In its fledgling phase Marxism may not have been a science, but its proposals were at least genuinely scientific, for they offered both an account and predictions that allowed the account to be tested. Once these predictions had not been fulfilled, however, Marxists had to offer decide whether to tweak their model or abandon it. These failures happened repeatedly. And as they continued to occur, it became more and more apparent that the model should be abandoned rather than tweaked, and Marxism became an ideology rather than a science.
Somehow this is relevant to the ID debate, but I forget why (perhaps it's b/c my son is singing "The Sound of Music").
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