freediver wrote on Apr 12
th, 2007 at 1:52am:
however once you get to then end, it becomes clear it is nothing more than trying to bring faith back into an area of scientific study
How so?
Here:
Quote:Q: Will your theory be more popular than evolution?
No. People want science to provide an alternative to faith based religions. Evolution explains our current observations in a way that also explains the origins of life. My theory explains current observations in a way that doesn't explain the origins of life.
Here:
Quote:Most of the famous scientists whose equations and constants we use in physics and chemistry were devout Christians, and sought to know God through his works. The Bible describes God's creation as being both real, and good - therefor worth studying. The idea of consistent 'natural laws' were first derived from the Bible rather than from nature and nature was studied with the expectation of finding natural laws. Finally, man was created in the image of God, so you would expect us to be able to understand God's creation - perhaps this is why maths (an entirely human construction) is so powerful in describing the natural world.
and here:
Quote:All people tend to come up with a creator or a creation story, even if they haven't been exposed to an 'established' religion. They show a lot of faith in these stories. Is evolution turning into one of these?
Quote:It is you that is making it into a question of faith.
How so?
Because the point of evolution is to propose a scientific model for the way in which life spontaneously came about and evolved into what we have today. You are simply saying: "science shouldn't do this, this is the realm of religion", and yet science is and has done exactly this, while the origin of life may be a question of faith for you, evolution is a scientific explanation of it. It seems to me freediver that you have more problem with the idea that there is a scientific model for the origin of life and you want science to butt out of this question.
Quote:why is it that trying to find a scientific model that explains the development of life from rudimentary elements suddenly NOT a scientific question?
Because it cannot be answered empirically. It is a question of of history.
Neither could relativity until very recently, and many predictions made by Einstien are still yet to be tested empirically, neither could QM be tested empirically until recently and again only in limited capacity, did that mean these were not scientific theories until they were able to be tested? Absolutely not.
Some quotes from Jared Diamond might help to clear things up:
Quote:Science is often misrepresented as "the body of knowledge acquired by performing replicated controlled experiments in the laboratory." Actually, science is something much broader: the acquisition of reliable knowledge about the world...
...A frequent solution is to apply what is termed the "comparative method" or the "natural experiment" - i.e., to compare natural situations differing with respect to the variable of interest.
So you see empirical experiment is not the be all and end all of science, careful observation and consideration are often sufficient in the development of scientific models, especially ones where direct experiment is simply not possible.
Evolution is an attempt to reconcile the idea of a random spontaneous emergence of life with scientific understanding, the model may be imperfect but it has proved so useful in so many areas of biology that it has never been dismissed by true scientists, only altered and improved as all complex scientific models should be.
Quote:Only faith in a divine soul would lead you to the conclusion that life cannot have arisen randomly, and that is a question that scientists are not trying to answer.
I agree that it isn't a sicentific question.
And never once has a proponent of evolution attempted to answer such a question, you on the other hand are using the idea that life must involve a soul and life could not have arisen spontaneously as a basis to attack evolution as though it were not science. Evolution answers a purely scientific question: how could life have arisen without resorting to faith in divine intervention?
Quote:is not as perfect and good as you try to make out in your article
I am not trying to make it out to be perfect or good. The definition is based on what makes science science. Just because scientists themselves contribute to, and borrow from other fields such as maths, history, engineering, law enforcement etc is no reason to make science an all encompassing term.
Maths is science, history is science, engineering is applied science, law enforcement is more or less applied science (at least concerned with).
Science IS an all encompassing term, it simply means the study of naturally observed phenomena. You are the one trying to change the definition of science here simply so that you can show evolution does not fit your idea of what science is. Your argument is a straw man, you invent your own definition of science that conveniently does not fit in with evolutionary theory, then attack evolution on the basis that it does not fit the straw man you are calling science.