I do know where my citations come from, and I do read them through to make sure I am not quote mining.
Again, I find that over the years you never criticise young earth creationism or any of the weird forms of ID.
So when you use the term nonrandom or guiding intelligence, some may mistake your reference as a reference to a supernatural designer, rather than an intelligence that is more like a computer algorithm, an analogy which Shapiro explicitly uses.
I'm not Mormon, but I don't find it necessary to criticise Mormons.
So when you use the term nonrandom or guiding intelligence, some may mistake your reference as a reference to a supernatural designer,
That would probably be due to the fact that I am referencing a supernatural designer and so apparently is Shapiro.
It opens up the possibility of addressing scientifically rather than ideologically the central issue so hotly contested by fundamentalists on both sides of the Creationist-Darwinist debate:
That central argument from the "Creationists" certainly is not whether the cell thinks or wrote its own program. Plus computer algorithms don't pop out of thin air.