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A test nobody wants to take [more ross exam, Dover Evolution trial, 20 October]
York Daily Record [Penna] ^ | 20 October 2005 | MICHELLE STARR

Posted on 10/20/2005 6:39:01 AM PDT by PatrickHenry

Neither side is interested in trying to prove intelligent design.

Intelligent design and evolution proponents agree that a test on bacterial flagellum could show if it was or wasn't able to evolve, which could provide evidence to support intelligent design.

But neither side wants to test it.

The test calls for a scientist to place a bacterial species lacking a flagellum under selective pressure and let it grow for 10,000 generations — roughly two years — to see if a flagellum or an equally complex system would be produced, according to testimony on Wednesday. A flagellum is a whip-like structure that can propel the bacteria.

Michael Behe, biochemistry professor at Lehigh University, testified in U.S. Middle District Court that he didn't know of anyone who had tested bacterial flagellum that way, including himself.

During cross examination by plaintiffs' attorney Eric Rothschild, Behe said he hadn't completed the test because he has better ways to spend his time. He also said he already knows intelligent design is science.

"It's well-tested from the inductive arguments," Behe said. "When we have found a purposeful arrangement of parts, we have always found this as designed."

Outside court, Dover school board members Alan Bonsell and Sheila Harkins said if anyone should perform the test, it should be the evolutionists.

"Somebody could do that if they wanted to," Harkins said. "If somebody believes intelligent design is not science, certainly they have a means to prove it's not."

Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, said scientists — who widely accept evolution as the cornerstone of modern biology — aren't going to take two years on an expensive test to disprove something they don't consider science.

They wouldn't bother, she said.

"This is not the first time creationists have tried to get scientists to do their work for them," Scott said.

This time around, even if the flagellum grew, Scott speculated that intelligent design proponents would say the test refuted the design of bacterial flagellum, not intelligent design.

They could still point toward design of the immune system and blood-clotting cascade as evidence, Scott said.

Behe has testified that if evolutionists ran the test and it didn't work, they would provide a reason such as they didn't have the right bacteria, selective pressure or length of time.

Evolution is harder to falsify than intelligent design, Behe said. He describes intelligent design as a fully testable, falsifiable scientific theory.

The design, he testified, is inferred from the purposeful arrangement of parts. During his time on the stand, he also testified about the concept of irreducible complexity, which means organisms are too complex to have evolved by natural selection or genetic mutation, so multiple systems had to arise simultaneously.

Scott said scientists couldn't disprove the purposeful arrangement of parts because too much could qualify. Anything outside of purposely arranged partswould be in state of chaos, she said.

The purposeful arrangements of parts is quickly taking over as the essence of intelligent design from the idea of irreducible complexity, Scott said.

Bonsell and Harkins believe intelligent design qualifies as a testable and falsifiable scientific theory, and Bonsell said he was ready for it to be put to the test.

"I'm all for scientific discovery and doing scientific experiments," Bonsell said. "They're the ones that are not."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: behe; crevolist; dover; intelligentdesign; scienceeducation
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To: MHalblaub
Science is about predicting the future.
Even statics is a prediction about stability of structures.

And statistics is a prediction about the stability of randomly generated events.

101 posted on 10/20/2005 7:15:18 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: PatrickHenry

Versace is Dead


102 posted on 10/20/2005 7:25:09 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: King Prout
Newton's Theory enables us to calculate where the stars will be in thousand years.

More or less accurately where. General Relativity allows a more accurate where. (Both the Newton and Einstein version are equally precise; Einstein's is more accurate.)

103 posted on 10/20/2005 7:27:40 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Right Wing Professor
On first reading, it looks like Rothschild made Behe contradict himself on several occasions, and otherwise look like a complete idiot.

I attended a presentation given by Behe. He accomplished the same thing without a lawyer guiding him.

104 posted on 10/20/2005 7:29:02 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Right Wing Professor
On first reading, it looks like Rothschild made Behe contradict himself on several occasions, and otherwise look like a complete idiot. Devastating.

I read the entire cross examination. the thing that stood out is how many times rothschild tried to twist Behe's words and miscontrued his writings. Behe was right on top of those attempts and did not let Rothschold get away with it.

I thought Behe did remarkably well.

105 posted on 10/20/2005 11:39:19 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Versace is Dead

An example of what Behe said may be true of the Intelligent Designer.

106 posted on 10/21/2005 3:11:33 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (No response to trolls, retards, or lunatics)
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To: connectthedots
From the Panda's Thumb, this morning

“Is there a distinction to be made between science and science fiction?” Eric Rothschild asked Michael Behe. “Yes,” responded Behe. “I have no further questions,” said Rothschild. And with those words (or ones quite similar — we’ll get precision with the transcript release), Eric Rothschild laid to rest the remains of Behe’s scientific credibility. Preceding that, there was a day full of cross examination, in which one would learn that Behe wasn’t as familiar with the scientific literature on the immune system as one might hope for someone billed as an “expert”, that rigorous peer review in “intelligent design” can be obtained in a ten-minute telephone interview — without the reviewer even having to see the manuscript, that the blood-clotting system can be reduced to a “core” of four parts — except that when one does so the result is claimed to be lethal, and much more. Why did the cross-examination of Behe sound so much like the lawyers were reading from the TalkDesign web site? Well, at least part of that would be due to the advice that the plaintiffs’ lawyers received from NCSE Public Information Director Nicholas Matzke, aka “Nic Tamzek” from the early TalkDesign days and regular PT contributor. By almost all accounts*, the TalkDesign material on various issues concerning Behe’s “irreducible complexity” was put to good use. Expect a more complete eulogy for Behe’s scientific career — and a post-mortem, as it were, of the terminal handling it received on Tuesday and Wednesday — to be posted here later, after we have the transcripts in hand.

What has to be considered for the future is whether the on-the-stand demolition of Behe will influence the remainder of the slate of TMLC experts. They had a pretty high withdrawal rate pre-trial, and now that the preparation of the plaintiffs’ legal team has been shown, vividly, will all the rest of TMLC’s scheduled experts actually show up for a big helping of what Behe had?

* As one might expect, the DI thinks Behe weathered cross-examination without any trouble whatsoever, but when one’s reports are apparently filed from Cloud Cuckoo Land, I think that we are permitted to “consider the source”.

107 posted on 10/21/2005 7:29:13 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: Right Wing Professor
Good post. As I read the first part of Behe's cross examination, it was obvious that the plaintiff's lawyer had considerable input from some serious veterans of the crevo debates. Behe wasn't expecting anything like that. He got put through the grinder. He ended up saying that he disagreed with stuff in Pandas, he didn't know diddly about "mechanisms" of ID (although he'd been quoted as saying that ID focuses on mechanisms), etc. It usually takes only one or two significant contradictions to demolish the credibility of a witness, and in this case, with one serious contradiction and Clintonian evasion after another, I don't think there's much left of Behe.
108 posted on 10/21/2005 8:18:33 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (No response to trolls, retards, or lunatics)
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To: PatrickHenry
"This is not the first time creationists have tried to get scientists to do their work for them," Scott said.

Well, if the creationists do it themselves, scientists will say it proves nothing because it wasn't done by scientists under strict guidelines and monitoring. And if it were, they'd say it only proves how that bacteria reacts, but not all of the animal kingdom.

Either way, it seems both sides have doubts about their own positions.

109 posted on 10/21/2005 9:26:47 AM PDT by theDentist (The Dems have put all their eggs in one basket-case: Howard "Belltower" Dean.)
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To: forsnax5

"Google "ring species." There are multiple observed examples of this."

Lots of info on this. Very interesting.

But this is another example of verification by observation of existing species. I was looking for some verification of this while under observation, i.e., a test which could be repeated and verified multiple times.


110 posted on 10/21/2005 9:45:08 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: Right Wing Professor
As one might expect, the DI thinks Behe weathered cross-examination without any trouble whatsoever, but when one’s reports are apparently filed from Cloud Cuckoo Land, I think that we are permitted to “consider the source”.

Panda's thumb is and unbiased source?

Behe did well in the fist day cross examination. Look forward to reading the remainder of it.

111 posted on 10/21/2005 9:56:17 AM PDT by connectthedots
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To: highball

"What that tells us is that, in all too many cases, it's not ignorance at all. At best, it's willful ignorance, and at worst it's knowingly spreading falsehoods."

Ala Piltdown man, Java man, Nebraska man you mean?


112 posted on 10/21/2005 9:56:26 AM PDT by GOPPachyderm
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To: GOPPachyderm

Don't forget Plaster of Paris man.


113 posted on 10/21/2005 9:58:09 AM PDT by ConservativeBamaFan
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To: ConservativeBamaFan

And Haeckel's drawings!


114 posted on 10/21/2005 9:59:19 AM PDT by GOPPachyderm
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To: PatrickHenry
I repost it here

Behe ... describes intelligent design as a fully testable, falsifiable scientific theory.

OK take these examples. Was it designed by an intelligent designer?

1. The vertebrate eye, with its "complexity" contains a basic flaw: The nerves and blood vessels of vertebrate eyes lie between the photosensitive cells and the light source, a design that no engineer would recommend, as it obscures the passage of photons into the photosensitive cells. Long ago, vertebrate ancestors had simple, cup-shaped eyes that were probably originally used only to detect light, not to resolve fine images. Those simple eyes developed as an out-pocket of the brain, and the position of their tissue layers determined where the nerves and blood vessels lay in relation to the photosesitive cells. If the layers had not maintained their correct positions, relative to one another, then the mechanism that control differentiation, in which an inducing substance produced in one layer diffuses into the neighboring layer, would not work. Once such a developmental mechanism evolved, it could not be changed without destroying sight in the intermediate forms that would have to be passed through on the way to a more "intelligent designed" eye.

2. Another example from the eye: the blind spot.

3. In the adult, cold-blooded ancestors of mammals, and in present-day mammalian embryos, the testicles are located in the body cavity, near the kidneys, like ovaries in adult females. Because mammalian sperm develop better at temperatures lower than those found in the body core, there was a selection, during the evolutionary transition from cold- to warm-bloodedness, to move the testicles out of the high temperature body core into the lower-temperaure periphery and eventually into the scrotum. This evolutionary progression in the adults is replayed in the developmental progression of the testes from the embryo to adult, and as they move from the body cavity towards the scrotum, they wrap the vas deferens around the ureters, like a person watering the lawn and gets the hose caught on a tree. If it was not for the constraints of history ond development, a much shorter vas deferens would have evolved, costing less to produce and probably doing a better job.

So, how many bad designs do we need in order to show that there was no intelligent designer, or did the designer had a bad day?
115 posted on 10/21/2005 10:02:53 AM PDT by AdmSmith
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To: AdmSmith
So, how many bad designs do we need in order to show that there was no intelligent designer, or did the designer had a bad day?

Bad day? Considering that 90% of all species are now extinct, it's fair to conclude that the designer had a bad billion years.

116 posted on 10/21/2005 10:08:57 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (No response to trolls, retards, or lunatics)
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To: PatrickHenry

LOL!


117 posted on 10/21/2005 10:11:42 AM PDT by AdmSmith
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To: webstersII
I was looking for some verification of this while under observation, i.e., a test which could be repeated and verified multiple times.

Such at test would simply be selective breeding, which has been practiced by humans for thousands of years.

118 posted on 10/21/2005 10:13:24 AM PDT by forsnax5 (The greatest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.)
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To: GOPPachyderm
Read 10 Major Flaws in Evolution here.
(still won't be enough for some people)
119 posted on 10/21/2005 10:21:27 AM PDT by ConservativeBamaFan
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To: ConservativeBamaFan

All 10 of those points are totally and utterly incorrect. Many of the explainations contain infactual data.


120 posted on 10/21/2005 10:31:38 AM PDT by bobdsmith
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