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Is Vitalism Making a Comeback?

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Evolution
Intelligent Design
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Vitalism is the age-old idea that living things possess a vital force — some fundamental element that generally does not exist in non-life. As a Darwinian paradigm took hold of the natural sciences in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, vitalism fell out of favor. But as writer and teacher Daniel Witt reports, a willingness to flirt with vitalism seems to be growing in certain scientific circles.

First, Witt explains what vitalism is and why it fell out of favor. Then he discusses recent attempts from evolutionary scientists to appeal to naturalistic processes to explain the vital force found in organisms. The new trend, says Daniel, is a tacit admission that the vitalists were on to something, an acknowledgement that Darwinian processes are not powerful enough to adequately account for living things. 

Daniel and I, as host, also note the eerie similarity between the arguments used to discredit vitalism and those used to sideline the theory of intelligent design. Unscientific? Check. Argument from ignorance? Check. Unfalsifiable? Check. Science stopper disproven long ago? Check. And yet, vitalism is making a comeback, and this time, in the work of those committed to a Darwinian framework. It turns out that no idea can simply be shamed out of existence, no matter how hard people try. Find the podcast and listen to it here.

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Andrew McDiarmid

Director of Podcasting and Senior Fellow
Andrew McDiarmid is Director of Podcasting and a Senior Fellow at Discovery Institute. He is also a contributing writer to Mind Matters. He produces ID The Future, a podcast from the Center for Science & Culture that presents the case, research, and implications of intelligent design and explores the debate over evolution. He writes and speaks regularly on the impact of technology on human living. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including the New York Post, Houston Chronicle, The Daily Wire, San Francisco Chronicle, Real Clear Politics, Newsmax, The American Spectator, The Federalist, Technoskeptic Magazine, and elsewhere. In addition to his roles at Discovery Institute, he promotes his homeland as host of the Scottish culture and music podcast Simply Scottish. Andrew holds an MA in Teaching from Seattle Pacific University and a BA in English/Creative Writing from the University of Washington.
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