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To: CarolinaGuitarman
Their being written partially in Greek didn't hurt either.

I'm not just talking about the Rosetta Stone. The cuneiform artifacts that pre-dated it by a couple of millennia at least (check it out) bear almost no resemblance to modern writing. There would have been a time between discovery and decoding, when we wouldn't know for sure what those markings indicated. But there would have been essentially no doubt that this was the work of man.

ID doesn't need to be tested?

Not in the way that you mean, for the reasons I explained.

Do you have any background knowledge on what a designed organism would look like, especially one designed by some nonhuman designer, the way we did for the Rosetta Stone.

We knew what the Rosetta Stone would look like before we found it?

538 posted on 10/03/2005 1:45:39 PM PDT by inquest (FTAA delenda est)
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To: inquest
"There would have been a time between discovery and decoding, when we wouldn't know for sure what those markings indicated. But there would have been essentially no doubt that this was the work of man."

Because we have extensive knowledge of people writing things and making markings. It would also have to do with where we found these tablets; finding them in an obvious human settlement with other tools and such would also give us great reason to think they were man-made.

"Not in the way that you mean, for the reasons I explained."

ID most certainly needs to be tested. You can't just make assertions and expect anybody to take them seriously without there being any way to test them. Problem is, there is no way to test ID.

" We knew what the Rosetta Stone would look like before we found it?"


We knew that people write, and that tablets found in human settlements are very likely of human origin. We then test that hypothesis, like ALL scientific theories have to be.

I take it you have no idea what a designed organism would look like compared to an evolved organism, which was my question. This is where your analogy breaks down, because we DO have a ton of background knowledge on what human writing would be like, and where we would expect to find it.
541 posted on 10/03/2005 2:04:59 PM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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