You aren't looking very hard or your standing on your head. It really doesn't matter if you don't know how remarkably structured the BF is in regards to human engineering because the entire scientific community is not so inclined, there are none that don't see the similarity.
Um... If we're gonna play
that card, it's perhaps worth noting that the "entire scientific community" disagrees with you. They don't see design. They see an
illusion of design. And they say as much. You don't get to play that card, I'm sorry.
You and others including much of the scientific community do not believe it was designed but not based on any evidence that would prohibit that conclusion but one of worldview. Evolutionary mindset is so entrenched in the minds of many scientists that they will only look at such engineering genius and claim it came about by natural processes alone. However, there is no evidence of how this evolved gradually over multiple stages and most certainly how each stage was an advantage to the host.
Once again, we come down to this fundamental misunderstanding at the core of all of this. Evolution is not the worldview. Evolution is the
model. Just like in much of physics, gravity is not a worldview, it is a model. Do you think physicists tested Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko for gravity before they launched the probe? No, of course not, because so far, everything we've tested has gravity, and we can inductively determine that it's pretty much constant. This is the case with evolution. Evolution is nearly an inherent property of life, given that life has the characteristic of descent with modification and natural selection. We see evolution in every part of life sciences, with morphology, genetics, ERV lineages, embryology, and more all producing a clear phylogeny. We know multiple examples of complex natural systems that evolve. So when we are presented with a complex natural system, the first thought is
obviously "it evolved". Just like when two objects are attracted to one another, the first thought is
obviously "gravity". This is the model we use to explore most of biology, and it
works.
But when you see a complex system, your first thought is "it was designed". First of all, that's a very tall claim, one that requires a whole lot of evidence. Think about what you are proposing here. You are proposing the existence of some sort of intelligent entity or entities. You are proposing as evidence for these entities that something is designed. And you are proposing as evidence that that thing is designed that it
looks designed. You have no objective criteria for measuring this. You have nothing beyond "it just looks that way". But we have
never established design in natural systems. We have
no valid point of comparison. I mean, what's more extravagant here - the claim that some entity we know nothing about created these biological systems using some technique we don't even know is possible and left no overt trace of its own existence, or the claim that complex biological systems can occur via a mechanism that we know can produce complex biological systems!
The claim that there is no evidence of the flagellum evolving is
false. Of the proteins indispensable for the flagellum,
only two have no known homologues.
We have a thoroughly workable hypothesis of how the flagellum could have evolved in individual steps with each step giving an advantage to the host. We can see intermediaries of this lineage. So you tell me - why should we
not assume that just like every other system we have examined thus far, the bacterial flagellum evolved? Why should we instead assume, based on absolutely no evidence whatsoever, that it must have been designed?
The eye may in your mind shown to be firmly established but there are many who would disagree and those include scientists who have been educated and trained in the field.
No, I'm sorry, eye evolution has been a solved issue since around 1860. And the genetics has only made it clearer. The fact that you can dredge up the Peter Duesburg of molecular biology to try to make the case that this is wrong does nothing to deflect the fact that it isn't. We
know the eye evolved. We know
how the eye evolved. We know the individual stages involved in eye evolution. We can trace the genetics back. We can see intermediaries today throughout all of nature. The eye is a complex biological system which
evolved.
Now if you feel that the apparent deliberate design that we see in the Bacterial Flagellum and all living organisms is just a false positive for design, it is incumbent upon you to show how evolution produces this and give evidence to support your position rather than just assertions and could haves, might haves and plausible stories of those telling them.
And there's the shift. "Please prove that it is not designed". No. You need to prove that it
is designed. And in order to do this, you need to do better than "It looks designed to me". You need to do better than "the scientific community accepts that it kinda looks designed".
I will say this again and again until you get it. You have plenty of examples of
humans designing things. You have zero verifiable examples of an "intelligent designer" designing
anything. For all we know,
this is a characteristic example of that intelligent designer's work:
...
You see no significance in that, but maybe some other entity, some other class of being
does.
You're mistaking the natural human compulsion to see patterns where there are none for an actual event. In science, we try very,
very hard to filter out natural biases like this, because, well, they're biases! They corrupt our data by filtering it through our heads. And here you offer us a piece of evidence which is
completely indistinguishable from a well-known, well-established bias, and you cannot offer any reliable objective criteria by which to measure it - nothing that doesn't boil down to subjective opinion. What are we supposed to make of that?
This is why we refer to it as the
illusion of design. Because pareidolia is a well-known and well-established bias which causes us to see the
illusion of familiar patterns where none exist. And because literally
all of your "evidence" for design can be discounted as pareidolia, you have nothing to work with.
This was the
entire point of my thread, "
How Do We Detect Design". And we've still gotten nowhere.
"You are right, and anyone who disagrees with you
knows that you're right. You cannot be wrong! Everyone else who disagrees is just lying. What you believe is self-evidently true and everyone knows it (even if they say they don't)."
That's what Romans 1:20 says. Excuse me for not being impressed in the slightest.
Regardless, there are only two options for the design in living things, actual deliberate design or evolution which Dawkins and others claim can mimic deliberate design. The evidence is the design in all life forms. Now if one wishes to claim that evolution can produce this appearance of deliberate design they must do more than assert that it can. Evidence must be provided that this design is produced by evolutionary means.
So let's go down the list of problems with this:
- We already know design can mimic nature in multiple ways
- You got the nature of that mimicry backwards
- You have not provided any evidence for design that is objectively distinguishable from a well-known, well-established cognitive bias
- You have formed a false dichotomy (what if it's neither design nor evolution, but some other, as of yet unknown natural process?)
- You hold evolution to a standard that simply is not reasonable
- You ignore the inductive power of evolution as a model
- You invoke Romans 1:20
That pretty much covers it, I think.
I am sorry to say that this exemplifies the fact that you do not understand the topic being discussed. WE don't impose a code onto it. The code is read by transcription and it has to be a meaningful code to work at all.
Wat. This "code" read by transcription? It's chemistry. It's not "reading" in the way we read it. The ribosome is not looking at the codon and saying, "Ah, A C G, better go code for <whatever that codes for>". These simplifying abstracts that we apply become incredibly confusing when taken too far. And that's what you've done. You've taken the analogy and mistaken it for the substance. What goes on in protein coding is like what goes on in rock formation: it's a natural process based on natural laws, and we can read a perfectly functional code into it, but that code is not inherently meaningful.
Perhaps valuable for future reading:
www.christianforums.com/threads/the-role-of-information.7898832/