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Intelligent Design and Science – In or Out?

id debate intelligent design is id science god and sience creationism neutral id position

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#661 serp777

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 03:41 AM

serp777, reply.

 

Intelligent agency produced the soup and it used preexisting soup to get it going.  Kind of like starting a fire with a match and claiming you invented fire.   This is hardly the product of random chance.  Evolution and gravity are apples and oranges.  One does not establish the other.

What counter argument do I need.  You still do not have life or a cell membrane or DNA for that matter.  As addx noted this same experiment was done years ago.  Still no reason ID is not in.

 

"Intelligent agency produced the soup and it used preexisting soup to get it going.  "

 

You've provided no evidence for this HUGE assumption. Your false is analogy does not prove anything because kindling fires is not the same as life starting. 

 

"This is hardly the product of random chance."

An organized fire could be the product of random chance. You would need to prove that random chance could not produce an organized fire. THat would be a fallacy. Nevertheless this is still a false analogy. 

 

It also follows that since humans evolved from recursive random chance, that therefore the fire was also a result of random chance if you go back through the sequence of events. 

 

"Evolution and gravity are apples and oranges. One does not establish the other."

Strawman argument. I did not claim they establish each other. Stop putting words in people's mouthes. I simply asked if you thought they had equivalent amounts of evidence that support them, not that evidence from one thing is evidence from the other. You also deflected from the main point which is basically: do you accept evolution or not? 


Edited by serp777, 04 July 2014 - 03:44 AM.


#662 shadowhawk

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 05:43 AM

Didn’t scientists who are intelligent design the experiment?  Yes.  ID.  They did not create life.

If humans started a fire with a match, they did not create fire.  Intelligence started it.  A few fires are started by nature but nature did not create fire.  Many if not most fires are caused by humans but this experment was definitely caused by ID.  ID is in.


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#663 addx

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 06:48 AM

In evolution random chance caused life.  Yes, I expect random chance not intelligent design to produce the result if your theory holds up.


Exactly. So I have to produce life out of random chance in front of your eyes without causing it artificially in any way since this would be taint the "randomness" of the event by my intelligent touch.

Nice going.

You havent produced life nor was it done by random chance.  What you have demonstrated is Intelligent Design.  Nice going.


Are you that daft.

You're asking me to produce life and when I do you I produced it not chance.

Maybe I should change my name to 'Chance' and that would be good proof, I could write a sentence "Chance created life" and it would be correct according to a dictionary.

#664 serp777

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 07:19 AM

Didnt scientists who are intelligent design the experiment?  Yes.  ID.  They did not create life.

If humans started a fire with a match, they did not create fire.  Intelligence started it.  A few fires are started by nature but nature did not create fire.  Many if not most fires are caused by humans but this experment was definitely caused by ID.  ID is in.


Your false analogy has no bearing on whether life was started by ID or not. Just because one thing is intelligently designed does not mean something entirely different is. Fallacy 101

#665 serp777

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 07:28 AM

In evolution random chance caused life.  Yes, I expect random chance not intelligent design to produce the result if your theory holds up.

Exactly. So I have to produce life out of random chance in front of your eyes without causing it artificially in any way since this would be taint the "randomness" of the event by my intelligent touch.

Nice going.
You havent produced life nor was it done by random chance.  What you have demonstrated is Intelligent Design.  Nice going.
Are you that daft.

You're asking me to produce life and when I do you I produced it not chance.

Maybe I should change my name to 'Chance' and that would be good proof, I could write a sentence "Chance created life" and it would be correct according to a dictionary.

He clearly has no concept of probability. Maybe you can get a hole in one on a par 5 during youfirst shot while you're at it. But if you can't i guess he thinks that means getting a hole is impossible in general

#666 platypus

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 09:41 AM

I read on the interwebs that in the visible universe there are approximately 10000 stars for every grain of sand on Earth! What are the odds that "random chance" does NOT create life in any of those starsystems? Anthropic principle rules ok!?



#667 addx

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 10:33 AM

He clearly has no concept of probability. Maybe you can get a hole in one on a par 5 during youfirst shot while you're at it. But if you can't i guess he thinks that means getting a hole is impossible in general


It's not even a question of his perception of probability.

He is litteraly asking for a wooden stove as proof of evolution.

Any human attempt to recreate the primordial soup will simply be creation of life by intelligence.

As proof, he wants to witness spontaneous creation of life with no human interference or a human hand ever tainting the location in any way.

This would only be possible by continuous monitoring of all completely isolated areas that contain no organic material and simply waiting for it to happen to witness it. And the isolation must not be mad made either or it will interfere. They found organic material even on mars so you'd have to do this somewhere else, and first make sure the entire planet has no organic compounds... maybe even make sure that no alien has ever landed on the planet.

Anyway, the zest of his disproval of evolution is based on asking for impossible levels of proof, while at the same time he is "cold case proving christianity" on 2000 year old hear say.

#668 serp777

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 06:02 PM

I read on the interwebs that in the visible universe there are approximately 10000 stars for every grain of sand on Earth! What are the odds that "random chance" does NOT create life in any of those starsystems? Anthropic principle rules ok!?


We already made that argument lol. He deflected and ignored so i expect the same will occur here

#669 sthira

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Posted 04 July 2014 - 06:59 PM

This argument ends here, with Duchykins' clear and concise terminus:

No proposal of a biological mechanism of ID yet?

For the sake of argument:

1) evolutionary theory is incorrect in part or in whole
2) life appears to be designed by intelligent agency

Now how does ID explain the diversity of life in any way that is scientifically useful/meaningful?

Oh that's right, it has no explanatory power.

That's why ID is not a scientific theory.


If God created "the primordial soup" out of "nothing", fine. Bravo to the immaterial, nonsensical (by definition) "G-d." Now begin to explain how the immaterial, nonsensical (by definition) God "did" it. Since untestable, data-less faith alone cannot explain how an immaterial, nonsensical god created the material, sensible universe, then what use is it?  Beyond being a sorta comfort food, what use is God or any religion in furthering our knowledge of reality?

What is the biological mechanism for Intelligent Design?

No one can as yet answer this.  Shadowhawk cannot answer the question because it's currently unanswerable. Shadowhawk -- like all of us -- remains agnostic whether he likes it or not.  We do not know. We are (or should be) humble enough to admit what we don't know. Claiming to know what we don't know is fine in private life. Believe privately what you will. Conflicts arise, however, when we publically claim to know what we don't know, then attempt to foist ignorance -- as if it's "truth" -- into public laws upon the rest of society. "God says do this," you say, baselessly, "god says do that," you say, baselessly. The political ramifications of unsubstantiated beliefs in the immaterial, nonsensical (by definition) God remain concerning and relevant. 
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#670 Duchykins

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 06:29 AM


No proposal of a biological mechanism of ID yet?

For the sake of argument:

1) evolutionary theory is incorrect in part or in whole
2) life appears to be designed by intelligent agency



Now how does ID explain the diversity of life in any way that is scientifically useful/meaningful?

Oh that's right, it has no explanatory power.

That's why ID is not a scientific theory.

Does it have to be materially physical to be scientifically meaningful?  What do you mean by useful.
 

We've been through this before. The current philosophies and definition of science do not recognize the existence of immaterial things. You would have to change what science is in order for ID to become 'scientific'. Your own ID proponents admit this. Your repeated failures to understand this undermine your entire position because they indicate a fundamental lack of knowledge of what science is.

Useful. Example: the creationist use of 'kind' is scientifically useless. You cannot do anything with it because there is no clear definition of it. 'Family', 'species', 'clade', these are scientifically useful words. Your previous argument that ID's 'mechanism' is intelligence and design is similarly useless, because they are poorly defined philosophical concepts that explain nothing about biology.

Useful. The described mechanism of evolution has applications ranging far outside evolutionary biology, it's used successfully in medicine and technology for example. ID cannot be used to assist in creating vaccines, antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals, antiparisitics, cancer treatments. ID cannot be used in psychology or psychiatry. ID cannot be used in pharmacology. ID cannot be used in archeology or linguistics. The principles of ID cannot be used to program software, especially AI. And that's just the beginning of the list of all the things evolutionary theory has application in and that ID is useless for.

#671 timar

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 07:24 AM

We've been through this before. The current philosophies and definition of science do not recognize the existence of immaterial things.

 

Well, of course they do. Every physical entity without mass is "immaterial" - electromagnetic radiation, gravity, the strong and the weak nuclear force, etc. It doesn't get more immaterial than a force field!

What science does not and never can recognize is the existence of a metaphysical entity, like a Creator, because it exists by its very definition beyond the physical world and its laws of causality. You can only speculate about such an entity, or seek to experience it by the means of intuition. You can never, ever make it a subject of scientific inquiry and this is why Intelligent Design is not science but religion and dogma in disguise.


Edited by timar, 05 July 2014 - 07:26 AM.


#672 Duchykins

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 07:28 PM


We've been through this before. The current philosophies and definition of science do not recognize the existence of immaterial things.

 
Well, of course they do. Every physical entity without mass is "immaterial" - electromagnetic radiation, gravity, the strong and the weak nuclear force, etc. It doesn't get more immaterial than a force field!

What science does not and never can recognize is the existence of a metaphysical entity, like a Creator, because it exists by its very definition beyond the physical world and its laws of causality. You can only speculate about such an entity, or seek to experience it by the means of intuition. You can never, ever make it a subject of scientific inquiry and this is why Intelligent Design is not science but religion and dogma in disguise.

Radiation, gravity, nuclear force, these are physical and/or properties of material objects/substances. It does not matter that we don't fully understand them. I did not say *matter* as in matter vs energy or matter vs emergent property. Consciousness is an emergent property of the physical and material. Material vs immaterial is all an ID creationist understands, even if imperfectly, and they use is synonymously with physicalism and naturalism. Gods and supernatual stuffs are immaterial, one of ID's complaints about the acceptance of evolution is the popularity of what they call 'scientific materialism'. This is one of the ways you can argue that ID is not scientific, by using their own crap definitions against them, since they refuse to use the standard definitions.

A metaphysical being (what is that?) is not beyond the reach of science unless you've defined it that way. A SUPERNATURAL being is, and you are using these two terms synonymously, which is very pop culture of you to do. In any case I'm not going to be arguing this kind of philosophy with you in this thread.

The agency's properties and nature aren't really relevant here unless they make it part of their definition of ID. So far they only make 'intelligent' part of the agency's definition, this is not an unscientific or necessarily religious concept in and of itself. My argument against is ID is superior because it does not need to drag religion or anyone's motivations into the matter, it doesn't need to assume ID is religious or that the intelligent agency is supernatural, immaterial or however they are defining their gods today. It doesn't need to assume anything about the agency. The ID creationist cannot cry straw man at my argument as they can at yours. ID is not a scientific theory because it explains nothing, proposes no mechanism, that is the absolute bottom line and it is indisputable. If you do not argue in this manner then all you offer are opportunities for ID creationists to play the misunderstood victim card and the 'stupid evolutionist' card. Arguing in any other way than the very bare bones strictly science-minded manner I did will only give the ID creationist ample room to drag out the debate, and that's all they want to do.

Shadowhawk was DONE when I pressed that argument. He did not reply for some time after I got done with him. He came back to life only because other people came back to the thread with inferior arguments that were easier for him to talk back to. This kind of thing happens all the time and not even with this subject or person.

SH posted a video of a prominent ID proponent who inadvertently argued that any 'material explanation' of the diversity of life would be incorrect. He meant natural, or physical; creationists tend to blur all three of these together. In any case what he means is a scientific explanation by current definitions of science, always remember that they are unequivocably against what they perceive to be 'scientific materialism'.

Edited by Duchykins, 05 July 2014 - 07:31 PM.


#673 sthira

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 11:20 PM

Yes, what Duchykins said. The end of the argument for ID is: what is the biological mechanism for "god's creation"? How did a metaphysical (nonbeing, suprabeing, whatever) out of "nothing" create "something"? Magic? How? I'm not suggesting it didn't "happen". Obviously things are happening. Maybe this is the truth -- maybe we live within the "thought" of god, we are what god is thinking right now. Fun to get high and speculate. Maybe god did create the big bang out of thought-nothingness, and maybe one day we'll discover how this happened. For now, however, we all probably agree that religion and its manufactured god is simply story and wild speculation. God was a beautiful story invented by ancient ancestors. And now that god is dead. Each day that god dies a little more as that god stays silent to us. New generations of people get the sad news of god's death (we invented god, then killed god). Of course, god could intervene whenever she chooses, yet so far she hasn't.

But the mysterious questions remain mysterious: why is there something rather than nothing? Why does anything exist rather than nothing? These are questions for science to slowly unravel. Religion is dead (except for their wars and business models and brainwashing tactics directed at fragile people).
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#674 shadowhawk

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 11:27 PM

As usual, lots of name calling with little reason to exclude ID from science.  Are you claiming to have proved evolution produced life?


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#675 sthira

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Posted 05 July 2014 - 11:40 PM

For now, evolution is a better story than religious creed; but no, I don't think anyone is claiming "evolution produced life.". No one knows "what produced life" including you who also do not know "what produced life" or even if that question -- what produced life -- is an acceptable question to ask.

#676 shadowhawk

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Posted 06 July 2014 - 02:12 AM

Well, I agree, life was not created and science did not create life and we do not do science by who has the subjective best story,  Who or what produced life is a fair question.  The test does not mean ID has no place no matter how many names are called.


Edited by shadowhawk, 06 July 2014 - 02:16 AM.


#677 Duchykins

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Posted 06 July 2014 - 05:51 PM

"Science did not create life"  what an absurdly bozo thing to say.  Nobody but you said that, and the fact that you phrased it that way implies a depth of ignorance that is staggering.

 

What did you mean by that?  Science is a method used by humans, not a natural phenomenon unto itself.  Did you mean 'evolution did not create life'?  Evolutionary theory is intended to explain the diversity of life, not the origin of life.  Did you mean abiogenesis or panspermia?   Did you mean any biological mechanism?  Did you mean any natural phenomena?

 

Do you mean that ID is not science?  You fervently belive life's origins lie within Intelligent Design somewhere.  Does your statement 'science did not create life' mean that ID is not science?  

 

ID is free to offer up its own hypothetical mechanism for the origin of life and cast its lot with abiogenesis and panspermia.  Of course ID does not even attempt to explain the origin of life any more than it explains the diversity of life



#678 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 02:20 AM

Since Evolution by your own admission can not answer many things, the field is open for other views to also try to answer these questions.



#679 Duchykins

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 02:59 AM

Cell theory doesn't explain electromagnetism, so what? That's not its job, it serves a very specific purpose and pointing out that there are a million things it doesn't explain doesn't mean there is something wrong with cell theory. It's not supposed to be a theory of everything. Nor does that mean you are free to assert wildly unsupported propositions as if they are EQUALLY VALID alternatives to cell theory.


How does Intelligent Design explain the diversity of life?

#680 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 03:25 AM

So what.  :)  What does this have to do with the topic.  ID is in.



#681 Duchykins

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 03:29 AM

Lol, what does it have to to with the topic? Replace 'cell theory' with 'evolutionary theory' and maybe you'll get a clue for once.

How does ID explain the diversity of life?

#682 serp777

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 05:02 AM

So what.  :)  What does this have to do with the topic.  ID is in.


You keep saying id is in like a religious chant, but that doesn't mean it's true

#683 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 06:40 PM

Lol, what does it have to to with the topic? Replace 'cell theory' with 'evolutionary theory' and maybe you'll get a clue for once.

How does ID explain the diversity of life?

 It notes the sudden appearance of most body  types in the pre Camrbrian strata.  How does evolution explain it? 
i



#684 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 06:43 PM

 

So what.  :)  What does this have to do with the topic.  ID is in.


You keep saying id is in like a religious chant, but that doesn't mean it's true

 

And you keep chanting ID is out but that does not mean it is untrue.  :)


Edited by shadowhawk, 07 July 2014 - 06:43 PM.


#685 Duchykins

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 09:11 PM


Lol, what does it have to to with the topic? Replace 'cell theory' with 'evolutionary theory' and maybe you'll get a clue for once.

How does ID explain the diversity of life?

 It notes the sudden appearance of most body  types in the pre Camrbrian strata.  How does evolution explain it? 
i

Evolution is wrong for the purposes of this argument, silly.

Pointing to the fossil record and saying 'these organisms appear in fossil record over a period of 30-70 million years' is evidence that the organisms existed during those times. An explanation is a 'how'. The Cambrian Explosion is a 'what', not a 'how'.

Once again, you are showing us that ID is nothing more than a 'what', it states that biological forms appear deliberately designed and it stops there with no effort to explain how the designer did anything with biological organisms, nor any nonorganic method used to produce organic material with which to design said organisms.

What is the biological mechanism ID proposes for the appearance of those organisms?

#686 sthira

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 09:23 PM

Since Evolution by your own admission can not answer many things, the field is open for other views to also try to answer these questions.


If you have a better line on how we human beings may explain the life around it, by all means let's pursue it. How does ID explain species diversity?

#687 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 09:56 PM

Darwim’s Doubt is the ID take on the issue of Diversity.  How do you explain it or do you have no doubts?  If not explain the Cambrian Explosion in evolutionary terms. :) So you are presented with refuting IDs diversity and explaining it.
http://www.amazon.co...t/dp/0062071475





 



#688 sthira

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 10:20 PM

Darwims Doubt is the ID take on the issue of Diversity.  How do you explain it or do you have no doubts?  If not explain the Cambrian Explosion in evolutionary terms. :) So you are presented with refuting IDs diversity and explaining it.
http://www.amazon.co...t/dp/0062071475





 


Paleontology isn't my field so I don't know anything about your questions beyond basic reading as a lay person. Any paleontologists here to clear this up? But that appears to be a diversion if we assume evolution is inaccurate and ID is accurate. How does ID explain the Cambrian diversification?

#689 shadowhawk

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 10:28 PM

Didn't assume anything of the kind.  Which theory can explain diversity?  ID says it looks designed.  Can science even consider this?  ID is in.



#690 sthira

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Posted 07 July 2014 - 10:32 PM

I watched several minutes of the clip above. Is there more than how wrong he thinks evolution is about this particular topic? Did I miss the point later when he offers ID's explanation for whatever the evolutionary paleontologists have botched here? How does ID explain these issues?

I also linked to your book. I've not read it. Is this a book refuting evolution, or is it making an independent case for ID? I'd like to hear how ID explains the world. Assume evolution is wrong. How does ID explain life?





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