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I don't. I just don't know about one right now, and from what we have learned about the natural world so far it doesn't seem likely, so molded plastic parts makes design a pretty safe bet.why not? humans designed genomes. on the other hand: if for you plastic=designed, how do you know there is no natural process that can made plastic?
irrelevant. if i see a car on a far planet i can conclude design without knowing how the car was build.
can you detect design when you see a self replicating car?
incorrect. some cars are made by a factory and some by human hands.
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That's kind of splitting hairs don't you think?
Whether a car is built in a factory or built by hand, it's still ultimately designed
No, it doesn't. My argument was that I can be pretty sure that molded plastic parts indicate design, and unless you can show me a natural process which produces molded plastic parts my argument does not fail. What you don't seem to get is that I don't have to prove the presence of design. All I have to do is detect it when I can.if you dont know than you cant conclude design when you see a plastic. thuse the argument fail.
Wrong again. Both factory methods and hand building methods leave evidence of intentional manufacture, which is what the conclusion of design is based on.what doest "splitting hairs" mean? anyway...
great. so we can detect design without knowing how the object was made after all. thanks.
that is not what pitabread is talking about: "If you want to argue that living creatures are created, then tell us how they are created.". so now we see that we dont need to know how something was made to know it was designed.Wrong again. Both factory methods and hand building methods leave evidence of intentional manufacture, which is what the conclusion of design is based on.
what doest "splitting hairs" mean? anyway...
great. so we can detect design without knowing how the object was made after all. thanks.
That's not what Pitabread said.that is not what pitabread is talking about: "If you want to argue that living creatures are created, then tell us how they are created.". so now we see that we dont need to know how something was made to know it was designed.
No, it doesn't. My argument was that I can be pretty sure that molded plastic parts indicate design, and unless you can show me a natural process which produces molded plastic parts my argument does not fail.
that is not what pitabread is talking about: "If you want to argue that living creatures are created, then tell us how they are created.". so now we see that we dont need to know how something was made to know it was designed.
It means you're making distinctions that aren't relevant to the point of the discussion.
Except we do know how it was designed/built.
You can always conclude intelligent design. Intelligent design is an unfalsifiable proposition and can never be ruled out. Your problem is that you want to prove the presence of intentional design, and you can't do that unless you can show evidence of intentional manufacture.ok. can you show me how a living thing can evolve from non living thing? according to your own criteria if we have no natural explanation (like the plastic) then we can concludee design. right?
and you said that the plastic is evidence of intentional manufacture since we have no evidence that such a plastic can evolve naturally. this is why i asked you if you can show me how a natural process can evolve a living creature. can you show that?You can always conclude intelligent design. Intelligent design is an unfalsifiable proposition and can never be ruled out. Your problem is that you want to prove the presence of intentional design, and you can't do that unless you can show evidence of intentional manufacture.
no you dont. you just see a car. a car can be made by different ways.
and again: we also know how genomes are deigned. so what is your point actually?