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The “Two Jones” Thesis and its Detractors: More ID opponents experience binary fission over Dover decision

Well, it appears that my article about the inherent contradiction in an important section of the Dover vs. Kitzmiller decision is making evident some potentially dangerous developments among Darwinist opponents of Intelligent Design. Both Richard Hoppe at Panda’s Thumb (“The Disco ‘Tute’s New Man“) and Ed Brayton at Dispatches from the Culture Wars (“ID and Testability“) have offered arguments against my position, and with each other–and, it turns out (at least in Brayton’s case), with themselves.
I had pointed out that Judge John Jones affirmed a blatant contradiction in his opinion. He argued that the alleged unsoundness of the argument from irreducible complexity is a blow to Intelligent Design, since it is “central to ID,” and then later argues that even if irreducible complexity were true, it wouldn’t confirm ID because it isn’t central to it, but “merely a test for evolution, not design.”


I also said that this kind of argument falls into the trap of affirming two more general contradictory positions: that ID is not falsifiable, and that it is false.
I argued two points:

1. That Judge Jones both affirmed and denied that irreducible complexity is “central to ID”; and

2. That, as a consequence, he only allowed irreducible complexity to count against ID, but not for it.

This was completely lost on Hoppe, who just ran on about how ID makes testable claims he says are false, and untestable claims that can’t be judged true or false:

What Cothran is apparently unable to comprehend is that while ID proponents occasionally make testable empirical claims, ID theory itself does not.

No, sorry. Cothran comprehends Hoppe, but Hoppe doesn’t comprehend Cothran. I understand Hoppe’s point. In fact, I understand it so well that it is very plain to me that it doesn’t address my argument. It’s a convenient distinction to make, but it isn’t a distinction the Dover decision makes.
Hoppe agrees with Jones–and he doesn’t. He agrees with the Jones who says that irreducible complexity is not central to ID, but disagrees with the Jones who says that it does. But nowhere does he deny my central thesis: that there are two Joneses, and that they disagree with each other.
So what does Ed Brayton say to this? First, that he has heard my argument “many times” before. Shucks. And I thought my “Two Jones” thesis was my very own discovery. Turns out, claims Brayton, that someone beat me to it, although he doesn’t say who it was.
Brayton, it turns out, is not only unimpressed by my argument (or the one I thought was mine before Ed informed me it wasn’t–although, in a Jonesian logical maneuver, he’s going to hold it against me anyway) but is less than impressed with Hoppe’s refutation of it, saying that he gives my argument “too much credit”:

I think he’s actually making things more complicated than they are. There is no “ID theory” and there never has been. What ID proponents call “ID theory” is nothing more than a set of bad arguments against evolution, all straight out of the creationist jokebook. They all take the form of a basic god of the gaps argument: “not evolution, therefore God.”

Note carefully what is going on here. Neither Hoppe nor Brayton addresses the two central points of my argument. Hoppe agrees with the Jones who says that arguments against evolution are not central to ID, and disagrees with the Jones who says they are, while Brayton agrees with the Jones who says that arguments against evolution are central to ID and disagrees with the Jones who says that they aren’t.
Neither, however, denies there are two Joneses: they simply disagree on which is the better Jones. In fact, when you put them together, not only do Hoppe and Brayton not address my argument, they actually confirm it: in agreeing with different Joneses they implicitly recognize that there are two of them.
Yet, in the final analysis, even Brayton can’t resist the apparently contagious logical schizophrenia that is increasingly infecting opponents of ID:

ID argument like this can be falsified because they are tests of evolution, not of the non-existent “ID theory.” ID is a purely negative argument that invokes supernatural causation, and that is why it cannot be tested on its own merits.

In other words, Brayton too argues that ID is both false and unfalsifiable. Not only are there now two Joneses, there are two Braytons.

Is it only a matter of time before Hoppe too–and all the other ID opponents–begin to experience this peculiar form of alogical reproduction? Considering the consequences (such as the potential twofold multiplication of bad reasoning), let’s hope not.