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Broader Implications of ID

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In the popular media, ID is often portrayed as Creationism in new clothes.  And indeed, even among ID proponents, the creation implications tend to be predominantly emphasized.  Yet the theory underpinning Intelligent Design has implications beyond the realm of biological history, perhaps it is a much broader theory than most realize at first.  In fact, it may even describe a comprehensive worldview.  The primary reason that ID has such an impact is because materialism underlies many areas of modern thought, and ID is an alternative hypothesis to materialism.

To understand the insights that ID brings, it is important to have a bit of philosophical background to begin with.  There are two basic concepts that are important to know: efficient and final causes.  This may seem a bit off the beaten trail, but stay with me here.  For any event there are two questions you can ask.  You can ask “how did this happen?” and you can ask “why did this happen?”.  As an example, the event of your web browser navigating to this article can either be described in terms of the very complex computer and network architecture and accompanying electrical signals that lead to the retrieval and display of this article (how), or it can be described in terms of the fact that you wished to view this article (why).  Both are valid explanations.  The first explanation is the efficent causal explanation and the second explanation is the final cause explanation.  Now, to relate these concepts back to the interplay between materialism and ID, materialism implies that all events only have efficient causal explanations, and any perceived final causal explanations can be reduced to efficient causal explanations.  On the other hand, ID implies that some events may potentially have irreducible final causal explanations, and no matter what one may know about how an event occurred they will not be able to completely explain its occurrence.

For an application of these two concepts and ID, consider the realm of economics.  Generally there tend to be two schools of thought regarding economics: the decentralized Austrian school and the centralized Kenseyian school.  ID allows us to say that one school is strictly and objectively better than the other.  To see this, consider how wealth is created.  Wealth is created by the creation of new information in the form of complex, specified inventions.  These irreducibly complex devices are formed from many integrated parts to accomplish a specific function or set of functions.  According to ID, individual intelligent agents are the creators of this information.  Thus, an economic system that incentivizes individuals to create new inventions to fulfill useful functions is strictly better than a system that does not.  In a centrally planned economy, there are only a few empowered information creators, who decide how resources are divided amongst the populace.  However, in a decentralized economy, all individuals are empowered to create information.  Since an Austrian economy focusses on decentralizing information production, it is strictly better than a Kenseyian economy at creating wealth, since the Austrian economy enables an enormously larger pool of information creating intelligent agents. 

But how are materialistic assumptions at play in modern economic theory?  The impact of materialism primarily has to do with the notion of wealth.  If you recall the introductory distinction between efficient and final causes, materialism implies that there is no such thing as an irreducible final cause while ID says there may really be final causes.  The added concept you need to see how this applies to economics is that when an event occurs due to a final cause, then at this point information is created.  So, conversely, if there is no such thing as a final cause, as materialism claims, then no information is ever created.  And, if information is tied to wealth creation, then the further implication is that wealth is not created.  In which case, wealth is no longer tied to inventions, but is instead tied to resources.  Since there are only a limited number of resources in the world, economics becomes primarily concerned with the proper distribution of these resources amongst the population, instead of being concerned with allowing the creation of greater amounts of resources.  So, a centralized Kenseyian economy becomes the best kind of economy within a materialistic paradigm, since it least wastefully allocates resources (at least in theory).  But, if the materialism assumption is removed, then the emphasis for economies is changed.  Once the door is opened to the idea that wealth can be created, then economies can look to provide better avenues for wealth creation.  As discussed above, ID further implies that wealth is better created through a decentralized than through a centralized economy.

Now lets consider a very right brained topic, very rarely under the purview of common ID discussion.  Namely, how are the humanities related to the sciences?  Commonly, they are considered two seperate spheres with little interrelation.  Additionally, the humanities, nowadays, tend to be somewhat looked down upon by the more technically oriented fields.  And, due to the greater difficulty in establishing an ROI for the humanities it becomes much harder to secure grant money and stay afloat in academia.  Consequently, out of a combination of insecurity and poverty, the humanities are beginning to sell out more and more in academia, and adopt the false robes of quantifiable, empirical fields and needlessly obtuse technical language. 

How does ID shed light on a solution here?  Well, underlying the difficulties that the humanities face is the worldview of materialism.  Materialism asserts that the only reality is matter.  If the only reality is matter, then only the fields dealing with the description of matter, matter.  Since the humanities ostensibly do not deal with matter, and in fact traditionally deal with entities such as the soul, God, and other such topics, the humanities are considered to be at best entertaining and at worst dangerous deceptions (per the recent rife of cantakerous anti-religion literature).  ID provides a helping hand here by showing that, at the very least, there is open room to doubt that there is nothing more to reality than particles colliding and quantum waveforms collapsing.  Again, to understand why ID helps, we can rely on the handy distinction between efficient and final causes.  Simply enough, if ID is at least possibly true, then there may be other entities at work than the particles and waves.  Furthermore, if ID is true, then final cause explanations are true and important, and final causal explanations are entirely in the realm of the humanities.  The humanities primarily occupy themselves with answering the question why?, and since final causes are the source of intelligently designed events, the humanities turn out to be even more important than the sciences, at least as far as intelligent design is concerned.

And, ID goes further than even this, as we’ll see in the realm of philosophy.

As any student of the history of philosophy can tell you, the modern era has denoted a dramatic change of focus in philosophy.  What used to be a holistic field that attempted to understand man and his relation to reality in totality with rationality, has bifurcated into two realms: contintental and analytical philosophical traditions.  The continental tradition tends to be occupied with questions of meaning and purpose, while the analytic tradition attempts to remove all ambiguity from discourse.  Perchance can we explain this divide in terms of our efficient and final cause distinction?  Perhaps we can if we first look at this distinction as it applies to language and thought.  The distinction between efficient and final causes shows up in linguistics as the distinction between syntax and semantics.  Syntax describes how a language works, the efficient causal portion of language, while semantics deals with the content of language, the purposeful thought and final cause behind a particular word choice.  Analytic philosophy tends to be primarily concerned with the syntax of our thought and language, and has significant concentration on the fields of logic and language syntax.  Continental philosophy tends to be primarily concerned with the semantics, and is often concerned with fields such as phenomenology and qualia.

So, here, even in the realm of philosophy we can see the same bifurcation as we saw in the humanities.  And, as we saw in the humanities, the analytic portion of philosophy is often considered the more reliable.  However, continental philosophy, instead of trying to make itself more quantifiable and objective has decided to embrace subjectivity.  Here again, ID is able to provide a useful perspective.  As we saw with the humanities, ID implies that the field of final causes may be much more relevant than it is usually credited nowadays, so implies that the syntax of analytic philosophy provides a substrate for the content of continental philosophy’s semantics, in the same way that we need grammar and vocabulary in order to express ideas in language.  And thus, ID provides a precise way of describing the relationship between analytic and continental philosoph, which can provide an approach for integrating the two fields.

By unifying humanities and sciences, and the fields of philosophy, ID now opens the way for providing a framework for ethics and morality.  In the middle ages, and throughout much of western history, morality has been understood within a framework of natural law.  This framework was explained by Aristotle by the notion that everything had a function, and that life was lived well by fulfilling one’s function.  Thus, morality was explained in terms of living according to a purpose, a final cause.  However, with the advent of materialism, the notion of natural function became discredited.  Why this happened is easy to see if we think of functions as final causes.  As explained previously, materialism does away with final causes, replacing them all with efficient causes.  Consequently, with the removal of final causes, so also was functionality and thus natural law based morality removed.  But, if materialism is not a foregone conclusion, then there may well be a system of functionality embedded in our world, within which we can define a moral theory based on natural law.

And with that, I bring to a close my brief, but indepth look at some of the non-biological implications that intelligent design theory has.  There are numerous other interesting implications of ID, but I will need to cover them in a new article.

Comments
The one area where I completely draw a blank in applying ID is chemistry.johnnyb
August 28, 2011
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Hi Eric, "So, one interesting application of Dembski’s CSI metric would be to measure the amount of CSI being produced in the market. As long as a market segment demonstrated CSI production, we could invest in said market with a fair amount of confidence. But, our confidence should plummet if we noticed CSI drop off." This does sound like an interesting exercise. Could this be set up as an experiment? It could be a good way of demonstrating CSI in action.Timbo
August 28, 2011
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But, even if ID worked, your anti-Keynesian logic wouldn’t follow. That's sort of like saying all Darwinists should be disciples of Milton Friedman -- and we know that certainly is not the case. Therefore, clearly, economies would work better if intelligent designers were making command decisions about how they work, rather than just leaving it up to the auto-regulation of the market. I don't think any of us here claim that natural selection does not exist or that design is the only force out there. To say that the work of Beethoven or Tolstoy or Andrew Wyeth or Einstein or name your person of accomplishment was the sole result of the marketplace is akin to the claim that birds and fish and butterflies are the sole result of natural selection. And saying that does denies neither the power of the market nor the power of natural selection.tribune7
August 28, 2011
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"ID’s skepticalness about natural selection and other self-organization processes would, if ID people were being consistent, lead to skepticism about the invisible hand of the market. " If you had read Eric's post carefully, you would see why this isn't true. Natural selection *would* work if the mutational process was guided by an intelligent agent. The problem with natural selection is that it presupposes that there is no intelligent agent guiding it. Likewise, for market economies, *anyone*, Keynesian or not, who forgets to include the role of intelligent agents will misunderstand the economy. Eric's point is that a planned economy has *fewer* intelligent agents acting, since only the top planners are utilized for their creativity. In a free market, *anyone* can act creatively, and thus you have many more intelligent agents acting. "Therefore, clearly, economies would work better if intelligent designers were making command decisions about how they work, rather than just leaving it up to the auto-regulation of the market." Again, with an ID perspective, you allow for multiple designers to make intelligent, command-decisions within the domain that they have sufficient information for, rather than only a few making command decisions within domains that they don't.johnnyb
August 28, 2011
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now THAT'S a platform! A bit wobbly, but it sure is pretty.MedsRex
August 28, 2011
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I'm a Dapper Dan man.material.infantacy
August 28, 2011
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"is you is or is you ain't my constituency"MedsRex
August 28, 2011
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He already has -- change over time is responsible for ingenious, sophisticated, functional, purposeful novelty.material.infantacy
August 28, 2011
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Heh, bullhorn politics: "the core ID argument is kaput." xpmaterial.infantacy
August 28, 2011
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Just watch out if he starts promising "change"MedsRex
August 28, 2011
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politics as usual. Ugh.MedsRex
August 28, 2011
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"we know natural processes can create new information" "there are no American troops in Baghdad" "the statue of liberty is kaput" How terribly disconcerting.material.infantacy
August 28, 2011
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'Have you written any articles here?' No, just a commenter, and a incurable plagiarizer of penetrating comments and articles by others; :)bornagain77
August 28, 2011
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Eric, Good work. You appear to be blazing a new trail by describing the similarities among disciplines from an ID perspective. Trailblazing requires a lot of hard thinking and a willingness to be original, both of which are inseparable from the willingess to take risks. It is one thing to speak of new information in principle, but it is quite another to provide it. The good news is that you have managed to be creative and stay on solid ground at the same time, a rare feat.StephenB
August 28, 2011
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Moreover, I remind Nick that there is now shown to be 'non-local' quantum information within life that is impossible to be reduced to, and thus produced by, the materialistic framework of neo-Darwinism in life; i.e. a 'non-local' cause must be supplied to explain non-local quantum information:
Here is a clip of a talk in which Alain Aspect talks about the failure of ‘local realism’, or the failure of reductive materialism, to explain reality: The Failure Of Local Realism – Reductive Materialism – Alain Aspect – video http://www.metacafe.com/w/4744145 The falsification for local realism (reductive materialism) was recently greatly strengthened: Physicists close two loopholes while violating local realism – November 2010 Excerpt: The latest test in quantum mechanics provides even stronger support than before for the view that nature violates local realism and is thus in contradiction with a classical worldview. http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-11-physicists-loopholes-violating-local-realism.html Quantum Measurements: Common Sense Is Not Enough, Physicists Show – July 2009 Excerpt: scientists have now proven comprehensively in an experiment for the first time that the experimentally observed phenomena cannot be described by non-contextual models with hidden variables. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/07/090722142824.htm (of note: hidden variables were postulated to remove the need for ‘spooky’ forces, as Einstein termed them — forces that act instantaneously at great distances, thereby breaking the most cherished rule of relativity theory, that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.) And yet, quantum entanglement, which rigorously falsified local realism (reductive materialism) as the complete description of reality, is now found in molecular biology on a massive scale! Quantum Information/Entanglement In DNA & Protein Folding – short video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/5936605/ Quantum entanglement holds together life’s blueprint – 2010 Excerpt: When the researchers analysed the DNA without its helical structure, they found that the electron clouds were not entangled. But when they incorporated DNA’s helical structure into the model, they saw that the electron clouds of each base pair became entangled with those of its neighbours (arxiv.org/abs/1006.4053v1). “If you didn’t have entanglement, then DNA would have a simple flat structure, and you would never get the twist that seems to be important to the functioning of DNA,” says team member Vlatko Vedral of the University of Oxford. http://neshealthblog.wordpress.com/2010/09/15/quantum-entanglement-holds-together-lifes-blueprint/ The relevance of continuous variable entanglement in DNA – July 2010 Excerpt: We consider a chain of harmonic oscillators with dipole-dipole interaction between nearest neighbours resulting in a van der Waals type bonding. The binding energies between entangled and classically correlated states are compared. We apply our model to DNA. By comparing our model with numerical simulations we conclude that entanglement may play a crucial role in explaining the stability of the DNA double helix. http://arxiv.org/abs/1006.4053v1 Quantum Information confirmed in DNA by direct empirical research; DNA Can Discern Between Two Quantum States, Research Shows – June 2011 Excerpt: — DNA — can discern between quantum states known as spin. – The researchers fabricated self-assembling, single layers of DNA attached to a gold substrate. They then exposed the DNA to mixed groups of electrons with both directions of spin. Indeed, the team’s results surpassed expectations: The biological molecules reacted strongly with the electrons carrying one of those spins, and hardly at all with the others. The longer the molecule, the more efficient it was at choosing electrons with the desired spin, while single strands and damaged bits of DNA did not exhibit this property. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/03/110331104014.htm Information and entropy – top-down or bottom-up development in living systems? A.C. McINTOSH Excerpt: This paper highlights the distinctive and non-material nature of information and its relationship with matter, energy and natural forces. It is proposed in conclusion that it is the non-material information (transcendent to the matter and energy) that is actually itself constraining the local thermodynamics to be in ordered disequilibrium and with specified raised free energy levels necessary for the molecular and cellular machinery to operate. http://journals.witpress.com/paperinfo.asp?pid=420 i.e. It is very interesting to note that quantum entanglement, which conclusively demonstrates that ‘information’ in its pure ‘quantum form’ is completely transcendent of any time and space constraints, should be found in molecular biology on such a massive scale, for how can the quantum entanglement ‘effect’ in biology possibly be explained by a material (matter/energy space/time) ’cause’ when the quantum entanglement ‘effect’ falsified material particles as its own ‘causation’ in the first place? (A. Aspect) Appealing to the probability of various configurations of material particles, as neo-Darwinism does, simply will not help since a timeless/spaceless cause must be supplied which is beyond the capacity of the energy/matter particles themselves to supply! To give a coherent explanation for an effect that is shown to be completely independent of any time and space constraints one is forced to appeal to a cause that is itself not limited to time and space! i.e. Put more simply, you cannot explain a effect by a cause that has been falsified by the very same effect you are seeking to explain! Improbability arguments of various ‘specified’ configurations of material particles, which have been a staple of the arguments against neo-Darwinism, simply do not apply since the cause is not within the material particles in the first place! ,,,To refute this falsification of neo-Darwinism, one must falsify Alain Aspect, and company’s, falsification of local realism (reductive materialism)!
etc.. etc.. etc..bornagain77
August 28, 2011
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Please post here any areas where you'd be interested to see ID applied. I have a few more in mind, but would also like to motivate my readers to start expanding their ID horizons. If you post a topic here I very well may touch on it in my next article.Eric Holloway
August 28, 2011
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Thanks again BA77. As always your comments are very well researched and provide a lot of valuable content. I always value your comments on my articles. Have you written any articles here?Eric Holloway
August 28, 2011
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Thanks Tribune, I agree with you completely.Eric Holloway
August 28, 2011
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Nick states; 'Since we know natural processes can create new information, the core ID argument is sunk.' Yet it is only by very deceptive means that Nick can make such a statement. The straightforward test, that has never been passed, that would need to be passed to show a violation of genetic entropy, and thus a gain of functional information,,, functional algorithmic information which is 'non-trivial', is this test: Is Antibiotic Resistance evidence for evolution? - 'The Fitness Test' - video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/3995248 Testing the Biological Fitness of Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria - 2008 http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/aid/v2/n1/darwin-at-drugstore In fact there is a null hypothesis stating that it is impossible for chance and necessity (purely material; Darwinian) processes to generate functional information. The Capabilities of Chaos and Complexity: David L. Abel - Null Hypothesis For Information Generation - 2009 To focus the scientific community’s attention on its own tendencies toward overzealous metaphysical imagination bordering on “wish-fulfillment,” we propose the following readily falsifiable null hypothesis, and invite rigorous experimental attempts to falsify it: "Physicodynamics cannot spontaneously traverse The Cybernetic Cut: physicodynamics alone cannot organize itself into formally functional systems requiring algorithmic optimization, computational halting, and circuit integration." A single exception of non trivial, unaided spontaneous optimization of formal function by truly natural process would falsify this null hypothesis. http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/1/247/pdf Can We Falsify Any Of The Following Null Hypothesis (For Information Generation) 1) Mathematical Logic 2) Algorithmic Optimization 3) Cybernetic Programming 4) Computational Halting 5) Integrated Circuits 6) Organization (e.g. homeostatic optimization far from equilibrium) 7) Material Symbol Systems (e.g. genetics) 8) Any Goal Oriented bona fide system 9) Language 10) Formal function of any kind 11) Utilitarian work http://mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/1/247/ag The Law of Physicodynamic Insufficiency - Dr David L. Abel - November 2010 Excerpt: “If decision-node programming selections are made randomly or by law rather than with purposeful intent, no non-trivial (sophisticated) function will spontaneously arise.”,,, After ten years of continual republication of the null hypothesis with appeals for falsification, no falsification has been provided. The time has come to extend this null hypothesis into a formal scientific prediction: “No non trivial algorithmic/computational utility will ever arise from chance and/or necessity alone.” http://www.scitopics.com/The_Law_of_Physicodynamic_Insufficiency.html The GS (genetic selection) Principle – David L. Abel – 2009 Excerpt: Stunningly, information has been shown not to increase in the coding regions of DNA with evolution. Mutations do not produce increased information. Mira et al (65) showed that the amount of coding in DNA actually decreases with evolution of bacterial genomes, not increases. This paper parallels Petrov’s papers starting with (66) showing a net DNA loss with Drosophila evolution (67). Konopka (68) found strong evidence against the contention of Subba Rao et al (69, 70) that information increases with mutations. The information content of the coding regions in DNA does not tend to increase with evolution as hypothesized. Konopka also found Shannon complexity not to be a suitable indicator of evolutionary progress over a wide range of evolving genes. Konopka’s work applies Shannon theory to known functional text. Kok et al. (71) also found that information does not increase in DNA with evolution. As with Konopka, this finding is in the context of the change in mere Shannon uncertainty. The latter is a far more forgiving definition of information than that required for prescriptive information (PI) (21, 22, 33, 72). It is all the more significant that mutations do not program increased PI. Prescriptive information either instructs or directly produces formal function. No increase in Shannon or Prescriptive information occurs in duplication. What the above papers show is that not even variation of the duplication produces new information, not even Shannon “information.” http://www.bioscience.org/2009/v14/af/3426/3426.pdf http://www.us.net/life/index.htm further note: “The First Rule of Adaptive Evolution”: Break or blunt any functional coded element whose loss would yield a net fitness gain - Michael Behe - December 2010 Excerpt: In its most recent issue The Quarterly Review of Biology has published a review by myself of laboratory evolution experiments of microbes going back four decades.,,, The gist of the paper is that so far the overwhelming number of adaptive (that is, helpful) mutations seen in laboratory evolution experiments are either loss or modification of function. Of course we had already known that the great majority of mutations that have a visible effect on an organism are deleterious. Now, surprisingly, it seems that even the great majority of helpful mutations degrade the genome to a greater or lesser extent.,,, I dub it “The First Rule of Adaptive Evolution”: Break or blunt any functional coded element whose loss would yield a net fitness gain.(that is a net 'fitness gain' within a 'stressed' environment i.e. remove the stress from the environment and the parent strain is always more 'fit') http://behe.uncommondescent.com/2010/12/the-first-rule-of-adaptive-evolution/ Evolution Vs Genetic Entropy - Andy McIntosh - video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/4028086bornagain77
August 28, 2011
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Thanks for the response, that's an interesting point about natural processes. Can you show me the evidence that natural processes create new information? I've been looking for such evidence for a long time, but every counter-ID article I've read has, unfortunately, resorted to some form of subterfuge. Believe me, if I found good anti-ID fodder I'd be all over it, since skepticism about ID is what originally lead me to investigating its veracity. As for your other point, it is also good. Yes, my argument about intelligent designers also implies that there is room for command decisions in an effective economy. The main point is what enables the greatest number of intelligent agents to create intelligent design. Unfortunately, leaving it only up to a few commanders is still a net decrease in intelligent design. This is why during the Cold War the US forces were more effective against USSR forces due to our use of decentralized execution in carrying out missions. Also, ID provides a coherent basis for the invisible hand of the market. Since the market is the conglomeration of intelligent design by intelligent agents, ID implies that there would be an emergent order and economy to its behavior. However, ID also provides a significant and very important caution in this regard. At the point where the agents in the market cease to behave rationally, and instead merely follow the crowd or indulge in groundless speculation we know that the market is headed for a bust. So, one interesting application of Dembski's CSI metric would be to measure the amount of CSI being produced in the market. As long as a market segment demonstrated CSI production, we could invest in said market with a fair amount of confidence. But, our confidence should plummet if we noticed CSI drop off. An additional point is that our market is likewise in trouble the more that trading becomes automated. The more it is automated the less CSI is being contributed. Instead, we are reduced to a more Kenseyian command economy, such as you describe, leaving the market much more susceptible to collapse. Perhaps our recent economic woes are indicative of this dilemma, since the vast majority of the current trades are accomplished by algorithms. If there were more ways to mass incorporate intelligent agent CSI production into algorithmic trading then we might possess the best of both worlds. Again, thanks for your comments Nick, they helped me elucidate my points more.Eric Holloway
August 28, 2011
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Since we know natural processes can create new information, the core ID argument is sunk. But, even if ID worked, your anti-Keynesian logic wouldn't follow. ID's skepticalness about natural selection and other self-organization processes would, if ID people were being consistent, lead to skepticism about the invisible hand of the market. Unintelligent processes can't produce anything but noise and damage, only intelligence can produce coherent and effective function, right? Therefore, clearly, economies would work better if intelligent designers were making command decisions about how they work, rather than just leaving it up to the auto-regulation of the market. [heads explode across the ID movement]NickMatzke_UD
August 28, 2011
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On the other hand, ID implies that some events may potentially have irreducible final causal explanations, and no matter what one may know about how an event occurred they will not be able to completely explain its occurrence. I don't agree. For me, ID is a means of determining whether something was designed which, while not being the final casual explanation, would be an integral step to finding it. If one mindlessly believes that a designed object was the product of undirected events, one will NEVER determine the true how-it-was-done causal explanation regarding it. Remember, ID does not address the existence of God only of design.tribune7
August 28, 2011
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William - the deceptive part here is that they are partially right - there is only so much hard drive space. But a good retort might be, how much content could fit on hard drives in the 1920s?johnnyb
August 28, 2011
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At a different forum I was involved in a rather lengthy argument about whether or not economics was a zero-sum game, and I realized that many (if not most) socialist-big government advocates in fact believe that wealth cannot be generated, that it is only distributed and redistributed; that the more the wealthy have, the less the non-wealthy necessarily can have. They kept referring to limited resources. I asked them how downloadable digital content (movies, music, games, books, etc.) was a limited resource, and their answer was that there was only so much hard drive space that could exist. Hats off to Mr. Holloway for an extremely interesting advancement of understanding about ID in terms of the efficient cause / final cause perspective.William J Murray
August 28, 2011
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