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The TSZ and Jerad Thread, III — 900+ and almost 800 comments in, needing a new thread . . .

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Okay, the thread of discussion needs to pick up from here on.

To motivate discussion, let me clip here comment no 795 in the continuation thread, which I have marked up:

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>> 795Jerad October 23, 2012 at 1:18 am

KF (783):

At this point, with all due respect, you look like someone making stuff up to fit your predetermined conclusion.

I know you think so.

[a –> Jerad, I will pause to mark up. I would further with all due respect suggest that I have some warrant for my remark, especially given how glaringly you mishandled the design inference framework in your remark I responded to earlier.]

{Let me add a diagram of the per aspect explanatory filter, using the more elaborated form this time}

The ID Inference Explanatory Filter. Note in particular the sequence of decision nodes

 

You have for sure seen the per apsect design filter and know that the first default explanaiton is that something is caused by law of necessity, for good reason; that is the bulk of the cosmos. You know similarly that highly contingent outcomes have two empirically warrantged causal sources: chance and choice.

You kinow full well that he reason chance is teh default is to give the plain benefit of the doubnt to chance, even at the expense of false negatives.

I suppose. Again, I don’t think of it like that. I take each case and consider it’s context before I think the most likely explanation to be.

[b –> You have already had adequate summary on how scientific investigations evaluate items we cannot directly observe based on traces and causal patterns and signs we can directly establish as reliable, and comparison. This is the exact procedure used in design inference, a pattern that famously traces to Newton’s uniformity principle of reasoning in science.]

I think SETI signals are a good example of really having no idea what’s being looked at.

[c –> There are no, zip, zilch, nada, SETI signals of consequence. And certainly no coded messages. But it is beyond dispute that if such a signal were received, it would be taken very seriously indeed. In the case of dFSCI, we are examining patterns relevant to coded signals. And, we have a highly relevant case in point in the living cell, which points to the origin of life. Which of course is an area that has been highlighted as pivotal on the whole issue of origins, but which is one where you have determined not to tread any more than you have to.]

I suppose, in that case, they do go through something like you’re steps . . . first thing: seeing if the new signals is similar to known and explained stuff.

[d –> If you take off materialist blinkers for the moment and look at what the design filter does, you will see that it is saying, what is it that we are doing in an empirically based, scientific explanation, and how does this relate to the empirical fact that design exists and affects the world leaving evident traces? We see that the first thing that is looked for is natural regularities, tracing to laws of mechanical necessity. Second — and my home discipline pioneered in this in C19 — we look at stochastically distributed patterns of behaviour that credibly trace to chance processes. Then it asks, what happens if we look for distinguishing characteristics of the other cause of high contingency, design? And in so doing, we see that there are indeed empirically reliable signs of design, which have considerable relevance to how we look at among other things, origins. But more broadly, it grounds the intuition that there are markers of design as opposed to chance.]

And you know the stringency of the criterion of specificity (especially functional) JOINED TO complexity beyond 500 or 1,000 bits worth, as a pivot to show cases where the only reasonable, empirically warranted explanation is design.

I still think you’re calling design too early.

[e –> Give a false positive, or show warrant for the dismissal. Remember, just on the solar system scope, we are talking about a result that identifies that by using the entire resources of the solar system for its typically estimated lifespan to date, we could only sample something like 1 straw to a cubical haystack 1,000 light years across. If you think that he sampling theory result that a small but significant random sample will typically capture the bulk of a distribution is unsound, kindly show us why, and how that affects sampling theory in light of the issue of fluctuations. Failing that, I have every epistemic right to suggest that what we are seeing instead is your a priori commitment to not infer design peeking through.]

And, to be honest, the only things I’ve seen the design community call design on is DNA and, in a very different way, the cosmos.

[f –> Not so. What happens is that design is most contentious on these, but in fact the design inference is used all the time in all sorts of fields, often on an intuitive or semi intuitive basis. As just one example, consider how fires are explained as arson vs accident. Similarly, how a particular effect in our bodies is explained as a signature of drug intervention vs chance behaviour or natural mechanism. And of course there is the whole world of hypothesis testing by examining whether we are in the bulk or the far skirt and whether it is reasonable to expect such on the particularities of the situation.]

The real problem, with all respect, as already highlighted is obviously that this filter will point out cell based life as designed. Which — even though you do not have an empirically well warranted causal explanation for otherwise, you do not wish to accept.

I don’t think you’ve made the case yet.

[f –> On the evidence it is plain that there is a controlling a priori commitment at work, so the case will never be perceived as made, as there will always be a selectively hyperskeptical objection that demands an increment of warrant that is calculated or by unreflective assertion, unreasonable to demand, by comparison with essentially similar situations. Notice, how ever so many swallow a timeline model of the past without batting an eye, but strain at a design inference that is much more empirically reliable on the causal patterns and signs that we have. That’s a case of straining at a gnat while swallowing a camel.]

I don’t think the design inference has been rigorously established as an objective measure.

[g –> Dismissive assertion, in a context where “rigorous’ is often a signature of selective hyperskepticism at work, cf, the above. The inference on algorithmic digital code that has been the subject of Nobel Prize awards should be plain enough.]

I think you’ve decided that only intelligence can create stuff like DNA.

[h –> Rubbish, and I do not appreciate your putting words in my mouth or thoughts in my head that do not belong there, to justify a turnabout assertion. You know or full well should know, that — as is true for any significant science — a single well documented case of FSCO/I reliably coming about by blind chance and/or mechanical necessity would suffice to break the empirical reliability of the inference that eh only observed — billions of cases — cause of FSCO/I is design. That you are objecting on projecting question-begging (that is exactly what your assertion means) instead of putting forth clear counter-examples, is strong evidence in itself that the observation is quite correct. That observation is backed by the needle in the haystack analysis that shows why beyond a certain level of complexity joined to the sort of specificity that makes relevant cases come from narrow zones T in large config spaces W, it is utterly unlikely to observe cases E from T based on blind chance and mechanical necessity.]

I haven’t seen any objective way to determine that except to say: it’s over so many bits long so it’s designed.

[i –> Strawman caricature. You know better, a lot better. You full well know that we are looking at complexity AND specificity that confines us to narrow zones T in wide spaces of possibilities W such that the atomic resources of our solar system or the observed cosmos will be swamped by the amount of haystack to be searched. Where you have been given the reasoning on sampling theory as to why we would only expect blind samples comparable to 1 straw to a hay bale 1,000 light years across (as thick as our galaxy) will reliably only pick up the bulk, even if the haystack were superposed on our galaxy near earth. Indeed, just above you had opportunity to see a concrete example of a text string in English and how easily it passes the specificity-complexity criterion.]

And I just don’t think that’s good enough.

[j –> Knocking over a strawman. Kindly, deal with the real issue that has been put to you over and over, in more than adequate details.]

But that inference is based on what we do know, the reliable cause of FSCO/I and the related needle in the haystack analysis. (As was just shown for a concrete case.)

But you don’t know that there was an intelligence around when one needed to be around which means you’re assuming a cause.

[k –> Really! You have repeatedly been advised that we are addressing inference on empirically reliable sign per patterns we investigate in the present. Surely, that we see that reliably, where there is a sign, we have confirmed the presence of the associated cause, is an empirical base of fact that shows something that is at least a good candidate for being a uniform pattern. We back it up with an analysis that shows on well accepted and uncontroversial statistical principles, why this is so. Then we look at cases where we see traces from the past that are comparable to the signs we just confirmed to be reliable indices. Such signs, to any reasonable person not ideologically committed to a contrary position, will count as evidence of similar causes acting in the past. But more tellingly, we can point to other cases such as the reconstructed timeline of the earth’s past where on much weaker correlations between effects and putative causes, those who object to the design inference make highly confident conclusions about the past and in so doing, even go so far as to present them as though they were indisputable facts. The inconsistency is glaringly obvious, save to the true believers in the evo mat scheme.]

And you’re not addressing all the evidence which points to universal common descent with modification.

[l –> I have started form the evidence at the root of the tree of life and find that there is no credible reason to infer that chemistry and physics in some still warm pond or the like will assemble at once or incre4mentally, a gated, encapsulated, metabolising entity using a von Neumann, code based self replicator, based on highly endothermic and information rich macromolecules. So, I see there is no root to the alleged tree of life, on Darwinist premises. I look at the dFSCI in the living cell, a trace form the past, note that it is a case of FSCO/I and on the pattern of causal investigations and inductions already outlined I see I have excellent reason to conclude that the living cell is a work of skilled ART, not blind chance and mechanical necessity. thereafter, ay evidence of common descent or the like is to be viewed in that pivotal light. And I find that common design rather than descent is superior, given the systematic pattern of — too often papered over — islands of molecular function (try protein fold domains) ranging up to suddenness, stasis and the scope of fresh FSCO/I involved in novel body plans and reflected in the 1/4 million plus fossil species, plus mosaic animals etc that point to libraries of reusable parts, and more, give me high confidence that I am seeing a pattern of common design rather than common descent. This is reinforced when I see that ideological a prioris are heavily involved in forcing the Darwinist blind watchmaker thesis model of the past.]

We’re going around in circles here.

[m –> On the contrary, what is coming out loud and clear is the ideological a priori that drives circularity in the evolutionary materialist reconstruction of the deep past of origins. KF]>>

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GP at 796, and following,  is also a good pick-up point:

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>>796

  1. Joe:

    If a string for which we have correctly assesses dFSCI is proved to have historically emerged without any design intervention, that would be a false positive. dFSCI has been correctly assessed, but it does not correspond empirically to a design origin.

    It is important to remind that no such example is empirically known. That’s why we say that dFSCI has 100% specificity as an indicator of design.

    If a few examples of that kind were found, the specificity of the tool would be lower. We could still keep some use for it, but I admit that its relevance for a design inference in such a fundamental issue like the interpretation of biological information woudl be heavily compromised.

  2. If you received an electromagnetic burst from space that occurred at precisely equal intervals and kept to sidereal time would that be a candidate for SCI?

  3. Are homing beacons SCI?

  4. Jerad:

    As you should know, the first default is look for mechanical necessity. The neutron star model of pulsars suffices to explain what we see.

    Homing beacons come in networks — I here look at DECCA, LORAN and the like up to today’s GPS, and are highly complex nodes. They are parts of communication networks with highly complex and functionally specific communication systems. Where encoders, modulators, transmitters, receivers, demodulators and decoders have to be precisely and exactly matched.

    Just take an antenna tower if you don’t want to look at anything more complex.

    KF>>

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I am fairly sure that this discussion, now in excess of 1,500 comments, lets us all see what is really going on in the debate over the design inference. END

Comments
OK, so once again it all hinges on when selection is “natural”. If we set up an computer model with fitnesses, genotypes, mutations, recombination, then the fitnesses must meet gpuccio’s standards to have the simulation accepted. I would never ask do much! Let's say that the fitnesses must meet what we observe in reality, in the processes we are simulating. Just showing that there are (many sets of) fitnesses that can lead to SI increasing, and CSI coming to be present, is not enough. Obviously it's not enough. Only darwinists can think it's enough! For then gpuccio will declare that we have made a case of “intelligent selection” but not “natural selection”. If it is intelligent selection, it is intelligent selection, and that is usually obvious if one considers the intelligent choices made by an intelligent designer in the procedure. There is no special need that gpuccio declares it. Intelligent persons can understand it by using the precious gift they have been endowed with: an unbiased cognitive mind. If they wish. I will readily acknowledge that I have made no big distinction between “selection” and “natural selection” in my posts here. I had that impression, yes. And yet your title boldly referred to NS, if I am not wrong... Just a small methodological "slip". I just am not as sure as gpuccio is how to distinguish between natural and unnatural fitnesses. Strange, because I have answered you explicitly about that, in my post #783, the same from which you quote. What the problem, you only read half of my posts at a time? However, I paste here the pertinent answer: "I am happy to comply. NS is that kind of selection (more correctly, effect) that can happen in a System where there are replicators interacting with environmental resource, and that is due only to the reproductive advantage that some kind of replicator can acquire. Intelligent selection is any kind of selection where a conscious intelligent being decides what to select, and what the effects of selection will be. Simple, isn’t it? NS is “natural” in the sense that it needs no intervention of a designer (once the System with the replicators is already set)." It is worse than that: gpuccio has presented no logical argument or mathematical theorem, or even computer model to back up the assertion that “RV+NS cannot do that”. That's true. And I have clearly said that I will not, and that I have no intention to try. And I have clearly said that you have no evidence to back up the assertion that “RV+NS can do that. And I have clearly said that there is no doubt that the burden of proof is yours, not mine. It's your theory. Your theory, your burden of proof. So all the posters and commenters at UD who keep saying that RV+NS cannot lead to CSI being in the genome are standing on thin air. So, now, observed facts are "thin air"! Good to know. Abd your faith that it can, on what does it stand? See above. I am happy to restrict the questions to “natural” selection if gpuccio and I can agree what is “natural”. I have given a very explicit, ad I hope clear, definition. I have pasted it again. What can I do more? It's up to you to agree or not, and if not, to explain why you don't agree. Skipping other issues which we can come back to if they are important enough — I do have answers for those — I note that gpuccio does define what the distinction is between “natural” and “intelligent” selection: Ah, OK. I note that you have noted. OK, so if I make an evolutionary algorithm with genotypes that lead to phenotypes, and these phenotypes have different abilities to get resources, and the reproduction depends on how much resources each individual can get, gpuccio will say “OK, that is natural selection. Now let’s see what it can or can’t do”? I am not sure I understand. If I understand correctly, that would be exactly the "implementation" of NS I have suggested many times. I would like it very much. My idea was: a) we take some computer environment with natural computer resources, designed in blind by people who are not aware of the implementation we are going to use it for. b) we design replicators that can well reproduce in that environment (like computer viruses) using those natural resources. c) we introduce in the replicators some random variation mechanism, which can be modulated appropriately to test different rates and modalities of random variation. d) we just wait. e) if and when the replicators develop new functions, we check their code to see if the new function is complex. That would be an implementation of NS in a computer environment, and could be considered in some way an indicator of what NS can or cannot do, even if obviously a computer environment remains different from a biological environment. Why do I worry that no matter how I do that, gpuccio will say that no, that way of getting phenotypes from genotypes is not natural, but is intelligently designed by me, and that rule for which phenotype gets which amount of resources is not natural, but is intelligently designed by me. You do it as I have shown, and I will not complain. The way of getting from genotypes to phenotypes would be perfectly natural: a computer virus replicates according to its code. And the relationship between the phenotype and replication would be natural: a better computer virus replicates better in that environment. Nobody makes intelligent ad hoc choices, because the environment has been set up blindly, and the fiteness if true, spontaneous fitness, not a choice of any intelligent observer. Perhaps gpuccio could demonstrate that this would not be a futile exercise by having gpuccio set up the model. Then we could see whether it can be shown that the model cannot out some appropriate form of SI into the genome. I have proposed this model many times. It's not my job to implement it. I am sure that, if correctly implemented, it will show that no new dFSCI is ever created, not even if the model is run forever.gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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a) It is not supported by any evidence that existing protein superfamilies are not islands of functionality. I am still waiting for the easy results of protein engineering in finding the supposed many functional proteins that, as you say, should be common everywhere.
Then we don't know what functionality resides in unknown sequences. But when we look (Szostak for example) we find functionality. There are many more than one needle in the haystack.Alan Fox
December 3, 2012
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Oops! There must be a shortcut key that I caught by mistake. contd... A duplication allows the possibility of drift.Alan Fox
December 3, 2012
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Allan Miller: This is the version of evolution attacked by many of the highly-educated critics – Spetner, etc. Every incremental change must have phenotypic effect and be favoured by NS, a highly improbable state-of-affairs. I do wish they’d get to grips with the theory before tilting at it. See my previous answer. I do wish you'd understand what I write before criticizing it...gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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The case of gene duplication speaks against your point a). A duplication allowsAlan Fox
December 3, 2012
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Petrushka: Untrue. Please, see my previous answer to Allan Miller.gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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Allan Miller (and Alan Fox): This just isn’t true. It isn’t essential – nor even plausible - that every step in a protein’s history should be fixed in a population by natural selection. I am not saying that it is essential that any intermediate must be fixed. This is only a misunderstanding. Neutral mutations can happen and remain where they happened without being fixed. This is obvious and trivial. But neutral mutations do not change the probabilistic scenario. They are just a new state in a random walk. The probabilities of each output do not change just because some random variation occurs. So, what I am saying is that each intermediate state that is supposed to change for the better the probabilities of a final output must have three characteristics: a) It must be functional b) It must be more functional than what already exists, so that it can be fixed (expanded) in the population. c) It must be in some way more related to the final sequence and structure more than what already exists (IOWs, it must really be an "intermediated"). So, I maintain that any intermediate (in this sense) in a protein’s history must be fixed in a population by natural selection. The rest of your argument I have already considered and answered. I will only remind now my easy conclusions: a) It is not supported by any evidence that existing protein superfamilies are not islands of functionality. I am still waiting for the easy results of protein engineering in finding the supposed many functional proteins that, as you say, should be common everywhere. b) Your reasoning has the simple consequence that neo darwinism automatically ceases to be a scientific theory. Indeed, your theory itself assumes that we will never find any evidence for the theory itself, and that there is no way to falsify it. Popper would be horrified. c) In billions of years, many protein families or proteins have undergone big sequence changes, sometimes even functional changes, and still their homologies are traceable. Why should that become completely false for the ancestors of existing superfamilies? This is simply ad hoc reasoning, AKA wishful thinking, or simply fairy tales imagination.gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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Joe And Joe promptly confirms my point! :)Alan Fox
December 3, 2012
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Toronto:
1.0) You will get a string of 500 bits or more that is functional software, i.e. x86 machine code that will perform some functions that no one has any prior knowledge of. If I generate such a string, which is unknown to anyone including me, is this enough to invalidate “dFSCI” as a design detection tool?
The simple procedure that you must follow is the following: a) You offer the string. If I cannot see the function myself, you should be so kind as to define it clearly and explicitly for me. b) I assess the presence or absence of dFSCI at the 500 bits level for the string. c) If I assess dFSCI as present, I will make a design inference fro that string. d) Then, you have to show me how the string originated, and you have to convince me that its origin is really non designed. IOWs, that all the functional information was generated without any design intervention, in a system that really did not include any specific information that could favor that particular output. e) If you succeed, you will have "invalidated “dFSCI” as a design detection tool". OK?gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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Toromto: At 1c), you check how this string came to be in this configuration. It's really frustrating how you do not understand things, even after one repeats them a lot of times very cleraly, and then you are ready to give the fault to insufficient clarity in others' explanations. My 1c) is: 1c) after careful observation and consideration, gpuccio isn’t aware of a ‘necessity mechanism’ that explains X to his satisfaction; I have clarified many times that to be aware of an explanation in no way means "checking how the string came to be". They are two completely different things. "To be aware of an explanation" means that we know some credible theory that fits what we observe. It is a statement about a theory. "Checking how the string came to be" means that we verify a fact. It is a statement about observing a fact. But you seem not to understand the difference between a theory and a fact. That's what darwinism does to human minds. All you had to do to be consistent in both test situations and real-life use of “dFSCI”, is to assess “dFSCI” regardless of how that string came to be, and then, after that, assess positive_for_design if you thought the string required an intelligent agent Which is exactly and literally what I have done in the challenge that gives its name to your thread. That’s all, just use terminology that is clear. You just use reasonings that are not wrong.gpuccio
December 3, 2012
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Umm Theobald is easily dismissed as his "evidences" don't have anything to do with any mechanism- he said so. Not only that the same "evidences" can be used to support a common design. And as for Coyne, Carroll and Shubin, well all they can offer are delusions of gradeur and equivocations. Not one of them can tell us how many mutations it takes to get an upright biped from a knuckle-walker/ quadraped. IOW they don't have any science to support their diatribe.Joe
December 3, 2012
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...an even more telling failure to provide even a solid comprehensive try at the 6,000 word essay challenge, both over the past two months or so. KF
Why would anyone re-invent the wheel? If you dismiss Theobold - if you are not interested in the popular works of Coyne, Carroll or Shubin and all the other vast literature written for professionals, students and the general public, what is an essay by some random people who still happen to read the UD blog going to be worth? Not much!Alan Fox
December 3, 2012
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gpuccio I was going to reply along the lines that we see only the budding tips of the tree when comparing sequences for homology. The connecting branches disappear. But I see Allan Miller has written a better response and I refer you to itAlan Fox
December 3, 2012
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And just when you thought it couldn't get any dumber- Mike Elzinga:
We also need to stop giving them feedback of any kind because they abuse every piece of information they are ever given and use it to become even more deceptive.
LoL! Umm, Mike, if you guys didn't misrepresent ID and IDists, ie your feedback, you wouldn't have anything to talk about. It's not as if you are actually going to provide testable hypotheses along with supporting evidence for your position, for discussion. Joe Felsenstein is worried about evaluating our arguments when all he needs to do is focus on his position. Positive evidence for the blind watchmaker is bad news for ID. THAT is how to evaluate our arguments-> by demonstrating blind and undirected processes can account for what say is designed, thereby making our arguments moot. Unfortunately not one of those TSZ clowns knows how to do any of that. So, without us to misrepresent, what will the TSZ ilk talk about? Talk about blog suicide...Joe
December 2, 2012
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Toronto:
Joe, kairosfocus, Mung, gpuccio and Upright BiPed, have been able to call us liars and get away with it as far as readers of UD can see.
And the readers here can see the actual lie. You have something in mind where I called someone a liar who hadn't actually lied and been exposed as such? And why do you even care about what is or is not true?Mung
December 2, 2012
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toronto:
Joe, kairosfocus, Mung, gpuccio and Upright BiPed, have been able to call us liars and get away with it as far as readers of UD can see.
If you ever stop lying then we will stop calling you liars. It is that simple. But when we keep telling you one thing and you keep saying something different about what we just said, that would be lying and the people doing it would be liars. It is what it is.Joe
December 2, 2012
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kairosfocus, I hear ya, however that is just too subtle- heck what I post is too subtle. A good tar and feathering would be appropriate. Just sayin'... PS- Haven't you heard? Your challenge has been met, to 38 decimal points (cue maniacal laughter) :)Joe
December 2, 2012
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Joe: I hear your point,where I see attempts to twist my words snipped out of context into all sorts of smears. However, the insistence on polite company rules has led to a very telling exchange of several thousand posts, multiplied by an even more telling failure to provide even a solid comprehensive try at the 6,000 word essay challenge, both over the past two months or so. KFkairosfocus
December 2, 2012
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d) Do those bridges exist? The only credible answer, st present, is that they don’t exist.
The only skeptical answer, given the complete absence of strong evidence of their existence. But there's no true skeptic at TSZ.Mung
December 2, 2012
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Apologies KF, I am just telling the truth ;) But yes, enough is enough- I just don't like being lied to and about and it seems that is all "they" have. I am sure that you have noticed it too.Joe
December 2, 2012
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keiths:
In a model of Darwinian evolution, we model variation, we model replication, and we model selection.
Umm natural selection is a RESULT and it doesn't select. So please tell us how you model that. Not only that whatever is good enough survives to reproduce- how do you model that? And finally replication is the very thing that needs to be explained, which means if you are starting with replication then you are cheating and have already lost.Joe
December 2, 2012
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EA: The problem is, of course, that many design objectors have a clear agenda to imply that design inference is a disguised right wing theocratic, tyrannical "Christo-fascist" agenda, with creationism as an integral component. They need to be reminded over and over again that each of these notions is ill-founded, as the Weak Argument Correctives show. KF PS: Such do not even understand what Fascism really is: a statist [Mussolini: "All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state"], politically messianistic ideology that sees itself as championing a mass-based victim group (or coalition of such groups) who identify with some Nietzschean (thus, "might and manipulation make right" nihilistic) superman political messiah who in the face of an unprecedented crisis has to have powers beyond the ordinary and is effectively above the law, which of course extends to his henchmen. That statism, of course, means that fascism is actually LEFTIST in essence [as in, note that Nazi means "National SOCIALIST German Workers Party"], but usually Fascists are smart enough to sign manipulative agreements with various traditional power centres, then use their growing power to subvert and undermine them. Resemblance to events ongoing in several places around the world, some quite close to home indeed, is NOT coincidental.kairosfocus
December 2, 2012
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KF @865: Probably everyone on UD is familiar with this quote, but thank you for providing it again. I have a lecture of Johnson's on tape where he discusses the meaning of the three words: creation, evolution and science. At one point he walks through this issue of not getting caught in the Bible-vs-science trap (and let's be very clear, it is an intellectual trap). I think it would be difficult to overstate the importance of Johnson's insights into the Darwinist mind. Anyone at all interested in the debate owes it to themselves to become familiar with his writings.Eric Anderson
December 2, 2012
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F/N 2: I see there was an attempt to divert to YEC bashing. Let us hear again Philip Johnson's reply to Lewontinian a priori evolutionary materialism:
For scientific materialists the materialism comes first; the science comes thereafter. [[Emphasis original] We might more accurately term them "materialists employing science." And if materialism is true, then some materialistic theory of evolution has to be true simply as a matter of logical deduction, regardless of the evidence. That theory will necessarily be at least roughly like neo-Darwinism, in that it will have to involve some combination of random changes and law-like processes capable of producing complicated organisms that (in Dawkins’ words) "give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose." . . . . The debate about creation and evolution is not deadlocked . . . Biblical literalism is not the issue. The issue is whether materialism and rationality are the same thing. Darwinism is based on an a priori commitment to materialism, not on a philosophically neutral assessment of the evidence. Separate the philosophy from the science, and the proud tower collapses. [[Emphasis added.] [[The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism, First Things, 77 (Nov. 1997), pp. 22 – 25.]
KF PS: On Jesus of Nazareth, cf. here. (I recently remarked on this here at UD in reply to Dawkins' dismissiveness.)kairosfocus
December 1, 2012
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Joe, you too. KFkairosfocus
December 1, 2012
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Mung: I am not able to monitor closely so please police your language, per polite company rules, cf. snips above on visiting just now. KFkairosfocus
December 1, 2012
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F/N: I find it sadly interesting that after thousands of posts across three threads -- almost every one of which will exceed 73 ASCII characters worth of digitally coded, functionally specific, complex information -- there seems to still be a project to suggest that the term is meaningless or circular; which means to those who suggest that, much the same. Now, dFSCI is empirically observed as symbol strings that are specific to some observed function or other that is relevant, such as posts in English, or the particular sequence of bases that specify a given protein or the like. (Notice my insistence on the relevance to our understanding, of good examples.) It is observable and recognisable at the least on material family resemblance to iconic cases separate from its origin. In some cases, we do independently observe origin -- e.g. text on the web such as these posts, Java programs, etc, and we see that uniformly, dFSCI is produced by intelligent action. We may also see that the space of possible configs of elements in a string of relevant length, is very large to the point that -- on needle in haystack grounds -- a blind chance and necessity search is all but utterly incapable of finding such cases, as such functionally specific strings based on particular well-matched combinations of many elements, will be rare in the overall space. That is, there is excellent, easily confirmed empirically reliable reason to hold that dFSCI, a subset of FSCO/I, is a reliable sign of design as best causal explanation. The real problem is, this points to design as best explanation of the dFSCI embedded in cell based life, and to OOL as a work of design, with the onward inference that design also best explains origin of major body plans. (Such both easily exceed the 500 bit threshold discussed or the more stringent 1,000 bit one that obtains for the observed cosmos.) It is not that we have empirically well-warranted observed info that overturns this for OOL or OOBPs. Far from this, indeed for OOL even the most ardent evo mat advocates are at an increasingly obvious loss. One that is openly admitted. And if we look beyond confident manner assertions and assumptions, from the Cambrian revolution on, there is no good empirically warranted account of the proposed incremental origin of major body plans. As for the GA or the like that are so frequently trotted out as asserted counter examples, let us simply notice, that such depend on intelligently designed, specifically functional algors and code, but moreso, they depend on reasonably well behaved uphill-pointing fitness functions. That is, they are from the beginning searches within islands of function that were intelligently arrived at. Notice, in short, that there seems to be a reason why, after more than two months and thousands of exchanged comments, there has been no serious taking up of the 6,000 word essay challenge. And yet, in biology textbooks etc, things are often presented in a breezy, no problem all ducks are in a row manner. Something is deeply wrong and needs to be fixed. KF PS: Over time, I have noticed some pretty nasty strawman caricatures meant to denigrate, sometimes based on snipping isolated remarks not even directly related to design issues out of context, down to snipping individual words out and providing false contexts, in an attempt to denigrate, but I have not seen a serious response on the full range of challenged issues. [Certain Anti Evo denizens, you know yourselves and SHOULD be ashamed; I hope you have taken time to see the law dictionary link and why I have taken a strong stance against porn, pointing to some shocking statistics [some denizens took occasion of such to attack] and the twelve-step type recovery system as ways towards the cure of enmeshed souls. Onlookers, pardon my needing to address such disgusting topics, this sort of ad hominem based irrelevancy is what I have repeatedly seen in tag line snippets and the like at objector sites.]kairosfocus
December 1, 2012
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And in true cowardly fashion Richie has a lie-filled meltdown:
You’re right Alan. I was just fascinated by Joe’s YEcism and attempted defense that the flood was a historic event.
So now I am a YEC because I understand their position, ie I am educated as opposed to Richie's obvious ignorance, and I am defending the flood as a historic event because I have expsoed his ignorance on the subject. What a brave little boy you are, lying about me on a forum I can't defend myself. And all of that because Richie's nested hierarchy ignorance was exposed. But by now I am sure he thinks we all forgot about that.Joe
December 1, 2012
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Keith: As promised, a Zachriel-style example of phylogenetic inference. Suppose you are told that strings 2 through 16 below are all descendants of a common ancestor, which is string 1 (the string with all commas). Try to reconstruct the tree, and think about the criteria you employ while doing so. Excuse me, I have no time for that. What I expect from you is that you show me how that is relevant for true biological hierarchies, and where that makes a difference with a design explanation. Please, stick to that.gpuccio
December 1, 2012
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Keiths: Later today I’ll post a Zachriel-style example of phylogenetic inference (Link, Link) and show why it depends on small changes. I am waiting.gpuccio
December 1, 2012
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