Actually, that doesn't even answer my question.
Yeah, it does. If we know that nonintelligence cannot bring forth intelligence, then we know that there must have been some intelligent force implementing intelligence into what we know are intelligent beings (me, you, plants and animals too). Now all we must discuss is what or who was that intelligent force.
No. (Stated to applying the same logic that states there will never be a duck birthed from a croc to the arguement stating that intelligence cannot arise from nontintelligence)
Yes. I know that many evolutionists will gladly cite the Urey Miller experiment as "solid proof" that intelligent life materials can arise naturally, but that's not as impressive as one may think. Crystals form naturally but they have never formed a crystal chandelier, that takes intelligence. You see, it even if ALL the materials were made that construct and support life, those materials MUST be placed in perfect order to produce, sustain, and maintain life. That takes intelligence. If I took ALL the gears and mechanisms that make a watch work, and put them in an air tight container and applied blind, nonintelligent energy to the box and it's contents, the watch would never ever get put back together. Even though ALL the pieces are there and I shook the box for an infinite amount of time, there would NEVER be an intelligent arrangement of the pieces. Intelligence simply cannot rise from nonintelligence.
It's not as far removed as you may think. The very first nervous system might have been a system of switches with as little as two possible states. As time went on, the number of switches just went up, until lifeforms emerged that could actually think.
The FIRST switch involved intelligence to make it work. It had to be applicable to some area. It had to be constructed with a purpose. It had to work in the first place. There had to be an intelligence to produce eve one switch, let alone millions.
Actually, that's my answer. Now, please show me why this answer is false.
Because adding minute steps over millions of years accomplishes nothing without an intelligence driving it. Think of it this way. If I go out to a cotton field and pick one head of cotton and take it back to my textile mill, what will happen to that cotton? Nothing unless I apply intelligence to it. It can sit in that textile mill for millions of years, but nothing will change for the better unless more intelligence is applied to it. What if I picked a bushel of cotton and took it back to the mill? Still nothing without more intelligence driving it to be more than what occurred naturally in the field. That cotton will never become clothes or anything more than cotton without intelligence driving it to more.
A jigsaw puzzle may be all there in the box, but it will never be complete without intelligence putting it together.
That's a plausible origin of life, but not the origin of intelligence.
Intelligence begets intelligence. Somewhere you either have to say that nonintelligence can bring about great intelligence or believe that there exists an uncaused source of intelligence.
No. (When told about finding a naturally occurring gold ring that is the perfect design and fit for one's fiancee's finger)
Yes. To believe that life, with all it's intricacies and symbiotic relationships and intelligence could form from nonintelligence is not intelligent.
No. There's no magical wall that prevents a system of switches from being extended until something emerges that we would classify as intelligence.
Show me where that has occurred once that can be observed, tested, and verified. Stating ToE does not count as that is the topic at hand we are debating.
In Christ, GB