Intelligent design
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Intelligent design (ID) (ID) encompasses a number of theories arguing that life shows signs of being created by an "Intelligent Designer" rather than through the process of evolution by means of natural selection. Intelligent design makes no claim as to the identity of the designer, however. As such, Intelligent Design arguments support belief in the creation of life on Earth by God, by some other intelligent agent that is not God, or by panspermia, the idea that life originated from organic molecules in space.
Intelligent design remains a fringe movement among the mainstream scientific community, and the vast majority of scientists consider it to be pseudoscience, and a masked attempt to bring religion back into scientific discourse.
Intelligent design arguments
Arguments for intelligent design can be broadly split into three categories:
- Asserting that the theories of naturalistic evolution and naturalistic abiogenesis areimprobable or impossible;
- Asserting that irreducible complexity gives positive evidence of an intelligent designer;
- Asserting that the mainstream scientific community is being intellectually dishonest in presenting evolution as fact when it is questionable, and discounting a multitude of evidences for intelligent design.
Criticism by the mainstreams scientific community
The mainstream scientific community typically criticizes intelligent design as follows:
- Asserting that Intelligent Design is pseudoscience because it violates the principles of scientific philosophy of naturalism and falsifiability.
- Asserting that intelligent design is a "wedge" to redefine scientific philosophy and in particular destroy evolutionary biology, after which creationism would become the prevailing view.
- Asserting that many of ID's arguments are deliberately deceitful.
The intelligent design movement
Advocates of ID believe there is empirical evidence that an "intelligent designer" (or designers) has been at work in the history of life, and many do not think that macroevolution of life, particularly the evolution of humans, is credible. Members of the "intelligent design movement" are typically theists (Christians, Jews, or members of other faiths that believe in a powerful deity) though ID itself does not specify the identity of the designer.
The intelligent design movement is mostly based in the United States, and is centered around part of a conservative Christian thinktank, the Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture (CSC), formerly known as the Center for Renewal of Science and Culture. The CSC was founded in 1996 and has a number of fellows. The program director is Stephen C Meyer, Associated Director is John G West. The father of the movement however and perhaps the most important is Phillip E. Johnson. As of 2004, the senior fellows are:
- Michael J. Behe
- David Berlinski
- Paul Chien
- William A. Dembski
- David DeWolf
- Guillermo Gonzalez
- Michael Newton Keas
- Nancy Pearcey
- Jay W. Richards
- Mark Ryland
- Wesley J. Smith
- Jonathan Wells
- Benjamin Wiker
- Jonathan Witt
ID and Creationism
ID is similar to Creationism in that it asserts that the life was created, rather than developing purely naturalistically. It is different from creationism, however, in that while Creationists assert that God created life as described in the Biblical book of Genesis, ID makes no explicitly religious claims, relying simply on evidence that life was created by an "Intelligent Designer," which could be the God of any religion or no religion, or some other intelligent being that is not God.
The wedge
In their effort to gain entrance into mainstream scientific discourse, some advocates of intelligent design have devised the "Wedge strategy." Evolutionary theory is analogised as a log, and ID as a wedge. The wedge may be put into cracks into the log (perceived discrepancies within evolutionary theory) and after some hammering, the log will shatter due to its inherent weaknesses. Because advocates of intelligent design believe that the evidence for intelligent design of one form of another is overwhelming, they believe that the movement should initially focus on advocating more clear-cut issues, such as irreducible complexity, rather than on more questionable issues, such as Noah's flood and the age of the Earth. The godfather of the ID movement, University of California, Berkeley law professor Phillip E. Johnson (now emeritus), is quoted as saying that issues such as the age of the Earth can be taken up once the common enemy of evolution has been done away with. Opponents of ID say that this shows is that ID is a tactical device.
The Wedge Strategy document was a document produced in 1998 by the Center for Renewal of Science and Culture but later leaked 1999 and published on the Internet. [1]. It summarised its goals as:
- Governing Goals
- To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and political legacies.
- To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are created by God.
- Five-Year Goals
- To see intelligent design theory as an accepted alternative in the sciences and scientific research being done from the perspective of design theory.
- To see the beginning of the influence of design theory in spheres other than natural science.
- To see major new debates in education, life issues, legal and personal responsibility pushed to the front of the national agenda.
- Twenty Year Goals
- To see intelligent design theory as the dominant perspective in science.
- To see design theory application in specific fields, including molecular biology, biochemistry, paleontology, physics and cosmology in the natural sciences, psychology, ethics, politics, theology and philosophy in the humanities; to see its innuence in the fine arts.
- To see design theory permeate our religious, cultural, moral and political life.
Intelligent design theory
At the heart of intelligent design lies the belief that the universe in general and life in particular show signs of having been designed by an intelligent agent. Examples of intelligent design theories include:
- Irreducible complexity. Irreducible complexity is defined as "a single system which is composed of several interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, and where the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning" (Michael Behe, Molecular Machines: Experimental Support for the Design Inference). Proponents argue that many aspects of life are composed of an enormous number of interdependent parts, which could not function alone, such as the eye, sexual reproduction, the four chambered heart, cilia, and mammary glands. They note that naturalistic evolution holds that life evolves new characteristics one mutation at a time. They conclude that naturalistic evolution fails to explain instances of irreducible complexity, because irreducibly complex systems could not have evolved gradually, but, in order to function, must have been created at once, as a single system, by an intelligent designer.
- specified complexity (aka no free lunch algorithms)
Perceived problems in evolutionary theory
The creationist movement in general perceives several problems with evolutionary theory. The ID movement often accepts various aspects of evolutionary theory, for example common descent and microevolution that other creationist groups disagree with. However, problems perceived by the intelligent design movement include:
In all cases, the scientific community rejects such problems.
Rejection by the scientific community
Opponents of ID, who include the overwhelming majority of the scientific community, claim that this argument intelligent design has no standing as a scientific hypothesis, i.e. it is considered pseudoscience. There are metaphysical objections, and a lack of scientific discourse.
In the United States, the National Center for Science Education seeks to fight what it calls antievolutionism, and various organisations such as the American Association for the Advancement of Science have spoken out against intelligent design.
Some ID proponents claim this is due to a global conspiracy, career requirements, etc. In response, opponents can point out that tenured professors are pretty safe, and anyone presenting convincing evidence of design would be lavishly rewarded and published in the popular press.
Metaphysical arguments
The scientific community argues that ID violates scientific philosophy. ID does not present falsifiable hypotheses, and violates the principle of naturalism. (See methodological naturalism) They also point to examples of seemingly poor design within biology. The ID movement in the first place however, say that they wish to redefine scientific philosophy and remove its materialism.
The identity of the "intelligent designer" cannot be inferred; it is assumed to be a monotheistic god. Other problems with the argument from design.
Scientific journals
To underscore the pseudo-scientific nature of ID, in the mid-1990s George W. Gilchrist of the University of Washington looked through thousands of scientific journals searching for any articles on intelligent design or creation science—he didn't find any. Other more recent surveys have also failed to find articles on these subjects in the primary scientific literature (not to mention that only a handful of these articles were even submitted).
To date, intelligent design has been able to publish one single peer-reviewed article in a scientific journal, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. The author is Stephen C. Meyer, Program Director of the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, the major organization promoting ID. This article is not available on-line from this journal, but a copy is on the Discovery Institute site:
A review of it is available on the Panda's Thumb website:
The paper has subsequently been disowned by the journal, which has stated that it did not go through the journal's approved peer review process. The journal's statement explains that the Meyer paper does not meet the scientific standards of the journal.
In contrast, many articles have been published in highly-ranked journals which specifically deny the claims of ID (for example, Lenski et al. 2003 The evolutionary origin of complex features. Nature 423:139-44.)
Biological complexity
Since the ID viewpoint does not prescribe the identity of the designer nor the mechanism by which the design was instantiated, ID is potentially compatible with a large number of different philosophies. The following views are all supportable within the narrow meaning of ID as an identifier of a past design action:
- ID only applies to life as investigated to date, on Earth, and is not an indication that life cannot originate through abiogenesis. This allows ID as a component of hypotheses that life on Earth was introduced by aliens, or as a result of panspermia.
- ID states that there has not been sufficient time for evolution to produce the complexity of life as observed even within the timespan available since the Big Bang, and thus the only available mechanism for the creation of life is one that is supernatural.
- ID states that the present knowledge of physics at the quantum level still allows that there are realms outside the well investigated space/time dimensions such that all natural explanations are not excluded.
Similarly, the observation of signs of design does not restrict the point of intervention, and the following possibilities exist:
- de novo creation of life
- intervention in existing organisms to introduce observed complexity
- on-going or intermittent intervention.
Further, there is no restriction on the number of designers responsible for observed life, so the number and character of intelligent design scenarios is potentially large.
Intelligent design in public education
Main article: Creation and evolution in public education
The legal status of intelligent design and evolution in public education has been the subject of a great deal of debate and litigation over the course of the past 80 years in America. By the establishment clause of the Constitution's first amendment, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Under current constitutional law, states may not pass laws which ban the teaching of evolution, or require the teaching of creation whenever evolution is taught. Most recently, the Supreme Court has held in their ruling of Edwards_v._Aguillard that a variety of theories of origins may be taught in public schools, as long as they are taught with the secular intent of enhancing a scientific education, and not motivated by religious conviction or agenda.
Evolutionary vs. ID views
According to the theory of evolution, genetic variations occur randomly, and environmental stress selects against those variations that are not as advantageous as others. From the intelligent design viewpoint, these random variations exist but are not the explanation for the appearance of new "kinds". The definition of a "kind" is vague, usually something like a genus rather than a species. New kinds arise when the designer steps in and causes significant variation to occur. Actually, ID is not closely tied to "kinds", but to complex changes whenever they occur.
Adherents of intelligent design call the idea that God causes new species to come into being a viable scientific hypothesis (see scientific creationism). Nearly all scientists consider it pseudo-scientific, on the grounds that it is an amalgam of false or unsupported claims within the realm of science, and of philosophical or religious claims outside the realm of science. (See methodological naturalism for a discussion of supernatural explanations in science.)
To underscore the pseudo-scientific nature of ID, in the mid-1990s George W. Gilchrist of the University of Washington looked through thousands of scientific journals searching for any articles on intelligent design or creation science—he didn't find any. Other more recent surveys have also failed to find articles on these subjects in the primary scientific literature (not to mention that only a handful of these articles were even submitted). Some ID proponents claim this is due to a global conspiracy, career requirements, etc. In response, opponents can point out that tenured professors are pretty safe, and anyone presenting convincing evidence of design would be lavishly rewarded and published in the popular press. In contrast, many articles have been published in highly-ranked journals which specifically deny the claims of ID (for example, Lenski et al. 2003 The evolutionary origin of complex features. Nature 423:139-44.)
Advocates of intelligent design argue that the biological evidence presents serious problems for macroevolution. For example, they claim that all the major types of animals appeared at the same time in the fossil record with no evidence of common ancestry (a claim that is not supported by subject experts)—a pattern they say is inconsistent with Darwin's theory of evolution. Modern evolutionary biologists' concept of evolution goes beyond the gradualism proposed by Darwin in the nineteenth century. Better evidence gathered since the time of Darwin has shown that evolution occurs at a steady Darwinian rate until a large environmental change occurs (such as an ice age, asteroid impact, or very large volcanic eruption). Evolution then occurs at a greatly accelerated rate. Those who adhere to the concept of intelligent design seem to ignore the modern concept of evolution, say many scientists.
They also argue that complex organs that cannot function without all their parts provide evidence for a cause having intelligence. Usually, this intelligence is attributed to God. This is one aspect of the idea that some biological developments are too complex to have come about without having been designed. This idea is particularly pressed by Michael Behe under the rubric irreducible complexity in his Darwin's Black Box (1996; see reference above). See also: argument from design and especially argument by lack of imagination. This is also called a "God in the gaps" argument. All of Behe's examples have been explained without the need for design (for example, [2]).
Proponents of intelligent design point to complex biological structures such as the eye, birds' wings, the existence of mitochondria, bacterial flagella, etc., arguing that such structures could not possibly have developed due purely to random mutations, even with the aid of natural selection. Symbiotic relationships, such as plants which can only be pollinated by a specific species of insect, which in turn can only reproduce by using the plant, could not have arisen, they argue—a typical chicken and egg problem. It is argued that these kinds of biological features are by their very nature too interdependent to come into existence independently through a natural process and then become so intricately intertwined. Opponents say these examples have been adequately explained.
The eye argument
Many early creationists cited the human eye as their prime example of this principle; "What use is half an eye?", they asked. Evolutionists would provide a detailed explanation for this and would state that creationists were simply falling into the logical fallacy called lack of imagination. A modern explanation for the evolution of the eye is given here.
The apparent "miracle" of the human eye, along with other body parts and organs, has often been used as proof by both creationists and intelligent design proponents that a higher power must be responsible for creating such a complex organ. Scientists, however, have devised working hypotheses on how certain body parts and organs have evolved.
For example, many biological cells not associated with the senses respond to the presence of light. Most notable of this group are photosynthetic proteins of algae and photosynthetic cells of plants. Other very primitive organisms, such as sponges, have very rudimentary photoreceptive cells that can only tell the difference between light and dark. These organisms use this primitive sense to orient themselves correctly toward light. In other words, much less than half an eye is actually quite useful. Yet other organisms have clusters of these photoreceptive cells that can distinguish crude shapes. Increasing the complexity, number, and arrangement of these cells will then yield rudimentary eyes that can recognize certain objects by shape and so on until an eye capable of seeing in color and three dimensions is produced (this has happened at least twice in evolution with the advent of the cephalopod eye and is currently under way with many other animal groups). Each of these steps in the development of a fully functioning eye has modern analogues in the animal kingdom, and each step need only develop through nothing more than natural selection: those animals with a better ability to sense their environment with photoreceptive cells will survive to produce more young than those that don't have this ability, and so on. Scientists thus conclude there is no need for divine intervention of intelligent design.
Richard Dawkins in particular has vigorously challenged ID arguments similar to Paley's. Furthermore, he points out that a hypothetical evolutionary path such as that given above for the eye need not even be correct; in order to refute the argument from design it need only be plausible, thus demonstrating that there are other ways in which such an organ could have come about. The title of Dawkins' book The Blind Watchmaker is a reference to Paley's example of the pocket watch. Dawkins's book, River out of Eden (1995) gives an example of a computer simulation where multiple independent organisms all showed a steady progression from a light-sensitive spot to a complex eye with a lens focus.
Additional arguments
Further, say scientists, a body part or organ that has a modern function did not necessarily have the same function in the past. Evolution works on chance and opportunity, with gill bones of mouth-less fishes evolving into jaws, fish air bladders becoming vertebrate lungs, and fin support structures becoming fingers and toes. Scientists have also argued that arguments like the watch argument actually damage the case for the ID theory. Specifically, some of them claim that life is often "poorly designed" on the macroscopic, cellular, and genetic levels. Others just say that we simply don't have enough knowledge about the processes in living systems to draw this type of conclusion.
Related examples are given under the topic Irreducible complexity.
Broader view of "intelligent design"
Some people use the term "intelligent design" in a broader sense than that given in intelligent design theory. It can refer simply to the belief that God designed the universe, without any specific claim as to how or when he did so. Many people consider this belief entirely compatible with standard Darwinian evolution, with no divine intervention—life could be produced by a purely natural process, evolution, designed by God. God might merely have written the laws of physics, or chosen the fundamental constants, and left the universe to run like clockwork afterwards. This would be a form of deism. A more theologically robust view is theistic evolution (see e.g., Kenneth R. Miller's Finding Darwin's God cited above), which is too nuanced to explain here. Not all people who believe God was involved in the design of the Universe also adhere to the specifics of the intelligent design belief, as proposed by creationists.
Public discourse
Intelligent design has lately been a controversial subject, particularly in American schools. After years of judicial rejection of creationist teaching—on the grounds that creationism is a religious theory, not a scientific theory—many creationists have begun to promote intelligent design as a non-religious, scientifically acceptable alternative to the theory of Evolution. However, this attempt has met with strong opposition from some theologians. In order to be non-religious, one must argue that the intelligent being who designed the universe is not necessarily the same as the religious God. This view has been criticized as allowing for the existence of a demiurge and for being perilously close to gnosticism, which is considered heretical by most Christian groups.
See also
Further reading
Pro-ID
- Michael J. Behe. Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, New York: Free Press, 1996. ISBN 0684834936. Argues that several exquisite biochemical mechanisms could not have arisen by a sequence of random mutations and selection.
- Michael J. Behe, William A. Dembski, Stephen C. Meyer. Science and Evidence for Design in the Universe (Proceedings of the Wethersfield Institute), Ignatius Press 2000, ISBN 0898708095
- William A. Dembski. Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Science & Theology, InterVarsity Press 1999. ISBN 0830815813
- William A. Dembski, James M. Kushiner. Signs of Intelligence: Understanding Intelligent Design, Brazos Press, 2001, ISBN 1587430045
- William A. Dembski, John Wilson. Uncommon Dissent: Intellectuals Who Find Darwinism Unconvincing, ISI Press, 2004. ISBN 1932236317
- William A. Dembski, Charles W. Colson. The Design Revolution: Answering the Toughest Questions About Intelligent Design. Inter Varsity Press. 2004, ISBN 0830823751. This Charles W. Colson is the born-again Watergate convict.
- Phillip E. Johnson. Darwin on Trial, Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway, 1991.
- Phillip E. Johnson. Defeating Darwinism by opening minds, Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1997.
- Phillip E. Johnson. Evolution as dogma: the establishment of naturalism, Dallas, Tex.: Haughton Pub. Co., 1990
- William Paley. Natural Theology; or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity , London: 12th edition, 1809. Online in full.
- Geoffrey Simmons, William Dembski. What Darwin Didn't Know, Harvest House Publishers, 2004, ISBN 0736913130
- Thomas Woodward. Doubts About Darwin: A History of Intelligent Design, Baker Books, 1993, ISBN 0801064430
Anti-ID
- Barbara Carroll Forrest, Paul R. Gross (2003) Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design ISBN 0195157427
- Ernst Mayr: One Long Argument: Charles Darwin and the Genesis of Modern Evolutionary Thought, Harvard University Press 1993. Explanation of the evidence behind the mainstream evolutionary theory.
- Kenneth R. Miller: Finding Darwin's God, HarperCollins 1999. A cell biologist (and devout Christian) pokes holes in intelligent design theory (and advocates scientific creationism)
- Robert T. Pennock: Tower of Babel: The Evidence against the New Creationism, MIT Press 1999. A philosopher pokes holes in intelligent design theory.
- Intelligent Design Creationism and its Critics, ed. Robert T. Pennock, MIT Press 2002. A comprehensive anthology.
- Matt Young, Taner Edis Why Intelligent Design Fails: A Scientific Critique of the New Creationism ISBN 081353433X
External links
Pro-ID
- Intelligent Design network, inc., http://www.intelligentdesignnetwork.org/
- Intelligent Design FAQ (for ID), http://www.arn.org/id_faq.htm
- Intelligent Design Undergraduate Research Center, ID/evolution student community, http://www.idurc.org
- Discovery Institute http://www.discovery.org
- Center for Science and Culture http://www.discovery.org/csc/
- CreationWiki, http://www.nwcreation.net/
Anti-ID
- Talk Origins Archive, http://www.talkorigins.org
- Talk Design Archive, http://www.talkdesign.org
- Talk Reason, http://www.talkreason.org
- The Pandas Thumb http://www.pandasthumb.org/
- EvoWiki, http://www.evowiki.org
- Resolution disparaging ID and ID politics, by the board of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2002/1106id2.shtml
- National Center for Science Education resources in ID, http://www.ncseweb.org/article.asp
- Entry about Intelligent Design in "The Skeptic's Dictionary" by Robert Todd Carroll, http://www.skepdic.com/intelligentdesign.html
Young-Earth creationist comment on ID
Neutral
- Entry about Intelligent Design in "The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy" by Kenneth Einar Himma, http://www.iep.utm.edu/d/design.htm