One Facebooker presented this thoughtful challenge:
·
How do you prove something is ID? You can't
because there is no solid evidence to support such a claim. Your means of
"proving" ID is simply labeling phenomenon we don't understand as
supernatural. I think that sort of thinking stunts progress. If everyone simply
shrugged their shoulders and attributed things they don't understand to the
supernatural we wouldn't do much in the way of trying to learn why and how
things work.
This is a charge commonly but mistakenly made against
intelligent design (ID). I therefore responded:
“Thanks for your challenge. I think that this same challenge
cuts even deeper against naturalism. There is no direct evidence that anything
is natural or that has ever happened naturally. Even the tiniest atom is a
marvel of design. Even the elegant, immutable, and causal laws of science give
evidence of ID (not to mention consciousness, freewill, life, fine-tuning of
the universe, and even the very existence of the laws of science, which are
unable to create something out of nothing).
How do we know that something is designed? If we see a name
scratched out in the rock, we automatically perceive that it had been designed.
We easily recognize the products of design. However, how do we detect
non-design? It seems that even chaos is patterned. This observation seems to
indicate that the entire world is unable to deviate from design. Perhaps the
universe is telling us something!
And the laws of science? They too seem to be designed. Just
look at E = MC2. It is precise, unchanging, universal, and knowable. It
provides evidence of an unalterable relationship among elements that ordinarily
seem to be disparate – energy, mass, and even the speed of light (precisely
squared). Do explosions (Big Bangs) create such order, immutability and
universality? Hardly!
Why then is naturalism the prevailing belief of science?
There is not a single shred of evidence that supports it. Therefore, it seems
that we should conclude that it is simply an alternative religion or
God-substitute, perhaps no more than a "shrugging of the shoulders?"
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