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Intelligent Design: Confronting Darwin with New Scientific Insights Intelligent Design, Part I
M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E ^ | 2002 AD | by Justin Hart

Posted on 08/20/2002 2:15:59 PM PDT by restornu

"If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down." (Origin of Species, 6th ed. (1988), p. 154) – Darwin

It’s understandable that there exists a theological debate among differing religious views. After all, religious understanding and belief derives its momentum from faith-driven exercises rather than hard empirical evidence. But one would expect scientific debate to avoid such quibbles and disagreements in light of their own scientific method, which does derive its momentum from hard empirical evidence. Unfortunately, science is overseen by humans, and the same biases, institutionalized thinking, and raw power involved with any human venture are also present in science.

One debate, looming large on the horizon, pits the “high priests” of evolution against the proponents of “intelligent design.” In this article I examine Intelligent Design and its claims against evolution.

Intelligent Design
In 1802, William Paley penned his famous pocketwatch analogy. To wit, if we find a pocketwatch in the desert we assume that some human hand was involved and that the watch did not materialize through some blind natural process. The analogy here is that the complexity of nature points to an intelligent designing force.

This was the prevailing scientific view until Darwin published his Origin of Species in 1859. The evidence that Darwin asserted took the scientific community by storm and evolution has been the prevailing modus operandi since that day.

Evolutionary biology teaches that all biological complexity is “the result of material mechanisms.” In short, evolution claims that all things came into existence by means of natural selection and mutation, in minute “baby steps” of progression over millions of years. Organisms adapt for conditions adding to their functionality piece by piece until we are what we are today.

We should note here that no one doubts natural selection as a robust scientific theory. For example, a desert fox has developed longer ears over time to help expel heat from his body. If this were all that evolution purports, everyone would go home happy. Instead the debate turns on Darwin’s theory that all species evolved from a handful of previous species. Intelligent Design is a growing scientific movement that challenges Darwin and his naturalistic legacy.

Intelligent Design derives its impetus from systems that are “irreducibly complex.” Here’s a common analogy that’s used to explain the theory.

An everyday example of an irreducibly complex system is the humble mousetrap. It consists of (1) a flat wooden platform or base; (2) a metal hammer, which crushes the mouse; (3) a spring with extended ends to power the hammer; (4) a catch that releases the spring; and (5) a metal bar that connects to the catch and holds the hammer back. You can't catch a mouse with just a platform, then add a spring and catch a few more mice, then add a holding bar and catch a few more. All the pieces have to be in place before you catch any mice.[1]

According to evolution, you should be able to reduce every biological system, piece by piece, down to its beginning. Evolution then could not be the scientific origin of the mouse trap, there must have been some intelligent hand involved. As Darwin admits in our opening quote, if you can demonstrate a complex biological system along the same line of reasoning, then his theory would break down.

Bacterium Flagellum
The question then is this: Are there biological systems that exhibit such complexity? One prominent example is that of bacterium flagellum. Bacterium flagellum are whip-like appendages that move bacteria throughout our body. These flagellum work very much like a motor; each has a rotor, a stator, O-rings, bushings, and a drive shaft. They are powered by the combination of 50 different proteins. These proteins exist independently within the human body and come together to power the flagellum. Take one of these proteins away, and the flagellum fails to operate. The mathematical probability of these 50 proteins coming together under the theory of evolution is so outrageous as to almost insist that there was some higher power involved.

Plasmids
Plasmids are circular pieces of DNA that can easily be exchanged among bacteria. Plasmids can also confer antibiotic resistance. When one bacterium releases a plasmid, another can absorb it, information from the Plasmid is infused from one into the other. The problem begins when we ask "where did the bacterium that released the plasmid information in turn derive it?" Any evolutionary explanation will be circular reasoning and insufficient to explain the matter.

Eukaryotic Cells
Michael Behe, one of the major proponents of intelligent design explains another example:

Another example of irreducible complexity is the system that allows proteins to reach the appropriate subcellular compartments. In the eukaryotic cell there are a number of places where specialized tasks, such as digestion of nutrients and excretion of wastes, take place. Proteins are synthesized outside these compartments and can reach their proper destinations only with the help of "signal" chemicals that turn other reactions on and off at the appropriate times. This constant, regulated traffic flow in the cell comprises another remarkably complex, irreducible system. All parts must function in synchrony or the system breaks down. [2]

Blood Clotting
The system that prevents our blood from clotting is yet another example. Blood clotting consists of a complex cascade of enzymes and cofactors which must be in place to work. The evolutionist’s rebuttal to this is that blood clotting experiments on mice have removed certain enzymes successfully. The Intelligent Design (ID) response is that the mice in the experiment were detrimentally affected by the reduced enzymes; which flies in the face of another evolutionary postulate: the mutated change in an organism must benefit the organism (survival of the fittest after all).

People, Places and Theories
There are a number of prominent players currently working on ID. Here are a few bios and links that you can peruse:

Philip E. Johnson, is a graduate of Harward and the University of Chicago. He was a law clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and has taught law for over twenty years at the University of California at Berkeley.

Johnson's most prominent contribution has been Darwin on Trial which examines Evolution from a standpoint of sound reasoning and scientific support.

Michael Behe received his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Pennsylvania in 1978, is a professor of biological sciences at Pennsylvania's Lehigh University. His current research involves the roles of design and natural selection in building protein structure. His book Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution is available in paperback (Touchstone Books, 1998).

Behe is one of primary proponents of ID. His book has been the focus of many of the evolutionist’s rebuttal. Behe has been lambasted and harangued for his viewpoints and his responses are mostly ignored by peer publications. Hmm… sounds like a familiar brick wall.

William A. Dembski, holds Ph.D.'s in mathematics and philosophy, is an associate research professor at Baylor University and a senior fellow with the Discovery Institute in Seattle. His books include The Design Inference: Eliminating Chance Through Small Probabilities (Cambridge University Press, 1998) and No Free Lunch: Why Specified Complexity Cannot Be Purchased Without Intelligence (Rowman and Littlefield, 2001). links

Dembski is known as the Isaac Newton of ID. He has taken informational mathematics to calculate the probability of irreducibly complex biological systems. He has also brought an historical perspective to the movement demonstrating how evolution failed to adequately dismiss British natural theology.

Jonathan Wells received two Ph.D.'s, one in molecular and cell biology from the University of California, Berkeley, and one in religious studies from Yale University. He has worked as a postdoctoral research biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and has taught biology at California State University, Hayward. Wells is also the author of Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth? Why Much of What We Teach About Evolution Is Wrong (Regnery Publishing, 2000).

Wells’ book has approached ID from an attack vantage point. He details 10 major flaws within evolution and shows how many supposed supports of evolution are nearly fraudulent but are still taught in our schools. Wells has been at the front of a debate in Ohio which is considering whether or not to allow ID to be taught as an alternative to evolution.

Conclusion
We should note that Intelligent Design is a theory just like Evolution is a theory. The debate between the parties is raging on and may eventaully reach a fervent pitch. Currently, several school boards across the country are examing its validity to determine if they should allow it to be taught in schools. Intelligent Design is an exciting venture for us to examine. In the coming months I will report on several books, theories and debates on the issue.

1. Intelligent Design a special report reprinted from Natural History magazine http://www.actionbioscience.org/evolution/nhmag.html#behe/miller

2. Ibid.


TOPICS: General Discusssion
KEYWORDS: crevolist
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To: PatrickHenry
Rarer than diamonds, and more valuable...
61 posted on 08/21/2002 9:14:47 AM PDT by general_re
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To: scottiewottie
Then it should be rather easy to create matter out of nothing, any examples?

The Sun generates energy through hydrogen fusion, so it should be pretty easy to recreate the process. Any examples?

[Hint: Your premise is faulty.]

62 posted on 08/21/2002 9:18:54 AM PDT by Junior
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To: winstonchurchill
The problem with ID guys goes even deeper than their misuse of data. The ID claim is that no method will produce certain structures. When shown a method, they just ignore the demonstration.

ID also seems to analyze biological evolution theory as a theory of going from Point A to Point B; while in fact evolutionary theory only says than one goes from Point A. (One can retrodict that one got to Point B from Point A but not that Point A must always lead to Point B.)
63 posted on 08/21/2002 9:20:46 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: PatrickHenry
The origin of life itself is not part of traditional evolution theory, which only explains how life (once it existed) proliferated into all the species we see today. However, the origin of living material does not seem all that improbable. Organic compounds -- the building blocks of protiens, have been found on meteorites, and have been located drifting in space. The stuff seems commonplace. Given a planet with oceans of water, plus billions of years, and the way that organic compounds naturally combine, it not only seems likely that self-replicating molecules could eventually form, but -- because we're here -- it's a 100% sure bet that it does happen.

Surely, you must know that you're operating on a sort of religious faith here. You simply lack any proof at all for this speculation. It's the sort of reasoning that has always made evolution the stunted child of science, just above the "sciences" of psychology and sociology and education.

As usual, evolution doesn't explain this ultimate question any better than ID or creationism (which are probably largely the same thing). The shrill whining of evolution missionaries aside, any person can readily observe that the fundaments of evolutionary theory have no sounder evidenciary footing than does intelligent design. To the origin-agnostic observer, neither one looks much like a science.

Most of us wouldn't care to fly on an airplane designed by either the sciences of evolution or ID. Evolution simply cannot compare with the levels of proof we have in physics or chemistry or even in medical science.

Personally, I rather like the ambiguousness of the entire situation. I think it's pretty clear that the energy economy of the universe probably varies by region and that there are some huge discoveries in science that we can't even yet imagine. Unfortunately, the dogmatism in scientific institutions toward some of the more interesting questions makes it unlikely that we'll see significant breakthroughs in our lifetimes. Science has often had sterile patches until basic assumptions are corrected.

I suppose it'll offend you but I rather like that situation. I think the real answers are far stranger and more interesting than anything presently offered to explain the origins of life.
64 posted on 08/21/2002 9:24:16 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: Physicist
Correct me if I am wrong, but it seems to me that your example was creating new matter, by exerting force on old matter. I can to the same with at trash compactor and the result is certainly more complex.

What I asked for is an example of creating matter out of absolutely nothing.
65 posted on 08/21/2002 9:24:47 AM PDT by scottiewottie
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To: Junior
Energy requires matter.

again, create something by combining nothing and nothing, then you might have a bang with legs.
66 posted on 08/21/2002 9:28:23 AM PDT by scottiewottie
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To: Junior; PatrickHenry
"Sons of Pond Scum" would be a great name for a rock band.

Well...

Spirogyra, large genus of freshwater algae

Before you're impressed, let me hasten to say that I am by no means a biology nerd. I collected a sample from my pond when in high school biology for a project because I always wondered what that ugly unattractive stuff was.

In the Eighties, there was a rather popular band by the same name, Spirogyra. I recall they did a few well-known movie sound tracks but I can't recall which movies. They were sort of an early alternative music band, kind of innovative for the time.
67 posted on 08/21/2002 9:33:43 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: general_re
He figured if he threw in a couple of names of scientific theorems the scientifically-illiterate folks out there would exclaim "Ah ha! This fellow must know about that against which he rales as he uses scientific jargon!"
68 posted on 08/21/2002 9:34:04 AM PDT by Junior
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To: general_re
Do you have a wide body or are you counting on small print?
69 posted on 08/21/2002 9:46:32 AM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: Aric2000
Actually, you don't 'prove' anything in science. Science is about drawing conclusions from observations, but nothing is 'proven' in science.

The biggest problem that I have with ID is that no one so far has presented an adequate method for falsifying it. Scientific theories must have falsification criteria or they are worthless.
70 posted on 08/21/2002 9:46:46 AM PDT by Dimensio
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To: Junior
Oh, name-dropping. Got it.

I can sort of see how you might bring Bernoulli's Theorem into a discussion of evolution, seeing as how it relates to the probabilities of observed events, but Pascal's Theorem? Huh?

71 posted on 08/21/2002 9:49:09 AM PDT by general_re
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To: scottiewottie
The point is that the energy came out of the vacuum, not out of the matter. You said "out of nothing", not "using nothing as a tool".

If you take a region of space filled with gravitational field and stretch it by expanding the space itself, you can do the same thing without any matter. This is how inflation created the matter we see.

The process by which inflation proceeded would probably be extremely difficult to reproduce today. This is because inflation requires the vacuum to be in a higher energy state than it now exhibits. The decay of this "false vacuum" is what drives inflation. We don't know what it would take to throw a region of vacuum back into this excited state. It certainly wouldn't be "easy".

But if easy creation out of nothing is what you want, try this: virtual particle-antiparticle pairs are constantly popping into spontaneous existence out of the vacuum, and quickly annihilating each other again. Every cubic nanometer of the universe seeths with them. We know they are there because we can measure their effect very precisely.

72 posted on 08/21/2002 9:53:23 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: VadeRetro
I'll just use the shorthand version - I get the jersey with number e...

I used to play on a softball team with a bunch of other computer guys - my jersey number on that team was 01112...

73 posted on 08/21/2002 9:54:35 AM PDT by general_re
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To: general_re
Lucky Seven!
74 posted on 08/21/2002 9:59:33 AM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: xzins
I think that the "Intelligent Design Team" t-shirt should have the slogan, "I am not a Creationist".
75 posted on 08/21/2002 10:02:30 AM PDT by scottiewottie
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To: editor-surveyor; PatrickHenry; xzins
I invited Patrick Henry over here to discuss ID. If you have to insult him take it to the smokey backroom. Patrick, I apologize for any and all boorish behavior exhibited towards you. For some reason, I expected better.
76 posted on 08/21/2002 10:03:43 AM PDT by JesseShurun
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To: Junior
Let me understand. ID supporters are "the ID crowd" and evolution supporters are "scientists"? Got it.

Look, I am not out to undermine your faith in the theory of evolution. I personally believe it is a faith framework adopted by those who do not wish to believe in God to provide an alternative explanation for the world in which we live. There may be a few people who come to God in Christ because they lose their faith in evolution and are thus cast at intellectual sea, but I think very few.

Most people seek the answer to much deeper needs than that.

So I tend to think of it more as a result of God-denial than a cause. Accordingly, while I have read a couple of books on the subject, it does not preoccupy me.

77 posted on 08/21/2002 10:04:14 AM PDT by winstonchurchill
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To: scottiewottie
I think that the "Intelligent Design Team" t-shirt should have the slogan, "I am not a Creationist".

I think that the "Team Socialist" t-shirt should say, "I am not a Communist!"

78 posted on 08/21/2002 10:05:37 AM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: VadeRetro
Exactly. Had to be in keeping with the composition of the team, and our team name - we were the "Stack Daddies" ;)
79 posted on 08/21/2002 10:08:16 AM PDT by general_re
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To: Physicist
"But if easy creation out of nothing is what you want, try this: virtual particle-antiparticle pairs are constantly popping into spontaneous existence out of the vacuum, and quickly annihilating each other again. Every cubic nanometer of the universe seeths with them. We know they are there because we can measure their effect very precisely."

Seems then we should call it, "not really a vacuum". This is where ID parts with CS, CS needs an origin where there is nothing. ID is perfectly content to conclude there has never been a time when there was nothing. An absolute vacuum has never existed.


80 posted on 08/21/2002 10:09:36 AM PDT by scottiewottie
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