- Jun 28, 2011
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Why would one assume such a thing? There is nothing wrong with positing development of design over time, or even a natural process such as natural selection in the process of creation.The question was simply: "Why do dolphin tails go side to side and shark tails go up and down? Why are they different?"
We have an evolutionary explanation. We currently don't have a "design" explanation (e.g. assuming the organisms were independently designed and created).
It is the demand for naturalism that limits explanatory possibilities. The exploration of creation is free to follow the evidence wherever it leads (notwithstanding certain religious commitments of many).
Certainly it is common to see development and experimentally initiated selection process in human design, I can see no reason why a Creationist cannot also observe these things and apply them as part of a possible explanation.
For the purpose of method this much is true. However when elements of the Universe point to a reality and purpose beyond the underlying framwork it is only truthful to recognise the inference for what it is.The only way to have testable hypotheses (part of the basic scientific methodology) is to have an underlying framework with which to test them: in this case the framework is the universe itself and the assumption that the universe is objective.
Statements from biologists like Crick and Dawkins that urge the scientist to ignore what is obvious in front of his face reveal the truth of the underlying metaphysical commitment.
The evidence of highly functionally coherent systems in biology is a very good example of this sort of objective evidence that is nevertheless denied because of a priori metaphysical commitments of Naturalist ideaology.Unless you have a way to objectively test things beyond the "natural", then your objection is moot.
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