Intelligent design timeline
From ResearchID.org
Contents |
History of ID
An abbreviated chronological list of events in the history of the term "intelligent design" and related foundational concepts.[1]
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[edit] BC[edit] 500-1 BC[edit] 500-428
[edit] ~360 BC
[edit] ~50 BC
[edit] 45 BC
[edit] AD[edit] 0-99[edit] 57
[edit] 500-599[edit] AD 543-615
[edit] 800-899[edit] AD 810-877
[edit] 1100-1199
[edit] 1200-1299[edit] 1220
[edit] 1268
[edit] 1600-1699[edit] 1605
[edit] 1687
[edit] 1700-1799[edit] 1744On April 15, 1744, the pioneer of the Principle of Least Action, Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis presented: Derivation of the laws of motion and equilibrium from a metaphysical principle The French word "dessein" appears 4 times, and 3 times associated with the word "intelligence". For example "marques d’Intelligence & de Dessein". One English translation also uses the phrase "intelligent design" for the French phrase "un choix".[19] [edit] 1776
The United States of America is founded on the presupposition of, and appeal to, an Intelligent Cause in its first Organic Law, the Declaration of Independence, 1776. This includes: "that all men are created equal,” "that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,” and entitlement by “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.” USC THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE - 1776 [edit] 1800-1899[edit] 1802
[edit] 1823
[edit] 1837
[edit] 1847
[edit] 1850
[edit] 1861
[edit] 1867
[edit] 1871
[edit] 1873
[edit] 1874
[edit] 1892
[edit] 1897F.C.S. Schiller stated, “It will not be possible to rule out the supposition that the process of Evolution may be guided by an intelligent design.”[31],[32] (Cited by Jonathan Witt[33]) [edit] 1900-1999[edit] 1904
[edit] 1924-1928The early pioneers of information theory (who typically remained on a highly theoretical and mathematical plane of thought) saw that informational phenomena in its most abstract form originated by an intelligent cause, and simultaneously recognized the physical meaning of information once disconnected from intelligence.
Source: Losee B (1999) "The Beginnings of Information Theory." Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48 (3) 1997, 254-269.
[edit] 1953
[edit] 1967
[edit] 1968Michael Polanyi publishes "Life's Irreducible Structure" in the June 21st edition of the journal Science. The paper makes an explicit comparison between technological machines and biological machines. Researchers in the ID community are later inspired by Polanyi's paper to explore the comparison and what it might mean for the biological sciences.
[edit] 1979James E. Horigan used the term "intelligent design" in his book Chance or Design? in much the same way that future scholars and researchers in the intelligent design community would frame their empirical approach. He used the phrases "intelligent design" and "intelligently designed" in his book more than 50 times.[37] [edit] 1981
[edit] 1981-1985
[edit] 1982
[edit] 1983
[edit] 1984
[edit] 1985
"If one examines work in modern biology-let's take the coding and replication of genetic information in a cell as the best example-one finds a curious assumption tacitly involved in all such work, namely an assumed analogy to ordering principles characterizing intelligent design... We interpret the behavior of the biological system by analogy with the logical ordering and controlled sequencing of function we have intelligently designed the computer to perform... Isn't it at least an open possibility that just as the computer manifests and fulfills purposes transcending its hardware yet appropriately embodied in it, so the biological system is the result or embodiment of intelligent design, expressing some abstract existence or purpose which transcends the specific chemistry?" [edit] 1986
[edit] 1988
[edit] 1989
[edit] 1991
[edit] 1993
[edit] 1996
[edit] 1997[edit] 1998
[edit] 1999
[edit] 2000-present[edit] 2000
[edit] 2000
[edit] 2001
[edit] 2002
[edit] 2003
[edit] 2004
[edit] 2005
[edit] 2006
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- Google Books search showing more instances of publications with the term "intelligent design" occurring previous to 1980.
References and notes
- ↑ The textual basis of this timeline was formed from pages at ideacenter.org and wikipedia.org
- ↑ Plato (360 BC) The Laws, Book X, Athens, Greece
- ↑ On the Nature of Things, Lucretius, 50 B.C.E
- ↑ John Tyndall, Address Delivered Before the British Association Assembled at Belfast, With Additions. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1874.
- ↑ Marcus Cicero (45 BC) On the Nature of the Gods,Book II XXXIV, Rome
- ↑ "Can I but wonder here that anyone can persuade himself that certain solid and individual bodies should be moved by their natural forces and gravitation in such a manner that a world so beautiful adorned should be made by fortuitous concourse. He who believes this possible may as well believe, that if a great quantity of the one and twenty letters, composed of gold or any other matter, were thrown upon the ground, they would fall into such order as legibly to form the ‘Annals of Ennius’. I doubt whether fortune could make a single verse of them." -- Marcus Cicero, as he engages the Epicureans, who held that the world came about purely by chance. Cicero is quoted by the stoic Lucilius Balbus in De Natura Deorum.
- ↑ De Natura Deorum Book II, XXXVII "if a countless number of the forms of the one and twenty letters, whether in gold or any other material, were to be thrown somewhere, it would be possible, when they had been shaken out upon the ground, for the annals of Ennius to result from them so as to be able to be read consecutively,—a miracle of chance which I incline to think would be impossible even in the case of a single verse. Yet, as the Epicureans assure us, it was from minute particles . . . coming together by chance and accident, that the world was produced"
- ↑ Paul (Saul) of Tarsus, 1 Thessalonians 5:21, the New Testament of the Christian Bible
- ↑ Paul (Saul) of Tarsus, Romans 1:20, the New Testament of the Christian Bible
- ↑ <a href="http://www.breakpoint.org/listingarticle.asp?ID=2502">Glory All Around, By T.M. Moore Breakpoint, 2/19/2008"</a>
- ↑ <a href="http://www.breakpoint.org/listingarticle.asp?ID=2502">Glory All Around, By T.M. Moore Breakpoint, 2/19/2008"</a>
- ↑ Dan Graves (1996) Scientists of Faith, p18 ISBN 082542724X
- ↑ Robert Grosseteste (c.1220) De Luce (Lat. "On Light")
- ↑ Grosseteste
- ↑ Roger Bacon (1268) On the Experimental Method
- ↑ Francis Bacon (1620) The New Organon
- ↑ Francis Bacon's Works
- ↑ Isaac Newton (1687) Principia, General Scholum, Trans. Andrew Motte
- ↑ Cosmological ID in 1744?
- ↑ "I hold (without appeal to revelation) that when we take a view of the Universe, in its parts general or particular, it is impossible for the human mind not to perceive and feel a conviction of design, consummate skill, and indefinite power in every atom of its composition." Jefferson to John Adams on April 11, 1823, MCM IV, 363
- ↑ Thomas Jefferson, Letter to John Adams from Monticello, April 11, 1823
- ↑ Charles Babbage, The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise, Chapter II, The argument in favour of Design from the changing laws in natural events. p34, 43
- ↑ Dove, Patrick Edward (1850) The theory of human progression, and natural probability of a reign of justice. London, Johnstone & Hunter, LC 08031381
- ↑ George Campbell, Duke of Argyll, The Reign of Law 1867, London: Strahan, Ch. 5 Creation by Law, s. 235, 276
- ↑ 1871 cited by Lewin, R., In the Age of Mankind: A Smithsonian Book of Human Evolution, Smithsonian Books: Washington DC, 1988, p.26
- ↑ Compiled by Stephen Jones
- ↑ "No physical hypothesis founded on any indisputable fact has yet explained the origin of the primordial protoplasm, and, above all, of its marvellous properties, which render evolution possible—in heredity and in adaptability, for these properties are the cause and not the effect of evolution. For the cause of this cause we have sought in vain among the physical forces which surround us, until we are at last compelled to rest upon an independent volition, a far-seeing intelligent design."
'The British Association', The Times, Saturday, 20 September, 1873; pg. 10; col A. - ↑ John Tyndall, Address Delivered Before the British Association Assembled at Belfast, With Additions. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1874.
- ↑ Sidgwick, Henry (1874) 'The Methods of Ethics'. Macmillan, 1874. p 62.
- ↑ George John Romanes, C. Lloyd Morgan (1892) An Exposition of the Darwinian Theory and a Discussion of Post-Darwinian..., pp 278, 280, 281, 283, 284
- ↑ Schiller "Contemporary Review" June 1897.
- ↑ F.C. S. Schiller, “Darwinism and Design Argument,” in Schiller, Humanism: Philosophical Essays (1903); and 128, 141(2nd Ed. 1912) New York: The Macmillan Co., citing Contemporary Review June 1897.
- ↑ Jonathan Witt, "The Origin of Intelligent Design: A brief history of the scientific theory of Intelligent Design", Discovery Institute
- ↑ Haeckel, Ernst (1904) Wonders of life: A Popular Study of Biological Philosophy. Watts.
- ↑ Nyquist H (1924) "Certain factors affecting telegraph speed." Bell System Technical Journal, 3:324-346.
- ↑ Hartley RV (1928) "Transmission of information." Bell System Technical Journal, 7:535-563.
- ↑ James E. Horigan (1979) Chance or Design?(Philosophical Library). For example he wrote:
- Any consideration of the idea of a designed universe raises, of course, the question of purpose. To hold that the universe was intelligently designed is to expect that an intelligent Designer would have had reason and purpose to bring the universe, and all that lies within it, into existence. The remarkable purposefulness we will consider in the natural world herein is of itself not demonstrable of ultimate purpose. When one seeks to argue to the existence of an ultimate Designer of the universe on the strength alone of inferences arising from present-day empirical knowledge, and without resort to biblical or other religious references, it restricts one's possible avenues of explanation of purpose that could otherwise be available. No doubt some will find this approach to be in error.
- Selected quotes available from: http://www.manasjournal.org/pdf_library/VolumeXXXV_1982/XXXV-17.pdf and http://www.pandasthumb.org/archives/2007/03/chronicle_of_hi.html#comment-167925
- Any consideration of the idea of a designed universe raises, of course, the question of purpose. To hold that the universe was intelligently designed is to expect that an intelligent Designer would have had reason and purpose to bring the universe, and all that lies within it, into existence. The remarkable purposefulness we will consider in the natural world herein is of itself not demonstrable of ultimate purpose. When one seeks to argue to the existence of an ultimate Designer of the universe on the strength alone of inferences arising from present-day empirical knowledge, and without resort to biblical or other religious references, it restricts one's possible avenues of explanation of purpose that could otherwise be available. No doubt some will find this approach to be in error.
- ↑ 'Evolution according to Hoyle: Survivors of disaster in an earlier world', By Nicholas Timmins, The Times, Wednesday, 13 January, 1982; pg. 22; Issue 61130; col F.
- ↑ Hoyle, Fred, Evolution from Space, Omni Lecture, Royal Institution, London, January 12, 1982; Evolution from Space (1982) pp 27-28 ISBN: 0894900838; Evolution from Space: A Theory of Cosmic Creationism (1984) ISBN: 0671492632 ... "The difference between an intelligent ordering, whether of words, fruit boxes, amino acids, or the Rubik cube, and merely random shufflings can be fantastically large, even as large as a number that would fill the whole volume of Shakespeare's plays with its zeros. So if one proceeds directly and straightforwardly in this matter, without being deflected by a fear of incurring the wrath of scientific opinion, one arrives at the conclusion that biomaterials with their amazing measure or order must be the outcome of intelligent design [my emphasis]. No other possibility I have been able to think of in pondering this issue over quite a long time seems to me to have anything like as high a possibility of being true."
- ↑ Denton is a self-identified agnostic. In 1986 he described himself as an agnostic to a Sydney newspaper reporter.
- ↑ Stephen C. Meyer, cofounder of the Discovery Institute and vice president of the Center for Science and Culture, reports that the term came up in 1988 at a conference he attended in Tacoma, Washington, called Sources of Information Content in DNA. Meyer attributes the phrase "intelligent design" to Charles Thaxton, one of the authors of The Mystery of Life's Origin.

