But you aren't responding to a comment on what hurricanes do, rather what they are.
Actually the point in comparison is regarding useful information. I used
schematic information, but that is beside the point. The issue is complex
information that can be translated and communicated and recognized.
A hurricane is a poor example and incongruous to information that will
be used to encode polypeptides.
A hurricane starts off as an atmospheric disturbance that grows to a massive, highly regular storm.
And if these so called "natural" laws are the result of an Infinite God
who created them, then the whole point is clearly moot.
The whole point of Intelligent Design is that it denies this possibility:
Fiction postulates ridiculous possibility. Real science is based on what is observed.
it states that natural processes cannot explain certain specific physical events or structures.
What is "natural?" Please explain
how you know that natural is the
place to start? How do you know you are testing so called "natural"
processes? What is natural? How is natural completely independent
of super natural? How do you
know that you are not testing processes
which are sustained by supernatural force? Supernatural order? How
do you
know that order can exist apart from the supernatural?
At what point do you know how to differentiate between natural, unnatural and supernatural?
The possibility that a deity put those laws into motion in the first place wouldn't be creationism at all, but would rather be more akin to deism or theistic evolution.
Since I used to be this and considered myself a creationist at the time, I
will not make an issue of it. There are far to many other problems here
to dissect rather than distinguishing between the different forms of
creationism.
It's still wrong, but at least more rational than creationism.
It is only rational when you are still stuck in 10's of thousands of inductions which point in the wrong direction. Deceptions make sense,
otherwise people wouldn't believe them. Sometimes the real truth is the
one that seems the most foolish on the surface, but when you get down
to basic assumptions you will see the superior logic of deduction vs.
inductions which lead to error.