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How Keith’s “Bomb” Turned Into A Suicide Mission

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Keith brought in an argument he claimed to be a “bomb” for ID. It turned out to be a failed suicide mission where the only person that got blown up was Keith.

(Please note: I am assuming that life patterns exists in an ONH, as Keith claims, for the sake of this argument only.  Also, there are many other, different take-downs of Keith’s “bomb” argument already on the table.  Indulge me while I present another here.)

In my prior OP, I pointed out that Keith had made no case that nature was limited to producing only ONH’s when it comes to biological diversity, while his whole argument depended on it.  He has yet to make that case, and has not responded to me when I have reiterated that question.  We turn our attention now to his treatment of “the designer” in his argument.

First, a point that my have been lost in another thread:

From here, keith claimed:

3. We know that unguided evolution exists.

No, “we” do not. ID proponents concede that unguided natural forces exist that are utilized by a designed system (even if perhaps entirely front-loaded) to accomplish evolutionary goals; they do not concede that unguided process (including being unguided and unregulated by front-loaded designed algorithms and infrastructure) can generate successful evolution, even microevolution, entirely without any guided support/infrastructure.

Keith claims that we have observed “unguided microevolution” producing ONH’s, but that is an assumptive misstatement. Douglas Theobald, his source for “evidence” that unguided evolution has been observed generating ONH’s, makes no such claim or inference.  Theobald only claims that microevolution produces ONH’s.  Observing a process producing an effect doesn’t necessarily reveal if the process is guided or unguided.

Keith agrees Theobald makes no such claim or inference. The “unguided” modifying characteristic, then, is entirely on Keith; he can point to no research or science that rigorously vets microevolutionary processes as “unguided”.

When challenged on this assumption, Keith makes statements such as “even YEC’s agree that microevolution is unguided”, or that some particular ID proponent has made that concession; please note that because others elect not to challenge an assumption doesn’t mean that everyone else is required to concede the point. If challenged, the onus falls upon Keith to support his assertion that unguided microevolutionary forces are up to the task of generating ONH’s, otherwise his entire argument fails because of this unsupported premise.

Keith’s response to the challenge about the “unguided” nature of microevolution:

As you know, we actually observe microevolution producing ONHs, and microevolution does not require designer intervention, as even most YECs acknowledge.

This is simple reiteration of the very assertion that has been challenged. Keith circularly refers back to the very source that provides no support for his “unguided” inference. This has been pointed out to him several times, yet he repeats the same mantra over and over “we know unguided microevolution can produce ONH’s.”  Reiterating an assertion is not providing support for the assertion.  As I’ve asked Keith serveral times, where is the research that makes the case that microevolutionary processes/successes are qualitatively “unguided”?  Keith has yet to point us to such a paper.

That said, here is the suicidal portion of Keith’s argument.

I’ve repeatedly challenged keith to answer this question:

Are you saying that it is impossible for natural forces to generate a mismatched (non-ONH) set of trees [diversity of life pattern]?

This question follows a point I made in the Black Knight thread:

If, as Keith’s argument apparently assumes, natural forces are **restricted** to generating biological systems as evolutionary in nature and conforming to Markovian ONH progressions, why (and perhaps more importantly, how) would a designer work around these apparently inherent natural limitations and tendencies in order to generate **something else**?

It’s like Keith expects a designer to defy gravity, inertia and other natural forces and tendencies in order to get a rocket to the moon and back, just because keith imagines that a designer would have trillions of options available that didn’t need to obey such natural laws and tendencies.

Keith’s argument relies upon his claim that the designer could have generated “the diversity of life” into “trillions” of patterns that were not ONH’s, and that no such options were open to natural forces.  If a designer and natural forces both had the same number of options open to them, there would be no advantage in Keith’s argument to either.  However, Keith’s “trillions of options” argument requires that the designer can instantiate living organisms into the physical world in a manner that natural forces cannot, thus generating “diversity of life” patterns nature is incapable of producing.

Keith’s response was:

You think that the Designer was limited by natural forces? You might want to discuss that assumption with your fellow IDers, who may not be quite so enthusiastic about it as you are. Besides the conflict with your fellow IDers, you have another problem: what is the basis for your assumption about the limitations of the Designer? How do you know what the Designer can and cannot do? Be specific.

Note the attempt to shift the burden, as if I was the one making  a claim about what the designer “can and cannot do”. I made no such claim.  The claim was in Keith’s assertion that the designer could have generated trillions of “diversity of life” patterns that nature could not by instantiating life forms into physical existence in a manner that nature could not.  Later, Keith modified his claim:

There are trillions of logical possibilities, and we have no reason to rule any of them out. After all, we know absolutely nothing about the purported designer.

What an explosive, self-contradictory blunder.  If we cannot rule any of them out because we know nothing about the designer, by the same token we cannot rule them in.  Whether or not unguided natural forces can generate any of the same “trillions of possibilities” of diversity of life pattern (alternatives to ONH) depends on what we know about those natural forces and how they operate.  Obviously, Keith doesn’t assume that unguided natural forces can instantiate life in  “trillions” of ways that would not conform to an ONH.  Not knowing anything about “the designer” doesn’t give Keith license to simply assume the designer has “trillions of possibilities” open to actually instantiating a “diversity of life” into the physical world. If we disregard actual capacity to produce biological diversity, the same number of purely “logical” alternatives are open to both natural forces and any designer.  You have to know something about the causal agencies to know what it is “possible” for them to do or not do. Keith admits he knows nothing about the designer.

Read what Keith said again:

You think that the Designer was limited by natural forces?

Something becomes clear here: Keith’s argument must assume that the designer is supernatural, and can magically instantiate biological life into the world in any way imaginable, without regard for natural laws, forces, or molecular tendencies and behavioral rules, and without regard to what would limit any other causal agency – it’s actual capacity to engineer particular outcomes in the physical world.

Yet, Keith says that we know nothing about the designer:

 After all, we know absolutely nothing about the purported designer.

If we assume that natural forces are capable of creating non-ONH patterns, Keith’s argument fails. If we assume that natural forces can only produce an ONH, then Keith must assume extra characteristics about the designer – that it is capable of instantiating  “diversity of life” patterns that natural forces cannot.  Keith’s assumptions are not equal.  For the assumptions to be equal, we either assume both unguided forces and the designer can only produce ONH patterns in a diversity of life landscape, or we can assume both are capable of non-ONH patterns.  We cannot assume that unguided forces can actually only produce ONH, and assume that the designer can actually produce trillions of other patterns, and keep a straight face while insisting our assumptions are equal and that “we know absolutely nothing about the designer”.

Comments
OK Box, you've convinced me you don't have the answers to those basic questions. I'll keep looking elsewhere for someone who can explain the ID position.Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapa: Those aren’t objections they’re honest questions. I read all the FAQ and didn’t see the answers anywhere.
Did you read the part on 'quote-mining'? Your "Meyer is a rather shameless quote-miner", does not indicate that you did. And how about the section that deals with the objection 'The Evidence for Common Descent is Incompatible with Intelligent Design'?Box
November 8, 2014
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StephenB Adapta: I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran. I think the order of events goes something like this: First, you read the book, then you try to recollect what you read. It isn’t easy to reverse the process. I didn't say specifically in DD. I don't recall Meyer answering those questions ever - in the movie Darwin's Dilemma, in any press release, in any interview. It's possible I missed the answer somewhere which is why I'm asking. I freely admit I have only read excerpts from the DD book available online. If Meyer did indeed answer the questions in DD then please give me the chapter so I can research it, or better yet just give me a one line summary yourself. You'd think I was asking for you to cut off an arm. Sheeze.Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapta:
I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran.
I think the order of events goes something like this: First, you read the book, then you try to recollect what you read. It isn't easy to reverse the process.StephenB
November 8, 2014
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Box These questions, demonstrate that you have a poor understanding of ID. Then please help me understand better. An attempt to improve this can begin by consulting UD’s resource section concerning “frequently raised but weak objections to ID. Those aren't objections they're honest questions. I read all the FAQ and didn't see the answers anywhere. I was taught the best way to learn is to ask questions. Am I asking at the wrong place? How can I learn if I don't ask questions?Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapta: Please refresh my memory. Mung: I don’t have access to your memories. Refresh them yourself. Adapta: I see, you don’t know the answer either. Thanks anyway for trying. I don't have access to your memories. I didn't try and I didn't claim to try. So you're spouting nonsense. Only you can refresh your memories and you didn't try. Don't blame that on me. Adapta:
I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran.
So?Mung
November 8, 2014
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Adapa, I notice that you have many questions. In the thread 'Might there be unclassifiable life forms out there?', you've asked: "Has anyone calculated the CSI of these mysterious mimivirus genome strings to see if they were designed? Or the dFSCI? Or the FSCO/I? Seems like it could be pretty important." In the thread 'Photosynthesis from 3.8 billion years ago?', you've asked: "Have any scientists from the ID community taken a look at this data? I’m trying to understand how it fits in with a Design scenario. Can someone here help?" These questions, demonstrate that you have a poor understanding of ID. An attempt to improve this can begin by consulting UD’s resource section concerning “frequently raised but weak objections to ID.”Box
November 8, 2014
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Mung I don’t have access to your memories. Refresh them yourself. I see, you don't know the answer either. Thanks anyway for trying.Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapta:
Please refresh my memory.
I don't have access to your memories. Refresh them yourself.Mung
November 8, 2014
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Mung Adapa: I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran. So? Perhaps your recollection is faulty. Could be. Please refresh my memory. The ID explanation for the Edacaran biota and the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran is _______________________? A one line summary would be greatly appreciated, thanks!Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Adapa:
I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran.
So? Perhaps your recollection is faulty. Adapa:
Can you summarize the ID position on them for us?
Read Meyer.Mung
November 8, 2014
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It seems William J Murray is avoiding a question. I’ll ask it again: I don’t recall Meyer ever giving his ID explanation for the Ediacaran biota or the 3 billion years’ of single celled life before the Ediacaran. Can you summarize the ID position on them for us?Adapa
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel said:
Didn’t know that paternity tests were under debate.
Life - biological evolution - is what is under debate. Did you not realize that? Now, do you have an example of an ONH produced by natural forces that is not the subject under contention?
We did explain. Fidelity is more likely to persist.
So, achieving a persistent fidelity is the reason why natural forces generated a common ancestor/vertical descent system in the first place? Why would unliving natural process pick a persistent fidelity living system to generate?
Vertical descent is not the only option available to life.
I didn't ask what options were available to "life". I asked, what options were available to unguided natural forces (unliving) in terms of generating a living system? Are natural forces required to generate life on the planet with a common ancestor and vertical descent? I suspect your answer here is "no". However, when asked why unguided (unliving) natural forces would generate life (abiogenesis) into a common ancestor/vertical descent system in the first place, you answer "fidelity is more likely to persist" sounds like you are saying that unliving natural forces generated the common ancestor/vertical descent system because it wanted fidelity to persist. That reason doesn't really work for unguided natural systems; however, we can easily see why a designer would choose a system where fidelity would persist.William J Murray
November 8, 2014
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bornagain77 @ 72 Another thank you for the links on whale evolution!
“Well, I told you we don’t have the tail in Rodhocetus. We don’t know for sure whether it had a ball vertebrate indicating a (tail) fluke or not. So I speculated (that) it might have had a (tail) fluke.,,, - Philip Gingerich
Wow! In other words, smoking-gun FAKERY in whale evolution! Now why would they do that? And the guy dramatically holding up the sign with the supposed transitional forms . . . He might as well have held up a sign with a hyena and a whale, and then dramatically unveiling an alligator as the transitional form. It was pathetic and embarassing considering all the essential novel systems in whales! And this is the best they have? -QQuerius
November 8, 2014
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WJM: You want to try again? 1. If a designer creates a life system comprised of a common ancestor and vertical descent, can that life system be anything other than an ONH? 2. Is an evolutionary, common ancestor/vertical descent the only system of life natural forces are capable of generating via abiogenesis? 3. Can you point to an example of an ONH that is generated by unguided forces and is not the subject under debate?
I'm lovin' itVishnu
November 8, 2014
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Adapa: But ID needs to explain the patterns and timelines in the fossil record over the last 3.8 billion years if it wished to become the leading scientific paradigm.
I disagree. I predict both the "leading paradigm" and ID will become synthesized eventually and there will be a new paradigm. As I see it, the current resistance to ID is because of institutional a priori commitments of anti-ID metaphysics because of fear of religion. (Shall I start quoting?) This will eventually fall away. ID will make progress in the microbiological side of things to the degree where a synthesis will become patently necessary in the eyes of all reasonable men. Time will tell.Vishnu
November 8, 2014
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I really like keitch s but in the end he didn't survive the first round... I had so much I wanted him to "see" if he were willing... Personality disorders are treatable....Quest
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel
lifepsy: Nested groups are only begun in the first place with individual traits. If those traits vary, then the nesting pattern is masked. Um, no. That’s not how nested hierarchies are determined; not now, not in Darwin’s day.
Traits evolve sequentially. If new traits are lost instead of preserved, then obviously the nested pattern of traits is broken.lifepsy
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel, Why do we share so much DNA with bananas (50% ?) and zebrafish (89% ?). Is that explained by horizontal gene transfer? How is that corrected in the ONH?Box
November 8, 2014
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keiths argues that a designer can literally produce trillions of nested hierarchies. How does he know this? What is the evidentiary basis for this claim? keiths claims unguided evolution can produce only one nested hierarchy. How does he know this? What is the evidentiary basis for this claim?Mung
November 8, 2014
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lifepsy: Nested groups are only begun in the first place with individual traits. If those traits vary, then the nesting pattern is masked. Um, no. That's not how nested hierarchies are determined; not now, not in Darwin's day. Darwin: “It is incredible that the descendants of two organisms, which had originally differed in a marked manner, should ever afterwards converge so closely as to lead to a near approach to identity throughout their whole organisation.”Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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I think we need to stop censoring the responses coming from keiths and let him make the best argument he can possibly make here at UD. After all, there's nothing to fear. Right?Mung
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel
While individual traits may vary, for reasonable rates of change, the nested hierarchy will be discernible
Thank you for proving my point. Nested groups are only begun in the first place with individual traits. If those traits vary, then the nesting pattern is masked.
A non-nested pattern would falsify branching descent.
Obviously wrong. For reasons already mentioned.lifepsy
November 8, 2014
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lifepsy: Branching descent may also produce non-nested hierarchies with regards to character traits. While individual traits may vary, for reasonable rates of change, the nested hierarchy will be discernible, such as the example you provided of Cetaceans. lifepsy: That would only be true if a non-nested hierarchy pattern of character traits would falsify branching descent. A non-nested pattern would falsify branching descent. Indeed, anomalies to the nested hierarchy often provide evidence of horizontal mechanisms.Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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Zachriel 73,
The fact is that we can observe that most organisms reproduce through vertical descent, and that the nested hierarchy is entailed in branching descent.
Wrong. Branching descent may also produce non-nested hierarchies with regards to character traits.
But this is irrelevant to the basic finding that the nested hierarchy is strong confirmation of branching descent.
Wrong. That would only be true if a non-nested hierarchy pattern of character traits would falsify branching descent. It wouldn't. Thus both outcomes are only accommodated.lifepsy
November 8, 2014
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Vishnu: You never answered: do you agree with keiths “bomb” and Rain Fairy arguments? We answered in on the thread where you asked. https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/why-keithss-bomb-is-a-damp-squib/#comment-526492 Vishnu: Mine may differ. Scientific merit is determined by tests of entailments of propositions. What is your standard? William J Murray: What part of “and is not the subject under debate?” did you not understand? Didn't know that paternity tests were under debate. William J Murray: the question of why that system in the first place and not some other system without a common ancestor and vertical descent. We did explain. Fidelity is more likely to persist. William J Murray: 1. If a designer creates a life system comprised of a common ancestor and vertical descent, can that life system be anything other than an ONH? Vertical descent means that there is fidelity in reproduction, presumably with some variation. If so, it will result in a nested hierarchy. William J Murray: 2. Is an evolutionary, common ancestor/vertical descent the only system of life natural forces are capable of generating via abiogenesis? Vertical descent is not the only option available to life. Early life probably had rampant horizontal mechanisms. Even highly complex organisms experience horizontal transfer, such as endogenous retroviruses. William J Murray: 3. Can you point to an example of an ONH that is generated by unguided forces and is not the subject under debate? We expect nested hierarchies as a result of a branching process, such as trees or mutations to the y-chromosome.Zachriel
November 8, 2014
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It seems Adapa is avoiding a question. I'll ask it again: Why didn’t unguided natural forces generate life on the planet in some way other than an evolutionary, common ancestor/vertical descendent pattern?William J Murray
November 8, 2014
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WJM asked:
Can you point to an example of an ONH that is generated by unguided forces and is not the subject under debate?
Zachriel said:
Mutations to the y-chromosome, which are used to trace male lineages.
What part of "and is not the subject under debate?" did you not understand? WJM asked:
why didn’t unguided natural forces generate life on the planet in some way other than an evolutionary, common ancestor/vertical descendent pattern?
Zachriel said:
The fact is that we can observe that most organisms reproduce through vertical descent, and that the nested hierarchy is entailed in branching descent.
That fact is nonresponsive to the question. Your further explanation of why, in such a system, that which reproduces successfully is more likely to endure over time is completely non-responsive to the question of why that system in the first place and not some other system without a common ancestor and vertical descent. You want to try again? 1. If a designer creates a life system comprised of a common ancestor and vertical descent, can that life system be anything other than an ONH? 2. Is an evolutionary, common ancestor/vertical descent the only system of life natural forces are capable of generating via abiogenesis? 3. Can you point to an example of an ONH that is generated by unguided forces and is not the subject under debate?William J Murray
November 8, 2014
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BA77 @ 71 Interesting ThanksVishnu
November 8, 2014
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Vishnu: “Substantial” compared to what? Zechrial: Substantial in a scientific sense.
Your opinion. Mine may differ.Vishnu
November 8, 2014
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