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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
William #323:
It is indeed the ID position that if natural forces are a scientifically plausible explanation of an effect or phenomena with an unknown origin, it is the better explanation, period.
Perhaps that is your position, but it is definitely not the ID position. Most IDers would agree with this obviously correct statement:
Given a choice between two hypotheses, we should prefer the one that is more plausible.
Don't you find it embarrassing to be arguing against something so obvious?keith s
November 12, 2014
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Reality, as I cited before, the Supreme Court of the United States disagrees with your personal belief that atheism is not a religion. ,,, Your denial of that obvious fact, as highly as you may hold your personal opinion to be, does not constitute a rebuttal of that fact. I could care less about your personal opinion as to the established legal (and philosophical) fact that Atheism is, especially for matters regarding the establishment clause, a religion in the United States of America.
Atheism and the Law (article written by an atheist) "... whether atheism is a 'religion' for First Amendment purposes is a somewhat different question than whether its adherents believe in a supreme being, or attend regular devotional services, or have a sacred Scripture." This is an important point and the Court also made reference to the Supreme Court's opinion that a religion is distinct from a "way of life", even if that way of life is inspired by philosophical beliefs or other secular concerns. Essentially, not every belief or belief system is a religion. The legal definition of religion, with regard to the First Amendment, may be very different from the layperson's definition. The First Amendment, in order to be effective in protecting all beliefs must guarantee the freedom to hold no religious belief. This is fairly straightforward, especially if you consider - for example - that a Christian may be considered an atheist with respect to every religion except Christianity. "Without venturing too far into the realm of the philosophical, we have suggested in the past that when a person sincerely holds beliefs dealing with issues of 'ultimate concern' that for her occupy a 'place parallel to that filled by . . . God in traditionally religious persons,' those beliefs represent her religion." "We have already indicated that atheism may be considered, in this specialized sense, a religion. See Reed v. Great Lakes Cos., 330 F.3d 931, 934 (7th Cir. 2003) ('If we think of religion as taking a position on divinity, then atheism is indeed a form of religion.')" This is, essentially, the basis for their decision. They have, in the past, considered atheism to be a religion in the specialized sense that atheism, like theism, specifically addresses the concept of god for the individual. This definition is an attempt to address the implied protections guaranteed by the First Amendment. "The Supreme Court has recognized atheism as equivalent to a 'religion' for purposes of the First Amendment on numerous occasions" http://www.atheist-community.org/library/articles/read.php?id=742 The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution prohibits the making of any law respecting an establishment of religion, impeding the free exercise of religion, abridging the freedom of speech, infringing on the freedom of the press, interfering with the right to peaceably assemble or prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
Of note, there are even atheistic churches now,,,
inside the atheist church hoping to take America by storm - video http://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2014/sep/29/atheist-church-america-cleveland-sunday-assembly atheist church http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/atheist-church/
Thus since Atheism is now legally considered a religion in the USA, with their own churches in America to boot, (and I would suppose tax exempt status as well), then according to the separation of church and state doctrine, (which atheists tenaciously cling to despite the doctrine not actually being in the constitution), then it is now illegal to teach the atheistic myth of origins, i.e. Darwinism, in public schools. :) Music
Jefferson Starship - Miracles https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKBttQmhDBw
bornagain77
November 12, 2014
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Box:
Suppose their is an unknown black box resting on your kitchen table. Now, the thought occurs to you that it might contain a platypus. At the same time you realize that you have no ground whatsoever to support this assumption; the box may contain some other animal, plant or thing or simply nothing at all. Ok. How to implement your system? 1. To rule something out is to assign a probability of 0 to it. [ probability of platypus in black box = 0 ] 2. To rule something in is to assign a probability of 1 to it. [ probability of platypus in black box = 1 3. Neither of those actions is appropriate, because we know nothing at all about the content of the black box. 4. The only remaining option is to assign an equal probability to all of the possibilities. [ probability of platypus in black box = ... ? ]
Box, The difference is that in the case of the boxed platypus, we do have prior information -- and lots of it. We know about boxes and platypi. We know about the humans who make boxes. We know how boxes are used by people, and we know how they are typically transported. We know where platypi live. We know about the typical motivations of people. If there is a black box on your kitchen table, we know that it was most likely placed there by a fellow human being who has access to your kitchen. The odds that such a person went to the trouble of acquiring a platypus, boxing it, transporting it to your home and placing it on the kitchen table are quite remote. The prior information is extremely important. It allows us to say, for example, that the box is much more likely to contain a book than a platypus. In the case of the designer, you have no prior information. In the absence of prior information, the sensible (and statistically accepted) thing to do is to assign equal probabilities to all the possibilities, including the ONH. Since the probabilities are equal, my trillion-sided die is an appropriate model:
Box, It’s astonishing to me that you still don’t get this, but let me try once more. Suppose you have two objects: 1. A coin with ONH stamped on both sides. 2. A trillion-sided die with ONH engraved on one and only one side. A friend of yours takes both objects into another room, out of your sight. She randomly picks one of the two objects and flips it. “I randomly picked one of the objects and flipped it, and it landed with ONH up,” she shouts to you. Your job is to guess which of the objects she flipped — the coin with ONH on both sides, or the trillion-sided die with ONH on only one side. If you can’t figure out the best answer, I’m afraid there’s little hope that you will ever understand my argument.
The right answers are: She flipped the coin, not the die, and terrestrial biodiversity is the product of unguided evolution, not intelligent design. ID is an irrational position.keith s
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel,
Box: what is it exactly that “gravity and branching descent” explain?
Zachriel: We already said, they entail elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy respectively.
"Branching descent" cannot be an explanation for the coming into existence of proteins, molecular machines, epigenetics, body plans and so on. Since the existence of those items are fundamental to the existence of, and difference ("branching") between, species. One cannot explain the cause by its effect. It is not at all comparable with the causal relationship between gravity and elliptical orbits.
Zachriel: We could also suppose the designer has an inordinate fondness for elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy, or we can ascribe the patterns to simple and known principles which is subject to additional study.
Let's assume (arguendo) that branching descent is an explanation for life. You remain neutral on the matter if it guided or not. If branching descent is guided, we must assume that the designer uses branching descent as an instrument. If branching descent entails ONH, then the designer is presumably ok with this outcome. On the other hand ... maybe she/he/they/it doesn't like ONH at all but there may have been no other option available. We have no way of knowing. I don't see your point. If branching descent is unguided, and if it is a plausible explanation for proteins, molecular machines, epigenetics, body plans and so on, then the conclusion is very simple: branching descent is a better explanation than any designer.Box
November 12, 2014
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Reality, Nice substance-free rant. We noticed you didn't provide any evidence to support your claims about me nor did you post anything tat refutes or addresses what I posted. I take that as an admission that what I posted is correctJoe
November 12, 2014
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Box: Now tell me, what is it exactly that “gravity and branching descent” explain? We already said, they entail elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy respectively. Box: And what do you hope to achieve with your argument? Make a case for Darwinism? No, just the case for branching descent, as that is what is entailed in the evidence cited in the original post.Zachriel
November 12, 2014
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bornagain77 said: "...atheistic materialism is a full fledged religion..." Um, no. And the rest of your accusations are also false. Thanks again for adding even more evidence to show that “ID” is a religious agenda.Reality
November 12, 2014
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Joe said: "Tiktaalik- If the tetrapod tracks found in Poland were found before Shubin et al. went looking for evidence of the transition from water to land, they would not have went where they found Tiktaalik. There is no reason to look for evidence of a transition millions of years after it happened." You're funny, Joe. You regularly deny, ridicule, and/or ignore what scientists say about fossils. You deny, ridicule, and/or ignore timelines, dating methods, relationships, traits (especially transitional traits), and everything else, but (and this is a BIG but) when you think that a fossil supports your ID-creation-baraminology beliefs you conveniently and completely rely on that fossil and what one or a few scientists say about it as though it's absolute proof that your beliefs are correct. And as others have pointed out to you, you don't understand transitionals or relationships at all.Reality
November 12, 2014
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If silencing by intimidation, or legal censorship, does not work, Darwinists simple 'EXPEL' anyone who disagrees with them: EXPELLED - Starring Ben Stein - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-BDc3wu81U Slaughter of Dissidents - Book "If folks liked Ben Stein's movie "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed," they will be blown away by "Slaughter of the Dissidents." - Russ Miller http://www.amazon.com/Slaughter-Dissidents-Dr-Jerry-Bergman/dp/0981873405 Origins - Slaughter of the Dissidents with Dr. Jerry Bergman - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6rzaM_BxBk etc.. etc.. Even atheists themselves, who break ranks with the Darwinian ‘consensus’ party line, are severely castigated by the neo-Darwinian atheists. There was even a peer-reviewed paper in a philosophy journal by a materialist/atheist that sought to ostracize, and limit the free speech of, a fellow materialist/atheist (Jerry Fodor) who had had the audacity, in public, to dare to question the sufficiency of natural selection to be the true explanation for how all life on earth came to be. Darwinian Philosophy: "Darwinian Natural Selection is the Only Process that could Produce the Appearance of Purpose" - Casey Luskin - August, 2012 Excerpt: In any case, this tarring and feathering of Fodor is just the latest frustrated attempt by hardline Darwinians to discourage people from using design terminology. It’s a hopeless effort, because try as they might to impose speech codes on each another, they can’t change the fact that nature is infused with purpose, which readily lends itself to, as Rosenberg calls it “teleosemantics.” http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/08/blind_darwinian063311.html Update per Nancy Percy: The microbiologist, Kas Thomas, who wrote the article expressing doubts about Darwinian theory (posted below) is shocked, shocked that he is being vilified by Darwinists: " I am not a creationist, and yet now I know from first-hand experience what it feels like to be on the receiving end of scorn born of dogma — scientific dogma. I don’t know why it should surprise me to find there are bullies on all sides of this issue. Until now, I stupidly thought scientific minds were more tolerant and less bullying than religious thinkers. The comments here show the truth. There are closed-minded, intolerant bullies on both sides. “Bully” meaning someone who is not content to leave one well-reasoned comment, then move on; someone who has to keep leaving more and more comments, using the most vitriolic language, simply because they can’t get their way.... It’s pretty clear who the bullies are here. I must say I’m shocked at the degree of intolerance and disrespect shown in some of these comments by Darwinists, who in many cases (it turns out) are anything but open-minded, tolerant, or reasonable. The comments speak for themselves. As I say, it’s clear who the bullies are." Here's the original article again: http://bigthink.com/devil-in-the-data/the-trouble-with-darwin As well, an esteemed Philosophy professor, who is also an atheist, suffered much the same fate as Fodor and Thomas from the hands of Darwinian atheists for daring to question the sufficiency of Darwinism to account for conscious experience (which is his specific specialty of study): The Heretic – Who is Thomas Nagel and why are so many of his fellow academics condemning him? – March 25, 2013 http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/heretic_707692.htmlbornagain77
November 12, 2014
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Reality, contrary to what you seem to believe, atheistic materialism is a full fledged religion, and Darwinists are notorious in their 'agenda' of trying to promote their 'religion' and stifle the free speech of Theistic viewpoints (especially Christian viewpoints),, Atheism and the Law - Matt Dillahunty Excerpt: "The Supreme Court has recognized atheism as equivalent to a 'religion' for purposes of the First Amendment on numerous occasions" http://www.atheist-community.org/library/articles/read.php?id=742 On the Fundamental Difference Between Darwin-Inspired and Intelligent Design-Inspired Lawsuits - September 2011 Excerpt: *Darwin lobby litigation: In every Darwin-inspired case listed above, the Darwin lobby sought to shut down free speech, stopping people from talking about non-evolutionary views, and seeking to restrict freedom of intellectual inquiry. *ID movement litigation: Seeks to expand intellectual inquiry and free speech rights to talk about non-evolutionary views. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/09/on_the_fundamental_difference_050451.html Evolution Is Religion--Not Science Excerpt: Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion—a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality,,, Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today. Darwinian atheist Michael Ruse - Prominent Atheistic Philosopher Here are several examples of atheists themselves violating the establishment clause of the first amendment by openly proselytizing their own atheistic religion in the classroom: "Proselytizing for Darwin's God in the Classroom" (from 2008): John G. West – video http://www.discovery.org/v/40/2 God, Darwin and My College Biology Class – Barash – Sept. 2014 Excerpt: EVERY year around this time, with the college year starting, I give my students The Talk. It isn’t, as you might expect, about sex, but about evolution and religion, and how they get along. More to the point, how they don’t. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/28/opinion/sunday/god-darwin-and-my-college-biology-class.html?_r=0 Darwinian Blithering - (John C. Wright dismantles David P Barash's evolutionary 'atheistic talk' to freshmen students piece by piece) - Oct. 14, 2014 http://www.scifiwright.com/2014/10/darwinian-blithering/ How the Scientific "Consensus" on Darwinism Is Maintained - David Klinghoffer - September 30, 2014 Excerpt: how it is that a scientist gets to evangelize for atheism at one public university while another at a different public university, Ball State physicist Eric Hedin, gets censured and silenced merely for apprising students of the existence of books offering scientific evidence for intelligent design. Hedin is well liked by his students according to RateMyProfessors.com, and makes an interesting comparison to David Barash who gets complaints about how he is "definitely an atheist and has an agenda to push," "tries to throw dirt on those who believe in anything other than his 'marvelous' theories," has a "clear agenda to push, as he's always rambling off topic about how biology proves that God doesn't exist." Barash even publishes his sermon notes in the New York Times so no one can miss what he's doing in his classroom, and that is just fine as far as I can tell with the administration across town here in Seattle at the University of Washington. It cannot be repeated too often that this is how the scientific "consensus" on Darwinism theory is maintained: one side in the controversy is coddled, the other intimidated. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2014/09/at_the_universi090151.html What They Really Teach Students In A Evolutionary Biology Class – cartoon http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-96cpSHPgIL4/VCftJobtPmI/AAAAAAAALf8/ZVyC7GB9dm0/s1600/Darwinism_See%2BNo.jpg Dr. Will Provine - EXPELLED - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpJ5dHtmNtU Oh well, so much for the argument that Darwinism is religiously neutral. Moreover, as if that was not bad enough, the unscientific religion of atheistic materialism drives science into epistemological failure (Plantinga Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism).bornagain77
November 12, 2014
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bornagain77, thanks for adding even more evidence to show that "ID" is a religious agenda.Reality
November 12, 2014
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William J Murray, you and the other IDists are doing what you're accusing Keith of. You're assuming your conclusion with your premise. Your premise, assumption, and conclusion are that something you IDists call "CSI" is "in living organisms" and that "CSI" is calculable, measurable, and/or computable (All or just one?) "in living organisms" and based on that premise, assumption, and conclusion you conclude and assert that intelligent design "in living organisms" has been demonstrated and verified. Trouble is, claims by IDists regarding "CSI", "dFSCI", and/or "FSCO/I" have been shown to be undemonstrated, unverified, circular, useless, made up nonsense.Reality
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel:
Gravity and branching descent entail elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy.
Only if you want to misrepresent nested hierarchies.Joe
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel #333, So we have "gravity and branching descent" and you are neutral on the fact if they are guided or not. We are making some progress understanding your argument. Now tell me, what is it exactly that "gravity and branching descent" explain? OOL? The new information for proteins, molecular machines, epigenetics and body plans? Or are does your argument modestly pertain to the controversial patterns of good ol’ ONH? And what do you hope to achieve with your argument? Make a case for Darwinism? How exactly? Explain your reasoning. Thank you.Box
November 12, 2014
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The Return of the God Hypothesis - Stephen Meyer Abstract: Historian of science Frederic Burnham has stated that the God hypothesis is now a more respectable hypothesis than at any time in the last one hundred years. This essay explores recent evidence from cosmology, physics, and biology, which provides epistemological support, though not proof, for belief in God as conceived by a theistic worldview. It develops a notion of epistemological support based upon explanatory power, rather than just deductive entailment. It also evaluates the explanatory power of theism and its main metaphysical competitors with respect to several classes of scientific evidence. The conclusion follows that theism explains a wide ensemble of metaphysically-significant evidences more adequately and comprehensively than other major worldviews or metaphysical systems. Thus, unlike much recent scholarship that characterizes science as either conflicting with theistic belief or entirely neutral with respect to it, this essay concludes that scientific evidence actually supports such belief. http://www.arn.org/docs/meyer/sm_returnofgod.pdf The Return of the God Hypothesis - Stephen Meyer - video lecture: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueEpWIfXao8 Intelligent Design - Stephen C. Meyer, PhD - (Return of God to science) video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJNMJef-gqU Irving Bible Church (November 2, 2014) - Lecture by Stephen Meyer. How science became separated from its Judeo-Christian foundation and how recent discoveries are returning God to science) Epistemology – Why Should The Human Mind Even Be Able To Comprehend Reality? – Stephen Meyer - video – (Notes in description) http://vimeo.com/32145998 Do You Like SETI? Fine, Then Let's Dump Methodological Naturalism - Paul Nelson - September 24, 2014 Excerpt: "Epistemology -- how we know -- and ontology -- what exists -- are both affected by methodological naturalism (MN). If we say, "We cannot know that a mind caused x," laying down an epistemological boundary defined by MN, then our ontology comprising real causes for x won't include minds. MN entails an ontology in which minds are the consequence of physics, and thus, can only be placeholders for a more detailed causal account in which physics is the only (ultimate) actor. You didn't write your email to me. Physics did, and informed you of that event after the fact. "That's crazy," you reply, "I certainly did write my email." Okay, then -- to what does the pronoun "I" in that sentence refer? Your personal agency; your mind. Are you supernatural?,,, You are certainly an intelligent cause, however, and your intelligence does not collapse into physics. (If it does collapse -- i.e., can be reduced without explanatory loss -- we haven't the faintest idea how, which amounts to the same thing.) To explain the effects you bring about in the world -- such as your email, a real pattern -- we must refer to you as a unique agent.,,, some feature of "intelligence" must be irreducible to physics, because otherwise we're back to physics versus physics, and there's nothing for SETI to look for.",,, http://www.evolutionnews.org/2014/09/do_you_like_set090071.html Is Metaphysical Naturalism Viable? - William Lane Craig - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzS_CQnmoLQ The Atheist’s Guide to Intellectual Suicide – James N. Anderson PhD. - video https://vimeo.com/75897668bornagain77
November 12, 2014
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Box: what are the “simple and known principles”? Gravity and branching descent entail elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy. Box: Are they unguided or not? On n'a pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là.Zachriel
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel #330, Aha. You are the one making an argument! Can you expand on that a little? For instance, what are the "simple and known principles"? Are they unguided or not? What do you claim that these "simple and known principles" explain exactly? OOL? The new information for proteins, molecular machines, epigenetics and body plans? Or are does your argument modestly pertain to the controversial patterns of good ol' ONH? Tell me, what is your argument all about? And what do you hope to achieve?Box
November 12, 2014
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“Geometry is unique and eternal, a reflection from the mind of God. That mankind shares in it is because man is an image of God.” – Johannes Kepler - he is best known for his laws of planetary motionbornagain77
November 12, 2014
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Box: Which argument are you referring to? We have non-trivial patterns, the nested hierarchy and elliptical orbits. They are neatly explained by branching descent and gravity theory. We could also suppose the designer has an inordinate fondness for elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy, or we can ascribe the patterns to simple and known principles which is subject to additional study.Zachriel
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel: Now try to respond to the argument.
Which argument are you referring to? Who is arguing what?Box
November 12, 2014
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Over and over keith makes this statement:
Can you truly not see that I am treating ID and unguided evolution equally here?
Disregarding the fact that your assumptions are not "equal" except in how you phrase them, even if they were, if making equal assumptions about two different premises automatically and necessarily gives one of the assumptions the victory, while those assumptions may be equal, they would not be logically proper to determine which premise was the best explanation because the conclusion is built into the assumption. Not all sets of "equal assumptions" are valid in every case, even if your assumptions were actually equal.William J Murray
November 12, 2014
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Z: We don’t play teams. Sorry, that should read we are our own team. Yeah, that's better.Zachriel
November 12, 2014
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Box: Sure, but make sure that you don’t tell that to your teammate Keith. We don't play teams. In your analogy, we know nothing of what is in the box. It might be random, it might be designed, it might be some underlying principle (a plague of platypuses). Only by investigating the particulars can we tell. Now try to respond to the argument. We have non-trivial patterns, the nested hierarchy and elliptical orbits. They are neatly explained by branching descent and gravity theory. We could also suppose the designer has an inordinate fondness for elliptical orbits and the nested hierarchy, or we can ascribe the pattern to a simple and known principle which is subject to additional study.Zachriel
November 12, 2014
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Guys to really see how stupid Keith's argument is for unguided evolution, study PCD.... it kills his argument dead......Andre
November 12, 2014
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07:16 AM
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keith said:
I have provided this in spades. My argument shows that when we treat ID and unguided evolution equally, unguided evolution turns out to be trillions of times better than ID as an explanation the diversity and complexity of terrestrial life.
No, you haven't. You haven't demonstrated or shown that natural forces can generate CSI. Mr. Arrington asked for a science bomb; your argument assumes all the science and attempts a logical argument. The problem with your argument is that you have assumed the very thing that Mr. Arrington asked for you to demonstrate - science that demonstrates natural forces plausibly capable of producing the kind of CSI we find in living organisms. You've assumed your conclusion with your premise.William J Murray
November 12, 2014
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07:06 AM
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Keith said:
We know that, William, but the attempt fails miserably. Here’s a capsule summary:
Apparently Adapa didn't know that because he characterized it as a totally arbitrary definition. Whether or not the attempt fails miserably is entirely irrelevant to the point I was making.
4. The only remaining option is to assign an equal probability to all of the possibilities.
The problem, keith, is that you don't know they are possibilities in the first place because you don't know anything about the designer. What we theorize is possible for any causal agency to generate depends on our knowledge of that agency. As you say, we know "absolutely nothing" about any putative designer. Therefore, you simply cannot claim what the actual possibilities are. You can only make up an amount that serves your conclusion.
Natural forces are a plausible explanation for microevolution.
Reiterating the rejected premise doesn't add anything to the debate.
That’s not correct. Suppose we discovered an object and determined that the probability of design was 98% and the probability that it was produced naturally was 2%. You, and every other ID supporter here, would happily go with the more probable explanation, design.
I noticed this debate habit of yours quite often over at TSZ, where you insist that others agree to your misguided characterization of their argument, belief or viewpoint. It usually happens you've made an an erroneous assumption and to take correction would mean that your argument falls apart. It is indeed the ID position that if natural forces are a scientifically plausible explanation of an effect or phenomena with an unknown origin, it is the better explanation, period. Which is why Mr. Arrington said that all it would take is a single demonstration or example of natural forces creating CSI and he'd close down UD and become a card-carrying Darwinist.William J Murray
November 12, 2014
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07:02 AM
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keiths:
If you know that my argument has been refuted, you should be able to state and defend the refutation in your own words. Can you do it?
Yes.Phinehas
November 12, 2014
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06:58 AM
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Zachriel,
Zachriel: 4. The only remaining option is to assign an equal probability to all of the possibilities. [ probability of platypus in black box = ... ? ] NEGLIGIBLE.
Sure, but make sure that you don't tell that to your teammate Keith. Keith not only refuses to rule the platypus out, he insists on ruling the platypus in for the full 100%; see post #302Box
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel:
No, the Shubin expedition was mounted specifically to find a fishapod in the Canadian Arctic.
According to your logic they could have looked just about anywhere as long as it had a swampy or shallow water environment.Joe
November 12, 2014
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Zachriel:
When we classify organisms, they form a singular objective nested hierarchy.
Only if one leaves out all of the alleged transitional forms. As Darwin noted if we include all of the transitional forms the distinct groups that nested hierarchy requires, disappear.Joe
November 12, 2014
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