Posted on 11/29/2004 6:52:41 AM PST by PatrickHenry
In a poll released last week, two-thirds of Americans said they wanted to see creationism taught to public-school science pupils alongside evolution. Thirty-seven percent said they wanted to see creationism taught instead of evolution.
So why shouldn't majority rule? That's democracy, right?
Wrong. Science isn't a matter of votes -- or beliefs. It's a system of verifiable facts, an approach that must be preserved and fought for if American pupils are going to get the kind of education they need to complete in an increasingly global techno-economy.
Unfortunately, the debate over evolution and creationism is back, with a spiffy new look and a mass of plausible-sounding talking points, traveling under the seemingly secular name of "intelligent design."
This "theory" doesn't spend much time pondering which intelligence did the designing. Instead, it backwards-engineers its way into a complicated rationale, capitalizing on a few biological oddities to "prove" life could not have evolved by natural selection.
On the strength of this redesigned premise -- what Wired Magazine dubbed "creationism in a lab coat" -- school districts across the country are being bombarded by activists seeking to have their version given equal footing with established evolutionary theory in biology textbooks. School boards in Ohio, Georgia and most recently Dover, Pa., have all succumbed.
There's no problem with letting pupils know that debate exists over the origin of man, along with other animal and plant life. But peddling junk science in the name of "furthering the discussion" won't help their search for knowledge. Instead, pupils should be given a framework for understanding the gaps in evidence and credibility between the two camps.
A lot of the confusion springs from use of the word "theory" itself. Used in science, it signifies a maxim that is believed to be true, but has not been directly observed. Since evolution takes place over millions of years, it would be inaccurate to say that man has directly observed it -- but it is reasonable to say that evolution is thoroughly supported by a vast weight of scientific evidence and research.
That's not to say it's irrefutable. Some day, scientists may find enough evidence to mount a credible challenge to evolutionary theory -- in fact, some of Charles Darwin's original suppositions have been successfully challenged.
But that day has not come. As a theory, intelligent design is not ready to steal, or even share, the spotlight, and it's unfair to burden children with pseudoscience to further an agenda that is more political than academic.
See my post 741. I suppose that if one was to take the words intelligent and design in their broader scope, a belief in life on earth being the result of aliens seeding the planting billions of years ago could also be included. If the common understanding of 'ID' also includes that, it is news to me and obviously my comments about 'in the beginning everything was perfect' don't apply. As for John Calvert, I have no insight into his personal beliefs.
Francis Bacon couldn't have done squat. For example, he had no electricity - r9etb
I understood you were using a synechoche of "given the use of a computer"
(Why are Biblical Literalists so darn literal?)
Numbers alone don't give the full picture
Buddha: mostly harmless
Are you going to reply to my #295?
I don't agree. The theory of evolution is based on the explicit assumtion that intelligent intervention (a term I think works better than "design") did not occur. The present controversy is centered on suggestions that intelligent intervention may have occurred, and the "scientists" are fighting hard against it. They won't even consider it unless somebody else provides them evidence of intelligent -- which says they've already decided for themselves that there is no intelligent intervention.
Furthermore, I think many are waiting to see evidence that an intelligent intervention did in fact occur during the process of devolpment from single-celled organisms to modern life. If such evidence is given, it will be considered.
This is a good example of what I'm talking about. If you carefully consider the statement, you'll see that you have in fact a priori assumed that intelligent intervention did not occur, ever, not even once. Where is the positive evidence to back up that assumption?
On the flip side, we know for an absolute fact (i.e., we have abundant positive evidence) that intelligent intervention is responsible for many of the characteristics of the plant and animal life we commonly see around us. Thus, the idea of intelligent intervention is clearly not absurd -- it is in fact eminently believable, because it is commonly practiced.
Yet despite the clear positive evidence, and the basic reasonableness of the possibility of at least occasional intelligent intervention, we see the scientists fighting tooth and nail against the idea.
This raises an obvious question: given the positive evidence for design in common plant and animal life, is it valid to call your a priori assumption truly scientific, or is it more accurate to call it a materialist bias?
My goal on this thread is not to undertake the fool's errand of trying to disprove evolution; but rather to uncover the assumptions that underlie the "science" of evolution. As Einstein pointed out in defense of Relativity, real learning comes when one can identify, understand, and if necessary correct underlying assumptions. That exercise is equally necessary in this discussion.
All that you are claiming is they both can't exist in parallel. Dance around the point all you want, but your 'test' is a sham.
Then if you're not going to let poor old Francis plug in the computer, it's not a good analogy, because we can read the genetic code, and we do know how it translates into proteins. We may not have all the finer details of interference, suppression, promotion, etc., down yet, but we have a complete chemical structure, and most of the important details of how it operates.
Given that algebraicists are still hard at work, I'd say that there's still plenty of algebra left to be invented. Certainly the depths of algebra have not been fully plumbed, and that is obviously even more true for mathematics in general. I don't see what that has to do with a discussion of evidence for design, however.
You're asserting there may be stuff in there we don't understand. I agree. But the set of things we don't understand about the genetic code is circumscribed by mathematical restrictions on what could be in there. Yes, algebraicists are hard at work, but, for example, we have a complete catalog of all groups, and we can prove it is complete.
On a more mundane level; we have at least fifty genomes sequenced, and we know that genes within those genomes were not chosen from some menu of possible building blocks according to function, as one would expect if they were designed, but are related by small integer numbers of changes to functionally equivalent or functionally similar genes in organisms which for independent reasons were thought to be close evolutionary relatives. In other words, the pattern of changes between the molecular structure of the genomes of organisms closely agrees with what was predicted from evolutionary theory, before we had significant amounts of genetic information available. Among the thousands of genes in higher organisms, I know of no single example of a gene that confounds evolutionary predictions - that is clearly, in a statistically significant way, closer in sequence to an evolutionarily more distant organism than it is to a closer organism. Of the tens of thousand of genes in whales, all without exception are closer in structure to the genes of hoofed mammals than to the genes of fish. So your putative designer never, ever, not once chose a fish gene to fulfill a function in an animal in an ecologically similar niche, preferring to adapt a land animal gene instead.
It makes no sense. And I'm sorry, I think we have more than enough information to say that that's not how an intelligent being would go about designing the biosphere.
And it's even more difficult to change the software without causing some other, unexpected behavior. Why? Because the subtleties of the design are lost on me.
Or, more often, it's just crappy design in the first place.
I sense we've hit an impasse here. By all means follow up, but I'm not sure I will. And thank you for a civil and stimulating discussion, something that's rare on a crevo thread.
Well, yes. But to place Francis Bacon into a computer-ready society would be to invalidate the fundamental requirements of the thought experiment.
RWP had previously referred to "contemporary rational processes," the scope of which includes all conditions necessary for a computer to operate. That includes things like electricity, without which none of the rest of a computer could possibly have made sense to him.
I think most scientists have an open mind with regard to the origin of species. Things change all the time. There are mechanisms at work we still don't fully understand. For example, even Cell Theory has been revised recently: http://aob.oupjournals.org/cgi/reprint/94/1/9
Check out iscid.org, arn.org, discovery.org, etc. for scientists that are looking into various possibilities as to how the species we see today came about.
#780. Good post.
Remember: we got onto this topic by considering whether and how we might detect "design," with an emphasis on understanding the design. As such it's a good analogy only if we place it in the context of Bacon's "contemporary rational processes," and not ours. And Bacon's world did not include the technological infrastructure required to operate a computer.
because we can read the genetic code, and we do know how it translates into proteins. We may not have all the finer details of interference, suppression, promotion, etc., down yet, but we have a complete chemical structure, and most of the important details of how it operates.
None of which would have been possible without a set of "contemporary rational processes" that provided the technology necessary to obtain that information.
But the set of things we don't understand about the genetic code is circumscribed by mathematical restrictions on what could be in there.
If you've been following the stories on this, you'll have noticed that the size of the "circumscribed area" is continually growing. (And of course we can't focus our attention on DNA alone, because it does nothing unless operated on by the "mechanical infrastructure" of the surrounding cell.
On a more mundane level; we have at least fifty genomes sequenced, and we know that genes within those genomes were not chosen from some menu of possible building blocks according to function, as one would expect if they were designed,
Again -- all you're really saying here is that you wouldn't have done it that way. It's still not a valid argument against design.
I know of no single example of a gene that confounds evolutionary predictions - that is clearly, in a statistically significant way, closer in sequence to an evolutionarily more distant organism than it is to a closer organism.
So what? Why would a smart designer do everything from scratch every time? Once again, this is not an argument against design -- in fact, it appears to be you saying that this is how you might design something.
So your putative designer never, ever, not once chose a fish gene to fulfill a function in an animal in an ecologically similar niche, preferring to adapt a land animal gene instead.
Completely false (not to mention silly.) On the water side: Whale shark/Krill-eating Whale. Great White Shark/Killer Whale. Fish-eating Predator Fish/Dolphins. Starfish/Sea Otter. And on the land side, I suppose you're going to claim that fish didn't come before, and evolve into, land animals?
It makes no sense. And I'm sorry, I think we have more than enough information to say that that's not how an intelligent being would go about designing the biosphere.
And yet, you're making this statement based on arguments from how you would design something. So you freely admit the efficacy of design as an explanation, but are (once again) rejecting design because it's not how you would have done it.
But once again: we already know for a fact that intelligent design occurs, because HUMANS DO IT!
I sense we've hit an impasse here. By all means follow up, but I'm not sure I will. And thank you for a civil and stimulating discussion, something that's rare on a crevo thread.
Thanks. I think it's civil and stimulating because neither of us is trying to ram our point of view down the other's throat. My interest is in looking at underlying assumptions, and you've responded in kind.
I agree with you. Scientists do assume that intelligent intervention has never occurred. This is a result of Occam's Razor, however, and not any anti-materialistic bias. Occam's Razor states that if two explanations are equally good at explaining known observations, the simpler one should be accepted. The two explanations here are that all of the variety of life arose from natural processes OR that all of the variety of life arose from natural processes in addition to one or more intelligent interventions. If there's no data to show that interventions occurred, then, by Occam's Razor, it makes sense for scientists to assume that it didn't. If there were to be found observational data that showed that intelligent interventions were necessary, then honest scientists would have to accept this idea. (I am not saying that all of them would, just that if they are practicing science appropriately, they would.) It remains to ID proponents to show evidence that intelligent interventions must have occurred, rather than just arguing that the idea is not absurd. Good scientists are willing to overturn established theories. The burden of proof is on those who wish to overturn them, however.
In billions of years, there have been a large number of experiments. It is improbable that I'll win the Powerball with one ticket, but if I buy 67 million tickets, it's almost certain that I will win.
"That's not the case at all. While it seems that many are willing to accept that at least some changes do occur over time, some are content to believe that everything that's alive today was always alive"
And some evolutionists think we are a breeding experiment by an alien race. I just prefer to leave the crazies out of the discussion.
My point was that, scientifically, Last Thursdayism or Native American creationism or Islamic creationism, are just as useful as ID (or creationism). They make no predictions and have no explanatory power and hence are useless scientifically, as is any idea that references a supernatural power. If you want to argue that there is was a non-supernatural intelligence that interferred with the development of life, then fine, let's see the positive evidence of this. Until such evidence is shown that cannot be explained without reference to such an intelligence, then such intelligence will be assumed not to exist by science. Outside of science, of course, people are free to believe and schools are free to teach anything they choose.
The examples you cite are morphologically or functionally, but not genetically similar. Which is exactly my point; if they do the same things, why aren't they made of the same stuff? You get parallel evolution of morphology; you don't get parallel evolution of genes. And yes, ancient fish (not modern bony fish) evolved into land animals; but the differences accumulated between fish and mammals are now huge, much larger than those between land animals and humans. Given any gene in a teleost fish, you can identify it as a fish gene and not a mammal gene from its sequence; it looks like other fish genes of the same type, not like mammal genes. The differences between fish and whales are typically 5 - 10 times as large as the difference between hoofed animals and whales.
I am proud of our Founding Fathers boldness in establishing American values. I am proud in the American soldiers who have fought for American values.
I am proud that millions of Americans chose to stand up against the Un-American values of Gay-Marriage and Liberal Judges who support killing innocent children in the same way Scott Peterson did.
I am proud that a President firmly grounded in American values is leading one branch of our government. And the other two branches are being lead by the Party most aligned with American values.
I humble myself before the bold and courageous men and women serving in Iraq. They are the true leaders of spreading American values by putting their lives on the line.
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