 |
| Topic: |
| Audio: |
|
 |
Download
the Episode |
|
Listen
Online
(Download Real
Player) |
| Guest: |

Daniel
Dennett, Director of the Center for Cognitive Studies,
Tufts University. |
| What
is it? |
Is
there any reason to think the cause or causes of order in the
universe bear an even remote analogy to human intelligence? Even if
they did, would that mean these intelligent causes had the benevolence
and sense of justice required of a Christian God? Is this whole issue
one of science, religion, or philosophy? These questions, considered by
Hume, have now become the focus of a national debate. The philosophers
discuss intelligent design with Daniel Dennett, Director of the Center
for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University, author of books on
consciousness, evolution, and freedom.
|
Listening
Notes
John points out that Hume
discussed the argument from design in his Dialogues on Natural
Religion. Ken says that before Darwin there was no good reason to doubt
the design argument. The theory of evolution provides a theory that
explains how life could be so complex without design. Ken introduces
Daniel Dennett, professor at Tufts University. Dennett discusses an
argument against evolution that says some things could not have evolved
because they are irreducibly complex. Dennett emphasizes that while
lots of people have tried to find irreducibly complex organisms, no one
has found one. Aren't there open questions about how certain structures
come to be? There are a lot, but Dennett thinks they will eventually be
solved. Dennett says that evolution is not a completed theory. Does
this mean that it is a 'mere' theory and not a fact? No, Dennett
explains, it means that there are some parts that are confirmed and
some parts that are still being investigated, but on the whole it is
accepted. Is intelligent design (ID) worse than evolutionary theory?
Dennett thinks so because ID does not have testable consequences and
makes no observable predictions.
Is ID science? ID proponents don't
publish in peer-reviewed journals and they don't make verifiable
predictions. Is the journal problem because of a bias in the science
community? Dennett says it is because the ID people have not been able
to present a good case. Dennett thinks there is an equivocation about
different senses of "design" being employed by the ID camp. Dennett
thinks it is a mistake to think that evolution proceeds solely by
selection. There are additional mechanisms at work. Religion provided
people with a narrative framework for their lives. ID lets people keep
that. Can evolution allow for those life-affirming narratives? Dennett
thinks that we can still create those stories with evolution in mind.
Is there an inherent contradiction between evolution and theism that ID
theory gets around? Dennett thinks the contradiction depends on what
sort of deity the theist wants.
Should ID be taught in high school?
Dennett thinks we have the duty of teaching our best confirmed, best
known theories in high school, which means teaching evolution and not
ID. John thinks that ID is teachable outside of the biology classroom,
say, in a philosophy class. Should science be taught as fact or as a
'mere' theory? This question mixes up a couple of senses of 'theory'.
Dennett does not think that we should let science stop us from talking
about religion.
- Roving Philosophical Reporter Polly Striker
(Seek to 04:20): Pauli
Striker interviews a high school biology teacher who teaches evolution
and a spokesperson for the National Center for Science Education about
the difference between evolutionary theory and design theory.
Additional
Resources
Encyclopedia Links
General
Links
Books
|
|