[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1328050149' post='498808']
I have read these posts carefully and it strikes me you do not understand intelligent design. You seem to be arguing from the position that those who hold to intelligent design do not agree with evolution and in fact many do.
You do not need to repeat elementary evolution theory as though this is all that is at issue. Not all ID theorists are theists and there are many views of where intelligence comes from. You are repeating basic evolutionist views which most ID theorists would not care about. I don’t either.[/quote]
Right... and that's why when people try to address weaknesses in intelligent design with logic, you use defenses like:
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1328050149' post='498808']
You assume you know the mind of an Intelligent Being and can judge it. That would make you greater than.... God can act by even letting evil happen if it meets His purpose in Christianity. It is called the permissive will of God.. I have seen good come even from sickness. Would you deny this? You are making all kinds of theological and philosophical statements with no scientific basis. Christianity has its own theological reasons, with the, "fall," Etc, but that is beyond the topic,[/quote]
And then go on to say:
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1328050149' post='498808']
Through the study and analysis of a system's components, a design theorist is able to determine whether various natural structures are the product of chance, natural law, intelligent design, or some combination thereof.
Such research is conducted by observing the types of information produced when intelligent agents act. Scientists then seek to find objects which have those same types of informational properties which we commonly know come from intelligence.... In a broader sense,
Intelligent Design is simply the science of design detection D
— how to recognize patterns arranged by an intelligent cause for a purpose.[/quote]
You are the king of contradiction.
So, if you are happy to stick with your latest definition of intelligent design then my last post (which you have conveniently elected to ignore) is entirely relevant.
[quote name='Link' timestamp='1327663172' post='498105']
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327628472' post='498042']
[quote] Link: If the DNA code is intelligent why do we see both humans and other animals that are born with horrible birth deformities (often these are so severe that a child is stillborn or dies shortly after birth), or genetic illnesses such as muscular dystrophy and hemophilia. [/quote]
Human beings are intelligent and yet none of them are perfect or make perfect things. Therefore even nature does not rule out Intelligent Design. We have an example of it in our very selves. There are all kinds of evil but this does not disprove God. Christianity explains evil in its own way but that is not the issue here.[/quote]
This is not an issue of evil.
If it was an issue of evil i would be asking "Why would a benevolent God allow this to happen". This is an issue about design, and critical flaws in a design that would be obvious to an intelligent designer. The question is more like "Why would a seemingly intelligent designer put such terrible flaws in a design"
There is a huge difference between designing something that is less than perfect, and designing something that is a complete failure. For example:
Cystic fibrosis is the most common, fatal genetic disease, affecting about 30,000 people in the United States, according to the National Human Genome Research Institute. Cystic fibrosis causes the body to produce thick, sticky mucus that clogs the lungs, leads to infection and affects the pancreas. Breathing is difficult, and digestive enzymes are blocked, which inhibit the absorption of food nutrients.
Any "intelligence" whatever it may be that is smart enough to design the insanely complex system of life on Earth from it's own mind is surely capable of fixing one gene in an organism that is going to kill it slowly and painfully.
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327628472' post='498042']
[quote]
Link: Surely an intelligent system would recognise these as damaging genes and repair them or replace them with functioning ones, but it does not.[/quote]
You assume you know the mind of an Intelligent Being and can judge it. That would make you greater than.... God can act by even letting evil happen if it meets His purpose in Christianity. It is called the permissive will of God.. I have seen good come even from sickness. Would you deny this? You are making all kinds of theological and philosophical statements with no scientific basis. Christianity has its own theological reasons, with the, "fall," Etc, but that is beyond the topic,[/quote]
So your argument is that no-one can know the mind of God and that God has his own reasons for doing the things he does.
And then you say that i am "making all kinds of theological and philosophical statements with no scientific basis."
Seriously do you not see the blatant hypocrisy of that statement?
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327628472' post='498042']
[quote]
Link: Of course genetic inheritance is explained and studied very well and we know that genes traits are
assigned randomly from both parents and we are often
able to predict the probability of a child being born with a particular illness, depending on whether one or both parents is a carrier or sufferer and whether a particular trait is
dominant or recessive. All because
we know that genes are
assigned randomly.[/quote]
True
assigned randomness is not predictable nor random. Prove it is random. This issue we have delt with before.
[/quote]
The work was first started by Gregor Mendel and is called Mendelian Inheritance. I'd be very surprised if you haven't heard of it (I'm pretty sure i learned about it in eighth or ninth grade).
This is a Wikipedia article that summarises it:
http://en.wikipedia....ian_inheritanceThese are the important parts.
Law of Segregation (The "First Law")The Law of Segregation states that every individual possesses a pair of
alleles (assuming diploidy) for any particular trait and that each parent passes a randomly selected copy (allele) of only one of these to its offspring. The offspring then receives its own pair of alleles for that trait. Whichever of the two alleles in the offspring is dominant determines how the offspring expresses that trait (e.g. the color of a plant, the color of an animal's fur, the color of a person's eyes).
Law of Independent Assortment (The "Second Law")The Law of Independent Assortment, also known as "Inheritance Law" states that separate genes for separate traits are passed independently of one another from parents to offspring.
I will provide you with an example.
Say two parents are carriers of the gene for huntington's disease. Both parents have a pair of alleles represented as Hh. H represents the dominant "normal" gene and h represents the recessive defective huntingtons disease gene.
They each pass on a single allele to their child which will the form their child's pair. The alleles are assigned at random (we know this from the original experiments performed by Mendel and numerous experiments and laboratory observations that back it up).
Because the alleles are assigned at random we cannot accurately predict the outcome of the childs genetic pair but because we know the limited number of possibilities we can predict the PROBABILITY of each genetic pair occuring. There are only four possible gene combinations the child could inherit.
H from his father and H from his mother = Completely normal
H from his father and h from his mother = Carrier of huntigtons gene but unaffected as has the dominant normal gene
h from his father and H from his mother = Same as above
h from his father and h from his mother = Sufferer of huntigtons disease
So therefore we know that there is a 25% chance the child will be normal. A 50% chance the child will be a carrier, and a 25% chance the child will be a sufferer of huntingtons disease.
That is how you predict the probability of a random event, by knowing all the possible outcomes. Grade school shit.
[/quote]
Before i finish i'd like to address some points made in your earlier post and reiterate some points made by hooter.
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327630734' post='498044']
Evidence #1: the origin of the universe- the steady state model supports atheism, but was disproved by the latest discoveries
- the oscillating model supports atheism, but was disproved by the latest discoveries
- the big bang model supports theism, and it is supported by multiple recent discoveries
- the quantum gravity model supports atheism, but it pure theory and has never been tested or confirmed by experiment and observation[/quote]
None of these models either support or weigh against the existence of a God.
Perhaps if you believe that they do, then you should elaborate on how you believe they do, or are you merely repeating it because you heard a scientist say something that you agree with, without giving it any independent thought?
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327630734' post='498044']
Evidence #2: the fine-tuning of physical constants for life- there are over 100 examples of constants that must be selected within a narrow range in order for the universe to support the minimal requirements for life
- example: mass density
- example: strong nuclear force (what he studies)
- example: carbon formation[/quote]
The fact that life in this universe requires the physical constants of this universe to survive points neither toward the existence of a God nor an intelligent designer, it's just common sense. Of course life is going to exist within the physical boundaries of the universe in which it exists, and if there were a universe in which life could not exist then there would be no one there to observe it. So the argument is moot.
No one really knows how many universes there are, perhaps we never will, perhaps there are an infinite number, perhaps this is the only one.
But is it not possible that there are different universes with different physical laws which forbid life as we know it, but allow life to exist in other forms which could not exist in our universe?
Or perhaps we are simply the lucky universe which worked and there are billions before us which have failed. The bottom line is, you don't know how rare or unlikely universes like ours are so you cannot assume it is the hand of the divine.
[quote name='shadowhawk' timestamp='1327630734' post='498044']
Evidence #3: the fine-tuning of our planet for habitability- the type of galaxy and our location in it
- our solar system and our star
- our planet
- our moon[/quote]
Our planet is one of hundreds of billions in this galaxy. There are billions of galaxies in this universe. So is it not logical that if a planet like ours can exist then given the sheer number of stars and planets in the universe that one like it will?
Besides, the planet is not "fine tuned for habitability" it just is what it is. The reason that the life on our planet is so well adapted to live on it is because those individual organisms best suited to exist in their environments are the ones that survive and go on to reproduce. Natural selection produces organisms finely tuned to their environment, without the need for environments to be finely tuned by an intelligent designer.