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Let me try to hammer this down once and for all. Before I start, let me give you a little of my background: I've got a B.S. and M.S. in biology, and have taken two years of courses in genetics at the PhD level. This includes an evolution class taught by John Avise, one of the first scientists to apply molecular biology techniques to population genetics and a preeminent member of the National Academy of Sciences. Additionally, I've taken a PhD level philosophy of science course, where I read original writings by Karl Popper and Imre Lakatos, as well as Thomas Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions". In that class, I wrote a paper on creationism/ID that I will be presenting at a conference in the next academic year. In researching that paper, I read Michael Behe's "Darwin's Black Box" as well as Henry Morris' "Scientific Creationism" and Phillip Johnson's "Darwin on Trial." In other words, I'm extraordinarily well-informed and feel that I can speak as an authority. I'm also a liberal Christian; therefore, I may not be accused of having an anti-religious bias.
Whether you look at Popper, Kuhn, or Lakatos, ID is not science. Very briefly, it's not falsifiable, it falls far outside any research paradigm used in science, and it has no legitimate protective belt for its hard core. Any of you who have read Popper, Kuhn, or Lakatos will recognize these terms. ID does not hold up as science from a philosophy of science viewpoint, unless you're Feyerabend, and he advocates treating voodoo as science. Literally.
ID is not a theory. A theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world; in other words, an organized system of accepted knowledge that applies in a variety of circumstances to explain a specific set of phenomena. Theories can incorporate facts and laws and tested hypotheses. ID incorporates NO facts. NO laws. NO tested hypotheses. It is NOT well-substantiated. Its primary proponent, Michael Behe, has put forth several examples of his main tenet of "irreducible complexity." ALL of his examples have been effortlessly rebutted by evolutionary biologists.
The scientific community does not regard ID as science. Not a single ID paper has ever been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. Not ONE. There's no grand cabal of scientists conspiring to hold down the truth; in fact, there's not a single scientist who wouldn't leap at the chance to topple a major theory like evolution simply because it would put his/her name in the history books and in every single science textbook. Doing landmark research and becoming a household word is currency in the scientific world, and toppling evolution would give a scientist the equivalent of Bill Gates' fortune in that currency. Imagine having your name established beside Einstein or Copernicus or Watson/Crick. Any scientist would go wild at the prospect.
As for teaching ID in science classrooms? Let me address a couple of the arguments "for" that I saw here:
I see no reason why an alternative, even a non scientific alternative, can't be provided alongside evolution.
I'll give you the reason. THERE IS NO SCIENTIFIC ALTERNATIVE TO EVOLUTION. Hence, any given alternatives aren't science. Teaching them in a science classroom is intellectual dishonesty.
The Supreme Court should not, and I don't believe has the power to, ban the teaching of ID in public schools.
OK. Let me lay this out for you.
1. Intelligent design requires a designer. 2. That designer is necessarily a creator. 3. That creator is some sort of omnipotent/omniscient being (and don't give me aliens; there's not a single ID proponent who can answer "how did the aliens come to be" and more iterations of same without retreating to an original omnipotent/omniscient alien creator - otherwise they have to think that perhaps the very first aliens evolved... and that's the ball game) 4. An omnipotent/omniscient being does not exist outside of religion and/or Star Trek's "Q". 5. Unless you're telling the kids that "Q" created the universe, then recognizing this omnipotent/omniscient being is teaching a religion, or aspect of a religion. 6. Mandating the teaching of a religion or an aspect of a religion as fact in public schools is making a law respecting an establishment of religion. 7. First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. 8. A law violating any Constitutional amendment falls under the purview of the Supreme Court, who has not only the right but the obligation to abolish that law.
So why not teach ID in science classrooms?
1. It's not science. 2. Teaching ID would be intellectually dishonest, therefore ethically bankrupt. 3. It's unconstitutional.
I hope that's clear enough. No insults, just explanation. :-)
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