The Talk.Origins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy
Index to Creationist Claims,
edited by Mark Isaak, Copyright © 2004
Claim CI002:
Intelligent design has explanatory power, especially given Dembski's
"explanatory filter." It accounts for a wide range of biological facts.
This makes it scientific.
Source:
Response:
- Merely accounting for facts does not make a theory scientific. Saying
"it's magic" can account for any fact anywhere but is as far from
science as you can get. A theory has explanatory power if facts can be
deduced from it. No facts have ever been deduced from ID theory. The
theory is equivalent to saying, "it's magic."
- Dembski's explanatory filter requires the
examination of an
infinite number of other hypotheses -- even unknown ones -- to accept
the design hypothesis. Thus it is impossible to apply. Intelligent
design remains untestable and impossible to use in practice.
Dembski himself has never rigorously applied his filter (Elsberry 2002).
- "Intelligent" and "design" remain effectively undefined. A theory
cannot have explanatory power if it is uncertain what the theory says
in the first place.
References:
Further Reading:
Pennock, Robert T., 1999.
Tower of Babel: The Evidence against the
New Creationism. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.
created 2003年5月7日, modified 2004年5月5日