Intelligent Design and falsifiability
Published by Yazad Jal November 10th, 2005 in Philosophy, ScienceAs an atheist, I find the entire concept of Intelligent Design (ID) absurd. But sometimes with strong emotions, clear thinking gets clouded. Uriah Kriegel questions not whether ID is true or false or even whether it’s good or bad science. He questions whether it is science at all. And he uses a clear measuring rod — Karl Popper’s concept of falsifiability.
So what is the mark of genuine science? To attack this question, Popper examined several theories he thought were inherently unscientific but had a vague allure of science about them. His favorites were Marx’s theory of history and Freud’s theory of human behavior. Both attempted to describe the world without appeal to super-natural phenomena, but yet seem fundamentally different from, say, the theory of relativity or the gene theory.What Popper noticed was that, in both cases, there was no way to prove to proponents of the theory that they were wrong. Suppose Jim’s parents moved around a lot when Jim was a child. If Jim also moves around a lot as an adult, the Freudian explains that this was predictable given the patterns of behavior Jim grew up with. If Jim never moves, the Freudian explains — with equal confidence — that this was predictable as a reaction to Jim’s unpleasant experiences of a rootless childhood. Either way the Freudian has a ready-made answer and cannot be refuted. Likewise, however much history seemed to diverge from Marx’s model, Marxists would always introduce new modifications and roundabout excuses for their theory, never allowing it to be proven false.
Popper concluded that the mark of true science was falsifiability: a theory is genuinely scientific only if it’s possible in principle to refute it. This may sound paradoxical, since science is about seeking truth, not falsehood. But Popper showed that it was precisely the willingness to be proven false, the critical mindset of being open to the possibility that you’re wrong, that makes for progress toward truth.
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If we examine ID in this light, it becomes pretty clear that the theory isn’t scientific. It is impossible to refute ID, because if an animal shows one characteristic, IDers can explain that the intelligent designer made it this way, and if the animal shows the opposite characteristic, IDers can explain with equal confidence that the designer made it that way. For that matter, it is fully consistent with ID that the supreme intelligence designed the world to evolve according to Darwin’s laws of natural selection. Given this, there is no conceivable experiment that can prove ID false.
Read the full piece.
This is interesting: Vatican rejects Intelligent Design.
He he…
It is sometimes complained that IDers resemble the Libertarians who always found a way to modify and reframe their theory so it evades any possible falsification, never offering an experimental procedure by which Libertarinism could in principle be falsified. To my mind, this complaint is warranted indeed. But the primary problem is not with the intellectual honesty of Libertarians, but with the nature of their theory. The theory simply cannot be fashioned to make any potentially falsified predictions.
Darwinism, anyone?
I don’t like ID either, but the the concept of falisfiability is not so rock-solid concept as it is made out to be. David Stove is a good read on the subject as it takes on Karl Popper.
Also, this kind of scientific McCarthyisms that is practised is bothersome.
Libertarianism by itself rejects the entire idea about Intelligent Design. One of the basic contentions of libertarian thought is that any being(pardon me for removing ‘human’) would perform any activity out of some selfish motive except in exceptional cases.
ID simply assumes that a being or entity exists but does not elaborate on the need for such activity!
As such the theory stays automatically rejected!
Sachin my post was not meant to impy that Libertarians believe in ID but that Libertarianism as a belief does not pass the falisfiability test. This is a long standing bone of contention between Yazad and me.
If something cannot be disproved because it cannot be proved how does one go about disproving it? Hmm.