Friendly Giant
When I said better argument, I meant that it was better because it didn't try to do too much. It is not a better argument at "proving" evolution, but rather a better way to bring the notion of good or bad design into the debate. It's actually just making the obseravtion that bad designs are consistent with the way natural selection acts. It doesn't rest on an appeal to ignorance. Your statement
When I said better argument, I meant that it was better because it didn't try to do too much. It is not a better argument at "proving" evolution, but rather a better way to bring the notion of good or bad design into the debate. It's actually just making the obseravtion that bad designs are consistent with the way natural selection acts. It doesn't rest on an appeal to ignorance. Your statement
is a similar statement, though doesn't really break much new ground. It's not simply an appeal to ignorance (we don't know how it could have happened, therefore the designer must have done it). Unfortunately, the sentence that immediately preceeds itThe structure makes sense if it was created as a complete system.
does work down to such an appeal. The point that I'm trying to make here is that many others have addressed the ID version of appeal to ignorance I'm postulating that one version from the evolution side of the debate is actually a similar appeal. The argument is generally framed as the statement "I can't see why an intelligent designer would have created that particular bad design. Therefore there is no designer"In order for it to develope, it needed a reason to be there, other system to be in place to use it and is now fatal to the system if it is removed.
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