So, you come up with this wacky, untestable idea that the reason why I can walk is because God is magically pushing me from behind, and then accuse everyone who disagree's with you "intellectually dishonest"? Boy, you've really shown your true colours here.
THAT is how you read me? Could re-read the opening post please? If I were arguing that God pushes the human body, how could humans be blamed for murder? Thats absurd and certainly was not my argument. No the argument is that the human hand is, in essence, SELF-propelling. The sheer exertion of free will moves the human hand as to, for example, stab someone as an act of murder. (This is not to deny that muscular energy contributes to the motion, but free will is the decisive force in that motion, otherwise we couldnt blame someone for murder). The argument is simple and, as far as I can see, irrefutable.
Not at all. Romans 1:20 is a favourite verse of mine, but I doubt very much that Paul was making a scientific statement when he said "since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities... have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made". Do you really think he was referring to Irreducible Complexity or Specified Complexity or some other form of Intelligent Design mumbo-jumbo? I seriously doubt it. I think he was speaking of the same awe-inspiring experience we've all come to appreciate when we observe the sun set or look up at the stars at night. That's not the kind of experience you can measure with science.
Your attempt to dissociate intelligent design from this passage isnt convincing. The force of this passage (and others) is so strong that, historically, only a few theologians (probably fewer than my fingers) have even TRIED to object to the doctrine of General Revelation, the doctrine that all men inevitably posit the existence of the Intelligent Designer in virtue of the way that God designed their minds and the world around them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_revelation
Again, Pauls words, which you cited, were these: "Since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities... have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made".
To begin with, notice how Paul begins the argument, Since the CREATION of the world (note he didnt say, since the EVOLUTION of the natural order). He then goes on to say that Gods existence is clearly manifest from that creation. How is it manifest? Does one conclude, Look at all this wondrous nature. Must be that God evolved it! No. Paul is talking about a revelation plain to all men in all generations, prior to the theory of evolution. CLEARLY, what Paul is saying is that the human reaction is, Look at all this wondrous nature. There must be a CREATOR and his usage of the term creation is evidentiary to this point. Therefore this one passage is, in itself, sufficient biblical warrant for rejecting the theory of evolution out of hand. At the very least, it lends substantive support to the watchmaker argument. Your silly attempt to deprecate the value of this passage in the debate clearly proceeds from the bias of a preconceived scientific agenda, it is not a fair, evenhanded treatment of the passage.
Not at all. Because as I've mentioned before, and as you've failed to address, we know a priori how pots are made and who makes them. The same is not true of life.
We dont KNOW the origin of a pot. We really dont know much of anything (see my signature). We typically form opinions based on probabilities, in turn based on experience. When that experience is lacking (as with large scale evolution) when we cannot witness the events firsthand, in this case for lack of lifespan longevity the probability declines. Hence excessive dogmatism is inappropriate.
Here's the point: I cannot prove that seemingly random mutations are not the work of a providential hand. Nor can I prove that they are the work of a providential hand. So believing that God has a hand in the mutations that bring about variation is just that: a belief. It does not stem from science, which is why science doesn't consider the hand of God as having any explanatory power.
Again, science often deals with probabilities, not only with proofs. And as for explanatory power, again, what are we trying to prove? A dubious conclusion of dubious value. Thats why I stated in the OP, consider the following two statements:
(1)[FONT="] [/FONT]Water boils raised to a certain temperature.
(2)[FONT="] [/FONT]Somewhere in my ancestry lies an ape.
On a daily basis, water is very useful. On a daily basis, proposition #2 is USELESS. It is a dubious conclusion of dubious value. Hence there is no NEED to be excessively dogmatic about it.
Cell memory is no mystery, so you cannot chalk it up to some supernatural intelligence that God has blessed B and T cells with. Cell memory operates according to the predictable laws of nature. Honestly, pick up a biology textbook and read a chapter about vaccinations and immunity.
No. Its not immediately clear that the concept of cell memory is reducible to mechanistic explanations (although scientists have so brainwashed you to believe). For one thing, the idea that cerebral memory is purely mechanistic was effectively debunked by Merleau Ponty in his most most famous book, The Phenomenology of Perception. Indeed, to presume that cell memory is purely mechanistic is as naive as presuming that mechanism explains human motility a common presumption among science-minded people like yourself which I EASILY debunked in the OP.
Fact is, it is difficult to speak of memory without reference to consciousness and, as I showed in the OP, consciousness supernaturally transcends ordinary mechanism.