Posted on 11/03/2003 12:05:39 PM PST by Heartlander
Why would an intelligent designer not only put broken genes in the design, but put the same exact broken gene in closely related species?
Well then, maybe I don't understand it. But to me, unless ID can demonstrate the designer himself, they simply have no case -- unless they can show that: "biological structure X could not possibly have evolved by any natural means." If they can't do that (it's my understanding that they haven't done it yet), all they have is some interesting biological topics for investigation. A list of grad-school research projects, perhaps, but that's all.
Are you saying that intelligence, sensitive response, self-organizing behavior are "unnatural" in biology?
No.
Intelligence may be "supernatural" in one particular sense; however, that's the one and only sense of the word -- the metaphysical sense -- that science cannot get at. It must stick to the empirical; and it has plenty of observable "small-i" instances of biological intelligence to keep it busy.
I agree. Somewhat. This is probably a bad usage of "supernatural." Immaterial maybe.
The empirical evidence from the human genome sequence, for example, strongly implies a lack of design. Most things seem randomly jumbled together at the molecular level.
I've used the all-time killer signature graphic maybe twice in my FR career. One thread got deleted and the other is in the Smokey Backroom.
Seem would seem to be the operative word, RightWingNilla.
Question: When we say that something is "random," what does that mean? Does it mean that that's what things really are as they are in themselves? Or could it mean that something is going on that we don't understand? And if we did understand it, we'd have a theory, maybe even a law?
You don't need to produce a designer, PH, to make the empirical observation that nature displays characteristics of design. It is science's job to investigate such matters -- empirical ones, that is. Metaphysics has no place in science.
Actually, I did.
Random refers to the outcomes of a process, or interaction. It's the variables that can have the property of following a random probability distribution. If the process involves interaction with more, or less many different entities of varying effect, such as reactivity, the encounter can be random, but the actual effect of the encounter depends on the properties of what is encountered.
Random as in we can identify taletale signs within the human genome of events that occurred in our evolutionary history that correspond exactly to what we know about how mutations occur without any human intervention. Duplications, fusions, deletions etc.
The data does not (so far) in any way suggest intelligence was used in the "design" of the human genome.
The only way the ID "hypothesis" works is to massage the definition of these words to the point where they have no meaning.
It's the job of science to resist hypothesizing unnecessary entities. Simply having no current explanation for a phenomenon is not a reason for assuming a designer. No brick walls are in sight.
There is no a priori assertion here. ID does not make claims about the designer. You are making a logical assumption: that where there is design, there has to be a designer.
Reminds me of the story of the little kid on Christmas morning, who (seeing a pile of horse manure under the Christmas tree) says, "Gee! There's got to be a pony around here someplace!" Of course, it is possible the horse manure was a cynical "Christmas present" from a malicious person....
You seem to want to force an argument about semantics. But at the end of the day, the assumption of a designer is not one that science, per se, needs to accept or dwell on to do its job. Science can study design perfectly well without studying the putative designer.
Would you feel better if we didn't call it design, but something else? Like maybe, "natural symmetry," "natural geometry," or "universal patterning?"
None of these is particularly good, however; for none captures the idea of purposiveness in nature. Biological organisms act as if they're purposeful. Maybe you could come up with a better term than "design" -- something a lot more "neutral."
I wasn't imputing motives to you in the absence of any evidence. What evidence I had before me, you put there. I had to try to make some sense of it. Because I didn't consider the evidence dispositive, I said "perhaps" -- as in "perhaps the observation applies in your case, perhaps it doesn't."
You wrote: "Is it not the case, then, that a theory that makes assertions about the nature of the designer - e.g., whether or not a designer has the attribute of existence - is, by its very nature, non-scientific?"
Sure. But the designer is not the issue for science. So questions of existence or non-existence of a putative, extra-cosmic designer are irrelevant. It is you, not I, who wants to drag the Designer in here. I myself would be quite content just to stick to the empirical.
As Alamo-Girl has already pointed out, there's nothing in ID that says "designer" refers to only one specific creative intelligence.
I think any putative scientific theory is non-scientific if it is predicated exclusively on a metaphysical notion. May I point out that such things as materialism, random walk, determinism, natural selection are examples of metaphysical notions?
I personally don't think President Bush is all that uneducated or stupid. He mangles his diction once in a while, but he's a bright guy with an Ivy League education who probably knows BS when he sees it. Not that it matters with regard to what's BS and what isn't. Whether or not he knows it when he sees it, I do.
Look, you miss the point. You throw around this creationist label with venom at those who see problems with neo-darwinism. Now, if I (or anyone) posted:
"On the issue of evolution, the verdict is still out on how God created the Earth."
B. I would be told, God does not belong in science.
III. I would be called, Creationist. (and all that it implies)
So let me get this straight Is this statement now OK when addressing education?
I agree with the statement. Does this somehow make me uneducated or stupid?
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