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Author Topic:   Intelligent design. Philosophy of ignorance.
jar
Member (Idle past 420 days)
Posts: 34026
From: Texas!!
Joined: 04-20-2004


Message 136 of 301 (369390)
12-12-2006 7:42 PM
Reply to: Message 135 by GDR
12-12-2006 7:06 PM


Re: Other options.
I know that you are a Christian so I have to wonder where you see God involved in this. I don't agree that it is clear that any given species is not an intended product. There is no way of knowing and is only personal opinion. Incidentally we can say that the mutations occurred but we can't scientifically say that the mutations were either random or caused.
You are putting a whole bunch of subjects into one paragraph so let me try to narrow it down some. The first sentence is simply not related to anything in this thread really but I have addressed that in many other threads and would be happy to do so again.
Then you go on to state "I don't agree that it is clear that any given species is not an intended product. There is no way of knowing and is only personal opinion." which again is theological and one I have addressed even in this thread. Since we can see that we have almost a 100% failure rate when we look at the history of any species, if they were the intended product then the designer is incompetent.
Would you hire a designer that had a record of 100% failures?
Incidentally we can say that the mutations occurred but we can't scientifically say that the mutations were either random or caused.
Well there is evidence that random mutations happen and there is zero evidence of intentional caused mutations. Sorry, but I just see no reason to bring in some outside power when there is zero evidence for such a power and looking at the results seems to show that the outside power is pretty inept and not needed to explain what is seen.
Do you start pounding nails into wood without having any idea why. I just don't believe that a designer with the intelligence to create all that we see would either.
What? Sorry but that just seems so totally irrelevant.
A life is a life. Just because some species failed to survive because of natural selection doesn't mean that the overall creation is flawed. Other life has taken their place.
Right, the system worked. I have said all along that I might be able to make a case for ID at the basic level. If the goal was to create life and for life to continue, then the process of evolution seems pretty successful. But if that is the case then life, any life is the desired outcome and individual critters, even man, is just a happenstance.
If evolution is a true theory then we have to accept that the process isn't finished as it must be still ongoing so we can be sure that we haven't seen the finished product.
Again, that is only true if you are looking at critters as the product instead of the process being the product.
Just because there is no physical evidence that we can discern doesn't mean that the soul isn't reality.
Yup. Doesn't mean it is real either.

Aslan is not a Tame Lion

This message is a reply to:
 Message 135 by GDR, posted 12-12-2006 7:06 PM GDR has not replied

RAZD
Member (Idle past 1431 days)
Posts: 20714
From: the other end of the sidewalk
Joined: 03-14-2004


Message 137 of 301 (369395)
12-12-2006 8:07 PM
Reply to: Message 106 by Hyroglyphx
12-11-2006 9:22 PM


Re: ID focuses on misrepresentations
I think if there is a considerable amount of support for a topic, there should be a platform for at least discussing its possibilities.
Yes, it could be anything.
No, because there is literally nothing supporting the inference of the deist God. It has as much philosophical and scientific backbone as the microscopic elephant.
And you have just concurred that ID has "literally nothing supporting the inference" and "It has as much philosophical and scientific backbone as the microscopic elephant."
Which people have been pointing out to you.
Yes, I mean that both pro and con arguments against design should be allowed to be discussed, because design does not have to be theological in nature.
It just needs evidence - which you just said was non-existent - to be valid for science.
I don't see a third option.
You don't even have a second yet. You are comparing science with philosophy and saying "look, science doesn't do philosophy" and the only reason you have for it is your personal beliefs.
The options are science and non-sense: you want to teach non-sense about microscopic elephants being possible.
Here's a novel idea: Lets leave it open to discussion in school ...
You call that "novel"??? Thats the whole wedge issue.
I mean, there are quite a few competing theories concepts.
But there is only one scientific theory. The others are hypothesis based on wishfull thinking and a complete (as you noted) lack of evidence. Crude concepts.
Yes, I mean that both pro and con arguments against design should be allowed to be discussed, because design does not have to be theological in nature. I mean, there are quite a few competing theories.
But you haven't even engaged the problem with neo-paleyism design as exemplified by the Silly Design Institute: Let's discuss BOTH sides of the Design Controversy..., you need to look at both sides of the design contoversy: neo-paleyism vs silly design.
Take the human eye: it is a D-- design. Barely able to meet the needs of the organism when it is NOT failing, and it is frequently failing.
You have a blind spot and a bunch of "wiring" that gets in the way of vision, reducing it's ability to see, and sometime seeing things that are NOT there and sometimes NOT seeing things that ARE there ...
This is SILLY.
With an AVERAGE design failing sight would not occur. It does, so the current design is sub-average.
With a GOOD design there would be other {benefits\features\abilities} that would have arisen from methods to keep sight from failing.
Good design borrows from other designs to assemble a superior design. Thus for GOOD design of the eye, we would have the retina of an octopus or squid (facing the proper direction) and the additional focus mechanism of octopus (change focal length to the eye - they have a fixed lens compared to our changeable lens) to give ZOOM vision as well as overcome any small loss of vision as the lens hardens.
Because there CAN be a better design using CURRENT PARTS, the existing design is pedestrian, poorly thought out and frought with problems that could be easily overcome.
It is NOT intelligent.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to design a BETTER eye from AVAILABLE parts.
Enjoy.

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This message is a reply to:
 Message 106 by Hyroglyphx, posted 12-11-2006 9:22 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

iceage 
Suspended Member (Idle past 5941 days)
Posts: 1024
From: Pacific Northwest
Joined: 09-08-2003


Message 138 of 301 (369399)
12-12-2006 8:22 PM
Reply to: Message 135 by GDR
12-12-2006 7:06 PM


Re: Other options.
GDR writes:
I don't agree that it is clear that any given species is not an intended product....
Do you start pounding nails into wood without having any idea why. I just don't believe that a designer with the intelligence to create all that we see would either.
GDR If you believe the intelligent designer intentionally designed all that we see what is your thoughts on the Guinea Worm parasite discussed here Message 98?
GDR writes:
If evolution is a true theory then we have to accept that the process isn't finished as it must be still ongoing so we can be sure that we haven't seen the finished product.
I have no problem accepting that. In fact, it is somewhat exciting to think we maybe the founding species of self-aware self-directed life that will extend beyond this warm little womb that is earth.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 135 by GDR, posted 12-12-2006 7:06 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 141 by GDR, posted 12-13-2006 3:08 AM iceage has not replied

fallacycop
Member (Idle past 5547 days)
Posts: 692
From: Fortaleza-CE Brazil
Joined: 02-18-2006


Message 139 of 301 (369413)
12-12-2006 10:12 PM
Reply to: Message 130 by Hyroglyphx
12-12-2006 6:08 PM


The second point is that ID, Big bang, evolution, and string theory, are just that-- theories. They are based on inferences that employ a variety of branches of science to support the overall thesis-- which we should encourage, not stifle. I didn't say, or even allude, that any one of those aren't making scientific inquiries. Of course they are. My reason for mentioning it is that they aren't branches of sciences, they are theories that use utilize those branches.
That distinction you are making between a branch of science and theories that make use of these sciences doesn`t really exist. It`s like saying that pulling out the leafs of a tree don`t heart the tree because they are not branches of the tree. they are just leafs that use the branches of the tree for support. I hope that helps clear that one out.
Behe, Dembski, Wells, etc have nothing to do with science?
They may have science degrees. But what they have been doing is not science because they have not been following the rules. They have been publishing books directed to the public instead of peer reviewed publications. They`ve been trying to short circuit the scientific process and jump from non-peer-reviewed publications directly into the classrooms. Sorry, but that`s not how it`s supposed to be done.
Yes, but something else would have been. I'm not merely speaking about humans. I'm speaking about the organism that is most closely related to the Chameleon that doesn't have the procryptic ability.
Name one. I think all camallions have this ability. But even if some doesn`t, that wouldn`t rule out evolution, because changes in the enviroment might change what is advantageous for a specific species and, therefore, change what is selected by natural selection.
For instance: all primates lack the ability to produce vitamine C (They have the gene for the enzime that produces it, but it`s defective) This is a disadvantage. How does evolution explain that? All primates may have evolved form a commom ancestor that had so much vitamine C in its diet that it was irrelevant for them whether they could produce theier own vitamine C. How does ID explain all the primates having the same defective gene while no other mammals have the same defect? As you can see, this is much more of a problem for ID then it is for evolution.
Who does nature know what a twig is and that an animal masquerading as one would be a very successful predator if nature is not cognizant?
That`s such a basic point of evolution that the fact that you would even ask that question shows that you haven`t understood anything at all yet. that`s surprising.
Nature is not cognizant. But throught a combination of random mutations and natural selection it can create new forms of life that have the appearence of having been designed, eventhough they have not.
How can they get around that? Being that I see this whole debate is more of an ideological battle more than a question of how good the science is, it seems that no matter what happens, there will be this factor of bias.
That`s where you go wrong. The battle really is between good science and bad pseudo-science. Only the people in your camp see it as being an ideological battle.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 130 by Hyroglyphx, posted 12-12-2006 6:08 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

PaulK
Member
Posts: 17827
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 140 of 301 (369464)
12-13-2006 2:17 AM
Reply to: Message 131 by Hyroglyphx
12-12-2006 6:26 PM


Re: Deep misgivings
quote:
So what? See, what you're doing is basically trying to make it either illegal or taboo to even mention God. I believe that the Designer is the Judeo-Christian God. But that's just my belief.
That really is a ridiculous distortion and slander. All that Percy is doing is pointing out that ID'ers frequently argue on the basis that the designer is God, even when dealing with supposedly scientific arguments.
You are quite free to go around saying that the Designer is God and Percy did not even remotely suggests changing that situation in the slightest. What you can't do is get away with saying it and then accusing others of distortion for saying the same thing that you do.
[queue]
Proponents of ID can't make substantive arguments by saying that God is the Designer. [/quote]
But we have seen that they DO make arguments that imply that God is the Designer.
quote:
What they can do, is show people that something of a Higher Cognizance is most parsimonious.
So you now admit that ID is at least arguing for the existence of A God, if not a particular one ?
quote:
What they can do, is show people that something of a Higher Cognizance is most parsimonious.
I think you will find very few who are not Christian. And most of them will be fringe figures. Can you find a major figure in ID who is not a Christian or a member of a closely related religion ?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 131 by Hyroglyphx, posted 12-12-2006 6:26 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

GDR
Member
Posts: 6202
From: Sidney, BC, Canada
Joined: 05-22-2005
Member Rating: 2.1


Message 141 of 301 (369467)
12-13-2006 3:08 AM
Reply to: Message 138 by iceage
12-12-2006 8:22 PM


Re: Other options.
GDR writes:
I don't agree that it is clear that any given species is not an intended product....
iceage writes:
GDR If you believe the intelligent designer intentionally designed all that we see what is your thoughts on the Guinea Worm parasite discussed here Message 98?
I was just disagreeing with jar on his assertion that it is clear that any given species is not an intended product. I don't think it is clear at all, but it doesn't necessarily mean that all species are intended. I am prepared to accept that one could make a good argument for the idea that some species are just by-products of natural selection. That doesn't mean however that it is true of all species.
This guinea worm sounds like a pretty miserable piece of work but no worse than some people that we could name. I have no idea but I imagine that it is possible that this worm also serves some necessary service

Everybody is entitled to my opinion.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 138 by iceage, posted 12-12-2006 8:22 PM iceage has not replied

PaulK
Member
Posts: 17827
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 142 of 301 (369469)
12-13-2006 4:25 AM


More on ID and God
Here is what a Christian, favouring cosmological ID has to say about his treatment by the ID establishment. The first Tme Dembski Booted me
Interesting points:
1) The ID establishment is very much against discussion of the age of the Earth.
Unfortunately most cosmological ID arguments assume an old Earth. So it is certainly a relevant issue - so why not allow discussion ? In fact if ID is really scientific why would there need to be discussion. The Earth is old - end of story. And why is Dembski so sensitive on the matter ?
2) David Heddle, the author of the post - an ID supporter - holds the view that ID is a "science-based apologetic".
He also understands that simply keeping quiet on the age of the Earth is problematic if ID is to be considered to be truly scientific.
So to GDR what do you say to this evidence that ID is NOT mainly about cosmology ?
And to NJ what do you say to Heddle's views that ID is an apologetic and not science ? He isn't an "ID detractor". And how do you explain why the ID movement would need an enforced silence on the age of the Earth - unless it is primarily a religious-political movement that needs to pander to YEC views, even when they conflcit with science ?

Replies to this message:
 Message 146 by Percy, posted 12-13-2006 9:52 AM PaulK has replied
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Percy
Member
Posts: 22492
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 143 of 301 (369498)
12-13-2006 9:02 AM
Reply to: Message 130 by Hyroglyphx
12-12-2006 6:08 PM


Re: Deep misgivings
nemesis_juggernaut writes:
For starters, you are quoting Judge Jones, not the people in question in taped deposition or on court transcripts.
If excerpts from the judge's ruling aren't sufficiently persuasive for you then here are the transcripts: Dover Trial Transcripts at the ACLU
Secondly, I thought you were placing in question the expert witnesses, like Behe, not the school board members...Please explain to me what this one trial and the opinions of school board members have to do with the overall view of ID?
You seem to have forgotten the context of the discussion. Fallacycop said this about IDists avoiding mention of God:
fallacycop in Message 56 writes:
Come on NJ, we all know that the only reason the ID movement avoids talking about god as the intelligent designer is to dodge a high court decision that made creation science unfit for teaching at science classes
You replied that he was imagining things:
nemesis_juggernaut in Message 73 writes:
No, you've imagined this Bogeyman scenario so you can keep it out.
And I replied to you that such misrepresentations were by no means a figment of anyone's imagination:
Percy in Message 77 writes:
One of the revelations of the Dover trial was the very public way it came to light that Christians will lie under oath.
What I did was give an example showing that what you had called a "Bogeyman scenario" had already happened when Christians under oath in an American courtroom lied about the religious motivations of their ID efforts.
It is common knowledge that IDists attempt to disguise and otherwise hide the religious nature of the views they are attempting to characterize as science. Why one would attempt to deny the obvious is hard to understand. IDists are almost exclusively evangelical Christians, and ID itself is just a branch of creation science, whose failed efforts at moving religion into public schools already has a long public record. For people to believe that ID has nothing to do with God or religion would require illogic and amnesia on a massive scale.
nemesis_juggernaut writes:
Percy writes:
Judge Jones is a conservative Republican, a churchgoer, and a Bush appointee.
That's immaterial. What is that supposed to mean?
I was merely attempting to anticipate your response, which I assumed would be similar to that of the Discovery Institute in trying to dismiss the significance of the decision by denigrating the judge and his motives. For example, these are the words of Dr. John West, Associate Director of the Center for Science and Culture at Discovery Institute (from Dover Intelligent Design Decision Criticized as a Futile Attempt to Censor Science Education):
"Judge Jones found that the Dover board violated the Establishment Clause because it acted from religious motives. That should have been the end to the case. Instead, Judge Jones got on his soapbox to offer his own views of science, religion, and evolution. He makes it clear that he wants his place in history as the judge who issued a definitive decision about intelligent design. This is an activist judge who has delusions of grandeur."
Moving on:
nemesis_juggernaut writes:
The point is that we have people claiming that ID is going to somehow undermine science. That's not possible because ID or evolution aren't branches of science.
There have been several other responses to your message, so concerning your misconceptions about science, branches of science and theories, I'm going to leave that aside for now in the hope that these are now remedied, but I'm glad to continue discussion about it if it proves necessary.
I don't believe your statement that people are claiming that ID is going to undermine science is accurate. Some may have made some statements that could be construed this way, but it would be a mistake to conclude this is the intended or key point. The objection to ID isn't that it would undermine science. Rather, the objection is that ID is not science. It is not science because of the way it is approached, which is revelatory in nature while ignoring key aspects of the nature of science and of the scientific method.
Behe, Dembski, Wells, etc have nothing to do with science?...etc...
Others have already addressed why what Behe, Dembski, Wells, Gitt, Baumgardner, Humphreys, etc, etc, etc, are doing with regard to creation science and ID is not science. Let me know if you think further discussion would be helpful.
Now, are they also lobbying their viewpoint? Yes, they are, just as Wallace and Huxley were lobbying in defense of evolution over a century ago. What's the problem with that?
The problem is that lobbying is their sole activity with regard to creationism and ID.
Genetics is the mechanism behind heredity.
You can't leave such an open-ended answer and expect that to speak to us. An answer of such brevity is almost as bad as Goddidit.
The term "brevity" cannot be accurately applied to a message board post of over a thousand words. I'm happy to explain the mechanisms behind evolution to any extent necessary. But I think the issue you're actually trying to raise is the lack of specificity we can achieve regarding past evolutionary events. It sounds like you want to know what, specifically and genetically, caused one lizard to evolve camouflage capability and another not. Whether or not an answer exists depends upon the level of detail you're seeking. Let me explain via analogy to geology.
There's a geologist doing soil analysis in a remote desert. The analysis indicates that a significant component of the soil must have come from a mountain range about a hundred miles away. This conclusion is reached because of similar mineral content and unique chemical signatures. But someone could claim, quite correctly though certainly also incredibly nitpickedly, that this is merely circumstantial evidence, and demand that they won't find the evidence credible unless the geologist can identify the particular weather systems, rainstorms, windstorms, etc., that eroded the material from the mountains and transported it to the desert. That evidence, of course, will never be found because evidence of such things just doesn't last very long. It's the same reason that there's no evidence in your yard today that will tell you what the temperature was at noon a week ago.
So what caused one lizard to develop camouflage and another not? The reasons are evolutionary. One lizard occupied an ecological niche where resemblance to objects common in it's environment would either provide protection from predators, or if it were itself a predator, would prevent it from being identified by potential prey. Or perhaps both, since even predators can be preyed upon. These selection factors would have caused lizards that better resembled leaves (or twigs or tree bark or whatever) to have a better chance of survival to produce more offspring, and the particular allele mix and any chance favorable mutations would increase in representation in the lizard population.
But why did another identical lizard population on the other side of the river not evolve the same camouflage capability? The reason is that things are never truly identical, including any chance events that might play a role. All we can know is that evolution took a different path there. The actual individual causative events can likely never be know. All we can do is look at the genomes of the two lizard populations and say, "Here at these gene positions are the differences that x million years ago gave one lizard population its chameleon capabilities."
nemesis_juggernaut writes:
Percy writes:
The answer to what I think you're actually asking is that the qualities that benefit a creature are enormously dependent upon the existing qualities of that creature, the nature of its genetic library, and the specifics of its environment. A chameleon might evolve the ability to resemble a twig if it lived in a forest but not in a desert.
How? Who does nature know what a twig is and that an animal masquerading as one would be a very successful predator if nature is not cognizant?
Nature doesn't know what a twig is or what camouflage is. Evolution is not a guided process. There is no knowing intelligence behind evolution. All that happens is differential reproductive success based upon each organisms individual characteristics. Those with characteristics that provide greater survival benefit are more likely to produce offspring, and more offspring, than others in their population.
Why would nature have selected something else when procryptism is markedly effective?
All solutions are not effective in all environments or for all creatures. Procryptic capability might work well for a lizard, but it wouldn't work very well for a prehistoric human. A lion's keen sense of smell is unlikely to be thrown off by the fact that a procryptic human exactly resembled a tree trunk. The same for a deer that a human is hunting. In fact, what humans have found most successful in hunting is to stay downwind of prey.
People like Behe and Dembski have already submitted many peer reviews on many subjects that don't directly mention Intelligent Design in the past.
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to say here. Behe is widely published in the microbiology journals, but none of his published work is ID. Dembski's never been published in the scientific journals that I'm aware of. Has either ever submitted an ID article to a journal?
But now, they're branded. And whatever they submit for review will be met with hostility on an a priori basis, rather than a posteriori basis.
How can they get around that? Being that I see this whole debate is more of an ideological battle more than a question of how good the science is, it seems that no matter what happens, there will be this factor of bias.
But it isn't an ideological battle, not within science. It's only a question of doing good science. If you do good science you'll get published. True, they've poisoned the well by committing the significant faux paux of taking their arguments public before sharing them with scientific colleagues, but if their science is good then it will eventually get published and it will gain adherents.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 130 by Hyroglyphx, posted 12-12-2006 6:08 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22492
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 144 of 301 (369500)
12-13-2006 9:35 AM
Reply to: Message 131 by Hyroglyphx
12-12-2006 6:26 PM


Re: Deep misgivings
nemesis_juggernaut writes:
That doesn't mean that I, John 10:10, Behe or whoever else isn't entitled to our private interpretations.
But John 10:10 isn't keeping his private. He's arguing that the designer is God in this very thread. Other ID threads here at EvC Forum are full of similar arguments from other IDists.
Our point isn't that you're not entitled to your private interpretations. Our point is that in the aggregate you IDists are not keeping them private. You cannot with any legitimacy accuse us of spreading disinformation when all we've done is repeat what advocates for your side have already said.
There's also the problem of the infinite regression. If you haven't heard about this before, the reasoning goes like this: Life is too wondrous and too complex to have ever come about by natural means, so it must have been designed by other intelligent life. Where did this other intelligent life come from? Well, since life is too wondrous and too complex to have ever come about by natural means, it must have been designed by another previous intelligent life. Where did this previous intelligent life come from? Well, since life is too wondrous and too complex to have ever come about by natural means, it must have been designed by another previous intelligent life.
See the pattern? It's called an infinite regression. Eventually you have to interrupt the regression to ask where the first intelligent life came from. You can either resume the infinite regression, or you can give the answer evangelical Christians and IDists everywhere would give: God.
What they can do, is show people that something of a Higher Cognizance is most parsimonious.
Most parsimoneous with the evidence. What evidence would that be? How wondrous and complex life is?
If I found a toaster on the ground, I don't need to know who the manufacturer is in order to know that it was designed.
Use a different object than a toaster, because you already know what a toaster is. Say you found an astrolabe on the ground (I'm presuming you don't know what an astrolabe looks like - if you're actually familiar with astrolabes then substitute an object you're unfamiliar with, perhaps a turnip twaddler). You immediately know that the astrolabe was designed and manufactured by people. Think about how you know this. You know this because of your familiarity with people and what they can do. You've seen tons of items manufactured by people and the astrolabe has many of the characteristics of such manufactured items. It's made out of metal, it has markings on it, it has moving parts, it's fastened together with screws and/or rivets, etc.
You've also seen tons of items that were not manufactured by people: rocks, soil, trees, rain, stars, etc. The astrolabe obviously fits in the category of things designed and manufactured by people.
Okay, now you're looking at a bacterium under a microscope. In order to carry out the equivalent comparison you performed with the astrolabe, you need a bunch of items to compare it with, and these items should be divided into two groups. One group of items would be those things you know were designed and manufactured by this unknown intelligence. And the other group of items would be those things you know were not designed and manufactured by this unknown intelligence.
Both lists, as it turns out, are empty. You have no data at all how this unknown intelligence designs and manufactures anything. You don't even know anything about the unknown intelligence itself, and worse, profess no curiosity about it. You don't even know what the equivalent of fingers are for this unknown intelligence, so you could be staring at one of his fingerprints and never even know it.
This is why the analogy you attempted to draw with a toaster is false.
Anything beyond a Desginer(s) is a theological question, not a scientific one.
Until you have evidence, the designer is also a theological, not a scientific, question.
Really? There aren't peoples of various faiths or political ideologies that advocate ID? And the Dover trial was 1 group. You want to make the sweeping indictment that only creationists are ID'ists simply because they don't agree with evolution.
I'm not sure why you persist in these attempts at misrepresentation. It isn't like the creationist/ID movement is some new organization with no history. The creationist/ID movement is almost exclusively the province of evangelical Christians who oppose the teaching of evolution in public schools. That's a fact.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 131 by Hyroglyphx, posted 12-12-2006 6:26 PM Hyroglyphx has not replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22492
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 145 of 301 (369502)
12-13-2006 9:41 AM
Reply to: Message 127 by Wounded King
12-12-2006 12:46 PM


Re: Deep misgivings
Wounded King writes:
That certainly isn't the case in the UK. My BSc was in 'Cell and Molecular Biology' and I could certainly have done one in 'Evolutionary Biology' if I had wanted to.
Oh, wow, that's neat! So NJ's analogy was dead wrong, since you *can*, at least in the UK, get a degree in evolutionary biology.
My Bachelor's degree says only "Bachelor of Electrical Engineering", and my master's says only "Master of Computer Engineering", but in doctor's offices I see that they clearly list specialities, like "Doctor of Medicine in Neurology" and so forth. My degrees are quite ancient now, and perhaps the practice you describe in the UK is now common here, too.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 127 by Wounded King, posted 12-12-2006 12:46 PM Wounded King has not replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22492
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 146 of 301 (369504)
12-13-2006 9:52 AM
Reply to: Message 142 by PaulK
12-13-2006 4:25 AM


Re: More on ID and God
PaulK writes:
Here is what a Christian, favouring cosmological ID has to say about his treatment by the ID establishment. The first Tme Dembski Booted me
There was a second time?
Here's the most significant thing I saw in that link, the most explicit indication I've seen thus far of the positive effects of Dover (emphasis mine):
David Heddle writes:
All my ID talks are on fine-tuning and cosmology. In spite of being labeled a heretic now and then by outspoken YECs, I generally have no problems--in fact the majority of the audiences in the churches and colleges where I speak are biased toward a YEC position. (I don't get invited to public schools anymore--the backfiring of the ID community's political strategies has poisoned that well.)
Another thing of note in Heddle's comments was the descriptions of censorship at Dembski's board.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 142 by PaulK, posted 12-13-2006 4:25 AM PaulK has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 148 by PaulK, posted 12-13-2006 11:09 AM Percy has not replied

GDR
Member
Posts: 6202
From: Sidney, BC, Canada
Joined: 05-22-2005
Member Rating: 2.1


Message 147 of 301 (369516)
12-13-2006 11:07 AM
Reply to: Message 142 by PaulK
12-13-2006 4:25 AM


Re: More on ID and God
PaulK writes:
So to GDR what do you say to this evidence that ID is NOT mainly about cosmology ?
I see ID as being about all that we can observe and not just cosmology.
I understand that there are people that misuse ID as a back door method of disputing evolution. I contend that they are at the opposite end of the spectrum from Dawkins who misuses science as a method of refuting religion.
As far as I'm concerned ID is just an updating of Paley's argument. In my own view the argument is even more compelling than it was at the time of Paley. When I read about relativity, QM or even genetics it screams out to me "design". Is that science? No.
Where some people look at the world and universe around us and see random chance others like myself see design. Again, neither is scientific.
Edited by GDR, : No reason given.

Everybody is entitled to my opinion.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 142 by PaulK, posted 12-13-2006 4:25 AM PaulK has not replied

PaulK
Member
Posts: 17827
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 148 of 301 (369518)
12-13-2006 11:09 AM
Reply to: Message 146 by Percy
12-13-2006 9:52 AM


Re: More on ID and God
Here's another item of interest, Ed Brayton's fisking of the DI's latest propaganda stunt.
The relevance here is that like NJ's "distorton", they refer to "errors" in the Kitzmiller ruling - where "error" is DI code for "contradicting our lies".
Fisking the DI's "Study" on the Dover Ruling
A brief look at some of those "errors" reveals that what their argument really means is that he didn't buy the ID side's arguments on various matters, and for good reason
Here's another example of an alleged error in the ruling:
| ID is not supported by any peer-reviewed research, data or publications.
Allegedly refuted by Minnich's references to
... the Axe papers, and Behe and Snoke paper. Yes, Minnich did mention them. Does that mean that those are indeed examples peer-reviewed research that supports ID? Not even close
and this is also relvant to the ongoing discussion
I don't care how many times the IDers jump up and down and say that the designer doesn't necessarily have to be supernatural, their own definitions, their own anti-naturalism rhetoric and their own previous statements incontrovertibly proves otherwise. There is one and only one reason why they continue to try and prop up this fiction that the designer could be natural, and that's because they need that fiction to get around the notion that ID is an inherently religious idea. It's a sham and a transparently obvious one at that.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 146 by Percy, posted 12-13-2006 9:52 AM Percy has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 149 by Jazzns, posted 12-13-2006 12:36 PM PaulK has not replied

Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3938 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 149 of 301 (369530)
12-13-2006 12:36 PM
Reply to: Message 148 by PaulK
12-13-2006 11:09 AM


Re: More on ID and God
I love this quote from the ACLU attorney.
An ACLU official calls the Institute's report a stunt.
"They're getting no traction in the scientific world so they're trying to do something ... as a PR stunt to get attention," said Witold Walczak, legal director for the ACLU of Pennsylvania and the ACLU's lead attorney on the case.
"That's not how scientists work," he said. "Discovery Institute is trying to litigate a year-old case in the media."
Walczak said the Discovery Institute staff is not, as it claims, interested in finding scientific truths; it is more interested in a "cultural war," pushing for intelligent design and publicly criticizing a judge.
"Why don't these guys go back to their 'labs,' and do something meaningful?" Walczak asked. "Oh, wait. They don't have labs. Silly me."

Of course, biblical creationists are committed to belief in God's written Word, the Bible, which forbids bearing false witness; --AIG (lest they forget)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 148 by PaulK, posted 12-13-2006 11:09 AM PaulK has not replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22492
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 150 of 301 (369532)
12-13-2006 12:57 PM


Judge Jones the Plagiarist?
Isnt' this document from the Discovery Institute pretty damning for Judge Jones: A Comparison of Judge Jones’ Opinion in Kitzmiller v. Dover with Plaintiffs’ Proposed “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law”
AbE: Here's some links.
Judge Jone's Decision
Plaintiffs' Proposed Findings and Conclusions
--Percy
Edited by Percy, : Add links.

Replies to this message:
 Message 151 by PaulK, posted 12-13-2006 1:04 PM Percy has replied

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