Posted on 02/05/2019 12:50:29 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Materialists are just waking up to realities that ID advocates have been writing about for decades.
The late Robert Jastrow ended his book God and the Astronomers (1978) with a picturesque quote about scientific progress:
For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries.
A similar thing could be written about ID advocates giving secular biologists a bad dream. Although belief in design is as old as man, Intelligent Design (ID) theory in its current form really picked up steam in the 1980s, after the revolution in molecular biology showed DNA to be a coded information system. As we shall see, statements by a prominent scientist and philosopher could be almost summarized in these words, ‘Biologists have scaled the mountains of life’s meaning. As they pull themselves over the final rock, they are greeted by ID advocates who have been sitting there for decades.’
Paul Davies wakes up out of a bad dream…
Paul Davies, originally from Australia but currently a professor of physics at Arizona State University in Tempe, is author of 30 books, some of which dabble in thinking outside the box. Acutely aware of the astonishing complexity of life, he wrote a piece January 30, 2019 on the nature and meaning of life. His words sound familiar to ID advocates.
THERE is something special almost magical about life. Biophysicist Max Delbrück expressed it eloquently: The closer one looks at these performances of matter in living organisms, the more impressive the show becomes. The meanest living cell becomes a magic puzzle box full of elaborate and changing molecules.
What is the essence of this magic? It is easy to list lifes hallmarks: reproduction, harnessing energy, responding to stimuli and so on. But that tells us what life does, not what it is. It doesnt explain how living matter can do things far beyond the reach of non-living matter, even though both are made of the same atoms.
The fact is, on our current understanding, life is an enigma. Most strikingly, its organised, self-sustaining complexity seems to fly in the face of the most sacred law of physics, the second law of thermodynamics, which describes a universal tendency towards decay and disorder. The question of what gives life the distinctive oomph that sets it apart has long stumped researchers, despite dazzling advances in biology in recent decades. Now, however, some remarkable discoveries are edging us towards an answer.
His article is titled, “Lifes secret ingredient: A radical theory of what makes things alive.” That New Scientist, a strongly atheist-leaning magazine, would publish this article supports our metaphor that biology is about to reach that final rock on the highest peak where the ID advocates are sitting. Look at how many things Davies admits that design scientists have been saying for decades:
Life as software: Life is made of atoms, true. That’s hardware, Davies explains. “Biologists, on the other hand, frame their descriptions in the language of information and computation, using concepts such as coded instructions, signalling and control: the language not of hardware, but of software.” That’s exactly how Stephen Meyer described DNA in the film Unlocking the Mystery of Life in 2002.
DNA as a molecular code: “Lifes informational aspect runs much deeper, however. It is at its most obvious, and most baffling, when it comes to the genetic code.”
Signal and response: Davies continues, “it must be read out, decoded and translated into a 20-letter amino-acid alphabet used to form proteins.” In the 1970s, Dr. A. E. Wilder-Smith repeatedly emphasized that the molecules in life use a language convention. The letters A, C, T, and G in DNA mean nothing by themselves unless both sender and receiver understand the convention.
Life as information: “A distinctive feature perhaps the distinctive feature of life is its ability to use these informational pathways for regulation and control,” Davies continues. ID advocates have long stressed the fundamental importance of information. William Dembski wrote a whole book about information being one of the fundamental aspects perhaps the fundamental aspect of nature. The title of the book is Being as Communion.
Life as goal-directed: Davies knows that Darwin’s view of life as aimless, purposeless and random flies in the face of what biologists have learned about life. Organisms have the ability “to manage signals between components to progress towards a goal.” ID advocates infer intelligence from goal-directed activity, which is fundamentally contrary to Darwin’s ideas of natural selection (the Stuff Happens Law (SHL), a mindless mechanism based on chance). Davies actually uses the term “intelligent design” here, quickly explaining that he does NOT mean Godbut then referring to mind as a contrast to mindlessness:
For that reason, many scientists recognise the equation life = matter + information. Mostly, however, the information part is downplayed, seen simply as a convenient way to discuss the biology. Heroic efforts to cook up some of the building blocks of life in the lab concentrate on the chemistry. They require purified substances, intelligent designers (that is, ingenious chemists) and controlled conditions that bear little relation to the messiness and mindlessness of the real world.
Code transcends matter: It should be obvious that rocks don’t invent language. Davies seems to be awaking to that revelation. “The known laws of physics provide no clue as to how chemical hardware can invent its own software,” he puzzles. “How can molecules write code?”
Directed evolution is not Darwinian evolution: In this section, Davies refers to Maxwell’s thought experiment of a “demon” that could override the Second Law of Thermodynamics. ID advocates emphasize that artificial selection is not Darwinian selection. It takes a mind to program “Maxwell’s demon” to make selections for a purpose. Davies mentions kinesin as a goal-directed molecular machine able to use random molecular motions as a ratchet to make forward progress (but it also requires the expenditure of ATP). He says there are many other such molecular machines in the cell.
Cells as logic networks: Davies finds logic circuits in the cell (AND, OR etc.) in the form of transcription factors and other regulators that make DNA information processing work.
This analogy leads to a profound new vision of life that was outlined a decade ago in the journal Nature by Nobel-prizewinning biologist Paul Nurse. Here, information has primacy. Focusing on information flow will help us to understand better how cells and organisms work We need to describe the molecular interactions and biochemical transformations that take place in living organisms, and then translate these descriptions into the logic circuits that reveal how information is managed, he wrote.
Semantic information: Though Davies worries about how to quantify it, he mentions “semantic information” as meaningful information. He says that is the only way to distinguish DNA from junk. ID advocates have taken information far beyond Davies; they lecture about Shannon information, Kolmogorov information, semantic information and other classes in great detail, comparing and contrasting the definitions. They were teaching that life uses semantic information long before Davies brought it up.
Transcendence: In his subsection on “Transcendent Life,” Davies recognizes that life transcends matter. “There must be a complexity threshold, somewhere between an amino acid and an amoeba, at which the physical and informational effects that characterise life emerge,” he says, not going far enough. What is that threshold? ID advocates show that all the things important to ustruth, goodness and beautytranscend matter. They don’t emerge from matter. They are transcendent aspects that we all recognize intuitively, and infer are marks of intelligent design.
…Then Davies returns to his dogmatic slumber
The late 19th century philosopher Immanuel Kant said that David Hume’s rejection of causality awakened him out of his “dogmatic slumber” to rescue it from skepticism. Some later philosophers, reading his responses, joked that Kant promptly awakened all right, but then rolled over and went back to sleep. In a sense, that’s what Davies does next. Awakened out of Darwinian slumber by all these facts that ID advocates have been preaching for decades, he turns over and falls back asleep again. Raising the perhapsimaybecouldness index, he dreams that science may someday find a new theory of biology within materialism perhaps through quantum physics.
Any new physics operating in biology would probably bleed into the physics of complex molecules more generally, so this would be a good place to look for clues.
This is just the sort of scale where quantum effects come into play. Perhaps the still-controversial field of quantum biology, which has uncovered hints of weird quantum goings-on in some biological processes, may provide pointers. My own hunch is that the answer will come from the intersection of quantum physics, chemistry, nanotechnology and information processing, a burgeoning field of research that still lacks a name.
Didn’t he just speak of transcendence, information, goal-directed behavior, semantics, codes, software, and logic? Such things do not just “emerge” from matter. Quantum physics provides no guidance for these things. What programmer would ever let the SHL do his work? Anyone who thinks materialistic processes can write their own software is dreaming in very deep dogmatic slumber.
Almost… but not quite! Davies is very close to the peak, but he cannot look over to see what’s on top. Maybe he is afraid to, because of his colleagues. More than many other scientists, he has become acutely aware of the “information enigma” in life. Some of you may remember his appearance in the Illustra Media film The Privileged Planet (2004), where he had expressed similar astonishment at the ability of the human mind to grasp reality, to understand and synthesize abstract concepts far outside our experience or needs for survival. The comprehensibility of the universe amazed him!
Another philosopher acutely aware of this “nature of life” question is philosopher Thomas Nagel. In God and Cosmos, Nagel expresses deep perplexity that traditional materialism is profoundly incapable of explaining the specified complexity of life. Even more than Davies, you expect him in the next chapter to embrace intelligent design as the only true solution. But like Davies, he backs off. He cannot take that last step. In another place he explained why. Creation.com quotes what he said in 1997:
I speak from experience, being strongly subject to this fear myself: I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isnt just that I dont believe in God and, naturally, hope that Im right in my belief. Its that I hope there is no God! I dont want there to be a God; I dont want the universe to be like that. My guess is that this cosmic authority problem is not a rare condition and that it is responsible for much of the scientism and reductionism of our time. One of the tendencies it supports is the ludicrous overuse of evolutionary biology to explain everything about human life, including everything about the human mind.“
With that, we return to Jastrow. In his 1979 book, he found it interesting that so many astronomers didn’t want to believe the universe had a beginning. They knew it would support the idea of a Creator. Jastrow, sadly, backed off from the highest peak, as shown in this clip by the John10:10 Project. So tragic!
Don’t be afraid to come to the top of the peak. The air is fresh up there. There, you will find rest for your soul. Dogmatic slumbers are replaced with wakeful joy. There’s love, truth and fellowship up on top. Your awe will no longer be raw, but rich with meaning. You know much of what you need to know by having read this article. Here’s the map to get over the final rock.
Sigh......
....no.
The Fundamental Dawinists are going to go crazy over this.
Then there is the DNA REPLICATION process which involves reading one strand and turning into two identical strands, all at the speed of a JET ENGINE.
I bet they don’t.
Soaking in the technological benefits of the scientific method while refusing to give it credence is churlish. Would Jesus be so obtuse?
To be a materialist one must be able to believe that:
-something came from nothing
-natural laws, symmetry, order came from primordial chaos
-organization came from primordial randomness
-consciousness, free will, reason came from matter
-life came from inanimate chemicals
-anthropic coincidences came from accidents
-man came from pond scum
-human knowledge and values came from a universe without absolutes and objectivity
Jesus might coolly list out a group of notable scientists and then ask “Well, who created them?”
The universe has more back of it than matter and energy as we know it.
A main difficulty with believing this is that it is metaphysically dangerous to those who think they’ve got tabs on the universe.
We do run into debate when it comes to the manner in which books like the bible describe certain events in the universe, versus the manner in which these events appear to people now. This seems to me to be one of the smaller questions about faith and science, as God can view and report things from multiple perspectives, including those not directly visible to man.
Darwinian evolution simply appears to be far too feeble an engine to generate what some have credited it with. And it would not matter whether it had thousands or billions of years to try. It would still fail.
It’s a belief. Believe what you want to. Leave others in peace to do the same. Simple.
It’s not wrong to talk about beliefs.
That was fun to read.
Thanks for posting!
Great article, thank you. The design in various aspects of Mycology would blow your mind, as in other disciplines. It’s not so much atheists don’t see it, they refuse to accept it, forcing them to make a decision on the consequences of a real Creator.
....he puzzles. How can molecules write code?
Well, you see, billions of years ago, those molecules wrote fake news for Buzzfeed and the Huffington Post, but then they got downsized, so they had to learn to code!
I have many friends who are afraid to believe in God. Their main concern seems to be they do not want judgement on their lives. To a person they are using illegal drugs, are promiscuous, lie as a way of dealing with coworkers and friends, or are engaged in some other activity they know to be unhealthy. They satisfy their conscience by not allowing anyone the privilege of passing judgement on their lives.
Evolution is not scientific, it is cultish.
It’s funny how science makes the internet and landing on Mars possible, but when it bumps up against ancient superstitions, we’re expected to abandon biology, geology, and more.
Don’t mind sparklite2. sparklite2’s just a contrarian.
Yes, I am, arguably.
It is your tagline. :-)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.