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Highlights from Mike Gene’s THE DESIGN MATRIX

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A friend of mine emailed me the following quotes from Mike Gene’s new book THE DESIGN MATRIX, available from Amazon.com here.

“The vast majority of scientists do not view Intelligent Design as science and I happen to agree with them.” (pg. xi)

“I should make it explicitly clear from the start that I did not write this book to help those seeking to change the way we teach science to our kids. I do not argue that design deserves to be known as science. At best, Intelligent Design may only be a nascent proto-science and thus does not belong in the public school curriculum. Nor does this book argue that evolution is false and deserves to be criticized in the public school curriculum. If the truth is to be told, I oppose such actions.” (pg. xi)

“Unlike the Face on Mars, the biotic face of design remains at the highest relevant resolution.” (pg. 17)

“If living processes are the products of design, it comes as no surprise that so much of biology is more akin to the study of engineering than to chemistry or physics. … Biology, and the language of biology, is not behaving in a manner similar to the relate sciences of chemistry, physics, geology, meteorology, etc.” (pgs. 58, 60)

“the concept of design can be useful as a research guide.” (pg. 83)

“We do not normally infer non-teleological causes when confronted with machinery … The existence of a machine is not something we would expect, or predict, from non-teleological causes. A non-teleological perspective that is confronted with the reality of molecular machines reacts by insisting non-teleological causes could possibly explain their origin. But this is not the way the inferential winds are blowing.” (pgs. 97-98)

“molecular machines conform to a rigorous definition of machine.” (pg. 102)

“[C]ooption and preadaptation do not necessarily follow from random variability culled by maximizing fitness. Cooption and preadaptation are phenomena that follow from the architecture of life itself. … In contrast, it is very difficult to imagine front-loaded evolution without multi-functionality, gene duplication, cooption, and preadaptation, as these are just the type of mechanisms that one would use to unmask secondary designs buried in primary designs. In fact, the hypothesis of front-loaded evolution predicts the existence of such mechanisms of evolution. Life itself, and its stem parts, was designed such that cooption and preadaptation would be made available to Darwinian evolution.” (pg. 178-179)

“the truth of any design inference does not entail that we should be able to uncover independent evidence of the designer.” (pg. 189)

“[T]he hallmark of evolution is the modification of pre-existing parts. What if we find structures that lack this hallmark? What if we find something that does not appear as a modification of a pre-existing structure? This would hint of that ‘clean sheet of paper’ and count against borrowing. With this criterion, we may not only have something that helps us better assess our design suspicion, but we may actually have a clue to help distinguish between front-loading and intelligent intervention.” (pg. 210)

“When we are dealing with molecular machines, (which are composed of functionally indivisible parts), many of the most well documented examples of Darwinian evolution become irrelevant. None of these data amount to evidence that irreducibly complex machines likewise evolved through Darwinian mechanisms. This is a significant point.” (pgs. 214-215)

“If the machine evolved through cooption, we would then expect to find remnants of this evolution in the form of simpler precursors, a myriad of permutations, and functions existing apart from the irreducibly complex system. If, however, the machine did not come into existence through cooption, we would expect to find the system to be composed of largely system-dependent parts, with little or no evidence of any precursor states that predate the machine in question.” (pg. 232)

“Good planning not only requires the use of reason and knowledge, but it also involves an element of foresight. Foresight, which is essentially rationality applied to prediction, is something the blind watchmaker cannot possibly have.” (pg. 254)

Comments
gosh I think that we should be able to criticize all theories in class. Science should be seen as a tentative process and not a collection of facts to memorize that nobody can question. On the other hand if the whole point of public school is to indoctrinate kids to produce useful servants of the state then yes I can understand Mike Gene's view.ari-freedom
December 19, 2007
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While I like Mike, I must disagree with him here.. “The vast majority of scientists do not view Intelligent Design as science and I happen to agree with them.” The SETI initiative is science because it employs the science of design detection. The ID initiative is science because it employs the science of design detection. The SETI project sits well with materialist ideology and is subsequently accepted by the scientific materialist community as science. Biological ID does not sit well with materialism and is subsequently rejected as science. The difference is not science but ideology. It seems to me that the initial SETI search for a narrow bandwith signal is a search for a mild (and subsequently suspicious) form of CSI. As soon as a narrow bandwith carrier is discovered the search will be on for whatever CSI the carrier is carrying.William Brookfield
December 19, 2007
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It is exciting following the cutting edge of science and watching as brick after brick is removed from the wall of evolution. I look forward with great anticipation to the day when evolution crumples and is replaced by science which actually explains our physical world. At first the big bang was difficult to accept, so too will be designed life, but good science leads us to the truth.Peter
December 19, 2007
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I'm a bit confused. Judging from these quotes it would seem Mr. Gene believes two things: 1) Darwinian mechanisms alone are insufficient explanations of the existence of molecular machines. Something more is needed, such as "front-loaded" information. 2) There should not be criticisms of the current Darwinian orthodoxy in science classrooms. Doesn't it follow from these two beliefs that Mr. Gene thinks insufficient explanations in science classrooms should go uncriticized and, as is too often the case, be uncritically accepted by students? That seems strange to me. I guess I'll just have to read his book and hear these quotes in their proper context.Clumsy Brute
December 19, 2007
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proto-science? That's a slap in the face. People have been doing work on intelligent design for nearly 2 decades, right? It's gone well past being a proto-science, and well into being an established (if controversial) science. I think it's time to move into the next phase, and do some applied intelligent design work!Nochange
December 19, 2007
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