Posted on 11/11/2005 4:47:36 PM PST by Wolfstar
It's an inside joke you wouldn't understand.
Or else a charlatan who uses a familiarity with jargon to fake understanding of science and math.
One or the other, certainly.
No. I have no such inclination. Being wrong is an inevitability if one attempts anything worthwhile in life. It happens, and one learns, admits it, and moves on. Why would one lie about it, let alone under oath?
Maaan, what does any of this prove? Awesome, dude, that so righteously kewl, it must mean there is a God. Pass over the doobie, maaan,
I don't believe or disbelieve. I find both a designed cosmos and a designer-less cosmos hard to comprehend.
As to reconciling a designer with birth defects, perhaps the designer had cruel intent. Intelligence doesn' t equal kindness here on earth. Perhaps the same with the designer.
xzins: Why does it shake your faith?
The intelligent design hypothesis has no doctrine, no articles of faith, no Holy writ.
Nor does it specify the "intelligent cause" - which could be either a phenomenon or an agent. Phenomena include intelligence as an emergent property of self-organizing complexity and fractal intelligence. Agents could be God, collective consciousness, aliens, Gaia, etc.
Nor does it address "all features" of the universe and life. Nor is it a theory of origins.
The hypothesis says that "certain features of the universe and life are best explained by intelligent cause rather than an undirected process such as natural selection."
Some people label intelligent design supporters as theists. And some people label supporters of the theory of evolution as atheists.
But neither is a valid because correlation is not causation.
For instance, that a bunch of storks appear at the same time a bunch of babies are born does not establish a cause/effect relationship between the two.
I'm sorry. I thought you meant it personally, that it had shaken your faith.
If we were speaking theologically, then we could talk about the many difficulties that life brings. They all issue, ultimately, from a fallen universe.
It is considered polite to ping someone when they are mentioned -- especially in a potentially negative light. I have pinged Alamo-Girl, and it is true that she is very knowledgeable regarding the ID discussion. So is Betty Boop.
Absolutely true, AG.
ID makes no statement about "who" or "what" the designer is. The best one can say about the designer is that it is an organizing principle which could be phenomenological or personal. Perhaps it is no longer even in existence.
I read most of the cross examiniation & couldn't find it. Behe seems to have done fairly well.
It may be too soon for intelligent design to be accepted in biology class. But it is gathering momentum and adherents, both in the public and among scientists. A 2001 Gallup poll showed that 82% of those polled believed that the generation of life was "God-directed," whereas only 12% believed in the evolution of human beings without God.
Excellent point, TB.
My daughter is taking a number of science courses on her way to becoming a nurse, and she reports her instructors are continually frustrated because everytime they bring up the subject of evolution, the students snicker.
Because Wolfstar recoils from the images he links to, he thinks God does the same. But God doesn't care if I have brown hair, blue eyes or 10 eyes.
According to the scientists, we live in a universe that is over 15 billion years old but from a Christian perspective that 15 billion years is but one of those 10 eyes blinking. God is eternal and God's kingdom is open to all, those with two, four or no legs alike.
Our short time on Earth is but a weigh station and God doesn't judge us by our weight. God knew us before we were in the womb and God will judge our souls not our botox injections.
Oh yes you did.
If the "design" of human systems is so intelligent, why do tragic inefficiencies such as the following occur at all?
If the cases shown in the above-linked photos are examples of "intelligent design," then the question has to be asked: To what purpose?
Such cases are not just tragic, but extremely cruel. They not only argue against "intelligent design," but also are capable of shaking one's faith in religion.
Purpose IS a religious/philosophical question.
Tragic IS a religious/philosophical/moral statement.
Extremely cruel IS a religious/philosophical/moral statement.
If serious ID proponents are capable of calmly and rationally reconciling -- in the example I used -- birth defects with the theory on a non-religious basis, I am most open to the information.
No clearly you are not. You ask religious/philosophical questions and make religious/philosophical/moral statements, and then demand a non-religious/non-philosophical rebuttal. You can't even debate on the ground you started the debate on.
That should make many celebrities breath a sigh of relief. (Although, I'm not sure a sigh is any more possible than a smile once one's had her botox injection. :>)
Good points.
The fatal flaw posed by the title of this thread is that the Intelligent Designer is something like the Christian God.
That really is not a premise of intelligent design.
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