Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

“Bill Dembski is world famous” says creationism’s prodigal son Michael Shermer

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

I was at the Dembski-Shermer Debate at Bridgewater College in Bridgewater Virginia last night. I had the privilege of finally meeting both William Dembski and Michael Shermer for the first time in person. They spoke to a crowd of about 350 people from Bridgewater College, James Madison University, and the surrounding community. The crowd was diverse from high-school educated carpenters to PhD trained scientists and philosophers. Symbolic of the diverse mix of people was an American pastor of a rural church and his wife, a Russian laser physicist!

Dembski won the debate, but I must salute Shermer’s honorable and courageous performance in the face of overwhelming odds. Shermer debated fairly and cleanly and avoided slinging mud and motive mongering. He did his best to stick to the discussion of scientific issues. Hats off to him.

It is hard not to really like Michael Shermer. One often gets the sense that Michael Shermer is viewed as creationism’s Prodigal Son by many. He was once an Evangelical Christian and renounced his faith after accepting Darwinian evolution. It seems many in my circles hold out hope Shermer will one day see the light and be restored to his long lost family.

That said, Shermer made a gallant attempt to discredit the hypothesis of intelligent design. His presentation reminded me of the valiant but ill-fated Pickett’s Charge in the battle of Gettysburg where Confederate soldiers marched a mile in the open field in the face relentless canon and musket fire. In that charge two life-long friends (Armistead and Hancock) found themselves pitted against each other, with Armistead leading his confederates into the blistering fire of Hancock’s canons. Such was the debate last night. Two friends, Bill Dembski and Michael Shermer were pitted against one another, and Shermer heroically fought on the side of a losing cause. I cringed that it was a courageous and honorable Michael Shermer marching into the battlefield instead of Barbara Forrest (see: Barbara Forrest, will the real coward please stand up).

Shermer attempted to discredit intelligent design by arguing the evidence for common ancestry. Shermer really shined when he cited the writings of Evangelical Christian and renowned scientist Francis Collins. He said Collins’ defense of Darwinian evolution in the book The Language of God was one of the best ever written, and Shermer read almost verbatim from chapter 5 of Collins’ book. That was a brilliant move by Shermer (especially before a crowd sympathetic to Dembski), but the move was brilliantly repulsed when Dembski reiterated, “ID is not inherently against the idea of common ancestry”. Thus Dembski neutralized Shermer’s best argument.

Shermer in the end said he was open to ideas like self-organization, or other evolutionary scenarios, and thus contradicted his own thesis on the importance of natural selection. When Shermer said he was open to the possibility of other mechanisms for evolution (like self-organization), Bill pulled out Shermer’s book and reminded him of Shermer’s own words:

No one, and I mean no one, working in the field is debating whether natural selection is the driving force behind evolution

Bill put together a wonderful arsenal of slides, videos, and compelling arguments making constant references to engineering. The audience was full of wonder as he showed the marvelous complexity of life graphically. He cited peer-reviewed articles demonstrating that debate was active on various ID topics. Bill Dembski mentioned the infamous Wistar Convention of 1966 where the world’s top neo-Darwinists were bludgeoned by mathematicians and computer scientists.

During the Q & A, Jason Rosenhouse (of Pandas Thumb) vigorously objected to Dembski’s citation of Wistar. Rosenhouse used a line of argumentation that he used in the essay CAN PROBABILITY THEORY BE USED TO REFUTE EVOLUTION?. Rosenhouse makes a formidable and convincing argument, but there is actually a more formidable and almost invulnerable counter argument (which I will give briefly). But rather than using his best counter to Rosenhouse, Dembski chose to avoid formalism and appeal to a popular audience by pointing out the selective use of probability theory by evolutionists. He showed Rosenhouse’s objections based on uncertainty regarding the conditions of the deep past were equally fatal to proponents of Darwinian evolution if Rosenhouse’s standards were equally applied, thus demonstrating Rosenhouse was arguing for a double standard.

But for the reader’s benefit, and to try to put a rest to some of this, the more solid but tediously formal argument against Rosenhouse’s thesis is laid out in Design Inference. Understandably because of time constraints, Bill did not bring out the big guns of formalisms laid in Design Inference. The formalisms demonstrate that there is a moot point crushing the Darwinist position, namely that Darwinists arguments are logically self-contradictory probability arguments of the form: “E = not-E” (page 46). Bill even uses the phrase reductio ad absurdum to described what his formalism demonstrates. “Reductio ad absurdum” is “proof by contradiction”. A proof by contradiction is not the same as argument from incredulity. A proof by contradiction shows how a claim is logically self-contradictory and therefore indefensible.

Darwinists argue that an unspecific mechanism can make specific outcomes. That is a logically self-contradictory claim, like the square circles. Probabilistically speaking, it’s like saying any ole combination (an unspecified mechanism) will open the safe (a specified outcome). When Darwinism is put into mathematical language, the self-contradictory nature of Darwinism is readily apparent. Rosenhouse argues that we would need detailed knowledge to make a probability argument, whereas the formal ID refutation is simply pointing out Darwinists have framed their claims in a logically self-defeating manner. That is the crux of the ID formalism refuting Darwinian evolution. This was shown in more detail in The Fundamental theorem of intelligent Design.

Shermer touched on the co-option argument and the flagella of other organisms other that E. Coli. This is a deep enough subject, I might have to defer discussion to another thread, but in brief, consider the fact your passwords are irreducibly complex. Does the fact that other people using passwords with some of the same alphabetic characters negate the IC of your password? Because some people have passwords that use the same letters as yours, can your password be more easily broken? There is a similar problem then with using arguments from protein homology to say IC is solvable since organisms use similar proteins (where we might think of proteins as letters to a password, and the passwords as IC systems). Dembski did not have time to address that point in Shermer’s presentation, and it was probably deep in the weeds enough that it would have bogged down the discussion.

During the Q & A the community of YECs came out in force and were rather polemic toward Shermer. I thought their tone was a bit rude. Can’t these guys be just a bit more collegial? No wonder they have such a bad reputation. After the hammering Shermer took, the YEC behavior was like the act of sticking bayonets into the bodies of dead soldiers. They could have been considerably more gracious, but they seem to have a real chip on their shoulder. Some YECs in that community are pretty tough, and one even showed me the door last year because he viewed me as too much a compromiser for my association with the ID movement! I was actually worried for Bill that the YECs in the crowd would start giving him a bad time over him not being a YEC himself. I mean, I was worried these guys would start arguing with Bill about what they think the Bible says.

In the closing remarks Shermer made some good points. He commented on the question that people pose to him about the after life, to which he responds “I’m all for it….but wanting something to be true does not make it true…the question of ID does not address the matter of such things…science shouldn’t be used to bolster religious belief, because science may over turn it.” Interestingly, that hit home for me. I cannot imagine having a religious faith not bolstered by empirical facts and sound theoretical arguments. If the facts overturn what I believe, then so be it. I can understand Shermer’s not wanting religion to rely on science, but on the other hand I can’t imagine a body of beliefs totally decoupled from empirical reality…..

The informal reception afterwards was very interesting. I met Bill Dembski for the first time and also had a cordial conversation with Jason Rosenhouse about things outside of ID. Though Rosenhouse and I are polar opposites, and sometimes we probably fume at each other, he has always been civil in person and conducted himself in an honorable manner whenever he participated in the Campus Crusade/Chi Alpha/IDEA functions I put together at his school.

I finally managed to talk to Dr. Shermer. He is quite a gentleman, and it was a delight to meet him. I asked him what he thought about the media attention given the ID movement. He said, “It’s far more than anything the creationists have ever gotten…it’s a truly successful media relations campaign…the creationists had nothing like it…a lot of it has to do with the internet….Bill Dembski is now world famous because of ID”. This is an interesting comment about the effectiveness of the internet. I didn’t have the time to pursue why he thought the internet was so important to the spread of ID.

I asked him about the mood of his colleagues post-Dover. To my surprise he said, for most of them it’s back to business. He’s all for people believing what they want to believe and teaching their children as such. He and his colleagues were concerned that tax payer money would be used to impose Christian beliefs on students, and thus he and his colleagues are much less worried about that now that Dover is behind us.

If I recall corretly, he said, “I’m against public schools, I think they’re a bad idea.” He mentioned he is favorable to private and home schools. But home and private schools are a veritable incubator of creationists! So I had to see if I could corroborate my recollection of what Shermer said with something he has published. He in fact wrote 25 EVOLUTIONISTS’ ANSWERS

In private schools funded and/or controlled by creationists, it is their freedom to teach whatever they like to their children.

Whoa!

He said he wanted to visit my alma mater, George Mason, because of their renowned free-market economics department run by 2 Nobel laureates. Is Shermer a libertarian of sorts? Hmm….Any way, I could go on, but the sum of my remarks is that I find Shermer to be an honorable gentleman. I would hope some day he sees the light.

Comments
How could you get down that deep? If we could put a man on the moon . . . :-) Seriously, solving and implementing the engineering would be fun and educational. It's just a matter of where the money would come from. Could any private source (Paul Allen?) have enough to do it right?tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
02:36 PM
2
02
36
PM
PDT
Jerry wrote: When Shermer used the forrest animal to whale evolution as evidence for gradualism working did he use the phony artist drawings of the ancient animals? Just curious.
I don't think so. Again, Dembski did not have time to contest that part of Shermer's presentation. Had he dones so he could have cited Berlinski. Berlinski argued the cow to whale evolution is highly suspect even though we have some bones which evolutionists use to argue that cows turned into whales. We're dealing with bones and 95% of the most interesting evolution is in the soft tissue. Even if there is common ancestry, the mechanism of Natural Selection is suspect. But here is Berlinksi
The claim that all skeptics of Darwinian orthodoxy are Christian Fundamentalists stands refuted by me. I'm neither a Christian nor a Fundamentalist. But lots and lots of people are skeptical in the scientific community. The interesting argument about the whale, which is a mammal after all, is that if its origins where land-based originally? What do you have to do from an engineering point of view to change a cow into a whale?...Virtually every feature of the cow has to change, has to be adapted. Since we know that life on earth and life in the water are fundamentally different enterprises, we have some sense of the number of changes? I stopped at 50,000, that is morphological changes, and don't think that these changes are independent. What's interesting about the cow to whale transition is that you can see that a different environment is going to impose severe design constraints on a possible evolutionary sequence. And what does this suggest about what we should see in the fossil record? Let's portray Darwinian evolution for what it really is'a collection of 19th century anecdotes that are utterly anything like we see in the serious sciences. That would be my favorite position. Yes biologist do agree that this is the correct position for the origin and diversification of life, but here are some points you should consider as well: the theory doesn't have any substance it's preposterous it's not supported by the evidence the fact that the biologist are in uniform agreement about this issue could as well be explained by some solid Marxist interpretation of their economic interest..
I think Shermer raised an important issue of vestigial organs. We do have strong evidence of reductive (degnerative) evolution, but this is not any more convincing that Darwinian evolution is creative than cars losing a tail light via a collision and then concluding tail lights were created by a collision. Darwinian evolution is destructive, not creative. If one doubts this, consider the latest on reductive eye evolution: Blind Cave Fish. Along with the whales, Shermer also showed how snakes had legs once upon a time. It seems that for some reason snakes once had the ability to walk, and then, well, they then lost the ability and seemed doomed to go around crawling on their belly ever since. He couldn't have chosen a more worse example before a crowd of YECs than a snake that once walked.scordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
02:35 PM
2
02
35
PM
PDT
tribune7:
Concerning Antarctica, that would be a very cool (okay, bad pun) place for serious digging.
I've always thought the same thing! I think it would blow people's minds. The problem is not the cold, but how thick the ice is there. I work with a guy that was working at the south pole (perhaps tens of meters from it). I think he said the ice was up to 3000 feet - I think. How could you get down that deep? By the time you get a tunnel bored.. perhaps the ice sheet might shift and close the tunnel. ... So. Where's the transcript?JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
02:27 PM
2
02
27
PM
PDT
Salvador, When Shermer used the forrest animal to whale evolution as evidence for gradualism working did he use the phony artist drawings of the ancient animals? Just curious.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
01:28 PM
1
01
28
PM
PDT
Sal, your posts are great and you are dead right about separating religion and science (albeit almost all secularists see that as a one-way street and fail to realize how close they are to walking in the footsteps of Mengele or this bunch anyway.) Concerning Antarctica, that would be a very cool (okay, bad pun) place for serious digging. Concerning Rosenhouse, why do some willfully (I can only see that it's willful) refuse to recognize that design is a real phenomenon and attempts to quantify it is real science and it is not breaking any rule to apply what we learn from those attempts to biology?tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
01:23 PM
1
01
23
PM
PDT
Till then Shermer’s analogy works and nit picking it gets nowhere. It's not so much nit-picking but about having a claim carved in granite i.e. having a neutral party hold the bet; not moving the goalposts after the pass is caught etc. :-)tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
01:02 PM
1
01
02
PM
PDT
May I remind YECs and others that Bill has writen a brilliant essay that if correct solves the major theological problem of pre fall death. It is really worth a read and should be offered to those who feel YEC is the only theology that fits with the Bible. http://www.designinference.com/documents/2006.05.christian_theodicy.pdf ID is separate from religion. The "revelation" which ID gives is that there is some amazing intelligence behind the biosphere.idnet.com.au
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
11:53 AM
11
11
53
AM
PDT
Shermer mentioned Newton as the greatest scientist in history and rightly described Newton's theological interests. Shermer quoted Newton who argued for the special creation or at least the intelligent design of the solar system.
This most beautiful System of the Sun, Planets, and Comets, could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being. Isaac Newton
Shermer then argued that the problem was "solved" and thus Sir Isaac Newton's claim has been decisively overturned, and thus faith of people rooted in Newton's claim has been uprooted. But in 2001, I had recently finished several courses in Classical Physics and Orbital Mechanics when I happened upon the following material which surveyed prevailing theories and convinced me that the problem of Solar System formation has been far from solved: Theories for the Evolution of the Solar System and Universe Are Unscientific and Hopelessly Inadequate I'm now rushing to get the new website up so that these topics can be pursued outside of Uncommon Descent. But the above link made very much sense to me after having studied orbital mechanics. Salscordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:54 AM
10
10
54
AM
PDT
Will the DNA be intact, throw in your bids: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070217/ap_on_sc/mexico_frog_in_amber;_ylt=AkyL8NYe3ZgrSALHTVz4V3UPLBIF Ok... when is this transcript for the Dembski-Shermer debate come out? I'm at the stage of commenting about preserved frogs.JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:48 AM
10
10
48
AM
PDT
Sal,
It would not surprise me that since the topic is SO Controversial, that it might attract web traffic. How nice if Pandas Thumb would have to parry with their old foe the YECs and not just the ID proponents.
Thanks for the chuckle. :) As if the PT'ers don't have enough problems with ID -- reminds me of a classic pincer movement.JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:19 AM
10
10
19
AM
PDT
JGuy, I was actually making a plug for the credibility of the bible. I personally believe a lot of the Old Testament is more allegorical than fact. But please, I do not want to get into a discussion of that here. But as far as I know there has not been any major evolution since man showed up. So my comment "Just a lucky guess" was meant to be ironic that the bible which is often heavily criticized got this part of evolution right.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:18 AM
10
10
18
AM
PDT
Jerry asked: Do you want to add geology to this too?
No, as it is Bill and Denyse's site and I am only a visiting contributor. HOWEVER, since there has been an intense interest in the topic, I am working with others on starting a website and weblog to invite people on both sides to discuss the issue. Thus, most of the intense interest in creationism expressed here will find a home in a more appropriate venue. It would not surprise me that since the topic is SO Controversial, that it might attract web traffic. How nice if Pandas Thumb would have to parry with their old foe the YECs and not just the ID proponents. They ought to be licking their chops that they could take shots at me over geology. One of their best, a geologist who presented a strategy of combatting YECs at the Geological Society of America sparred with me at KCSF over lava formation. Origins of Lava, Mantle Plumes and the fine work of Walter Brown The issue of lava formation pertains to the Atlantic Ridge. Let me say, I don't have quite the disdain for the idea of an Old Earth. The arguments are reasonable. I do, however consider the arguements in favor of OOL especially bad. There are many ID proponents and creationist who subscribe to Old Earth Geology, so hopefully some of the theology sparring will be lessened and reasoned discussion takes place. Salvadorscordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:06 AM
10
10
06
AM
PDT
Jerry, In regards to your post to Sal above, the following isn't geology per se, but it may have implications - somethign like you suggest. It is a YEC argument, but at least look at the data presented. You might find this interesting: http://www.grisda.org/origins/09067.htm JGuyJGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
10:06 AM
10
10
06
AM
PDT
correction... I mean, what is meant by a "last major species".JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:57 AM
9
09
57
AM
PDT
Jerry: I suppose my question was moreso asking you for clarification. Sorry if you got dazzled with my uncanny ability to complicate questions :P Maybe, I should've simply asked you what you mean exactly... I'm not sure what you mean by "species".JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:52 AM
9
09
52
AM
PDT
Salvador, The beginning of the declaration for this site says "Materialistic ideology has subverted the study of biological and cosmological origins so that the actual content of these sciences has become corrupted. " Do you want to add geology to this too? It would be interesting to pursue this but I never heard much of a beef against geology except it obviously affects the YEC viewpoint. It would be the kiss of death to the ID movement if it tried to add geology but if in fact the same level of distortion is going on there, it should be discussed. I never had a geology course but have watched several lectures on it and I find it convincing, especially volcano formation and the continual adding to the shelf at the mid Atlantic ridge. They have all the changes over time documented visibly. It is not like biology where there is nothing but hand waving and sudden shifts in species formation. Do we have any geologist in the house?jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:44 AM
9
09
44
AM
PDT
JGuy, I haven't a clue what you are talking about. I was asking a scientific question and you responded with nonsense.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:28 AM
9
09
28
AM
PDT
tribune 7, When we start finding a multitude of long thought extinct species still alive today, then your discussion has a point. Till then Shermer's analogy works and nit picking it gets nowhere.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:26 AM
9
09
26
AM
PDT
Jerry:
If humans are the last major species to appear then how did the writers of the bible know this? Just a lucky guess.
Do you mean like finding a city of upright lizards? or A community like the movie Planet of the Apes? hmm or Birds with hands and big brains? I bet the bird race would have destroyed us all... air power.JGuy
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
09:17 AM
9
09
17
AM
PDT
Rosenhouse give his opposing account of events, Shermer and Dembski in Bridgewater. I would recommend reading his take on things to balance what I have written. Rosenhouse also raises questions I think would benefit every serious ID proponent to have an answer for. He raised the question:
“Inetelligent design is just the Logos theology of John's gospel restated in the idiom of information theory.” I wonder why he didn't use that definition?
First of all the claim by Dembski is not a definition. If I said, "carrots are orange" is that a definition of what carrots are? No. The statement is true, but it is not a definition. Bill responded to such issues himself here: Flamboyant Theological Quotes Rosenhouse's account is more detailed regarding the specifics of Shermer. I gave only tidbits of what Bill said, because anyone who has read this weblog and watch Unlocking the Mystery of Life knows that vast array of arguments that Dembski had at his disposal. So much so, that Bill could barely cram them into a 20 minute presentation!!!!! Shermer made good use of the bad design argument, but bad design is still design. Even a master playwright like Shakespeare will design deeply flawed characters for the ultimate purpose of his story. In like manner, the Divine drama might be filled with "bad designs" for a reason.scordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
08:51 AM
8
08
51
AM
PDT
There is a group of non-ID people who suggest that there are lots of out of place fossils, and that the prevailing paradigm is forcing the anomalies to be ignored. Hypothetically if these anomalies do point to something wrong, it still raises the issue of why fossils have tended to be sorted together into certain strata. I don't think the problem is unsolvable to give an explanation for the sorting phenoma, but it is challenging. Let us also, for the sake of argument, say the Earth is Old. Why then over 100,000,000 years is 600 some meters of continent not fully eroded into the sea? 6 centimeters of erosion per 10,000 years would do the trick, and even with tectonic crustal recycling, we ought not to have geological strata with 300,000,000 year old fossils. Something of basic geo-paleontology is amiss. This is a very BASIC question. It does not immediately argue for a young earth, but it puts into doubt why there should be a geological column strata in the first place. The answers offered have been almost as bad as the defense of OOL and Darwinian evolution. If there were enough money, I would say antartica would have some very interesting fossils preserved there. I wonder what we would find? We have found evidence of lush fossil forests in Antartica. Why is that??? Was antartica a warm place once upon a time and then we had global cooling? What sort of fossils will we find? Furthermore, these fossils, being possibly frozen may give us soft-tissue samples and not just decayed bones! That would be a good place to find pre-cambrian rabbits. :-)scordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
08:22 AM
8
08
22
AM
PDT
Pick any other long extinct organism and the same analogy would work. And if the extinct organism turns out not to be extinct then the analogy falls apart. So, we find another extinct organism. What if we should find that that is not extinct? At what point would we start saying we are flat-out wrong about evolution? And shouldn't finding human fossils next to marine life be more of an anomaly than an expectation?tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
08:12 AM
8
08
12
AM
PDT
tribune7, Shermer is using the trilobite as generic for long extinct organism. Pick any other long extinct organism and the same analogy would work. If we found trilobites today it would be very interesting but probably wouldn't change much other than there would be a hunt for other long extinct life. It wouldn't change Shermer's proposition in any meaningful way. There would be a lot of heat but not much new light.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
07:57 AM
7
07
57
AM
PDT
I thought that tribolite have not existed for a few hundred million years while the coelacanth is with us today. Once upon a time, it was thought the coelacanth had not existed for hundreds of millions of years. Would Shermer disbelieve Darwinian evolution if he found living trilobite?tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
07:40 AM
7
07
40
AM
PDT
Any idea when the transcript will be available? Thanks!IDist
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
07:27 AM
7
07
27
AM
PDT
Great post Sal. Has the debate been TV recorded and is it accessible by INTERNET. IMHO a debate between one of the ID leaders and the leader of CSICOP is worth to be seen worldwide.kairos
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
07:24 AM
7
07
24
AM
PDT
inunison wrote: I think scordova that you are mistaken. Facts are assigned meaning by our interpretation. So, today, you would reject a particular theology because it does not line up with interpretation of the facts and what happens when interpretation of the same facts change tomorrow?
I appreciate your reluctance to agree, and to be consistent with what I have said, let me offer that I could be mistaken. I am willing to accept that our interpretation of physical facts is faulty. What I find distressing is that some are reluctant to admit their interpretation of sacred writings might not be faulty as well. What is especially bad is when the science and the theology are faulty but the individual promotes themselves as infallible in their understanding. Yes, I have made profession of faith, but that does not equate to an assertion that my understanding of things is infallible. In fact, like a child with limited and fallibile ability, I have rather put child-like trust in claims that I cannot fully prove, but seem reasonalbe to me. It remains in the hands of the thing I trust to vindicate the truthfulness of what I have come believe with my limited fallible mind. But if we wish to invoke theology, what does Romans 1:20 mean? Our interpretation of facts may be faulty, but will they ever be so faulty as to invalidate the strength of the facts as described in Romans 1:20?scordova
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
07:21 AM
7
07
21
AM
PDT
I thought that tribolite have not existed for a few hundred million years while the coelacanth is with us today.jerry
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
06:28 AM
6
06
28
AM
PDT
MaxAug, I believe it was Rosenhouse who trued to sell the idea that since random number generators can generate specified complexity then Dembski's arguments fail. He held this belief even AFTER it was pointed out that RNGs are the product of a designing agency and as such all alleged SC derived by them can be traced back to that intelligent agency. IOW he is as good as any anti-IDist for setting up and tearing down a strawman. He is also good at taking quotes out-of-context. And he is very bad at substantiating the materialistic anti-ID position. Which in reality is all he has to do to refute ID.Joseph
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
06:25 AM
6
06
25
AM
PDT
Shermer said he would disbelieve Darwinian evolution if he found a human fossil along with a tribolite. Why not a Coelacanth? tribune7
February 17, 2007
February
02
Feb
17
17
2007
06:07 AM
6
06
07
AM
PDT
1 2 3 4

Leave a Reply