Which is why the tests are cited
I feel so much better now. Thanks.
Don't feel bad. It was not intended as an insult at all. I myself am quite ignorant of many things. I am for example very ignorant of psychology or pediatrics. Or any number of other things. There is nothing wrong in not knowing. Wrong is only in claiming to know when one does not. Beware of people who do not acknowledge ignorance.
We are aware of the underlying principles.
If so, why do you make so many rookie mistakes at the top echelons of your "society"?
Perhaps it is better that you who do the critiquing should learn what you're criticizing? Is that really too much to ask?
Actually degradation over time is relevant.
Weeeeell..... In a way. But not the way you seem to think. What IS entropy precisely? Is it
really degradation over time? No. It isn't. Again, please learn what you're criticizing before you criticize it. Which in this case will require a lot of work. You can study it in a book such as phsyics for scientists and engineers by Tipler and Mosca coupled with a book such as Zumdahl's chemical principles for an introduction and then go over to more specific books on quantum physics and thermodynamics, statistical thermodynamics and more before you really understand it. One such book I can recommend is Dill and Bromberg's molecular driving forces which is not specifically about entropy alone, but it will teach you much about it. Just be sure you get your calculus down before you start on it.
Except that the evidence points to intelligent design.
No it doesn't. Look at whatever point you want. Whatever claim you creationists boast. The best you can come up with is that we don't know every detail about certain things. But one cannot from that conclude that the thing about which our knowledge is lacking was made by an engineer, human, divine or otherwise.
The bacterial flagellum. Irreducibly complex.
Bacterial flagellum? Sorry, but that's a logically fallacious statement. Just because it is complex does neither mean it is irreducably so, and even things which are irreducably complex can evolve naturally. Which isn't to say evolution itself isn't a design tool. It is in many areas of engineering and science today.
Many of the proteins in the bacterial flagellum or eukaryotic cillium are very similar to each other or other proteins in the respective cell or other cells. Their evolution is not all that difficult to explain, all you need do is search a bit. The process is well documented. As is the structure. In fact, this level of biology is where my expertise starts coming into play. The size is within my realm. Their functions and compositions as well. Although I am not yet an expert, I should add.
Design is identifiable via physical means.
You say design is identifiable via physical means. I say this presupposes a comparable level of intelligence and an understandable level of complexity. Give an intergrated circuit or other device with complex enough mechanics to someone from the deep amazon and they might not recognize it as designed. You probably wouldn't if I showed you some of the stuff we work on. Heck, I wouldn't on first glance. I'd need an AFM.
Thing is, if we humans cannot recognize our own designs as such what makes you think we can recognize God's designs as such? It seems highly fallacious.
It also seems highly problematic to assume He would design things the way we did in the industrial era. As it is today we use evolution as a design tool in many areas of engineering and science. Both biological and abiological. Why do you think God is incapable of using that which we use?
Metaphysics is not understandable via physical science. Doesn't mean that Darwinism is the explanation for the metaphysical creation of man.
Metaphysical?
Whatever. We weren't made from something inanimate and then into what we are now without any transition. We evolved. Everything points to that. Nothing points to us being created as we are now from no other living creature before our current "form".