Wiccan_Child
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It's not the "I don't know" that refutes the argument. The critic uses the argument on itself: you end up with an infinite regress, an unending list of designers of designers. If that isn't parsimonious (not to mention paradoxical), I don't know what it.No. For every answer you get 3 or 4 new questions always pop up out of that answer. You can't use the inability to answer the new question as an argument against the answer.
The question is: what is the origin of the designs in living organisms?
Answer: God made them.
New question: Where did God come from?
Answer: Don't know.
That "don't know" doesn't negate the answer "God made them" because "don't know" applies to a different question.
As an example in science:
Question: What is the origin of the spacetime/matter/ energy in the universe?
Answer: The Big Bang.
Question: What is the origin of Big Bang?
Answer: don't know.
You can't use the "don't know" to negate all the arguments and data for the Big Bang.
It doesn't mean that there couldn't have been a designer, only that this particular logical argument isn't a valid proof of one.
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