Search results: intelligent design deconstructing

Deconstructing intelligent design (4): On information and minds

Deconstructing intelligent design (4): On information and minds

Philosophy of science

By Jesús Zamora Bonilla

After having shown the ways in which Richard Dembski’s ‘explanatory filter’ (EF) in support of the ‘intelligent design theory’ (ID) misconceives and misapplies the nature of scientific explanation, I shall devote the last entries of this series to discuss another mistake in Dembski’s work: the way in which he employs the ‘no free lunch’ theorems […]

Deconstructing intelligent design (3): The true (and complex) nature of the ‘explanatory filter’

Deconstructing intelligent design (3): The true (and complex) nature of the ‘explanatory filter’

Philosophy of science

By Jesús Zamora Bonilla

If in the two previous entries of this series we have seen that (contrarily to what Dembski’s filter suggests and needs) ‘law’ and ‘hazard’ are not different types of explanations, but necessary and complementary elements of basically all explanatory models, I will try to show here that ‘explanation from purpose’ is not as significantly different […]

Deconstructing intelligent design (2): Dembski’s “explanatory filter” is not a filter at all

Deconstructing intelligent design (2): Dembski’s “explanatory filter” is not a filter at all

Philosophy of science

By Jesús Zamora Bonilla

Besides confusing what a scientific explanation is, as we saw in the previous entry , Dembski’s ‘explanatory filter’ (‘anything must be explained by law, by chance, or by design’) also commits the worst mistake that can be committed while using the logical rule known as ‘disjunctive syllogism’ (“either p or q; not p; ergo q”) […]

Deconstructing intelligent design (1): On Dembski’s wrong “explanatory filter”

Deconstructing intelligent design (1): On Dembski’s wrong “explanatory filter”

Philosophy of science

By Jesús Zamora Bonilla

The most notorious argument presented in favour of the theory that asserts that living beings are necessarily the result of a conscious and deliberate act of intelligent creation, is William Dembski’s ‘explanatory filter’ (EF). According to this argument, when explaining anything, we have three alternatives: first, we shall try to explain it as the result […]

Raiders of the lost purpose (1): fine tuning

Raiders of the lost purpose (1): fine tuning

Philosophy of science

By Jesús Zamora Bonilla

Since more than a century ago, every generation has a moment in which religious believers experience an agonising urge to persuade themselves that the ‘truths’ of their religion are compatible with the sophisticate description of the universe that contemporary science is unfolding. Every now and then this leads to the landfall of some best-selling books […]