Snoopy wrote:Looking at fossel records & such is really more of a historical reconstruction than a scientific study.
Oh really? Then I suppose you believe that astronomy is an illegitimate science too! I mean, all we're really doing is just looking at stars through telescopes. Stars don't even fit into glass beakers, so I don't see how the scientific method could possibly be applicable.
Snoopy wrote:There is really no way to test a hypothesis when one can only perform the analysis part of the test-record-analyze system of experimentation.
No, I already laid out how this works a couple of posts ago.
For example, suppose somebody was questioning if species X evolved from species Y. You could lay out a number of hypotheses, like we should find comparable DNA, etc. that could be experimentally confirmed. In the context of the fossil record, you could lay out a hypothesis and experiment as follows:
Question: Did species X evolve from species Y?
Hypothesis: If species X evolved from species Y, then we should find no case where an X appears in the fossil record without a linear progression of fossils, from Y to X in that chronological order, leading up to it.
Experiment: Dig up the ground and find out.
Your lab coat and glass beaker restriction on experimentation isn't supported by the scientific method. While a lab experiment can offer increased flexibility in what sort of experiment you can produce, since you have more control over your environment, that sort of flexibility isn't necessary. The totality of the fossil record, the global gene pool, etc. provide for an ample variety of experiments.
Remember too that with experiments both inside and outside the lab, you
analyze results, so there's no reason to be afraid of experimentation that consists heavily in analysis either.
Snoopy wrote:It brings us to a question of the purpose of science. Is science out there to strengthen our philosophies, or is it out there to improve our quality of life?
Both are wrong. If you're going to remain adamant about science even having some sort of inherent "purpose," I'd suggest that it's just its function--methodologically acquiring knowledge about the world, no more than that.
Snoopy wrote:It does, however, strengthen naturalism.
Science
per se cannot demonstrate naturalism. It fundamentally assumes naturalism to demonstrate anything, so any attempt to demonstrate naturalism would be begging the question.
But taking a step back from the picture and looking at how science itself plays with the other boys, does science's success rate in describing phenomena, contributing to technology, etc., help bolster naturalism? Sure, science has been largely successful, which suggests that, if its methodology is correct, then its necessary assumptions, including naturalism, are correct too. (Let's sidestep Humean levels of skepticism for now.)
Of course, this is true of all science, not just evolution. I mean, you just don't get it, do you? Every time science successfully makes a prediction, God falls back. Every time science successfully explains a phenomenon, God retreats. Occam's razor slices God right out of the equation. There's little room at all for God to explain things in the universe these days, and macro-evolution has played very little role in this.
Now, it just so happens that a small group of Christians is desperately hanging onto the vestige of the notion that science might not be able to explain this one thing, macro-evolution, to try to prove God's existence or something. But I don't see it fit to reward creationists with the notion that macro-evolution is more deeply tied with naturalism than other sciences just because their obstinance is the thing verily responsible for any such stronger tie.
Even so, even if macro-evolution did somehow bolster naturalism in a meaningful way more than other scientific topics, it's unclear to me why we should abandon a topic as a science simply because it bolsters a philosophical belief.
(As a matter of clarification, when I use the word naturalism, I'm using it in the more general, weaker definition, which goes something like, everything experiencable can only be explained in terms of nature, not the stronger definition, which goes something like, everything is nature, and nothing else exists.)