pittguy579 said:
Nope, you are deluded and maybe need a shrink
Im not the one hand waving away points and playing silly childish games just so I dont have to do any work.
You did also say
this:
"
Sure evolution could potentially go in reverse in some instances, but to say the primary engine of evolution works by going in reverse is ridiculous. "
When replying to caravelair, who never said evolution could go in reverse. Yet instead of admitting your error you just pretend someone did say it, but cannot even provide a name.
Creatures loosing features (like cave species) is not evolution going in reverse.
None of my points has had a valid rebuttal. Someone tried to say the arch was a valid example of a commensurate system because it was "Evolving" from a hunk of rock into an arch. If that is the best you have, that is laughable
If you put it like that, it is laughable. But I commend you on actually trying to discuss the subject instead of following your same pattern you have been on for pages. See below.
Any engineer will tell you that any system such as a mousetrap is more akin to life than a hunk of rock.
An "engineer", as you pointed out earlier in the thread
is not a biologist and that is the field that Behe and Dembski are in, which is what you said.
Now, also according to you, the reason why the arch is not a valid argument against ID is, and I quote you...
"
The only thing I find laughable is your inability to comprehend them. The systems are not equate"
The systems, IE, life and a mousetrap "
DO NOT EQUATE" either.
Mousetraps are not living organisms and cannot be compared to a living organism, remember my
toaster analogy?
Reading back on the thread, I see you dont really understand the point of calling systems Irreducibly complex. An IC system is just that. You cant take parts away from it in
its currect state. Thats all it means. Its what Behe and Dembski do with this idea that matters.
Behe and Dembski say the system had to be created all at once or the system fails. But even man-made systems werent created all at once. The modern car wasnt always that complex, if you keep going back further and further the car had a very simple design. So clearly their argument cannot use human machines as comparable with living systems.
Behe and Dembski say that IC systems are a HALLMARK of design. So they say, if we find any system that is irreducibly complex, it must have been designed. Thats why IC is so important to them. So they compare living systems to mousetraps and other man-made machines in order to illustrate this point. The problem with this as I have already pointed out above is many man-made machines DIDNT get created "all at once".
And so that brings me onto the most important point of all: The fact is living things evolve, they are not static machines that do not reproduce.
So the issue is that the IDists claim that we can look at a living system that seems to be "irreducibly complex" and conclude that it must have been designed.
Because thats the reason for them coming up with Irreducibly Complexity in the first place, thats what they want to be able to say we can do when looking at a living system. But there is no logical basis for their assumption.