durangodawood
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Not sure I understand what youre asking.so this replica isnt looks design?
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Not sure I understand what youre asking.so this replica isnt looks design?
If I copy the form of something that was designed, like a watch, then my copy looks like something designed.i asking if the replica looks design.
so we cant conclude design if we will see this object?:If I copy the form of something that was designed, like a watch, then my copy looks like something designed.
But if I copy the form of something not designed, like a cloud, then my replica looks like something not designed.
Making imitations of a form doesnt really tell us anything about whether the form was designed or not.
No we cannot.so we cant conclude design if we will see this object?:
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(image from wiki)
Well, there's a certain amount of design that has to go into an instructive model, like deciding what colors to paint the various molecules and so on.so we cant conclude design if we will see this object?:
![]()
(image from wiki)
The object is a model designed to represent the structure of a flagellum. A plastic Christmas tree is a model designed to represent a certain kind of pine tree.so we cant conclude design if we will see this object?
For me it was much more complex than just the scrupulosity. The scrupulosity was pretty awful for me for years but it was a larger overarching investigation of my own faith that finally led me to leave it. Don't get me wrong; I wasn't raised in a particularly religious household...standard middle-of-the-road whitebread midwestern Methodist. So it wasn't anything anyone pushed onto me, it was just the way my brain worked.
I still have many, many, many Christian friends. People who's faith I honor and whom I respect. I have even helped defray costs for friends' mission work. But faith is no longer my thing.
We have two competing hypotheses:
1. An external intelligence (God) created life using standard chemistry
2. Life arose out of non-life through an (as yet unknown) process using standard chemistry
The "God hypothesis" leads to many more questions than it answers and may not be absolutely necessary as an explanatory variable.
i talk about the model itself. lets say that it were even able to reproduce like a living thing. do you will conclude design in this case?Well, there's a certain amount of design that has to go into an instructive model, like deciding what colors to paint the various molecules and so on.
But nothing here indicates that this is a model of a thing that was designed.
If the model were able to reproduce???i talk about the model itself. lets say that it were even able to reproduce like a living thing. do you will conclude design in this case?
As far as I'm concerned, these discussions should be taking place on at least three levels. You start by looking at data on the scientific level--what do we know about the natural world and how does it appear to work? I don't see how the question of naturalism vs. non-naturalism is relevant at this point at all. So no God hypothesis.
Then you move into philosophy of science. Where are the boundaries between what science actually tells us and the metaphysical assumptions that we ourselves are bringing to the table? Do reductionist theories of science truly work or do we need a new framework? What are the epistemological presuppositions that scientific knowledge depends upon to be a reliable way of understanding reality? What are the ramifications of quantum physics for the entire endeavor? (Nobody knows!)
And then you move into the history of the philosophy of science and deconstruct everything. Is reductionism an artifact of a mechanistic worldview? How much else of what we inherited from the scientific revolution is now obsolete? Are we in the midst of a new revolution now, and what does that mean for what we think we know? Progress is not a straight line--are there concepts that we tossed out centuries ago that have since snuck their way back in? The debate on Aristotle and his relevance to modern science is very interesting in that regard.
This approach is still in its infancy, but it's a really intriguing one. To me, at least. But I've spent my whole life convinced that modern Western society was wrong about something--just took a couple decades to zero in on exactly what.![]()
If we have an item, say "life" in front of us and we want to propose hypotheses that will provide the most information as to how "life" got here, barring our current ability to make it in a lab we can still come to some reasonable conclusions as to where life came from.
If life is made up of chemicals which occur naturally in non-life and if life can be effectively "stopped" by disrupting these chemical reactions then there is no reason to believe that life is anything more than a rather more complex form of non-life. That life probably arose from non-life.
My problem with religious explanations is that they invariably are attempts to avoid the real human condition of imperfect knowledge. It seems that religious explanations for the "origins" of things are an attempt to deny that, indeed, we simply don't know some things.
(And ultimately the more we find in science the smaller that "unknown" becomes. One of the reasons that many theologians do NOT like the "God of the Gaps" explanations).
What are religious explanations?
I like mythology, but I don't see the point in treating it like fact. Beyond that, ex nihilo nihil fit is not really an attempt to explain the origins of anything, and without centuries of Scholastic philosophy to lay the foundations, there would be no modern science at all.
None of what I've said has been God of the Gaps logic.
The question is really whether nature as understood by the natural sciences points beyond itself to something else.
I see the Scholastics as being humanity's exercising it's faculty for the primacy of logic. I always felt the Scholastics were a great aspect of Christian faith and it is sad that we've gone so far away from it.
Nor am I suggesting you are. I merely pointed out that religious explanations as opposed to standard "naturalistic" explanations usually fall afoul of this.
What is this "something else"? I certainly agree that there are extreme limits at the frontiers of quantum mechanics that beggar the imagination and cause one to wonder about the nature of "reality", but I also see questions like "origin of life" as being potentially fully soluble by wholly naturalistic explanations.
I guess that depends on what youre calling a "motor".
lets say it replicate like a living thing. in this case you will conclude that such a watch were designed or evolved?If the model were able to reproduce???
Sounds like more fantasy.
But lets go with it. We would have to examine the method by which it reproduces. We can examine how a tree reproduces. We can examine how a computer virus reproduces. Lets see how the model does it. Then I'll tell you.
Its a block of painted plastic that reproduces like a living thing?lets say it replicate like a living thing. in this case you will conclude that such a watch were designed or evolved?
I still dont understand this object: a watch made from wood that can reproduce biologically?not plastic but a watch that made from wood and its able to reproduce. you will conclude design or not in this case?