• Re: Did Dawkins really claim that god-did-it is a scientific hypothesis

    From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to RonO on Fri May 30 11:12:17 2025
    On 30/05/2025 00:54, RonO wrote:
    https://evolutionnews.org/2025/05/dawkins-intelligent-design-is-a- scientific-hypothesis/

    The ID perps are claiming that Dawkins claimed that intelligent design
    is a scientific hypothesis.

    QUOTE:
    In 2024 in New York, Dawkins participated in a moving public dialogue
    with former New Atheist Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who is also a former Muslim.
    She had not long before announced her conversion to Christianity from
    atheism for what she describes as “very subjective” reasons. It was in response to a “personal crisis”: “I lived for about a decade with intense depression and anxiety and self-loathing. I hit rock bottom. I
    went to a place where I actually didn’t want to live anymore but wasn’t brave enough to take my own life.” Faith rather than suicide was her way out of the crisis.

    Dawkins answered kindly that belief in a designer is more than a mere subjective response: “You appear to be a theist,” he told her. “You appear to believe in some kind of higher power. Now, I think that the hypothesis of theism is the most exciting scientific hypothesis you
    could possibly hold.” Hold that thought in your mind.
    END QUOTE:

    Did this really happen?

    Ron Okimoto


    It looks like another bait and switch. Take Dawkins' acceptance of God
    as a potential scientific hypothesis, and drag in the anti-evolutionary
    baggage of the Intelligent Design movement. (Fallacy of equivocation.)

    --
    alias Ernest Major

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  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to Martin Harran on Fri May 30 11:08:51 2025
    On 30/05/2025 09:47, Martin Harran wrote:
    On Fri, 30 May 2025 08:08:47 +0000, j.nobel.daggett@gmail.com
    (LDagget) wrote:

    On Fri, 30 May 2025 4:07:46 +0000, erik simpson wrote:

    On 5/29/25 4:54 PM, RonO wrote:
    Dawkins answered kindly that belief in a designer is more than a mere
    subjective response: "You appear to be a theist," he told her. "You
    appear to believe in some kind of higher power. Now, I think that the
    hypothesis of theism is the most exciting scientific hypothesis you
    could possibly hold." Hold that thought in your mind.
    Struggling through his wikipedia entry, it seems that Dawkins indeed
    does support the notion that as a scientific hypothesis, God is
    legitimate. A fair number of physicists would agree. Religious
    superstructures such as the Biblical miracles, visions, etc. don't count >>> as hypotheses.

    Seems to me that the proper perspective is that just about anything
    could be a scientific hypothesis if the terms involved were
    defined with sufficient precision, and the asserted hypothesis
    was in some sense amenable to being objectively tested.

    That's a bit sneaky because defining __god__ has been historically
    problematic. Most definitions put limits on the thing being
    defined, some sense of where it begins and ends, how to distinguish
    what it is and isn't. This seems somehow connected with the odd
    categories like omnipresent and omnipotent that some would attempt
    to use. It has an air of resisting a definition but for a
    hypothesis to be usefully considered scientific that doesn't work.

    If asked to test the "god did it" hypothesis, it seems like we
    would need some clarity on the __it__ part and some of those
    how, when, and where type questions specified somewhat.
    Otherwise, how do you go about testing the hypothesis.

    If you can't test it, it simply can't be a scientific hypothesis.
    Philosophers can hedge over distinctions between "can in
    principle test" versus "can in practice test". I'd weigh in
    on the side of 'not scientific' until you can do it in practice
    with an added label of __potentially__ for the not in practice set.

    Is that not moving closer to theory than hypothesis?

    From wiktionary

    "(sciences) A coherent statement or set of ideas that explains observed
    facts or phenomena and correctly predicts new facts or phenomena not
    previously observed, or which sets out the laws and principles of
    something known or observed; a hypothesis confirmed by observation,
    experiment etc."

    or to make a stab at it myself

    a coherent model explaining diverse observations

    There are exceptions in usage, such as String Theory - I think this is
    bleed through from mathematical usage. Note that there are people who
    argue that String Theory is not scientific.

    I think that the concept of a research program is helpful.

    String Theory is a research program which has failed to deliver (other
    than a body of mathematics).

    Evolutionary psychology is in principle a research program. That
    evolution has had an influence on human behaviour is a more than
    plausible hypothesis. But evolutionary psychologists in general lack a necessary scepticism about their supplementary hypothesis, and even the overriding hypothesis is questionable - could not evolution have handed
    over control of behaviour to the more labile (and therefore more
    adaptable) culture? The evolution of cultural control of behaviour would invalidate the underpinnings of the research programme. I'm ambivalent
    on the scientific nature of evolutionary psychology - I don't think that
    the hypothesis is inherently incapable of providing insights, but much
    of the practice seems to be in the cargo-cult science zone.

    Intelligent Design could have been a research program, albeit one I
    would have low expectations of (lower than evolutionary psychology). The movement might even have had expectations of being one, but if it did
    they failed to put in the work. Intelligent Design is instead a
    religiously motivated political movement with a strategy of attacking
    the theory of evolution.

    Some people would exclude the supernatural from the scope of science. I disagree on this point; all science requires is statistical regularity
    of behaviour, i.e. some degree of predictability.

    So God is not a priori excluded from science. On the other hand to bring
    God within the scope of science may require concessions that the
    religious may not wish to make. As a practical matter, as an ignostic I
    think that God as a concept does not give us enough purchase on which to
    base a scientific hypothesis.


    Odd thing that some would consider not being a scientific
    hypothesis as a challenge to the ultimate truth of their hypothesis.
    But that is dubious thinking.

    Those who think that way are usually those who feel their religious
    beliefs are challenged by science. That gives them 3 options:

    1) Rethink their religious beliefs to accommodate the science.

    2) Try to argue that their beliefs are actually just another
    scientific hypothesis.

    3) Dismiss the science

    ID'ers simply can't face up to option 1 so they go for a mixture of
    options 2 and 3.


    --
    alias Ernest Major

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