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Denying the Obvious

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Living things appear to be designed for a purpose. That statement is entirely non-controversial. Even the world’s most famous materialist admits it: “Biology is the study of complicated things that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.” Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design (New York; Norton, 1986), 1.

I will go one step further and assert that the appearance of design in living things is far from ambiguous or equivocal; it is overwhelming. Honest materialists do not dispute this assertion either. Dawkins again: Living things “overwhelmingly impress us with the appearance of design as if by a master watchmaker . . .” Id., 21.

To be sure, Dawkins attributes the overwhelming appearance of design in living things to the accretion of random errors sorted through a fitness function called “natural selection.” But advances in the study of living systems in recent years (especially at the microscopic level) have made the “accretion of random errors” explanation for the overwhelming appearance of design seem at least dubitable, if not downright facile.

Moreover, as our knowledge of the vast gulf separating living things from non-living matter has increased, the less satisfactory “chance dunnit” explanations have become. It was one thing to attribute the appearance of the first living organisms to chance events occurring in some “warm little pond” 100 years ago when Haeckel was suggesting a cell was a “simple globule of protoplasm.” Haeckel’s glib simplification is amusing now that we know that even the simplest living cells are marvels of staggeringly complex nano-technology.

Better, it seems to me, to admit that living things appear overwhelmingly to be designed because they are in fact designed. Dawkins and his ilk deny design, however, not because the evidence compels them to deny it, but because their a priori metaphysical commitments compel them to do so. In other words, Dawkins denies the obvious because his religious beliefs require him to do so.

When one accepts materialism, in addition to design, one is compelled to deny other glaringly obvious truths. Here are a few:

1. Good and evil exist. Dawkins denies that good and evil exist. Yet he most assuredly knows that they do exist. In fact, like almost everyone else who denies the existence of good and evil, he lives his everyday life as if this most basic truth claim of his is absolutely false.

2. The universe is fine-tuned for the existence of life. No materialist denies that literally dozens of constants rest on a razor’s edge between “too much” and “too little” for the existence of life. They do, however, deny that this finely tuned state of events results from fine tuning. Instead, they resort to glib “it must be that way, because that is the way that it is,” anthropic arguments that are laughable for their lack of curiosity and intellectual rigor.

3. The DNA code is a code. All semiotic codes whose provenance is known have been designed by intelligent agents. Materialists must assert that the most elegant, sophisticated and complex semiotic code in the known universe resulted from . . . Actually, they don’t have a clue how DNA first arose though blind chance and mechanical law; the only thing they know for certain is that intelligence played no role.

4. “I” exist. Materialists, to be logically consistent, must say that consciousness is an illusion. In other words, when a materialist uses the word “I” in a sentence, he must believe that the pronoun has no real antecedent.

5. Free will exists. Materialists must deny the existence of libertarian free will, which requires them to say things like “I [which word has no real antecedent] choose [an illusion of course] not to believe [even though I admit it is absurd to suggest that particles in motion can hold such a thing as a “belief”] in free will.”

6. A man’s body is designed to be complementary  with a woman’s body and vice versa. All of the confusion about whether same-sex relations are licit would be swept away in an instant if everyone acknowledged this obvious truth.

I welcome our readers to add to this list.

[Update]
Since I posted the OP, our readers have suggested the following for the list.

7. Tim writes: “Although not glaringly obvious, one truth that must be denied by the strict materialist is that the world around us can even be understood by us.” In a similar vein, JDH writes: “A corollary to the fact that true materialist must deny that free will exists is that in a truly materialist world, it is impossible to practice science.”

8. Barry:  The world is broken. I’m broken. Everyone knows  the way things are is different from the way things ought to be. Everyone knows the way they are is different from the way they ought to be.

9.  WJM:  “Materialists must deny the fact that when they argue, they are making an appeal to an entity assumed to be unbound/uncaused by physics and chemistry.”

[Update 2]

The sentence in bold has been revised to take into account a valid comment by Mark Frank, for which I thank him.

Comments
MF @ 75. Thank you yet again.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2014
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Picking up on your #80, esteemed Mung and hoping to develop it a little, such blind hatred as is being evidenced by the attitude and actions of Israels' many enemies seems to me to have glaringly demonic dimension to it. The cold, calculated cynicism of Hamas (and apparently, Hesbollah before them) in using the Palestinian civilians as human shields, reminds me of those hideous 'tug-of-hate' cases, where one parent will kill their own children, simply to spite their spouse or partner. Of course, the parallel is not exact by any means, the players and dynamics being quite different, but the pitch of the hatred so exceeding the strength of any love, is so characteristically human, in the worst sense, and not all that uncommon within families. And who is ultimately responsible for so many Palestinian deaths? Who else but the so-called 'international community' ceaselessly fanning the anti-Jewish hatred and the most unrealistic expectations of the Palestinians. Never in the history of the world has a weaker people vanquished a stronger people by very definition; while history and common sense should tell us that, even with the backing of Qatar, Iran and others, Israel are not going to break the pattern of the stronger triumphing, and be beaten by the Palestinians and their allies. Geopolitics is normally the most wickedly hard-headed theatre of human endeavour, but the Palestinians have continually been used almost literally as cannon fodder, by Hamas, aided and abetted by the 'international community' (of Israel's enemies [and vacillating friends]), surely in the certain knowledge that they themselves are the prime culprits in causing the countless deaths of Palestinians over the years and the demolishing of their homes. They have prevented the Palestinians from arriving at a realistic and even fruitful modus vivendi with Israel, as good neighbours. Typical of the 'international community' were their 'pious' and totally unrealistic, admonitions to Israel to show proportionality in response to the rocket attacks from Gaza. Instead of fighting a war, you'd think it was a mixed- doubles tennis match they were playing. All that was missing were the fruity tones of the late Dan Maskell: 'Oh, I say! What a rocket of a volley that was, and a wonder cross court lob by Mortar in return!' Blinded by their hatred, it's all crocodile tears from Israel's enemies. If they really cared about the Palestinians, they would stop encouraging the wars and intifadas they wage against the Jews, and all start to face the reality and permanence of Israel in their midst, as potential brothers. It is beginning to have an Armaggedonish look about it, now, as if Israel goes the ME will likely be incinerated with her.Axel
July 28, 2014
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I may have put myself out on a limb with this post to the NCSE blog (Thanks to Cornelius Hunter for the list plus a few of my own) ----------------------- The insults, ridicule and mocking proliferates here at NCSE, with little actual content. So I propose we tackle this "mountain of Evidence" and proceed to mine this mountain for the treasures it supposedly contains. Let's get the explosives and obliterate the rocks and dirt; let's bring in the big shovels and fill the big trucks with the raw ore and take it to the Concentrators for separation and refinement; let's separate the junk from the copper, silver, gold and load the ore cars with the concentrate and send it off to the smelters. From the smelters we expect the finished and refined copper, silver, gold and more. So lets begin this mining of the "Mountain of Evidence" beginning with the following questions concerning the precious evidence contained therein. Let's mine and concentrate and refine and answer the following: We don’t know how the laws of nature evolved, we don’t know how the 240+ physical and natural constants evolved, We don’t know how the first cell evolved we don’t know how the DNA code evolved, we don’t know how replication evolved, we don’t know how RNA polymerase evolved, we don’t know how transcription evolved, we don’t know how genes evolved, we don’t know how translation evolved, we don’t know how hemoglobin evolved, we don’t know how the electron transport chain evolved, we don’t know how ATPase evolved, we don’t know how eukaryotes evolved, we don’t know how multicellular organisms evolved, we don’t know how the vision cascade evolved, we don’t know how visual pattern recognition evolved, we don’t know how hearing evolved, we don’t know how audio pattern recognition evolved, we don’t know how the kidney evolved, we don’t know how the liver evolved, we don’t know how the circularity system evolved, we don’t know how mammals evolved, we don’t know how male/female anatomical sexuality evolved, we don’t know how bio sonar evolved, we don’t know how the hummingbird tongue evolved, we don’t know how the whale evolved, we don’t know how photosynthesis evolved, we don’t know how the butterfly evolved, we don’t know how flight feathers evolved. we don’t know how flight evolved we don’t know how turtles evolved, we don’t know how consciousness evolved, we don’t know how biological information (i.e. DNA) evolved, We don’t know how the various machines within the cell evolved, we don’t know how altruism evolved, we don’t know how bees evolved, we don’t know how all of the body organs, including skin co-evolved to their present form, we don’t know how human intellect evolved (i.e. music, art, literature etc.) … and more I’m sure Carl Sagan once said "Extraordinary claims demand extraordinary answers." I disagree, ... I believe extraordinary claims demand ordinary answers. So let's begin. And in this mining operation I would expect concrete definitive and easy to understand and follow answers, and not a bunch of dross in the form of insults and mockery. Begin wherever you wish, the easy ones first would be fine. We have a mountain of questions … do we have a mountain of evidence? Cheers, donayearningforpublius
July 28, 2014
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vel @ 74
For me while design may be obvious the causes of the design are anything but.
Unless you want to redefine the word, intelligent agency is the only known cause of design. That is why the Dawkins' invented the word "designoid" for the which appears designed but wasn't.Joe
July 28, 2014
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Mark Frank @#70- If simultaneity is relative to the observer’s frame of reference, that means it is a case of perception, as I said in 69.
there is no absolute concept of “at the same time”
Then guess what, "Einstein", A and B didn't happen at the same time and neither did B and C. So no way would A and C happen at the same time. As I said: However if it is a fact that A does occur the same time as B and B occurs the same time as C then A occurs the same time as C. That still stands, regardless of your inability to understand it.Joe
July 28, 2014
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Mark
I am not going to get into a debate with you about self-evident truths but I should clarify my position. I don’t dispute the logical laws – I just think we should not be dogmatic about their nature.
Oh please! The point is not that you don't dispute logical laws. The point is that you think they are disputable. For you, any claim in support of a self-evident truth is "dogmatic," which means that you don't think that such laws are really laws at all. Thus, you contradict yourself when you say that you don't dispute the law of non-contradiction. It's hardly a law of it is open for debate.
I do dispute that the law of causality is self-evident – in fact I think it is false.
Well, of course you do. If no law is self evident, it would follow that law x is not self evident. By the way, it is ironic that you choose to remind Barry of the unbridgeable gap between "is" and "seems" after assiduously trying to bridge that gap on another thread in support of subjectivism.StephenB
July 28, 2014
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Re MF (who studiously ignores what I write): To object to the self evident nature of causality is misplaced, a strawman error. For, strictly, it is a corollary to another principle under certain conditions of being. That principle is self evident and unobjectionable, but one needs to understand modes of being to see the corollary status of causality regarding possible, contingent beings. I will only argue for a weak form of the principle of sufficient reason, which is unobjectionable. Considering an entity A, we may ask, why A. Then we may expect, hope or simply seek a good and sufficient reason. On so doing, we will see possible vs impossible beings . . . in effect if there is a possible world in which A would exist were it instantiated, A is a possible being. If there is no world in which A can exist -- because core attributes stand in mutual contradiction [e.g. in the ordinary sense of square and circle, a square circle] -- then A is an impossible being. Of possible beings, we have necessary beings where A must exist in any possible world. Beings, where there are possible worlds in which they do not exist and those in which they do, are contingent. How this obtains, is that at least one enabling factor exists, that must be present for A to begin, or to continue. An excellent case in point is the dependence of a fire on oxidiser, heat, fuel and a heat-generating chain reaction. Such factors are necessary, enabling causal factors. And, cause-effect relationships simply tell us the ways in which such dependencies obtain. Necessary factors, if absent, block emergence. Sufficient clusters of factors will be adequate for A to occur or continue, and must include all necessary, enabling factors. However, as ever so many are unfamiliar with modes of being or possible worlds analyses, or the like, there will often be a primary failure of understanding, and perhaps even a pons asinorum. (Well do I remember how hard it was to make sense of Calculus at first.) Quantum effects are often presented as causeless, but we can readily identify enabling factors, some even trivial. Such as no unstable atoms, no RA decay. And where we do not know factors beyond being sufficient for a stochastic process to work with some probability, that is still not causeless. Likewise, I note that nothing, properly denotes non-being. As such, it has no causal capacity whatsoever. Recent attempts to call something (a quantum vacuum) nothing are self-evidently ill informed. Of course, all of this was recently pointed out to MF at length, but when ideology intervenes, it blocks ability to assent to what is genuinely self-evident. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2014
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PS: SB's clip from the Angelic doctor is also bang on.kairosfocus
July 28, 2014
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A_b: Please, scroll up to 51 above, from yesterday morning:
4 –> On that, it has been long since pointed out to MF et al that obviousness/plausibility to a given person is not the same as self evidence. 5 –> A SET, is one that is seen as true, and as necessarily so, once one properly understands its meaning, on pain of PATENT absurdity. 6 –> Understanding, in light of our experience of the world, is pivotal. Many people lack the degree of understanding required, some primary through ignorance. Others, through being locked into ideologies that block them from accepting a SET, even at the cost of clinging to the most absurd positions . . .
The comment gives more context, and specific relevant examples. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2014
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If Israel today put down its arms, the country's Palestinian Muslim neighbors who support Hamas would immediately seek to commit genocide against Israel's Jewish citizens. So says the Hamas charter. If the Palestinians put down their arms, Israel would immediately seek to do business with them, forming a relationship like America has with Canada and Mexico. Turn your neighbors into corpses or turn them into trading partners. That's the yawning moral difference between the ultimate goals of Hamas and the ultimate hopes of Israel. In a sane world this would be blindingly obvious. As Ann Gauger observes in her current cover article for us, there are some things that really shouldn't need to be said. This is one. Harris's article merits attention because he feels that in his community of aggressive materialists and atheists, the obvious isn't obvious at all.
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2014/07/from_sam_harris088301.htmlMung
July 28, 2014
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or example, it seems self-evident that a rock is solid. But we now know that it is mostly empty space; definitely not solid.
Don't trick yourself into thinking that evidentiary scientific statements are on the same plane as basic principles of logic. Whether a rock is solid depends on how we define "solid," the capability of our instruments, our observational prowess, etc. That is a very different situation from, say, the question of whether something can be both true and not true at the same time. It is a trivial matter to come up with examples of scientific advancements that have overturned prior understandings of particular physical phenomena. However, to date no discovery has ever overturned (nor even provided a rational basis for overturning) basic principles of right reason and logic. The basic principles of logic that inevitably undergird scientific investigation must not be conflated with our temporary limited understanding and application of our scientific investigative efforts. They are two very different things. Mark Frank's examples @50 suffer from the same flaw.Eric Anderson
July 28, 2014
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"Self-evident truth" is a great phrase, but what does it mean? For example, it seems self-evident that a rock is solid. But we now know that it is mostly empty space; definitely not solid.Acartia_bogart
July 28, 2014
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#76 Stephenb I am not going to get into a debate with you about self-evident truths but I should clarify my position. I don't dispute the logical laws - I just think we should not be dogmatic about their nature. I do dispute that the law of causality is self-evident - in fact I think it is false.Mark Frank
July 28, 2014
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Mark
The problem being how to tell a self-evident truth from one that just seems obviously true – not by noting that it seems obviously true!
That isn't a problem. Aquinas explained it 800 years ago: A thing can be self-evident in either of two ways: on the one hand, self-evident in itself, though not to us; on the other, self-evident in itself, and to us. A proposition is self-evident because the predicate is included in the essence of the subject, as "Man is an animal," for animal is contained in the essence of man. If, therefore the essence of the predicate and subject be known to all, the proposition will be self-evident to all; as is clear with regard to the first principles of demonstration, the terms of which are common things that no one is ignorant of, such as being and non-being, whole and part, and such like. If, however, there are some to whom the essence of the predicate and subject is unknown, the proposition will be self-evident in itself, but not to those who do not know the meaning of the predicate and subject of the proposition. Therefore, it happens, as Boethius says (Hebdom., the title of which is: "Whether all that is, is good"), "that there are some mental concepts self-evident only to the learned, as that incorporeal substances are not in space." The first principles of right reason, LOI, LNC, LEM, the whole/part relationship, are self-evident to all, not just to the learned. Included in "all" would be you. Of course, you can say that first principles are not self-evident to you, and no one can stop you from saying it, but insofar as you do that, your credibility goes out the window.StephenB
July 28, 2014
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#72 BA The problem being how to tell a self-evident truth from one that just seems obviously true - not by noting that it seems obviously true! But I am not going to go over all that again. Thanks for accepting my point so graciously. While you are at it you might want correct "truths" 5 and 6. In 5 I think you mean "Free will does exist". In 6 I think you mean "complementary" not "complimentary". I have no doubt many men have been complimentary about other men's bodies - probably including yourself. Whether they are complementary is a different issue.Mark Frank
July 28, 2014
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MF, I don’t want to go over the design debate all over again. I was interested in validity of Barry’s argument. Sorry if that is frustrating. Not at all, I am interested in the same thing. For me while design may be obvious the causes of the design are anything but.velikovskys
July 28, 2014
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It is obvious that people deny the obvious, but I deny that it is obvious that people deny the obvious.Mung
July 28, 2014
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MF, do not run too far with my statement in 65. Yes, some propositions that at first appear to be “obviously” true, are not necessarily true. However, there is a subset of obviously true propositions – which we call “self-evident truths” – that are not so limited. Self evident truths are both obviously true and necessarily true on pain of descent into patent absurdity, as KF has aptly elucidated above. The law of identity (A=A) is one such "obvious truth" that is also a self-evident truth.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2014
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MF @ 66. I take your point and it is a valid one. My argument was not clear and it could have been mistaken for the one you suggest. I have revised the OP. Thank you.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2014
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#69 Joe - I fear you have your science is wrong. It is not just a perception. It is actually true that simultaneity is not transitive. Actually there is much more to it than that - simultaneity is relative to the observer's frame of reference and there is no absolute concept of "at the same time". But it follows from that the simultaneity is not necessarily transitive. Your reaction rather proves the point that what appears obvious may not be true - a point which Barry conceded in #65.Mark Frank
July 28, 2014
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I believe Einstein was talking about perception- as in it is perceived that A occurs at the same time as B and B occurs the same time as C. However if it is a fact that A does occur the same time as B and B occurs the same time as C then A occurs the same time as C.Joe
July 28, 2014
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BA: The trajectory of observations is indeed different for the diverse cases. In addition, the attempt to undermine self evidence that also lurks runs into difficulties of order: || + ||| --> ||||| is obvious, so it must be untrustworthy. There is a missing factor. There are self evident truths, which must be respected. And, on the design inference, the specific context at work (though the objections to logic of cause and effect etc also lurk), we can identify and even measure a quantity, functionally specific complex information [FSCI], which routinely turns out to be produced by design. On inspecting the mathematics of blind search of config spaces,we can see that it is maximally unlikely that a solar system or even cosmos scale search that is not intelligently directed, will succeed. So, while this is not a case of self evidence, it is a case where we have a widespread phenomenon, a known cause and analysis that gives good reason for those observations. But, when we turn to cases in the world of life such as the genome or proteins in amino acid space, we see that there is a resistance to the idea that blind chance is inadequate, a plainly ideologically motivated resistance in many cases that are notorious. There is indeed an irony, of ideological lock-in while imagining one self to be the vanguard of progress. But then, if one can tell oneself that those design thinkers are nothing but Creationists in cheap tuxedos, one can imagine one is Galileo all over again confronting the Inquisition. We need to correctly understand the past and ourselves if we are to draw sensible lessons from it. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2014
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I have not been following this thread in any depth but it seems to be that most people accept as true that species evolve through some process associated with the term "natural selection." We now know that there is no known basis for such a claim while it still seems reasonable to the average person and to the dedicated scientist. Which means that scientific consensus is nonsense. Also it was almost 200 years after the death of Galileo that science solved two problems with the earth revolving around the sun, the parallax problem and the wind problem. So what seems reasonable to Galileo took a long time to gain support with science.jerry
July 28, 2014
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#65 Barry - of course I meant 2. It would be nuts to pretend that every statement that appears to be obviously true is false! As I understand it, the argument of your OP is: 1) Denying that life has bee designed entails various statements. 2) These statements are obviously true. 3) Therefore denying design is false. If this is your argument (and I am sure you will correct me if I am wrong) it seems highly relevant that just because something seems obviously true it is not necessarily true. Indeed I believe several of them to be false.Mark Frank
July 28, 2014
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“The sun moves round the earth” Yes, this idea was once widely held. Here’s the difference between your example and mine with respect to design: As science advanced the idea that the sun moved around the earth became less and less defensible until it was finally abandoned. Conversely, as science advances the idea that the first life could have been generated spontaneously in some warm little pond has become less and less plausible and the “obvious” explanation (i.e., design) has become more and more plausible. You don’t get it do you? When you invoke Galileo and Copernicus you are condemning those, like yourself, who cling to the old orthodoxy in the face of new developments that make that orthodoxy all but untenable. As you know, I am a connoisseur of fine irony, and this particular dish is especially delicious. Finally, the logic underlying your argument is fallacious. Your argument appears to be: 1. Some propositions once held to be obviously true were not. 2. Therefore, propositions that appear to us to be obviously true are not. 2 does not follow from 1. You might respond that you do not mean 2, but instead you mean “Therefore, propositions that appear to us to be obviously true are not NECESSARILY true.” I will grant that. But if that is what you meant the conclusion is irrelevant to my post and in no rebuts its internal logic.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2014
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Mark Frank: Prior to Einstein I would have thought most people would have thought it was obvious that if A happens at the same time as B and B happens at the same time as C then A happens at the same time as C. In fact don’t you think most people would still think it obvious? Yet its false. Evidence please.
If that is the case then the answer is that this is one reason I believe there is no design in biology.
You are not a biologist nor have you given any indication you can properly assess evidence. And I meant what I said: So are you saying that since most biologists do not see design in biology that there is design in biology? We are dealing with opposites here, Mark.Joe
July 28, 2014
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Mark Frank, the first example you use to support your argument is simply false. As KF points out, the ancients knew the earth was round and even calculated its circumference. You are guilty of subscribing to one of the more pernicious modern conceits.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2014
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#61 velikovskys I don't want to go over the design debate all over again. I was interested in validity of Barry's argument. Sorry if that is frustrating.Mark Frank
July 28, 2014
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Mark Frank, If that is the case then the answer is that this is one reason I believe there is no design in biology. I have other reasons. Perhaps you could define meaning of design you are using, for me the shape of a Bristlecone Pine is designed by both its genetic parameters and environmental factors. The result is design in biology.velikovskys
July 28, 2014
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That it makes him look like the ass that he, in all probability, is in real life? You betcha.jstanley01
July 28, 2014
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