Jimbo07
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2006
- Messages
- 4,518
Just idle conjecture (because I am neither fully religious, nor fully a scientist):
Wouldn't an intellectually honest creationist (or, more fairly, theistic evolutionist) WANT to be a scientist? If you accept a god-of-the-gaps, wouldn't you want to squeeze the gaps so hard that when all was said and done, what remained must be God?
Assuming for a moment that at some point Behe wasn't a liar, could he have believed that irreducible complexity was that end of the gap? If so, wouldn't he be happy to have it blown away? Wouldn't it mean that there is a different gap for God, and many years of happy searching to continue?
I'm reminded of drkitten's comments on the current intellectual status of the soul. There is still so much unknown, wouldn't everyone want to keep searching, regardless of what the conclusion is at the end of the day?
I don't know.
Wouldn't an intellectually honest creationist (or, more fairly, theistic evolutionist) WANT to be a scientist? If you accept a god-of-the-gaps, wouldn't you want to squeeze the gaps so hard that when all was said and done, what remained must be God?
Assuming for a moment that at some point Behe wasn't a liar, could he have believed that irreducible complexity was that end of the gap? If so, wouldn't he be happy to have it blown away? Wouldn't it mean that there is a different gap for God, and many years of happy searching to continue?
I'm reminded of drkitten's comments on the current intellectual status of the soul. There is still so much unknown, wouldn't everyone want to keep searching, regardless of what the conclusion is at the end of the day?
I don't know.