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The Psychology of Blinding Obedience to a Paradigm

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In church on Sunday the sermon was about Jesus’ raising Lazarus from the dead.  What does this have to do with the ID/Darwinism debate?  Nothing, of course.  But the story does contain a remarkable illustration of what I will call the “psychology of blinding obedience to a paradigm.” 

 

The central claim of ID can be illumined by a very simple illustration from the movie 2001, a Space Odyssey.  After the opening sequences, the plot of the movie shifts to a scientist journeying to the moon to investigate an “anomaly” that has been discovered buried under the moon’s surface.  Here is a picture of the anomaly.  The scientists immediately reach an obvious conclusion – the anomaly was created by an intelligent being.  In other words, they make a “design inference.”  Why do they make such an inference?  Because the anomaly exhibits complex specified information (“CSI”) that cannot reasonably be attributed to chance, mechanical necessity or both acting together.  Therefore, the commonsense conclusion reached by the scientists is that “act of an intelligent agent” is the most reasonable explanation for the existence of the anomaly. 

 

NASA plans to resume its moon missions in the mid teens.  Now suppose that the next time we visit the moon, an astronaut actually finds an “anomaly” like the one in the film.  Can there be any doubt that scientists would make the same design inference?  Would such an inference be even the least bit controversial?  Obviously not.

 

Lets return to earth.  If you have not already done so, click on the video in the upper right of UD’s home page.  This is an excerpt from “Expelled” called  “Complexity of the Cell.”  After watching this video you can see why the cell has been called a “nano-city.”  It has a library (DNA molecules); it has streets; it has walls that open and close; it has specialized molecules that move other molecules up and down the streets as required.  And the marvelous thing about all of this is that it is completely automated.  The cell is, quite simply, a marvel of nano-technology that exhibits CSI vastly greater than the “anomaly” in 2001, a Space Odyssey. 

 

There is no known natural source of CSI.  In fact, all of the CSI that anyone has ever observed has been the product of purposeful actions by intelligent agents.  Accordingly, ID proponents make an inference – that the CSI in a cell is also the result of purposeful acts by an intelligent agent.  But unlike the anomaly on the moon, this seemingly commonsense inference is not only controversial, it is vehemently denied by the proponents of neo-Darwinian Evolution (“NDE”).  Proponents of NDE vociferously and repeatedly claim that there is “overwhelming evidence” proving that Darwinian processes can account for dramatic additions to CSI.  Well, I have been following this debate for a few years now, and I am still waiting to see that evidence.

 

And that takes us back to our starting point.  Consider the last two verses of the Lazarus story (John 11:45-46).  Jesus has just raised from the dead a man who has been in his grave for four days, and in these two verses John tells us that after seeing this miracle many believed Jesus’ claims, but – and here is the remarkable part – many did not.  This last group included agents of the religious leaders who were plotting Jesus’ death, and instead of believing in Jesus, these agents went back to their masters and made their reports.

 

What can we learn about human psychology from this story?  Unfortunately, some people will always be subject to the “psychology of blinding obedience to a paradigm.”  In the Lazarus story the agents of the religious leaders had a stake in the continuance of the existing religious paradigm.  Whether their stake in the status quo was financial or psychological or some other stake, we are not told, but one thing is clear – their stake shackled them to a blinding obedience to the existing paradigm.  They were blinded even to the evidence of one of the greatest miracles that had ever been reported up until that time – a man four days in the grave raised from the dead.  Because of their blindness, they literally could not see either the flaws in the status quo they were defending or the benefits of the alternative being offered.

 

Here at UD we see the same phenomenon in operation day after day in the ID/Darwinism debate.  I am continually amazed that seemingly intelligent people, who for all I know are acting in complete good faith, simply cannot grasp even elementary principles of reasoning if to do so would require them to question the NDE orthodoxy. 

 

For example, in a recent post I used the example of Mt. Rushmore to illustrate a known instance of intelligent design.  I asked my readers to consider an investigator who knows nothing about the origin of the faces on the mountain other than their bare existence (perhaps an investigator from the far distant future after an apocalypse has erased all other records of human activity).  The investigator might conclude that the faces on the mountain were the product of chance and necessity, i.e., wind and rain and other environmental factors against all odds combined to form the exact replicas of the faces of four men.  Or the investigator could conclude from the obvious CSI exhibited by the carvings that they are the product of the purposeful efforts of an intelligent agent. 

 

I then asked my readers to consider a cell, which exhibits VASTLY MORE CSI than Mt. Rushmore.  An investigator could conclude that the CSI of a cell – this marvel of nano-technology – is the product of random replication errors (i.e., chance) culled by natural selection (i.e., mechanical necessity).  Or, as in the Mt. Rushmore example, the investigator could conclude that the CSI was the product of the purposeful efforts of an intelligent agent. 

 

Which is the more reasonable explanation for the CSI in the cell, I asked my readers.  One Darwinist, an obviously intelligent person acting in what I trust was perfect good faith responded:  we have a plausible materialist explanation for the apparent design of life, whereas we don’t have such an explanation for Mt. Rushmore.”

 

It apparently never occurred to this commenter that whether the materialist explanation for the design life is more plausible than a materialist explanation for the design of Mt. Rushmore is precisely the issue in question.  And the bald unsupported assertion that one explanation is more plausible than the other solves nothing.  In other words, it did not occur to the commenter that his explanation was satisfying to him only because he assumed his conclusion simply had to be true. 

 

I would have thought that our commenter’s failure to grasp elementary principles of logic was an anomaly if I had not seen Darwinists make the same type of error over and over again these last few years.  The point of this post is that I no longer believe these people are stupid, and I am trying (yes, appearances to the contrary notwithstanding, I really am trying) to be more patient with them.  I trust my fellow authors and the pro-ID commenters on these pages will join with me in this endeavor.  I am not talking about obvious trolls.  That is another category altogether, and we will continue to deal with them ruthlessly.  But with respect to people of demonstrated intelligence and good faith who, because of the “psychology of blinding obedience to a paradigm” cannot seem to grasp simple concepts, let’s try to be a little more patient and, if anything, pity those who have imprisoned themselves in self-constructed psychological towers.

 

 

 

 

Comments
Rib: "Natural selection doesn’t require the existence of any unknown laws." No, just the suspension of all credulity.Barry Arrington
December 8, 2008
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I myself have had a horrible time trying to convince laymen evolution believers that natural selection is nonrandom. Just when I had hope rib understood that, he goes and mucks it up again. The problem I think is that all the propaganda says evolution is a random process. In fact, only part of it is random, and it is the first part. Random mutations and random selection of stepwise pathways happen first. Natural selection happens after that. Tell me if there is something wrong with this: Input - > Random operator - > Non-random operator - > Non-random outputtragicmishap
December 8, 2008
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Patrick, check out #16 where rib says quite clearly: "Natural selection is not the “accumulation of random noise”, as any biologist could tell you. Selection is highly nonrandom." I think he just contradicted himself.tragicmishap
December 8, 2008
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Patrick wrote:
Bzzt. Wrong. Your lack of basic knowledge is showing. Even your fellow Darwinists would object to deterministic natural selection being defined as a “chance hypothesis”.
Like my fellow Darwinian Stephen Jay Gould, who wrote an entire book dedicated to the idea that natural selection is not deterministic? Or my fellow Darwinians who understand that mutations can be caused by non-deterministic quantum phenomena like cosmic rays? As for using the term "chance hypothesis" to describe the operation of natural selection, that is Dembski's usage, not mine:
Moreover, H, here, is the relevant chance hypothesis that takes into account Darwinian and other material mechanisms.
If there is a "lack of basic knowledge" here, as you suggest, then it is Dembski's. I'll let you take it up with him directly.
I pick and choose subjects that I feel are worth my time.
If you decide not to offer refutations, that's fine, but don't expect us to assume that you can.ribczynski
December 8, 2008
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I fourth that.
I fifth that. Fifteen years ago I was a big fan of Dawkins and the other evolutionary materialists. A dozen years ago I became a Catholic and I was still a big fan of Dawkins and the other evolutionary materialists. It was groovy with me if God created an evolutionary universe which unpacked living potentiality via an elegant, simple process. Darwinism did not threaten my faith at all. Soon after it came out, I read Behe's Darwin's Black Box, which appealed greatly to my intuitions as a hardware/software design engineer. Reading the other primary ID books really drove home for me that Darwinism is a preposterous, unsubstantiated, hand-waving crock of a mirage of a theory. Note, though, that had I found it to be well-supported, it would have been no threat to my religious beliefs. But there is a very strong asymmetry in this debate. If Intelligent Design is likely true, then it is the atheist who is going to be having a very tough time--much, much tougher than the time I had being a theist and believing in Darwinism. Hence all the biased intransigence. Indeed, I think that Dawkins had it preciesly backwards, and that the real truth is: "Atheism makes it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled Darwinist."Matteo
December 8, 2008
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Well, if there’s “no way this kind of technology can be explained by random changes and natural selection,” I guess we should just give up now.
That is equivalent to saying "Well, if there’s “no way lead can be turned into gold via chemical means,” I guess we should just give up on alchemy now." Well, yes. You should, and that's exactly the point. As far as I can tell, True Science did not end with the abandonment of alchemy, even though, I suppose, one could argue that we just didn't try hard enough. Science advances when great minds are freed up from pursuing dead ends...Matteo
December 8, 2008
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Is there a problem with this page? I had a comment that has not appeared.GSV
December 8, 2008
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Natural selection doesn’t require the existence of any unknown laws. And the chance hypothesis is natural selection — a known process.
Bzzt. Wrong. Your lack of basic knowledge is showing. Even your fellow Darwinists would object to deterministic natural selection being defined as a "chance hypothesis". The chance component is largely relegated to variation and potential indirect stepwise pathways.
Don’t expect instant responses from me for everything you post.
Instant responses? You said:
Later today I will present some remarks and questions about natural selection that should address the points raised by you, jerry, Patrick, and others who are skeptical of NDE’s power.
I responded:
You better have some data then. I’ve been discussing observed limitations, not talking points.
As expected you then proceeded to produce (copy and paste?) common talking points, not data.
If they’re easy to refute, then why don’t you refute them for the benefit of the lurkers?
Easy? They require long, time-consuming responses. I pick and choose subjects that I feel are worth my time. If lurkers want to see them refuted they have google and the archives on UD. Never mind that others felt the need to do so already.Patrick
December 8, 2008
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What if the “superior designer” turns out to be a power-mad life form from another planet (or, given your earlier comment, perhaps from another dimension)? Isn't that your problem too? :-) If that's the reality pretending we are here by accident isn't going to help you. Unless, of course, by doing so you think you might be appeasing this "power mad" life form, kind of like as a form of worship. Fortunately, we know God to be loving, wise and kind, so we don't have to worry about that.tribune7
December 8, 2008
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Patrick asks:
How can they honestly insist that we should presume an unknown law or chance hypothesis is actively at work?
We don't. Natural selection doesn't require the existence of any unknown laws. And the chance hypothesis is natural selection -- a known process.
Even on the CBS thread you had nothing to say in regards to my long post on natural selection
Patrick, I'm responding to about ten different people here. Don't expect instant responses from me for everything you post.
...instead choosing to make arguments that I’ve seen refuted before on this very website.
If they're easy to refute, then why don't you refute them for the benefit of the lurkers?ribczynski
December 8, 2008
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It seems to me that the title of Barry Arrington's post is just an inelegant word for "ideology." And if I may be so bold, can I say that we all hold to ideologies? Everybody's ideas seem reasonable to them. Example: several times in the original post, and later in a comment, Barry refers to evidence as "obvious." Gil's comment says that design is "obvious" twice in a single comment. Things that we feel to be obvious aren't usually arrived at by reason and experiment. Things that are obvious don't need defending. What we feel to be "obvious" is usually the result of ideology.RoyK
December 8, 2008
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Gil wrote:
No, we take it apart, analyze it, and figure out how it works, so we can learn from the superior design of a superior designer.
What if the "superior designer" turns out to be a power-mad life form from another planet (or, given your earlier comment, perhaps from another dimension)? Will you be OK with learning at the feet of our evil alien overlord?RoyK
December 8, 2008
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I third that.
I fourth that. To be fair when the "single-gene-single-function and microevolution adds up to macroevolution" paradigm reigned I believe that accepting Darwinism was reasonable. It's only when an increase in knowledge showed that paradigm to be false that Darwinism became unreasonable. Never mind the observed limitations of Darwinian mechanisms based upon experimentation involving many, many generations and also computer simulations. Then the lack of raw data to back up the story-telling.
Almost everyone of the Darwin defenders here have exhibited this behavior. There is no attempt to understand or comprehend your position but an incessant attack mode on even the smallest of points. A constant gotcha mind set.
I was surprised to see even Prof Olofsson engage in this, claiming that the EF "does not work" which as I pointed out was a gross distortion of Bill's quick comment. Rib, I find it surprising you say this:
If you continue making an honest effort to understand our arguments, you may find that they are not so ridiculous as you suppose.
When asked directly, "And what are these stepwise pathways?" the reply from you was "We don’t know them, and Dembski didn’t either." How can they honestly insist that we should presume an unknown law or chance hypothesis is actively at work? That we should somehow incorporate into calculations something we know nothing about? Even on the CBS thread you had nothing to say in regards to my long post on natural selection, instead choosing to make arguments that I've seen refuted before on this very website. Do you now see why we view such arguments as ridiculous? How can we make "an honest effort to understand" when you're supplying nothing?Patrick
December 8, 2008
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IDskeptic: "Also, if you don’t challenge your own beliefs, how sure can you be? This applies to me as much as everyone else." And it certainly applies to me. Thank you for reminding a deep, but often overlooked, truth.gpuccio
December 8, 2008
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Barry Arrington: "We owe it to them to do our best." Absolutely. there is perhaps no more "sacred" duty than to humbly suggest and defend, without any arrogance or abusive authority, what we deeply believe to be true.gpuccio
December 8, 2008
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Gil (#14): "One thing is transparently obvious: DNA information encoding is only a small part of what is going on in biological systems. I suspect that living systems are encoded with a highly sophisticated, multi-parallel — indeed, multi-dimensional-parallel, essentially holographic — information system that is light-years ahead of our understanding of information encoding with digital, sequential-processing algorithms." You are, as usual, absolutely right and absolutely pertinent. It is incredible how much "mysterious" information we are gathering about living systems: they appear, day after day, as ever more challenging "miracles". And it is incredible, indeed utterly unbelievable, the daily arrogance and dogmatism with which these wonderful universes of mystery are routinely ignored or, even worse, easily "explained away" in the name of flat and cognitively depressing views of reality which have absolutely no support from experience and no epistemological dignity. In such a grey "waste land", it is a pleasure to hear spontaneous words of humble wisdom form people like you.gpuccio
December 8, 2008
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Although we may have different viewpoints, we're all looking for the trut - so we're united in that sense. Also, if you don't challenge your own beliefs, how sure can you be? This applies to me as much as everyone else.IDskeptic
December 8, 2008
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Jerry, we debate the Darwinists here not because we think we going to change their minds. We ususally do not. Don't foget the lurkers! We now have 7,000 a day visiting the site. Most never leave a comment, but many follow our arguments. We owe it to them to do our best.Barry Arrington
December 8, 2008
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"It is interesting that I rarely observed this type of behavior when growing up and in school but it seems that in recent years this behavior has become much more prevalent than I ever would have thought based on my own personal experiences. Maybe we are like flypaper to this type of mentality and those with this psyche feel an irresistible impulse to come here and combat us." Well put Jerry, "combat" seems to be the best explanatory word for their behavior on this website. Couldn't agree more. Instead of coming to terms with what we are trying to convey, they would rather just "return fire" with some things that have already been dealt with or things that don't even apply to the argument.PaulN
December 8, 2008
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Barry, The new UD experiment in open mindedness is revealing. I will repeat what I said above "I too find the psychological processes that go on with Darwinists fascinating. The most amazing is the “not give an inch” mentality. When you see it, it is a sure sign of committed intransigence based on ideology and not reason, There is no reason or arguing with such a person but it is worthwhile keeping them around while they are civil because they always reveal their stripes." Almost everyone of the Darwin defenders here have exhibited this behavior. There is no attempt to understand or comprehend your position but an incessant attack mode on even the smallest of points. A constant gotcha mind set. It is part of the mentality that if you get the last negative thought in about your opponents then you have won. And when their behavior elicits a negative response in others, they are ready to pounce with the person's rude behavior or faux pas. There is no "I understand your position but here is where and why I disagree with you." There is little attempt at constructive understanding and as I said they quickly reveal their stripes. My recommendation is engage them till they reveal their stripes and then ignore them when they become intransigent. If people here want to end up in hopeless mental cul de sacs with these people, then I hope they have a lot of time to waste. It is interesting that I rarely observed this type of behavior when growing up and in school but it seems that in recent years this behavior has become much more prevalent than I ever would have thought based on my own personal experiences. Maybe we are like flypaper to this type of mentality and those with this psyche feel an irresistible impulse to come here and combat us.jerry
December 8, 2008
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Tribune7, "Rib, most of us grew up with these arguments and pretty much accepted them as established fact until we started looking at them seriously." I third that. I think most people forget that Behe, Dembski, Kenyon, Myers et al were originally proponents of evolutionary theory. Even moreso Kenyon, who founded "Biological Predestination," which accounts for alot of the darwinistic opposition in the first place. I think for the most part these guys rejected Darwinistic theory because of how far they studied into all the details, as opposed to a lack of understanding or knowledge of the broad and vague Darwin theory we see today.PaulN
December 8, 2008
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Rib, most of us grew up with these arguments and pretty much accepted them as established fact until we started looking at them seriously.
I second that. I accepted the theory of evolution as a solid fact. Then I read Gavin de Beer's "Homology..." and Pierre La Grasse's "Evolution of living organisms". After that I began questioning my earlier conviction. So I did more investigating and came to find out that the theory of evolution is too vague to be of any use. And too vague to even be considered a theory. For example when I ask what varies all I get is either the DNA or allele frequency. Note the answers lack specification. And as such they don't "answer" anything. And to this day that is all the answer one can expect from evos because no one has a clue as to whether or not the physical transformations required are even obtainable via selected mutations.Joseph
December 8, 2008
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What I won’t do is open the door toward invoking non-material processes as a legitimate explanation for natural phenomena. . . But I’m not refusing a non-material explanation; I’m just refusing to grant a non-material explanation the name of science. Roy, if you limit "science" with the understanding that "science" is not the definitive arbiter of truth that view is merited. For instance, if you find a huge puddle of water on your living room floor, it would be much to investigate it methodically and materially as to the cause rather than pray for some divine revelation. But science is considered the arbiter of truth in our society, and it dogmatically rejects design arguments for the big questions, even when those arguments are far more rational than what it is they insist happened.tribune7
December 8, 2008
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If you continue making an honest effort to understand our arguments, you may find that they are not so ridiculous as you suppose. Rib, most of us grew up with these arguments and pretty much accepted them as established fact until we started looking at them seriously.tribune7
December 8, 2008
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The bottom-line is we exist and there is only ONE reality behind that existence. The anti-ID camp relies on cosmic collisions, atomic acidents, and chance events. Heck the best explanation they have for the laws that govern the physical woprld is "They just are (the way they are)" S Hawking in "A Briefer History of Time".
If the solar system was brought about by an accidental collision, then the appearance of organic life on this planet was also an accident, and the whole evolution of Man was an accident too. If so, then all our present thoughts are mere accidents - the accidental by-product of the movement of atoms. And this holds for the thoughts of the materialists and astronomers as well as for anyone else's. But if their thoughts - i.e., of Materialism and Astronomy - are merely accidental by-products, why should we believe them to be true? I see no reason for believing that one accident should be able to give me a correct account of all the other accidents. It's like expecting that the accidental shape taken by the splash when you upset a milk-jug should give you a correct account of how the jug was made and why it was upset.--CS Lewis
Joseph
December 8, 2008
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Selection is highly nonrandom.
Selection is the result of three random processes- variation, inheritance and fecundity. So if the inputs are random what does that say about the output? And you keep ignoring the fact that NS only provides 16% of the variation observed. And in populations over 1,000 it practically disappears altogether. And also anything that humans make is artificial.Joseph
December 8, 2008
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Huh? You're the one who said the designer was beyond our imagination. Your invocation of said designer was so referential I heard organ music while reading it.RoyK
December 8, 2008
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No, we take it apart, analyze it, and figure out how it works, so we can learn from the superior design of a superior designer.
You are a top-notch programmer, Gil. I bet you could write a program to really analyze DNA and figure out its design.crater
December 8, 2008
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Well, if there’s “no way this kind of technology can be explained by random changes and natural selection,” I guess we should just give up now. Huh? No, we take it apart, analyze it, and figure out how it works, so we can learn from the superior design of a superior designer.GilDodgen
December 7, 2008
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Barry wrote:
Wind, rain, etc. have been known to form sculptures that have a vague resemblance to a human face.
'Vague' being the operative word. Nobody thinks that Mt. Rushmore bears merely a 'vague' resemblance to a set of human faces.
Thus, pace your repeated denials, there is a colorable natural explanation for sculpting Mt. Rushmore. Is it really such a stretch to suggest that our hypothetical investigator might possibly conclude that natural forces sculpted Rushmore?
Yes. You've told us that Mt. Rushmore is obviously designed. If so, why would your hypothetical investigator conclude otherwise? And if you now disagree with yourself, then how about pointing us to someone who actually believes that "wind, rain, etc." constitute a plausible explanation for Mt. Rushmore. I can point you to thousands of people who think that natural selection is a plausible explanation for the complexity of life. Can you point me to a single person who finds your natural explanation of Mt. Rushmore plausible? And yet you claim that both explanations are equally plausible.
Well, yes, it is actually, but no more of a stretch than to suggest that the accumulation of random noise is responsible for the construction of the staggeringly complex nano-machinery of the cell.
Natural selection is not the "accumulation of random noise", as any biologist could tell you. Selection is highly nonrandom.
Re the “is human intelligence natural” question. I am gaveling that discussion.
For the purposes of your argument, you'd better stipulate that human intelligence is not natural. Otherwise your statement that "There is no known natural source of CSI" would necessarily mean that humans cannot generate CSI, and that they therefore could not possibly be responsible for Mt. Rushmore. :-)ribczynski
December 7, 2008
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