take you back to the analogy that ID proponents use comparing ID with Archaeology. In Archaeology the designer(s) is assumed, and then researchers go looking for the evidence.
I have asked you before, why don't you lay out the logic? Preferably as a syllogism.Within an analytical logical system the identity of the designer is as important as any corollary or any axiom. You can't escape the implied conclusions in analytic logic - that is why it is such an immensely powerful tool.
Please use analytic logic to prove that analytic logic is true.Again, analytic logic does not allow you to stop or end anywhere. It actually uses set theory to formulate the next conclusion that is then open for testing.
Using your statement above, all natural sciences are ultimately reduced into nonsense, since you can never tie this line of reasoning back into the scientific method. You seem to imply that you can reach conclusions with absolute truth value through an inductive process.You can't pick and choose when to start and stop the logical process. That is why ID has no place amongst the natural sciences.
Of course you can pick when to start the logical process, otherwise you have no starting point.