Kevin's problem is that he's emotionally wedded to teleology -- he is a priori opposed to any explanation that doesn't appeal to "purpose".
Its comments like these that make me refer to atheists on this forum as generally boring and anti-philosophical.
Christ Almighty.
I was a philosophy major for most of college, dart. My degree ended up being in political theory (i.e., the branch of philosophy that deals with politics). I participated in philosophy clubs in my spare time, and talked to my roommates (who got degrees in philosophy) about little else. To say that I'm anti-philosophical is like saying that the Pope is anti-Catholic.
Perhaps by "philosophy" you mean "metaphysical studies", as in the bookstore section? If that's the case, then yes, I'm anti-philosophical, but that's hardly a put-down.
I suppose I could have interesting discussions on these matters with just about anyone I meet outside the forum, without the slightest hint of contempt. But you guys make it sound like some kind of intellectual deficiency to even ask such questions.
It's not an intellectual deficiency to ask such questions, but it
is an deficiency to refuse any other answer, as you continually do.
If science hasn't answered the question, then it shouldn't be a real question! Anyone who asks it must be an idiot. Good grief. Schmo once laughed at the notion that philosophy could provide us with any kinds of truths. Who else agrees with this?
Not me. But continue flailing, please.
I could easily respond by calling JSM's problem a blind devotion to a random universe and a dogmatic loyalty to atheistic assumptions.
Umm, no. Like I've repeatedly said before, if double-blind studies showed the efficacy of prayer, I'd be pretty convinced that there is a God that answers prayers.
He is a priori opposed to any explanation that appeals to purpose.
False. I'm just opposed to any "explanation" that is merely mumbo-jumbo masquerading as explanation. Insofar as we don't know the nature of the designer, that is what Intelligent Design
is. (This is the reason I accept teleology in anthropology and archaeology, and am wary of it in biology and cosmology.) Just as you can't explain the origin of the universe by invoking a magic walnut, you can't do it by invoking a "God" that has no other posited attributes. It's not an
explanation if the being invoked to do explanatory work is mysterious.
Like EAllusion has said, if we knew more about the purported designer's intent, then we could look for clues of its machinations. The problem is that IDers continually beg off of answering this question, except to mention phenomena (like the existence of humans) that can be explained much more succinctly by natural processes, thereby falling for the anthropic fallacy.
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Look, Kevin: your basic problem in the evolution debate is that you really don't understand what you're railing against. Your conception of evolution has apparently been almost wholly formed by misinformation from the likes of the Discovery Hackstitute. I, too, was an anti-evolutionist once upon a time, so I can sympathize. If my understanding of evolutionary processes were limited to yours, I'd probably come to similar conclusions about the need for a designer. But your ignorance of evolution aggravates everybody, including yourself (although you probably don't recognize this).
If you
really wanted to do a really good job of arguing against evolution, you'd be reading stuff like
Darwin's Dangerous Idea with an open mind and a charitable disposition. That way, you'd understand the arguments for evolution given by people who actually believe in it, instead of the risible caricature of it set up by its ideological opponents. I challenge and encourage you to do that, because it's in line with your own present aims of dismantling evolution.
Are you a serious scientific and philosophical iconoclast, Kevin? Or are you merely a brainwashed sentimentalist? Your ability to accurately portray evolution as it is currently understood by biologists and philosophers of biology will tell.