cdesign proponentistsThey mistake Intelligent Design for Biblical Creationism because all they are focused on is God as an explanation for anything.
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cdesign proponentistsThey mistake Intelligent Design for Biblical Creationism because all they are focused on is God as an explanation for anything.
Darwinian a priori assumptionalists, sad but true
You can calculate it for yourself:
Information is:
This is the Shannon equation for information as it applies to genetics. It means that the total information is the sum of the frequencies of n genes times the log of the frequency of n genes.Let's say that a population has two alleles for a certain gene, and a new allele mutations and eventually each has an equal frequency.![]()
Original: ((0.5)*(log(0.5))+((0.5)*(log(0.5)) = (about 0.3)
After new allele: ((0.33)*(log(0.33))+((0.33)*(log(0.33))+((0.33)*(log(0.33))= (about 0.47)
As you see, any new allele adds information. If you mean "useful function," rather than "information," someone's already given you an example. Would you like some more?
Technically I've given him 3
The absurdity is staggering, take away the bait trap and there is no point to the other parts. He even said it wouldn't attract many mice but if one were particularly stupid it would be just as dead.
Everyone makes mistakes. It would be nice to see Ken Miller admit that the mousetrap example he used was not one of intelligent redesign.
I still think the secreter example has something to say to IC. It certainly isnt proof of evolution, however.
They mistake Intelligent Design for Biblical Creationism because all they are focused on is God as an explanation for anything.
Got that right. Behe is not even YEC. He is in many ways TE. Apparently they shoot their (theologically) wounded in that camp.
I'd still like to know how we can confidently say that we've positively identified an IC system. It strikes me that most proposed IC systems so far are, in fact, functionally reducible, and that ID proponents have been a little quick on the draw in labelling them as such. So if we can't distinguish between a supposed IC system and our ignorance as to how if might have evolved, can we really ever say with confidence that some system x was miraculously poofed into existence rather than having evolved that way? I'd like to hear some of the ID proponents here comment on this.
I think you are begging the point. I am not familiar with the details of the systems under discussion, but as I understand the present debate, the flagellum consists of about 40 distinct parts. Having demonstrated a precusor to one or two out of 40 does not demonstrate that the others could have evolved.
The notion that an irreducibly complex organ could evolve flies in the face of the basic concept of evolution, that is, natural selection of chance variations. natural selction would discard the various components as useless unless they were assembled in a workable form.
I am tempted to ratchet up the rhetoric. But, what does that serve? There are counterarguments. You probably know them. So what is the point of making it appear that you can now declare victory. It just ticks people off.
Oh please do. I mean, yes, there were base elements in antiquity. However, there wasn't nylon. That particular configuration was man-made. Furthermore, it was highly toxic to life. It's a thing of evolutionary beauty for how organisms adapted and evolved to take advantage of it.
But that's not an argument. How can you say something looks like an IC system if you don't know what an IC system looks like? That is the question, after all: What does an IC system look like? "I'll know it when I see it" isn't a particularly helpful answer since it is by no means objective.
Science isn't in the business of offering facts. It's in the business of explaining them.
If thats not an argument, then even less so is the opposite gradual steps assertion, no? At least I can perceive a system; I cannot perceive the increments leading up to the system.
"I can't imagine how it might have happened, therefore it didn't happen" is an argument from incredulity. In other words, a logical fallacy. It's also god-of-the-gaps theology. So I humbly disagree with busterdog -- I don't think you've made a good point.If thats not an argument, then even less so is the opposite gradual steps assertion, no? At least I can perceive a system; I cannot perceive the increments leading up to the system.
"I can't imagine how it might have happened, therefore it didn't happen" is an argument from incredulity. In other words, a logical fallacy.
I'm not really sure about what you're trying to say here.And... “I can’t imagine how it might have happened, therefore it happened” is an argument from credulity. Is it not a greater fallacy? And even when biologists are able to imagine how it happened (I think even I could come up with some fiction, if I put my imagination to it), would that make it true?
I'm not really sure about what you're trying to say here.
You appear to be trying to depreciate the scientific method by saying that it is but simple guesswork and nothing more. That any imaginative story will do.
This isn't the case. Scientific hypotheses must be testable to be useful, and therefore must make predictions. "Particular biological systems are irreducibly complex because I can feel it in my gut" meets none of the criteria of a scientifically valid hypothesis.
The onus is on ID proponents to put forward a predictive model that can positively identify IC systems because it appears so far that they've only arguments from incredulity and god-of-the-gaps theology to offer.
Simply defaulting to an explanation of IC because you cannot yet understand how a particular system might have evolved doesn't cut the mustard.
As proposed, intelligent design offers only (supposed) negative evidence against evolution, rather than positive evidence in its own favour.
You just said earlier that your inference of IC systems is based on little more than gut feelings. "If it walks like a duck...", etc. But so far you haven't been able to tell us just what a "duck" is -- only what it isn't. That's not tangible!I didn’t say that at all. I'm saying “show me the money”; that’s what science is about, right? Show me the money, or else your guess is as good as mine. (Actually my guess is a little better, since it’s based on something tangible.)
First, many supposed instances of irreducible complexity have been discredited -- not based on "unproved guesswork", as you say -- but based on careful, scientific examination of the systems themselves. Read Miller's Finding Darwin's God if you'd like to learn more. Some of his examples have already been presented in this very thread.But saying “particular biological systems are not irreducibly complex because” of any other unproved guesswork meets no criteria of either science or common sense.
For one, I don't believe nature is mindless. I believe the evolution of nature is teleological. After all, God is intimately involved with His creation.Why would mindless nature build a propeller without a drive to turn the propeller? Why would mindless nature build a drive to turn a propeller while there is no propeller to be turned?
Again with the appeal to "common sense". Not a valid argument. Common sense tells me that because I have a degree in science and you do not, I shouldn't take you too seriously on matters pertaining to science. What do you make of that?I think the onus is on opponents of common sense observations to forward a predictive model substantiating an alternative to common sense observations. (I don’t claim it’s impossible to defy intuition; it’s been done before, just not in this particular case.)
I'm still not sure what you're trying to say here, but it's worth noting that evolution has a proven track record as an explanation for the origin for many biological systems. In fact, the theory of evolution is the working paradigm of biology today. If the theory is of any value, it certainly ought to be able to explain supposed irreducibly complex systems to some degree. And lo and behold -- it does! As I said earlier, all examples of IR systems that Behe has proposed so far have been shown with further study to have functional components independent of the system for which they have been exapted, as predicted by evolutionary theory. This is what I mean when I say the case for IC systems is based more on ignorance than positive evidence for such. The challenge I am putting forth is for the ID proponents to be able to distinguish between the two.The only evolutionary argument so far is “we already believe the theory of evolution, therefore the facts must conform to the theory”, which is an argument from credulity, and is therefore a fallacy.
But doesn’t defaulting to an explanation of gradual evolution of a system when you cannot yet understand how it could have happened cut even less of the mustard?
As proposed, evolution of apparently IC systems offers only…what?...”we have some evidence from which we presume evolution to have happened, so we presume it must have happened even where we can’t imagine it to have happened.”
Sorry, I still don't understand you. I agree that God created life intentionally. And I agree that life is complex. What I don't agree with is that He did it all using His magic wand, because the evidence so far suggests that He created biodiversity using the natural processes He instated at the beginning of creation. Does that answer your question?This is what’s perplexing to me – an atheistic evolutionist has to resort to leaps of logic, but a theistic evolutionist doesn’t. Don’t you agree that God intended and began living organisms somehow, so why the quibbling over when He began it – is flagellum more incredible than the initial genesis of life itself? If you agree that the Almighty can create “life”, is creating an outboard motor that big of a deal?
Does the enzyme eat the configuration or the base element? Some people say the latter.
And I agree that a new function is no more "new information" than a new configuration of base elements is a substance completely foreign to the capacity of bacteria created 6000 years ago.
Got that right. Behe is not even YEC. He is in many ways TE. Apparently they shoot their (theologically) wounded in that camp.