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Why intelligent design will change everything
WorldNetDaily ^ | March 25, 2006 | Lynn Barton

Posted on 03/29/2006 7:53:52 PM PST by SampleMan

Last year, the intelligent design movement burst onto the national scene, causing all manner of outrage from the guardians of science and right thinking. All the major media covered this upstart idea challenging Darwinian evolution's theory of the origin of life. Everybody has been piling on, even conservative pundits like George Will and Charles Krauthammer. The cultural elites were appalled when the yahoos on the Kansas Board of Education voted to "teach the controversy" to high-school students. In Dover, Pa., a judge outlawed the mere mention of I.D. theory in school science classes. Like a fierce game of whack-a-mole, wherever I.D.'s politically incorrect head pops up, its opponents rush to smack it back down.

I am enjoying all this tremendously. What makes it so much fun to watch is that so far not one of the critics understands it. Without exception, they simply dismiss I.D. theory as nothing more than stealth religion – creationism by another name. They say that all I.D. does is insert God to explain what science has not yet figured out. While they all lose their collective minds about it, warning darkly that the fundamentalists are coming, support for I.D. theory will continue to grow because it is good science. I want to explain why, so that when you hear the intelligentsia loudly denouncing it, you, too, can have a good laugh. Even better, you will understand why intelligent design theory is going to become a major force for good in the battle to rescue our collapsing culture – because the way we think about origins affects the way we think about nearly everything. (More on that later.)

Meanwhile, the debate rages on, all the while opponents keep insisting there is no debate.

Despite its pretensions to objectivity, science has always been political. That's why scientific revolutions have often met initially with resistance and ridicule, because the old order stands to lose if the new becomes accepted. But the great thing about science is that eventually the weight of evidence breaks through. Think Galileo (opposed not only by the church but by fellow academics), or Lister (ridiculed for disinfecting surgical rooms to prevent infection), or the Wright Brothers (man will never fly). So all this hand wringing about intelligent design is a good sign that the revolution is under way. The old order is being challenged, and they are freaking out.

I.D. not religion

First, what I.D. theory is not: It is not creationism. Full disclosure here: I am a creationist. As a Christian, I believe God is the author of life. But I.D. theory is a science-driven enterprise. It is not a deduction from Scripture but an inference from observation. It says that the intricate design found in living things and in the universe itself is best explained by an intelligent cause. Darwinism, on the other hand, says that undirected natural processes led life to arise spontaneously; then evolution by natural selection (survival of the fittest) resulted in living things that appear to be designed, but really aren't. The question boils down to this: When considered objectively, where does the evidence actually lead?

Drawing heavily on Nancy Pearcey's great apologetic book "Total Truth," I'm going to focus on two of the most powerful arguments for intelligent design. Her book contains many more. I wish every Christian (and every thinking person) would read her masterful defense of Christianity as total truth about all of reality. But just reading this column will make you far more knowledgeable about I.D. than nearly all of its opponents.

It's true that by far the dominant theory of origins is the evolutionary one. It goes something like this: It all began billions of years ago in some sort of chemical soup (a "warm little pond," as Darwin put it) which, when zapped with an energy source, led to the chance formation of amino acids. These acids somehow self-organized into proteins and then morphed into the first living cell. All living things descended from that first cell, evolving from simple into increasingly complex organisms, all the way up to man.

Just one problem

In Darwin's time this was easier to imagine, because it was thought that cells were mere blobs of protoplasm. It fit in nicely with his idea that life could have first appeared as a simple cell. There's just one problem. We now know that there is no such thing as a "simple" cell. Recent advances in microbiology have demonstrated that the cell is literally a miniature factory town, with its own chemical library containing blueprints that are copied and transported to molecular assembly lines that manufacture everything the cell needs. Nancy Pearcey compares it to "… a large and complex model train layout, with tracks crisscrossing everywhere, its switches and signals perfectly timed so that no trains collide and the cargo reaches its destination precisely when needed."

Just one cell is vastly more complex than anything ever created by human engineering. And your body contains 300 trillion of them, each one "knowing" exactly what it is supposed to do within itself and in relation to all the other cells.

Microbiologist Michael Behe has coined the term "irreducible complexity" to describe this. That is, the cell consists of coordinated, interlocking parts that must all be in place simultaneously, or it won't function at all. You can't improve the cell through one random mutation at a time because if you change any one aspect, the whole thing will crash. For evolutionary change to occur, every single piece of its Rube Goldberg-like factory would have to mutate at exactly the same time, and each single mutation would have to be beneficial, or the cell would just die.

Darwin himself understood what today's evolutionists refuse to admit:

"If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."

That is exactly what Behe has done. As Pearcey puts it:

"An aggregate structure, like a pile of sand, can be built up gradually by simply adding a piece at a time. ... By contrast, an organized structure, like the inside of a computer, is built up according to a pre-existing blueprint."

Since living systems are organized wholes, they had to have been put together in the first place by a pre-existing design.

Darwinists cannot explain irreducible complexity. They keep saying that it poses no problem for evolution, as if repetition would make it so. They insist that just because we don't yet understand how evolution can work in light of this doesn't mean that we won't figure it out eventually. But they will never figure it out, because irreducible complexity makes evolutionary change at the cellular level logically impossible.

(Note: Natural selection clearly occurs within species as an adaptive mechanism. I.D. theory does not deny or even address this, nor does it address the question of whether natural selection could lead to the development of entirely new species. I.D. theory is concerned with the origin of life only.)

Not by chance

Even more powerful evidence comes from the genetic code. DNA is a kind of language consisting of four chemical "letters" that combine into an astonishing variety of sequences to spell out a message. It contains a mind-boggling amount of information. Where did it come from?

Darwinists say that DNA resulted from chance mutations operated on by natural selection. Really? As theologian Norm Geisler quipped:

"If you came into the kitchen and saw the alphabet cereal spilled out on the table, and it spelled out your name and address, would you think the cat knocked the cereal box over?"

In fact, chance events tend to scramble information, like typos in a page of text. Even if some kind of more complex molecule somehow did appear in the supposed chemical soup, the same random processes that produced it would continue to insert "typos," soon scrambling any coherent message that might have occurred. Again, it's not that we don't yet understand how chance could create complex information; it's that in principle this cannot happen.

Nor by physical law

If chance cannot do it, perhaps some yet-undiscovered physical law can. That's what scientists excited about complexity theory are hoping. They are studying self-organizing structures like snowflakes and crystals, searching for clues to how similar natural processes might also give rise to the complex information found in DNA. But they won't find any.

That prediction stems not from ignorance or hubris, but from the nature of physical laws, which by definition are regular and repeatable. Those properties enable the brilliant engineering students at MIT to enjoy shoving a piano off seven story high Baker House roof every year. They know that gravity makes things fall, every time.

But the information found in DNA is quite different. When you decode one section it tells you nothing about what comes next. The letters are free to combine into an unimaginably vast quantity of information. By contrast, the physical laws being explored in complexity theory are simple instructions, able to create complex patterns but not much information – certainly not enough to account for the fact that each cell in your body contains more information than the entire Encyclopedia Britannica.

This is not at all like saying man will never fly because God didn't give him wings. It's not that I.D. theorists can't imagine how a physical law could create information. It's because in principle, law-like processes cannot generate complex information. Some things really are impossible.

Information, information, information

It turns out that life is not primarily about matter, but information. Commenting on the failed attempts to create life in the lab, astrophysicist Paul Davies writes:

"Trying to make life by mixing chemicals in a test tube is like soldering switches and wires in an attempt to produce Windows 98. It won't work because it addresses the problem at the wrong conceptual level."

Common sense tells us that information does not occur without an intelligence to organize it, any more than the hardware of a computer can create its own software. Even scientists know this. Otherwise, how could SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) researchers ever hope to distinguish between radio signals generated by some natural process and those sent from the hoped-for aliens? Again, we see that the most plausible explanation for the information in DNA is an Intelligent Designer put it there.

But for Christians, we knew that, didn't we? "In the beginning was the Word (Logos)." Behind everything is the Logic, the Wisdom, the Intelligence of God.

Darwin's irony: cultural devolution

Currently, only a minority of scientists holds to intelligent design theory, but the number is growing. To date, over 400 scientists have signed a document entitled "Scientific Dissent from Darwinism." Many of these scientists are not Christian, and some are outright hostile to it, which is further evidence that I.D. is not religion. A scientific revolution is just beginning, but almost nobody recognizes it, least of all its opponents.

And not a moment too soon, since evolutionary theory did not stay in the scientific realm but oozed into all the sciences, the liberal arts and out into culture, with horribly destructive results. The biblical view of man as a spiritual being created in God's image has been replaced by the view that man is nothing more than a highly evolved animal struggling to survive in a meaningless universe. Scratch any social ill and you will find Darwinism underneath.

One of the worst consequences has been the devaluation of human life. It is no exaggeration to say that Darwinism has led to the killing of untold millions of human beings. To highlight just a few examples: eugenics (philosophical Darwinism) inspired Margaret Sanger to found Planned Parenthood and the pro-abortion movement. Eugenics helped Hitler convince an entire country to follow him in his attempt to wipe out the "inferior" Jews, not to mention the toll in blood it took to stop him. These days Peter Singer, a Princeton professor of bioethics, advocates that parents be allowed to dispatch their imperfect infants up to 30 days after birth. The misguided "right to die" movement is rapidly becoming the "right to kill" movement, as last year we watched severely disabled (but not dying) Terri Schiavo starve to death by court order, while a large portion of the country approved of it. Meanwhile, more than a million babies continue to be aborted every year. None of these horrors could have occurred in a culture that understood each human life to be a unique creation of God, stamped with his image.

Darwinism is also behind the sexual revolution (just doing what comes naturally), radical feminism, family breakdown and normalization of homosexuality (gender roles are social constructs we can discard as we "evolve" as a society). Darwinism removed the foundation for a transcendent moral Truth that stands outside of our personal preference. Now we make it up as we go, "re-imagining" everything. Even many Christians consider their faith to be purely personal. It's "true for me, but maybe not for you." No wonder assertions that Jesus is the only way to God meet with such outrage. And why so-called progressives are deeply offended when Christians try to bring into the public square what they view as nothing more than our particular rabbit's foot. Rejection of God is the root cause of our cultural degradation, but Darwinism has been its indispensable support, giving intellectual cover for all the evil we want to do.

Reversing the damage

But intelligent design is on the move, and this is a great gift to everyone, especially Christians. It's only a matter of time before it becomes accepted as a legitimate competing theory of origins, and as it does it will unleash enormous changes for good, not only in science but all of culture – because if people understand that there is (or at least could be) a Designer, then we can once more ask, what is the purpose of that design? What are things for?

For example, conservatives and Christians are having a difficult time making the case against homosexual marriage. Thousands of years of exclusively heterosexual marriage mean nothing to those with a Darwinist worldview. Why, they are far more evolved than those benighted cultures in the misty past. To them, tradition is oppressive; destroying it is progress. Why shouldn't people be able to "love" whomever they want? How will it hurt your marriage?

The truth is that homosexual marriage is wrong because it violates God's design and purpose for us, with inevitably negative consequences. But for an exercise in frustration, just try to discuss design with someone steeped in the evolutionary mindset. Point out the functional biological differences between male and female, and they will dodge, deny or change the subject. Press the issue, and they will become angry at your attempt to "impose" your personal values. What they will never do is engage the substance of your argument. They can't. Their worldview will not allow them to admit the obvious.

Multiple research studies documenting the need that children have for a mom and a dad are probably the best defense we've got, but in a nation full of divorced or never married single parents, and with a media quick to promote "gay" families, it's a tough slog. So far, a majority of the public opposes homosexual marriage, but it's mostly instinctive and traditional. People say things like, "I wasn't raised that way." But younger generations, raised on books like "Heather Has Two Mommies" and subjected to Darwinist dogma throughout their schooling, have no tradition left to hold them. And any common-sense instinct they might have to resist faces an incessant cultural onslaught that brands such thoughts as hateful prejudice.

For the older generations, watching defenders of marriage viciously attacked in the press is very confusing. Having never reasoned out something so basic as marriage, they, too, will begin to doubt themselves. Unless something dramatic changes, public opposition will eventually crumble, and we will see the destruction of marriage as one more nail in the cultural coffin we are building for ourselves.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: crevolist; evolution; id; junkscience; pseudoscience; tinfoilhat; twaddle
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To: Conservative Texan Mom
That's one possibility"?

Without a fact there is only faith and belief. Science does not propose 16 possibilities and then roll the dice for acceptance of one. Without a fact its no more a possibility than it is not a possibility. Unknown.

521 posted on 03/30/2006 7:39:44 PM PST by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: metmom
Well, you state the obvious.

The article I posted, which has been accredited falsely as my opinion, connected Darwin to Hitler's illness. Mad people justify themselves in any way they can, and its not wise to connect the given reasons to the madness.

Vice simply saying what you and I have just said, the last 300 or so posts and untold hours of gooogling have been predominately dedicated to trying to prove Hitler was a Christian. But by all accounts not in any way to disparage Christians. You be the judge.
522 posted on 03/30/2006 7:40:54 PM PST by SampleMan
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To: jec41

Are you from Germany? If so, I'd be interested in some of your experiences from WWII? This is of great interest to me, as my heritage is primarily German! I don't suppose there is a different ping list for such discussion since it is not related to this forum.

Hitler's interpretation is not consistent with mine, and mine seems to be broader than many.

It disturbs me that he did claim this because it places Christianity in a bad light.


523 posted on 03/30/2006 7:41:41 PM PST by Conservative Texan Mom (Some people say I'm stubborn, when it's usually that I'm right!)
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To: metmom
A follower of Christ is not going to manipulate and butcher people.

Visit your local prision.

524 posted on 03/30/2006 7:44:51 PM PST by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: jec41
The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman World, were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful.
-Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)
525 posted on 03/30/2006 7:47:02 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Conservative Texan Mom; Ichneumon

You know, every single evo on these threads, knows that I am a Christian, as I have mentionned it enough...and they have never ever said anything to me, that smacks of being disrespectful of my belief...of course, I also support evolution...but they all also know that I do believe that the Christian God is the one who created the first life...and altho they may disagree with me on this, they have never been what I could ever call disrespectful...they simply dont agree with me...but since we are not talking about the creation of the first life form, when we discuss evolution, there is hardly anything to disagree about...

To be truthful, the only people on these threads who have been disagreeable with me, are Creationists, or IDers who think they have a monopoly on what the Bible says, and will tell me I cannot possibly understand the Bible, if I support evolution, and or have been told I cannot be a Christian, because I support evolution...

Now who is being nasty and disrespectful?...



526 posted on 03/30/2006 7:50:28 PM PST by andysandmikesmom
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To: furball4paws
...the Muslims have a rapidly growing following and are remarkably united theologically.

Not really. Only in the sense of feeling picked on.

527 posted on 03/30/2006 7:51:27 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: jec41

You would not speculate because you see it as useless and choose not to, or because speculations can not occurr in science without observation, a sort of "does not compute" scenario?


528 posted on 03/30/2006 7:52:01 PM PST by Conservative Texan Mom (Some people say I'm stubborn, when it's usually that I'm right!)
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To: js1138
Why is it the Christians are so easily misled by murderous tyrants?

Because most of them are stupid. Of course, this applies to those belonging to every other religion too (or those with a lack thereof.) (Note that I intentionally left an opportunity for quote-mining.)

529 posted on 03/30/2006 7:54:50 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Skooz

I need to clarify. I am not asking to speculate about a religion. I am asking if someone agreed with everything all the way to the big bang, and then said "That's were the designer(whatever it be) must have done it? Could you say, "that's one of many possibilities?"


530 posted on 03/30/2006 7:55:32 PM PST by Conservative Texan Mom (Some people say I'm stubborn, when it's usually that I'm right!)
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To: Conservative Texan Mom
German and Irish. My families settled early in America. By the Civil war few even knew their European heritage. They were just American.

It disturbs me that he did claim this because it places Christianity in a bad light.

Christianity is probably the most favored of all religions. The actions of some Christians put Christianity in a bad light. Actions of other Christians put it in a good light.

531 posted on 03/30/2006 8:01:04 PM PST by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman World, were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful. -Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)

Thanks, I needed a voice of sanity.

532 posted on 03/30/2006 8:03:33 PM PST by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: bvw

If the bill was basically straight, rather than folded, then it's definitely a low-probability event, but obviously not a zero-probability event. That just goes to show you that even low-probability events happen. ;^)

I bet that looked cool though.


533 posted on 03/30/2006 8:10:01 PM PST by AntiGuv (™)
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To: VadeRetro
If you aren't predicting anything, you aren't saying anything about how the world works or has worked. Even a historical science has to be predictive. You say what happened, then predict that all the evidence uncovered in the future will be consistent with what you say happened.

This is acceptable


No IDer has done anything that would teach us anything. In fact, they seem to be openly advocating what amounts to punting on first down, a cessation of inquiry into dreary old mechanistic natural causes of things in favor of militantly refusing to understand how anything could happen without Design.

This has been your observation.

How would you respond to someone who believed in evolution and a designer. Let's say they agreed with everything all the way back to before the big bang, and then said, "that must have been where the designer(whatever it be) did it. Would you be willing to say, "That is one of many possibilities?"
534 posted on 03/30/2006 8:11:14 PM PST by Conservative Texan Mom (Some people say I'm stubborn, when it's usually that I'm right!)
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To: andysandmikesmom

How do you feel about post 524?


535 posted on 03/30/2006 8:12:25 PM PST by SampleMan
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To: andysandmikesmom
To be truthful, the only people on these threads who have been disagreeable with me, are Creationists, or IDers who think they have a monopoly on what the Bible says, and will tell me I cannot possibly understand the Bible, if I support evolution, and or have been told I cannot be a Christian, because I support evolution... Now who is being nasty and disrespectful?...

...As a casual observer, and having read your post in context to the thread, I would have to say both. Them, for the very complaints you level...and you for bringing it up and using it as you have.

Before you disagree, which you're free to do, take a few steps back and think about it.

536 posted on 03/30/2006 8:13:36 PM PST by csense
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Because most of them are stupid. Of course, this applies to those belonging to every other religion too (or those with a lack thereof.)

So basically in your opinion most everybody is stupid; except you I suppose.

537 posted on 03/30/2006 8:15:06 PM PST by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Conservative Texan Mom
You would not speculate because you see it as useless and choose not to, or because speculations can not occur in science without observation, a sort of "does not compute" scenario?

Its a useless exercise. Philosophy is the argument for faith and belief (speculation) of the unknown. It has provided little or no new knowledge in thousands of years. Most Knowledge since the middle ages have been of math and science. Science was repressed by philosophy for thousands of years. It was not until the early middle ages when Aristotelian thought was retrieved from the Arabs and accepted by the Church that there was much progress. In the last 150 years we have accumulated more knowledge than was previously known in our entire documented history. It was not because of the faith and belief of philosophies or speculation.

538 posted on 03/30/2006 8:20:38 PM PST by jec41 (Screaming Eagle)
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To: andysandmikesmom
I am part Scotswoman, and I would never touch haggis...it sounds revolting...

It helps if you don't think about it too much.
... the same goes for sausage.

539 posted on 03/30/2006 8:30:42 PM PST by dread78645 (Sorry Mr. Franklin, We couldn't keep it.)
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To: andysandmikesmom
I don't think we do disagree. I don't see evolution linking to abiogenesus either, but apparently some do, and wish to argue it. I am wondering if this is more on beliefs that they link it or evidence.

I also do not know how one would test for God. I am actually testing something to see if the scientific community is at all open to the possibility that there could be a designer. I have not made any reference toward God or any other religion. My question started off as, "Could there be a designer?", then it was changed to "Could a designer have been responsible for our beginnings?" Then, it was "If someone agreed with science all the way back to the big bang, and then said "That must have been where he did it?" Could a scientist speculate, "That's a possibility." Now I am at, if someone agreed with science all the way back to the big bang, and then said, "That's where the designer(whomever it may be)did it." could a scientist say, "That is one of many possibilities." So far, apparently not. So, I am wondering why? Could this be considered intolerance toward even the suggestion of a higher being. I do get some favorable responses when I phrase ID in terms of space aliens. If we could go there, meet them and observe the science by which they made us, is it testable? Would it be called ID? The answers are, yes it is science. No one wants to call it ID though. To be fair, there have been two EVO's on these threads, not the current one, that have said ID is a possibility when you look at as the catalyst for evolution.
540 posted on 03/30/2006 8:31:24 PM PST by Conservative Texan Mom (Some people say I'm stubborn, when it's usually that I'm right!)
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