Intelligent Design is not creationism

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

  1. TraderNik:
    There was nothing gradual about it. It was sudden. Right at the beginning of the opening post in this thread I cited this statement by William Dembski:

    TraderNik:
    Wrong. It is the ID critics that have brought proving a negative into this debate. When I asked them what would cause them to suspect that something in nature was intelligently designed they said: "Show me something that couldn't have evolved".

    TraderNik:
    No one here has submitted that argument as proof of ID. It has only been presented to ID critics that were asking IDers to prove evolution impossible.

    TraderNik:
    You got it backwards. It's the ID critics that employ circular logic, appeal to authority and request proof that God exists and that prompts sarcasm from the ID side.

    TraderNik:
    No one disputes that design entails a designer but that designer doesn't have to be a supernatural entity. Once again read Dembski's statement:

    TraderNik:
    What ID proponents? What original claims are being backed off? Every ID theorist I know infers bioengineering at the origin of life.

    TraderNik:
    It's necessary because life looks like it was bioengineered.

    TraderNik:
    Only one of these propositions is religious.
     
    #2141     Feb 23, 2007
  2. I'm not sure if this occurred to you but you just proved all three of my points in one post. I said that the arguments for ID were based on

    1. Taking legitimate questions, flipping them around semantically, and throwing them back in the face of the questioner. (See #1 above).

    2. Appeal to authority (See #2 above) and

    3. Pure assertion (see #3 above)

    This post provides a nicely encapsulated description of the ID/Creationist technique.

    We should essentially see the sudden and unexpected insertion of the term 'bioengineering' into the debate as essentially a capitulation. It is much the same as when ZTroll starts posting images of pink bunnyrabbits sniffing their fingers and saying 'You stink'. It means "I am feeling uncomfortable with the way this is going and I want to stop now".

    ________________________________________

    Member of the ET Anti-Troll Brigade

    iustus ignarus troll
     
    #2142     Feb 23, 2007
  3. I notice you were unable to state openly that you do not believe in God. That is all right. As an ID/Creationist, your belief in a Creator God is a given.

    Please understand I have nothing against people who believe that we were created by 'God'. I simply don't want Creation, rebranded as ID, shoved down my throat or the throats of my kids. If you believe that God created life on earth, please either keep it to yourself or dicsuss it and revel in it with your co-religionists. Do not attempt to suggest that it is a scientifically provable theory or that it belongs in the public classroom alongside evolution, posing as 'ID'.

    There are plenty of really smart people who believe in God. More power to them. I welcome the debate with them about the existence of God. My position is that it is a faith-based belief system and that there is not now, nor can there ever be any proof of His existence. I do not believe that life on earth was 'designed' by anything metaphysical. The idea that ID is plausible because things on earth 'look' designed is the most inane things have ever heard.
     
    #2143     Feb 23, 2007
  4. TraderNik:
    As usual you don't know what you are talking about. I wrote the following back on 11-22-2006:

     
    #2144     Feb 23, 2007
  5. Do they indeed? Sounds like something only an intelligent entity could accomplish.

    Yes, channeling fits in with this discussion nicely.

    I may have read you wrong. Perhaps you're simply a believer in the idea that extraterrestrials seeded the earth with life and are observing us in some type of grand experiment. As we have established, ID/C and it's claims of design lead inexorably to either a Creator God or an extraterrestrial seeding of the young planet earth with life.

    You said above that only the God theory is religious. I guess that's a separate argument.
     
    #2145     Feb 23, 2007
  6. TraderNik:
    Yes, William Dembski and I both believe in God. So what? What we believe is irrelevant to ID. What is relevant to ID is what is hypothesized within the ID paradigm.

    Once again:
     
    #2146     Feb 23, 2007
  7. TraderNik:
    ID theorists have proposed the following hypothesis:
    See anything religious there? Any mention of God? Any appeal to the supernatural? Anything anti-evolution? Anything that is anymore beyond the reach of empirical investigation than are the speculations involving a non-teleological origin of life?
     
    #2147     Feb 23, 2007
  8. neophyte321

    neophyte321 Guest

    For the record ...... I was merely suggesting that it is possible for people to idolize anything; a method say ... a scientific method even.
     
    #2148     Feb 23, 2007
  9. Checking every belief at the door leads someone to conclude that they don't know if life is by design or by non design...

    All that science is supposed to know is through empiricism. The guesswork of evolutionary theory is just that....speculative guesswork, not empiricism.

    Why not leave it at the door too?

    Teach process that we know, can observe, and can measure, not prognostications based on arguments from ignorance.

    Why is it so difficult for scientists to simply say:

    "We don't know. It could be design, we can't rule it out. It could be chance, the fact is that we don't know, and we don't need to know to continue our scientific exploration. We really have no way to calculate the odds of design versus non design. So unless we are promoting a theory to make us feel better about the unknown, and unknowable, maybe we should just focus on what we can actually know, which is the observation of biological processes."

    All scientific discoveries ultimately begin with "I don't know."

    When science can actually raise the level of morality, consciousness, generate inner happiness and satisfaction, then perhaps I will your your bandwagon.

    Until that time, man is essentially unchanged in thousands of years when it comes to emotional development, and the emotional world of human beings is where most people actually live, despite their attempts to be completely "rational."

    Common sense is entirely lacking from this discussion, and common sense suggests life if by design.

    If anyone takes a look at other species, even the most "evolved species" we do not see the range of differences in those species in behavior that we see in humans.

    I mean, seriously think about the entire human race, the range from Shakespeare to a serial killer, from Gandhi to a dictator.

    Think of how advanced and intelligent the founding fathers were, then look at today's politicians.

    The theory of evolution just doesn't wash when common sense is applied to the analysis of human beings and their varied behavior, intelligence, emotional makeup, etc.

    The clones here think I am against science, which is completely false. I wish science to return to its rightful agnostic position, not atheistic nor theistic in its motives.

    The resistance seen here by the so called "scientific community" wishing to prevent children from broadening their thinking and awareness by being exposed to different points of view and then allowing them to decide for themselves is so downright fundamentalist, dogmatic and extremist in nature as to be utterly shocking.

    It reminds me of any group that is losing their grip over the masses, and is fighting tooth and nail to retain the type of control they once had.

    The problem with ID is its history as being presented by Christians who were fundamentalists.

    It is easy to dismiss them, as it is easy to dismiss any fundamentalists who are denominational in nature.

    However, times are changing. People are presenting ideas of design who are not Christian, and not fundamentalists.

    When arguments begin to be presented that are of a broader nature and appeal to common sense, when people begin to understand the nature of control that is being applied, when science loses its stature as the new "God" we will once again turn back, hopefully to a more enlightened point of view that is more all inclusive and seeking commonality, not division.

    To even suggest that the anti ID crowd is not driven by their atheistic agenda, that they are frightened by the thought of religion having any impact on science is bloody obvious.

    I don't know about you, but I really believe closed minded dogmatic scientists are a walking talking oxymoron.

     
    #2149     Feb 23, 2007
  10. stu

    stu


     
    #2150     Feb 24, 2007