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Jason Carter's avatar

Good article, Joel. I hope you and the family are well.

I think what a lot of people mean when they accuse Christians of not holding to the 'scientific worldview' is simply not holding to naturalistic Darwinism, which is itself an empirical system with many more implied miracles than Christianity. It's a bait-and-switch of sorts, using the term 'science' in its most rigorous sense (i.e., falsifiable truth claims backed by sufficient experimentation to establish a hypothesis as a scientific theory) but applied to a group of atheistic true-believers who prefer their dogmas be accepted as scientific truth rather than the non-falsifiable claims they really turn out to be upon closer inspection.

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Clark Coleman's avatar

Using your terminology to restate something I have thought since I was a young man:

Methodological naturalism causes origin of life researchers to publish research that only mentions naturalistic hypotheses for the origin of life, without mention of a supernatural Creator.

But nothing in methodological naturalism requires that such researchers claim that their current hypotheses are very satisfying or convincing. It is perfectly in accord with methodological naturalism to say "We have been investigating naturalistic explanations for the origin of life, and current we have significant unresolved issues, so that we cannot claim we are close to having a convincing explanation." No God references are needed in this honest and scientifically humble statement.

However, philosophical naturalism makes it very unsatisfying to make this statement, especially in a society where the ever-present boogeyman of the religious creationist lurks. Thus, the philosophical naturalist is tempted to overstate the degree of current naturalistic understanding of the origin of life problem. In such overstating, are they being "rational" in some sense? I think not.

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