Intelligent Design is not creationism

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Teleologist, Nov 4, 2006.

  1. Lol... This is good.

    For a long time, because of the lack of experimental verification, the Big Bang theory was called a "cult" by some people. Does that count? :D
     
    #2051     Feb 15, 2007
  2. Enter the clone, right on cue...

    I believe Turok to be a ginormous idiot, so his flawed response doesn't surprise me he wrote it.

    Okay, I will leave now and let the wanker do his thing...



     
    #2052     Feb 15, 2007
  3. No, the scientists who dreamed it up are the object of worship...

    Well, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord, (or it may be a scientist)
    But you're gonna have to serve somebody.
    --Bob Dylan--"Gotta seve somebody--


    Poetic license apologies to Dylan...

     
    #2053     Feb 15, 2007
  4. Your Best Objections
    Scott Adams

    I got lots of thoughtful comments to yesterday’s post on whether the Big Bang was intelligent by definition. I wasn’t planning on following up on the topic, but I feel I owe it to you. Here are the top objections that people raised, along with my replies. If you didn’t read yesterday’s post, read it first.

    Objection 1: The Big Bang is an event, not a thing.

    I think most people realized I was referring to both the universe and what it did. People are the sum of their matter plus their actions. The universe is a sum of its matter plus its actions. To keep things simple and colorful, I’m going to call the universe and everything it does the Big Bang.

    Objection 2: The Big Bang had no intentions. Intelligence requires intention.

    You can’t have intentions without free will. And free will is an illusion, according to plenty of prominent scientists and big thinkers. At best, free will has never been defined in any way that would not apply equally to a human or a coin sorting machine. The coin sorter “chooses” which tube to redirect the nickel to in a deterministic fashion. Your brain chooses what to have for lunch in the same way, just more complicated, and with the illusion of intention. The Big Bang (okay, the universe) has no intentions, but neither do you, because it’s a nonsense superstition. You only have the illusion of intentions. So intentions must not be a necessary component of intelligence.

    Objection 3: According to evolution, unintelligent processes can cause emergent phenomena, such as intelligence. The Big Bang was an unintelligent process, and the intelligence emerged later. (Implied: Duh!)

    By this reasoning, people are not intelligent either. People are a collection of dumb molecules. The intelligence we exhibit is an emergent property of people, not a quality of the people themselves. No molecule in a human body is itself smart. Yet we still say the person as a whole is intelligent. And we generously include as “the person” all of his body parts that are not directly involved in producing intelligence. Your lungs, for example, are every bit as important as your brain in supporting the emergent intelligence you produce. They are both 100% necessary.

    If I build a computer and the computer creates a spreadsheet, we don’t credit the computer with the creation. We credit the one who created and programmed the computer. People are every bit the machines as computers, but more complicated and moist. The Big Bang created people, and is therefore the ultimate author of what we in turn create. (Remember, we have no free will. We’re just like the computer in that way.)

    Objection 4: But what created the Big Bang!

    If there was a “before” to the Big Bang, I have no problem including it in the process and calling it intelligent. But there is no evidence to persuade me that time even existed before the Big Bang, so “before” might be a nonsense concept.

    Objection 5: It’s just semantics. All you did was say that whatever produces intelligent results must be intelligent. It’s a circular definition.

    Of course it’s semantics. That’s the whole point. We’re trying to figure out what the word “intelligent” means. If the best definition that anyone can offer is circular, then it’s silly to say the universe does or does not have an intelligent designer. The phrase would have no meaning. But if we CAN define intelligence in some meaningful way, then we might be surprised to find that the definition applies equally to humans as to the Big Bang. (After you remove your superstition about intentions, and clear up your thinking about emergent properties.)

    Objection 6: Dawkins said, “An intelligent life is intelligent enough to speculate on its own origins.”

    My cat has intelligence, but I doubt she’s doing much speculating on her origins.

    I think those were the best objections I got. Let me know if I missed any objections that are better than the ones I listed.
     
    #2054     Feb 15, 2007
  5. This guy's an idiot.
     
    #2055     Feb 15, 2007
  6. neophyte321

    neophyte321 Guest


    GREAT SONG! ... great,song.


    Dylan, a Minnasotan, would, no doubt, vote Franken ..


    My favorite Dylan tune is "tangled up in blue" ... actually, my favorite Dylan tune is the Jerry Gacia Band's version of "Tangled Up in Blue"

    :)
     
    #2056     Feb 15, 2007
  7. So Help Us Darwin

    By William F. Buckley Jr.

    An intimidatingly learned colleague has written to a few friends to deplore the latest bulletin on Senator John McCain, who is of course running for president. The news is that McCain has agreed to speak at a luncheon hosted by the Discovery Institute in Seattle. What offends my friend is that the think tank in question supports the concept of Intelligent Design. And the question raised—believe it or not—is whether such a latitudinarian thinker should be thought qualified to be president of the United States.

    It seems an ancient controversy, and of course it is. Fifteen minutes after Charles Darwin explained his theory of evolution, his disciples—apostles—ruled out any heresy on the subject of the naturalist explanation for human life. Young people are educated to think of the question in the grammar of the Scopes Trial, Clarence Darrow vs. William Jennings Bryan. That trial made for great naturalist theater. Mr. Bryan was not born either to become president or to explain how God could tolerate chicken pox, so Clarence Darrow wiped him into dust.

    But the contention continued, and has been explored from time to time under heavy lights. My own forensic involvement took place nine years ago as host of Firing Line. The two-hour, nationally televised debate on the topic “Resolved: that the evolutionists should acknowledge creation” featured seven professors. Four of them took the establishmentarian scientific position. It is, essentially, that not only is naturalism established as verified science, but any interposition into the picture—of inquisitiveness, let alone conviction that there might have been design in the evolution of our world—is excluded.

    But that was a tough night for those who hoped that the lunacy of creationist thought would prove self-evident. The evolutionists had to contend with, for instance, Phillip E. Johnson, professor emeritus of law at the University of California at Berkeley, who wrote the book Darwin on Trial, and then Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds.

    In outlining epochal events in this quarrel, Johnson quoted the official directive on teaching evolution as it appeared in the 1995 position statement of the National Association of Biology Teachers. “The diversity of life on earth is the outcome of evolution: an unsupervised, impersonal, unpredictable, and natural process.”

    Please note, said Professor Johnson, that two years later the board of that association dropped the words “unsupervised” and “impersonal.” The meaning of it being that hard scientific research has taken from the evolutionary position not its authenticity—no one can argue with much of its description of what happened in the development of man—but its title to exclusivity. To prove absolutely that an apple, dropped from above Johnny’s head, will fall down on it is not the equivalent of proving that no extrinsic force had a hand in setting up that gravitational exercise.

    Johnson’s objections have to do with separating real science from the materialist philosophy that provides “the only support for Darwinist theory.”

    The questions are profound, and the arguments subtle. It is not reasonably expected of Senator McCain, or any other contender for the presidency, that in his public appearances he will explicate all the conundrums.

    But the intelligent liberal community should not impose on anyone a requirement of believing that there is only the single, materialist word on the subject, and that only contempt is merited by those who consent to appear at think tanks composed of men and women prepared to explore ultimate questions, which certainly include the question, Did God have a hand in creating all of this? Including the great messes we live with?

    Representing the affirmative that night on television, one debater closed with this: “I’m taken with the reply of an elderly scientific scholar to an exuberant young skeptic. ‘I find it easier to believe in God than to believe that Hamlet was deduced from the molecular structure of a mutton chop.’”
     
    #2057     Feb 18, 2007
  8. stu

    stu

    So Teleologist, you want to swop essays....


    Robert J. Schneider
    EVOLUTION FOR CHRISTIANS
    "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution."

    ..or perhaps first it may be an idea to convince these 10,000 clergy folk of your ID/Creationist support agenda ...
    Michael Zimmerman
    An Open Letter Concerning Religion and Science


    Although we've reached our goal of gathering 10,000 clergy signatures, interest has been so high that we continue to add more clergy on a regular basis!

    On 11 February 2007 hundreds of congregations from all portions of the country and a host of denominations will come together to discuss the compatibility of religion and science. For far too long, strident voices, in the name of Christianity, have been claiming that people must choose between religion and modern science. More than 10,000 Christian clergy have already signed The Clergy Letter demonstrating that this is a false dichotomy. Now, on the 198th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin, many of these leaders will bring this message to their congregations through sermons and/or discussion groups. Together, participating religious leaders will be making the statement that religion and science are not adversaries. And, together, they will be elevating the quality of the national debate on this topic.

    If your congregation would like to join this national event, please send a note to mz@butler.edu. We welcome your participation.

    For too long, the misperception that science and religion are inevitably in conflict has created unnecessary division and confusion, especially concerning the teaching of evolution. I wanted to let the public know that numerous clergy from most denominations have tremendous respect for evolutionary theory and have embraced it as a core component of human knowledge, fully harmonious with religious faith.

    In the fall of 2004, I worked with clergy throughout Wisconsin to prepare a statement in support of teaching evolution. We were called to action by a series of anti-evolution policies passed by the school board in Grantsburg, WI. The response was overwhelming. In a few weeks, nearly 200 clergy signed the statement, which we sent to the Grantsburg school board on December 16, 2004. Additionally, groups of educators and scientists sent letters to the Grantsburg School Board and to the Superintendent of Schools protesting these policies. In response to all of this attention, as well as the efforts of others, the Grantsburg School Board retracted their policies.

    The outpouring of support from clergy around the country encouraged me to make this a nationwide project. If you want to read more about it or join us in sharing this important perspective, click here. Encourage your clergy to consider signing the statement and please feel free to link to these webpages. And, while the current focus is on Christian clergy, please let me know if you are willing to write and/or host a statement from other religions.

    .....

    Within the community of Christian believers there are areas of dispute and disagreement, including the proper way to interpret Holy Scripture. While virtually all Christians take the Bible seriously and hold it to be authoritative in matters of faith and practice, the overwhelming majority do not read the Bible literally, as they would a science textbook. Many of the beloved stories found in the Bible – the Creation, Adam and Eve, Noah and the ark – convey timeless truths about God, human beings, and the proper relationship between Creator and creation expressed in the only form capable of transmitting these truths from generation to generation. Religious truth is of a different order from scientific truth. Its purpose is not to convey scientific information but to transform hearts.

    We the undersigned, Christian clergy from many different traditions, believe that the timeless truths of the Bible and the discoveries of modern science may comfortably coexist. We believe that the theory of evolution is a foundational scientific truth, one that has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human knowledge and achievement rests. To reject this truth or to treat it as “one theory among others” is to deliberately embrace scientific ignorance and transmit such ignorance to our children. We believe that among God’s good gifts are human minds capable of critical thought and that the failure to fully employ this gift is a rejection of the will of our Creator. To argue that God’s loving plan of salvation for humanity precludes the full employment of the God-given faculty of reason is to attempt to limit God, an act of hubris. We urge school board members to preserve the integrity of the science curriculum by affirming the teaching of the theory of evolution as a core component of human knowledge. We ask that science remain science and that religion remain religion, two very different, but complementary, forms of truth.

    Sincerely,

    Michael Zimmerman
    Dean
    College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
    Butler University
     
    #2058     Feb 19, 2007
  9. Is Evolution Needed to Make Sense of Biology?
    By Julie Thomas

    "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution."

    This was the title of an essay by Theodosius Dobzhansky
    written over thirty years ago and is the position
    of most Darwinists today. If nothing in biology
    makes sense except in the light of evolution, this
    would mean everything in biology would collapse
    into senseless gibberish without evolution. It would
    mean that all of biology would become incoherent if
    the concept of evolution was not applied. This would
    also mean that without evolution, no biological
    research could be done. My, it's interesting how a
    useful and fruitful concept can be elevated to the
    level of a necessary, all-important, and primary concept.

    Now, since nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of
    evolution, evolution must be *needed* by biology. This means,
    I suppose, that biology did not come into existence until evolution
    (however you define it) was realized. How Harvey ever made sense
    of the circulatory system and Mendel made sense of inheritance must
    be a truly thorny problem for those who believe nothing in biology
    makes sense without the light of evolution. But there's more.

    In what way was evolution needed to determine that DNA is
    the genetic material?

    In what way was evolution needed to determine that DNA is
    two strands of nucleotides arranged as a double-helix?

    In what way was evolution needed to crack the genetic code?

    In what way was evolution needed to understand the lac operon?

    In what way was evolution needed to determine that ribosomes
    synthesize proteins?

    In what way was evolution needed to determine the fluid mosaic
    model of the cell membrane?

    In what way was evolution needed to determine the mechanism
    of the F-ATP synthase?

    After all, none of these important biological insights could have
    been made without a concept that is *needed* to make sense of
    *all* of biology?

    While we're at it, why do we need need evolution to make sense of
    the following biological phenomena (for starters):

    *photosynthesis

    *protein synthesis

    *LTP in Aplysia

    *the role of potassium and sodium channels in action potentials

    *membrane synthesis

    *the influence of blood pressure on cardiac output

    *incomplete dominance

    *forming spindle fibers during mitosis

    *cytokinesis

    *forming actin-myosin cross-bridges during muscle contraction

    *shuttling proteins across the nuclear pore complex

    *chromosome structure and packing

    *signal transduction

    *protein folding

    *the peptidoglycan cell wall

    *the relationship between Tay-Sachs disease and lysosomal hydrolases

    *the electron transport chain

    *the trp operon

    *insulin and the regulation of blood glucose

    *DNA recombination

    *IREs and iron metabolism

    *axonemal form and function

    *desmosomes

    *G1 checkpoints

    *regulation of membrane fluidity

    *regulation of 5S rRNA expression

    *glomerular filtration and urine formation

    *conjugation

    *the MTOC

    *transport and modification through the ER


    That's enough for now. I don't need evolution to make sense of
    these phenomena. Of course, evolution might (and does) contribute
    insights on these phenomena that lead to research, and one can always
    busy themselves trying to explain the origin of these things in light
    of evolution, but none of this means that evolution is required to make
    any sense of this stuff. Why is it that things like chromosome
    structure, iron metabolism, urine formation, and LTP make no sense
    without evolution? How is it that evolution alone allows us to see
    the role of glomerular blood pressure in urine formation rates? Can't we
    teach students how proteins are formed without first explaining how the
    protein synthesis machinery evolved? I learned about protein synthesis
    without any reference to its evolution. I suppose this means my instructor
    and I were more gifted than the scientific community which stumbles about
    bumping its head in the dark without the necessary illumination of evolution.

    Of course, maybe things have changed. So I close my eyes and
    reach into my large file of articles (skewed with many focused on
    evolution) and randomly pull one out. Surely since nothing in
    biology makes sense without evolution I could not find one
    single article which makes sense without evolution. I pull out:

    Temperature sensing in bacterial gene regulation - what it all boils down to.

    It makes lots of sense although I don't see where
    evolution is being used as the Guiding Light. If nothing in biology
    makes sense except in the light of evolution, why am I having a hard
    time finding where evolution is absolutely required to turn gibberish
    into meaningful concepts? Why is it so easy to find things that
    would still make lots of sense if evolution was not true?

    Finally, let's consider the words of someone like H. Allen Orr who,
    in his review of Behe's book, wrote:

    "there's a striking asymmetry in molecular versus evolutionary
    education in American universities. Although many science, and all
    biology, students are required to endure molecular courses, evolution-
    even introductory evolution-is often an elective. The reason is simple:
    biochemistry and cell biology get Junior into med school, evolution
    doesn't. Consequently, many professional scientists know surprisingly
    little about evolution."

    Let's see. Many professional scientists know surprisingly little about
    evolution. But how can the indispensable guiding light of biology be
    so unimportant for so many professional scientists? These poor
    scientists must not publish anything, and are incapable of teaching,
    as biology must not make any sense to them at all. Furthermore, note
    how Orr assumes that education in biochemistry and cell biology
    does not presume at least education in an introductory evolution
    course. How can this be? If nothing in biology makes sense without
    evolution, then biochemistry and cell biology would not make sense
    without evolution. This means students without a solid understanding
    of evolution would do poorly in these classes, meaning they would
    be weeded out. Since evolution is needed to make sense of cell biology,
    any learning of cell biology must entail an understanding of evolution.
    Thus, why it is that "many professional scientists know surprisingly
    little about evolution" is an enigma. :)

    Sorry, but I think the notion that "nothing in biology makes sense
    except in the light of evolution" is a bogus and tired propagandistic
    claim. Lots of things make sense in biology without the light of
    evolution. That's why it's possible that "many professional
    scientists know surprisingly little about evolution."

    Dawkins, Richard. 1987. The Blind Watchmaker. On page 283:

    "It isn't that any transformed cladists are themselves
    fundamentalist creationists. My own interpretation is that they
    enjoy an exaggerated idea of the importance of taxonomy in biology.
    They have decided, perhaps rightly, that they can do taxonomy
    better if they forget about evolution, and especially if they never
    use the concept of the ancestor in thinking about taxonomy. In the
    same way, a student of, say, nerve cells, might decide that he is
    not aided by thinking about evolution. The nerve specialist agrees
    that his nerve cells are the products of evolution, but he does not
    need to use this fact in his research. He needs to know a lot
    about physics and chemistry, but he believes that Darwinism is
    irrelevant to his day-to-day research on nerve impulses. This is a
    defensible position."

    One could, I suppose, argue that these professional scientists don't
    contribute any good science, but there is not a shred of evidence for
    that type of ad hoc claim.
     
    #2059     Feb 19, 2007
  10. Stu:

    Once again, ID is not creationism and ID is not anti-evolution. So both of these articles are irrelevant to ID.
     
    #2060     Feb 19, 2007