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Information Theory
and The End of Materialism
Materialist philosophy
lies at the basis of the theory of evolution.
Materialism rests on the supposition that
everything that exists is matter. According to
this philosophy, matter has existed since
eternity, will continue to exist forever, and
there is nothing but matter. In order to provide
support for their claim, materialists use a
logic called "reductionism." This is the idea
that things which are not observable can also be
explained by material causes.
To make matters clearer,
let us take the example of the human mind. It is
evident that the mind cannot be touched or seen.
Moreover, it has no center in the human brain.
This situation unavoidably leads us to the
conclusion that mind is a concept beyond matter.
Therefore, the being which we refer to as "I,"
who thinks, loves, fears, worries, and feels
pleasure or pain, is not a material being in the
same way as a sofa, a table or a stone.
Materialists, however,
claim that mind is "reducible to matter."
According to the materialist claim, thinking,
loving, worrying and all our mental activities
are nothing but chemical reactions taking place
between the atoms in the brain. Loving someone
is a chemical reaction in some cells in our
brain, and fear is another. The famous
materialist philosopher Karl Vogt is notorious
for his assertion that "the brain secretes
thought just as the liver secretes bile."384
Bile, however, is matter, whereas there is no
evidence that thought is.
Reductionism is a
logical deduction. However, a logical deduction
can be based on solid grounds or on shaky ones.
For this reason, the question we need to ask is:
What happens when reductionism is compared to
scientific data?
Nineteenth-century
materialist scientists and thinkers thought that
the answer would be that science verifies
reductionism. Twentieth-century science,
however, has revealed a very different picture.
One of the most salient
feature of this picture is "information," which
is present in nature and can never be reduced to
matter.
The Difference
between Matter and Information
We earlier mentioned
that there is incredibly comprehensive
information contained in the DNA of living
things. Something as small as a hundred
thousandth of a millimeter across contains a
sort of "data bank" that specifies all the
physical details of the body of a living thing.
Moreover, the body also contains a system that
reads this information, interprets it and
carries out "production" in line with it. In all
living cells, the information in the DNA is
"read" by various enzymes, and proteins are
produced. This system makes possible the
production of millions of proteins every second,
of just the required type for just the places
where they are needed in our bodies. In this
way, dead eye cells are replaced by living ones,
and old blood cells by new ones.
At this point, let us
consider the claim of materialism: Is it
possible that the information in DNA could be
reduced to matter, as materialists suggest? Or,
in other words, can it be accepted that DNA is
merely a collection of matter, and the
information it contains came about as a result
of the random interactions of such pieces of
matter?
All the scientific
research, experiments and observations carried
out in the twentieth century show that the
answer to this question is a definite "No." The
director of the German Federal Physics and
Technology Institute, Prof. Werner Gitt, has
this to say on the issue:
A coding system always
entails a nonmaterial intellectual process. A
physical matter cannot produce an information
code. All experiences show that every piece of
creative information represents some mental
effort and can be traced to a personal
idea-giver who exercised his own free will, and
who is endowed with an intelligent mind....
There is no known law of nature, no known
process and no known sequence of events which
can cause information to originate by itself in
matter...385
It is impossible for
the information inside DNA to have emerged
by chance and natural processes.
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Werner Gitt's words
summarize the conclusions of "information
theory," which has been developed in the last 50
years, and which is accepted as a part of
thermodynamics. Information theory investigates
the origin and nature of the information in the
universe. The conclusion reached by information
theoreticians as a result of long studies is
that "Information is something different from
matter. It can never be reduced to matter. The
origin of information and physical matter must
be investigated separately."
For instance, let us
think of the source of a book. A book consists
of paper, ink, and the information it contains.
Paper and ink are material elements. Their
source is again matter: Paper is made of
cellulose, and ink of various chemicals.
However, the information in the book is
nonmaterial, and cannot have a material source.
The source of the information in each book is
the mind of the person who wrote it.
Moreover, this mind
determines how the paper and ink will be used. A
book initially forms in the mind of the writer.
The writer builds a chain of logic in his mind,
and orders his sentences. As a second step, he
puts them into material form, which is to say
that he translates the information in his mind
into letters, using a pen, a typewriter or a
computer. Later, these letters are printed in a
publishing house, and take the shape of a book
made up of paper and ink.
We can therefore state
this general conclusion: If physical matter
contains information, then that matter must have
been designed by a mind that possessed the
information in question. First there is the
mind. That mind translates the information it
possesses into matter, which constitutes the act
of design.
The Origin of the
Information in Nature
When we apply this
scientific definition of information to nature,
a very important result ensues. This is because
nature overflows with an immense body of
information (as, for example, in the case of
DNA), and since this information cannot be
reduced to matter, it therefore comes from a
source beyond matter.
One of the foremost
advocates of the theory of evolution, George C.
Williams, admits this reality, which most
materialists and evolutionists are reluctant to
see. Williams has strongly defended materialism
for years, but in an article he wrote in 1995,
he states the incorrectness of the materialist (reductionist)
approach which holds that everything is matter:
Evolutionary biologists
have failed to realize that they work with two
more or less incommensurable domains: that of
information and that of matter… These two
domains will never be brought together in any
kind of the sense usually implied by the term
"reductionism." …The gene is a package of
information, not an object... In biology, when
you're talking about things like genes and
genotypes and gene pools, you're talking about
information, not physical objective reality...
This dearth of shared descriptors makes matter
and information two separate domains of
existence, which have to be discussed
separately, in their own terms.386
Therefore, contrary to
the supposition of materialists, the source of
the information in nature cannot be matter
itself. The source of information is not matter
but a superior Wisdom beyond matter. This Wisdom
existed prior to matter. The possessor of this
Wisdom is God, the Lord of all the Worlds.
Matter was brought into existence, given form,
and organized by Him.
Materialist
Admissions
We have already
described how one of the fundamental principles
that make up life is "knowledge," and it is
clear that this knowledge proves the existence
of an intelligent Creator. The theory of
evolution, which tries to account for life as
being the result of coincidences in a purely
material world, and the materialist philosophy
it is based on, are quite helpless in the face
of this reality.
When we look at
evolutionists' writings, we sometimes see that
this helplessness is openly admitted. One
forthright authority on this subject is the
well-known French zoologist Pierre-Paul Grassé.
He is a materialist and an evolutionist,
although he sometimes openly admits the
quandaries Darwinist theory faces. According to
Grassé, the most important truth which
invalidates the Darwinist account is the
knowledge that gives rise to life:
Any living being
possesses an enormous amount of "intelligence,"
very much more than is necessary to build the
most magnificent of cathedrals. Today, this
"intelligence" is called information, but it is
still the same thing. It is not programmed as in
a computer, but rather it is condensed on a
molecular scale in the chromosomal DNA or in
that of every other organelle in each cell. This
"intelligence" is the sine qua non of life.
Where does it come from?... This is a problem
that concerns both biologists and philosophers,
and, at present, science seems incapable of
solving it.387
The reason why
Pierre-Paul Grassé says, "Science seems
incapable of solving it," is that he does not
want any nonmaterialist explanation to be
thought of as "scientific." However, science
itself invalidates the hypotheses of materialist
philosophy, and proves the existence of a
Creator. Grassé and other materialist
"scientists" either ignore this reality, or else
say, "Science does not explain this." They do
this because they are materialists first and
scientists second, and they continue to believe
in materialism, even if science demonstrates the
exact opposite.
For this reason, in
order to possess a correct scientific attitude,
one has to distinguish between science and
materialist philosophy.
Continue:
Distinguishing
Between Science and Materialism
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