Creationists
sometimes criticize evolution by describing it as “just a theory.”
In other words, it's a “theory” not a “fact” or a “law.”
In response to that criticism, Scientific
American said the following:
Many
people learned in elementary school that a theory falls in the middle
of a hierarchy of certainty--above a mere hypothesis but below a law.
Scientists do not use the terms that way, however. According to the
National Academy of Sciences (NAS), a scientific theory is "a
well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world
that can incorporate facts, laws, inferences, and tested hypotheses."
No amount of validation changes a theory into a law, which is a
descriptive generalization about nature. So when scientists talk
about the theory of evolution--or the atomic theory or the theory of
relativity, for that matter--they are not expressing reservations
about its truth.
Now,
it's typical for people in different lines of work to have industry
specific terms or even specialized meanings for common words. It's
called “jargon.” The word, “load,” for example, might mean
something different to a truck driver than an engineer. It's always
been a pet peeve of mine, wherever I've worked, to hear my employees
use jargon when talking to customers. I would always have to remind
them not to use terms like LTV, DI, or DDA when talking to customers.
It's fine that people use jargon, but when you're communicating with
the public, you need to use terms the public understands.
Scientists
have a special meaning for the term, “theory.” I get it. Even
so, I think evolutionists need to be a little more gracious when
attempting to “educate” non-scientists in the scientific meaning
of the term. I think their snobbery is unjustified in at least two
ways: 1) Scientists are also a little casual in how they use the word
and 2) the meaning intended by a lay person is not entirely
incorrect. I'll expand on both of these points.
If the
word theory is supposed to mean a “well-substantiated explanation”
of some phenomenon, why do evolutionists habitually use the word
“theory” when talking about abiogenesis? We have never observed
life rising from non-living matter in nature; neither have we been
able to artificially create life from non-living chemicals. There is
no “well-substantiated explanation” of how it happened so there
can be no
theory of abiogenesis. All they have are guesses – wild
guesses – about how it might have happened but none of the guesses
have actually produced a living thing. Still, they call them
“theories”
about the origin of life. Why do they do that? It could be that
they are trying to minimize the embarrassment of having no natural
explanation for the origin of life by assigning to their guesses the
“scientific” term, theory. It could be that they're really not
as hyper-sensitive about the word as they pretend to be with critics
and just use the technical definition of the word as a red herring to
derail the debate. Either way, when they are so loosey-goosey with
the term themselves, they lose credibility when they harp on how
non-scientists use the word.
The
other thing, though, is that, even according to the scientific
definition, the “theory” is still just an explanation of
something. It may be “well-tested.” It may seem to explain the
thing well. But at the end of the day, the scientific meaning of the
word isn't terribly different than how the non-scientist means it.
They both mean explanations.
Let me
give you an analogy: I can open a carton of eggs and see there are a
dozen. That's an objective fact. But why are there a dozen eggs?
In other words, why do they sell eggs in dozens rather than, say, in
tens? If I had to inventory eggs, it's easier to count by tens than
by twelves. If I had to guess, I would say it's because there are
more ways to divide dozens than tens. If a farmer ships eggs to
multiple families or a family is feeding several members, how many
ways the eggs can be divided evenly is important because it reduces
left overs. This could be my hypothesis and I could test it by
questioning farmers or doing historical research into the practice.
Maybe my hypothesis will be confirmed or maybe not. Regardless, why
there are a dozen eggs will never be an objective fact in the same
sense as there are a dozen eggs. Do you see? No matter how
confident we may be with the theory, it will never be held in the
same regard as the fact.
I've
said before that calling evolution, “just a theory” is a weak
criticism. I didn't mean, however, that it's wrong to say it. I
think it's weak in the sense that it doesn't really address any
particular weakness in the theory. It's sort of like saying,
“evolution is stupid.” I think it is stupid but if I want to
convince someone about why it's stupid, I'd better have something a
little more substantial. On the other hand, evolution is not correct
simply because evolutionists use the word, “theory” to describe
it. When a critic expresses his doubts by describing evolution as
“just a theory,” it means he's questioning the explanation.
Scolding him about the technical meaning of the term, theory, doesn't
really help the evolutionist. Let's face it, no matter how much
smugness... er, I mean confidence evolutionists have, it
really is just a theory after all!
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