ID proponents are stumbling over themselves in their haste to come to the defense of the Meyer 2004 review paper. But rather than defending the paper (given the critiques, an unenviable task now delegated to unnamed ‘DI Staff’), they quickly readjusted their sights and settled for strawmen to shoot down (see for instance the ‘response’ by DI Staff to Meyer’s hopeful monster. Only by creating a strawman argument as to what Gishlick et al were arguing can they even hope to make their case. And I won’t even mention the poor reading comprehension of the papers which were given to Meyer as examples of relevant papers missed by Meyer in his ‘review paper’.
Another example is a recent article by Mark Hartwig.
Although the article itself has received a share of the abuse–mostly in the form of a “critique” published on the Panda’s Thumb blog–the main target has been the editor who published the piece, Richard Sternberg. Mark Hartwig in Bitten
I understand that to ID proponents, peer review can feel like ‘abuse’ but that is mostly because typical ID ‘research’ tends to be based on appeal to ignorance and a restricted view of science. Unfamiliar with peer review, it may come as a shock when scientists expose the many flaws and shortcomings in what some may have hoped would be a glorious entry of ID into the world of science. But as the critique on Panda’s Thumb has shown, ID cannot really withstand the scrutiny of critical peer review. (A conclusion further supported by the response by the DI staff)
And that must sting…
7 Comments
a Creationist Troll, apparently · 29 October 2004
Back from holiday....
Well, let me see. Meyer's paper has been published. There has been one "semi-official" response on an evolutionist website, which has been deconstructed in a similarly "semi-official" way by DI - and there has been much huffing and puffing. But if the paper was so flawed, then why did it pass peer-review? Where is the paper responding to Meyer which will deconstruct his paper and discredit BSW for publishing him? Is there real substance to the charges laid against Meyer - that we have yet to see - or is this just bluster? As for whether the DI response is attacking a straw man or not - is that so? Or is it the case that in actual fact that the Panda's Thumb paper was guilty of quote mining itself? It certainly looked to me as though the papers cited by GME were assuming what the authors claimed they proved - which I think was a key tenet of the DI argument.
Oh, yes, we've had somebody in Nature saying (in effect) that this just shows how many rubbish journals there are now and how they all need to scratch around to fill their pages. Funny, I don't think that PBSW had such a bad reputation before it published Meyer. What changed? Or could the correspondent cite similarly "bad scholarship" in other journals to demonstrate his case? Or is this just bluster? (Again?) ITWSBT
Great White Wonder · 29 October 2004
Pim van Meurs · 29 October 2004
Welcome back Creationist troll. You have some good questions. Yes, Meyer's paper was published. And Panda's Thumb was the first to review and critique it but others are finding similar problems with the paper. The DI's response has so far been to avoid dealing with the issues and focus on the creation of strawmen.
Why did it pass 'peer review'? Perhaps if we find out who was reviewing this paper we may know but irrespective of the peer review issue, it is obvious that Meyer's paper lacks in some fundamental manners
1. It fails to present a scientific hypothesis of intelligent design
2. It tries to eliminate evolutionary pathways but fails to address the various relevant ones
3. It addresses Shannon information in the genome but fails to address the many papers that show that mutation and selection can increase (specified) complexity in the genome.
In other words, this 'review paper' fails to review much of the relevant research, fails to present a scientific hypothesis of ID and is basically a limited argument from elimination (or ignorance) with many of the flaws of earlier such arguments.
So yes, I believe that PT and others have done a great job at exposing the lack of substance in Meyer's paper and more is in the works :-)
DI's response has been missing the point, rather than addressing the issues and critiques raised they create a strawman argument as to what the authors of the critique argued. Of course I understand why they may have chosen this approach, the alternative does not seem to be very 'appetizing'.
PvM · 29 October 2004
Bob Maurus · 1 November 2004
Did someone recently post a review of Dembski's latest - answering the hard questions about ID - on PT? I can't find it, and don't have an absloute memory of where I saw it, and now I need it. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
PvM · 1 November 2004
Bob Maurus · 1 November 2004
PvM,
Many thanks, I saw it in the past week and then lost it.
Bob