Home| Letters| Links| RSS| About Us| Contact Us

On the Frontline

What's New

Table of Contents

Index of Authors

Index of Titles

Index of Letters

Mailing List


subscribe to our mailing list:



SECTIONS

Critique of Intelligent Design

Evolution vs. Creationism

The Art of ID Stuntmen

Faith vs Reason

Anthropic Principle

Autopsy of the Bible code

Science and Religion

Historical Notes

Counter-Apologetics

Serious Notions with a Smile

Miscellaneous

Letter Serial Correlation

Mark Perakh's Web Site

Letters

[Write a Reply] [Letters Index]

Title Author Date
great artcile, but caution Levitt, Norman Mar 30, 2006
Mr. Nigh will be interested to know that in my (rather frequent) discussions with physicists, mathematicians, and philosophers on the foundations of physics, I take the view (which scandalizes some physicists) that at the
foundational level, physics is a very tentative and immature subject, especially as regards the fundamental ontology of the "physical" universe.
In my view, physicists are decades, if not centuries, away from achieving a view of such matters as quantum mechanics and cosmology that is deep enough and self-consistent enough to qualify as a candidate for a fundamental
understanding of space, time, matter and all that.

That said, however, I would claim that in the realm of phenomena that it addresses, evolutionary theory is an utterly mature and well-confirmed science, fundamentally correct in every sense that matters and with the
potential to provide an explanatory framework for a vast range of biological and even cultural phenomena that are as yet unexplored. I think it is a distortion to refer to it as "Darwin's Victorian view of life," Darwin's
enormous role in laying the groundwork for it notwithstanding. There is a long, rich history of thinking beyond Darwin and beyone "Victorianism," whatever that might be.

As a side issue, allow me to interject my view that Donna Haraway is a thinker of no special importance to the understanding of science or to
philosophy in general; rather, she is a type-specimen of a certain type of academic gamesmanship not unrelated to Fuller's. But Mr. Nigh probably disagrees.

I think my view of the points at issue is that, indeed, science doesn't know everything; but non-science doesn't know anything. Perhaps that is to flip and dismissive not to antagonize hordes of people. But, suitably dressed up
in sober epistemological terminology, I think it is a philosophically defensible position.

Norman Levitt
Related Articles: Steve Fuller and The Hidden Agenda of Social Constructivism