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drj11 -> RE: Ben Stein is right! Darwinists are tyrants. (5/12/2008 9:03:48 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
Oh, I see. I cannot disagree with Dawkins because I don't have a biology degree. How wonderfully elitist. Secondly, read what I said earlier about any theory or concept being vulnerable to being selectively cherry-picked for content that favors another deliberate position. So, if noted scientific leaders of the evolutionary community are 'cherry-picking' evolutionary theory, how are we supposed to know when they are legitimately speaking about the theory, and when they aren't? quote:
You are not listening to me, Jack. The scientific method turns on repeatable, and testable data - not demonstrations alone. How is ID testable? Where is the data? How do you prove a supernatural entity is responsible for biological creation, then go back to Square One, and mechanically repeat that proof? For example, you can prove the existence of gravity via the repetition of experiments with identical results, and/or breaking down gravitational variables via hard equations. How do you use the same method to mechanically prove a supernatural force is responsible for the creation of a giant squid? It’s not that I am not listening to you, it’s that you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. If we reduce science down to only that which ‘repeatable’, then there could be no scientific theories concerning the origin of the universe, earth, life, or the origin of species, because none of those events are repeatable. Perhaps that is your point, but that would limit scientific inquiry severely. But as far as what ID claims, ID claims intelligence is required to produce irreducibly complex and specifically complex systems and structures. And information driven nano-machines (and thus cells) are such systems. I can demonstrate the production of a specifically complex string right now. Here I will do it again. Ooops, here it is once again. Sentences don't mutate, mate and reproduce unique offspring. However, if they did, and specific and ever changing natural conditions made certain combinations of letters more likely to be able to "live" to reproduce more offspring, then your sentence might just form over time, and prove not to be so irreducibly complex. See: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/fitness/ (section 1.2.3) Edit: This actually goes straight to the heart of the irreducibly complex argument, and is similar to Behe's mousetrap analogy. Yes, if you assume the final form was and is the ultimate end product and no previous forms could perform the same function or any other beneficial function than irreducible complexity sorta makes sense. But thats not how it works. When ken miller show's up for an interview with a mousetrap for a tie clip with a spring pulled out, he illustrates perfectly where irreducible complexity falls down.
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