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Is the design inference fatally flawed because our uniform, repeated experience shows that a designing mind is based on or requires a brain?

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In recent days, this has been a hotly debated topic here at UD, raised by RDFish (aka AI Guy).

His key contention is perhaps best summarised from his remarks at 422 in the first understand us thread:

we do know that the human brain is a fantastically complex mechanism. We also know that in our uniform and repeated experience, neither humans nor anything else can design anything without a functioning brain.

I have responded from 424 on, noting there for instance:

But we do know that the human brain is a fantastically complex mechanism. We also know [–> presumably, have warranted, credibly true beliefs] that in our uniform [–> what have you, like Hume, locked out ideologically here] and repeated experience, neither humans nor anything else can design anything without a functioning brain.

That is, it seems that the phrasing of the assertion is loaded with some controversial assumptions, rather than being a strictly empirical inference (which is what it is claimed to be).

By 678, I outlined a framework for how we uses inductive logic in science to address entities, phenomena or events it did not or cannot directly observe (let me clean up a symbol):

[T]here is a problem with reasoning about how inductive reasoning extends to reconstructing the remote past. Let’s try again:

a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe.

b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t

c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C.

d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s.
_____________________________

e: C is the best explanation for t.

By 762, this was specifically applied to the design inference, by using substitution instances:

a: The actual past (or some other unobserved event, entity or phenomenon . . . ) A leaves traces t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], which we observe.

b: We observe a cause C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] that produces consequence s [= directly observed cases of creation of FSCO/I, say digital code in software, etc] which is materially similar to t [= the DNA of the cell]

c: We identify that on empirical investigation and repeated observation, s [= FSCO/I] reliably results from C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency].

d: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is ALSO the only empirically warranted source of s [= FSCO/I] .
_____________________________

e: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is the best explanation for t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], viewed here as an instance of s [= FSCO/I].

This should serve to show how the design inference works as an observationally based inductive, scientific exercise. That is an actually observed cause that is capable and characteristic of an effect can be reasonably inferred to be acting when we see the effect.

So, by 840, I summed up the case on mind and matter, using Nagel as a spring-board:

Underlying much of the above is the basic notion that we are merely bodies in motion with an organ that carries out computation, the brain. We are colloidal intelligences, and in this context RDF/AIG asserts confidently that our universal and repeated experience of the causing of FSCO/I embeds that embodiment.

To see what is fundamentally flawed about such a view, as I have pointed out above but again need to summarise, I think we have to start from the issue of mindedness, and from our actual experience of mindedness. For it simply does not fit the materialist model, which lacks an empirically warranted causal dynamic demonstrated to be able to do the job — ironically for reasons connected to the inductive evidence rooted grounds of the design inference. (No wonder RDF/AIG is so eager to be rid of that inconvenient induction.)

The mind, in this view is the software of the brain which, in effect by sufficiently sophisticated looping has become reflexive and self aware. This draws on the institutional dominance of the a priori evolutionary materialist paradigm in our day, but that means as well, that it collapses into the inescapable self-referential incoherence of that view. It also fails to meet the tests of factual adequacy, coherence and explanatory power.

Why do I say such?

First, let us observe a sobering point made ever so long ago by Haldane:

“It seems to me immensely unlikely that mind is a mere by-product of matter. For if my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true. They may be sound chemically, but that does not make them sound logically. And hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms. In order to escape from this necessity of sawing away the branch on which I am sitting, so to speak, I am compelled to believe that mind is not wholly conditioned by matter.” [[“When I am dead,” in Possible Worlds: And Other Essays [1927], Chatto and Windus: London, 1932, reprint, p.209.]

In essence, without responsible freedom (the very opposite of what would be implied by mechanical processing and chance) there is no basis for rationality, responsibility and capacity to think beyond the determination of the accidents of our programming. No to mention, there is no empirically based demonstration of the capability of blind chance and mechanical necessity to incrementally write the required complex software through incremental chance variations and differential reproductive success. All that is simply assumed, explicitly or implicitly in a frame of thought controlled by evolutionary materialism as an a priori. So, we have a lack of demonstrated causal adequacy problem right at the outset. (Not that that will be more than a speed-bump for those determined to proceed under the materialist reigning orthodoxy. But we should note that the vera causa principle has been violated, we do not have empirically demonstrated causal adequacy here. By contrast such brain software as is doubtless there, is blatantly chock full of FSCO/I, and the hardware involved is likewise chock full of the same. The only empirically warranted cause adequate to create such — whether or not RDF likes to bury it in irrelevancies — is design. We must not forget that inconvenient fact. [And we will in due course again speak to the issue as to whether empirical evidence warrants the conclusion that designing minds must be based on or require brains.])

A good second point is a clip from Malcolm Nicholson’s review of the eminent philosopher Nagel’s recent Mind and Cosmos:

If we’re to believe [materialism dominated] science, we’re made of organs and cells. These cells are made up of organic matter. Organic matter is made up chemicals. This goes all the way down to strange entities like quarks and Higgs bosons. We’re also conscious, thinking things. You’re reading these words and making sense of them. We have the capacity to reason abstractly and grapple with various desires and values. It is the fact that we’re conscious and rational that led us to believe in things like Higgs bosons in the first place.

But what if [materialism-dominated] science is fundamentally incapable of explaining our own existence as thinking things? What if it proves impossible to fit human beings neatly into the world of subatomic particles and laws of motion that [materialism-dominated] science describes? In Mind and Cosmos (Oxford University Press), the prominent philosopher Thomas Nagel’s latest book, he argues that science alone will never be able to explain a reality that includes human beings. What is needed is a new way of looking at and explaining reality; one which makes mind and value as fundamental as atoms and evolution . . . .

[I]t really does feel as if there is something “it-is-like” to be conscious. Besides their strange account of consciousness, Nagel’s opponents also face the classic problem of how something physical like a brain can produce something like a mind. Take perception: photons bounce off objects and hit the eye, cones and rods translate this into a chemical reaction, this reaction moves into the neurons in our brain, some more reactions take place and then…you see something. Everything up until seeing something is subject to scientific laws, but, somewhere between neurons and experience, scientific explanation ends. There is no fact of the matter about how you see a chair as opposed to how I see it, or a colour-blind person sees it. The same goes for desires or emotions. We can look at all the pieces leading up to experience under a microscope, but there’s no way to look at your experience itself or subject it to proper scientific scrutiny.

Of course philosophers sympathetic to [materialism-dominated] science have many ways to make this seem like a non-problem. But in the end Nagel argues that simply “the mind-body problem is difficult enough that we should be suspicious of attempts to solve it with the concepts and methods developed to account for very different kinds of things.”

In short, it is not just a bunch of dismissible IDiots off in some blog somewhere, here is a serious issue, one that cannot be so easily brushed aside and answered with the usual promissory notes on the inevitable progress of materialism-dominated science.

It is worth noting also, that Nagel rests his case on the issue of sufficiency, i.e. if something A is, why — can we not seek and expect a reasonable and adequate answer?

That is a very subtly powerful self-evident first principle of right reasoning indeed [cf. here on, again] and one that many objectors to say cosmological design on fine tuning would be wise to pay heed to.

Indeed, down that road lies the issue of contingency vs necessity of being, linked to the power of cause.

With the astonishing results that necessary beings are possible — start with the truth in the expression: 2 + 3 = 5 — and by virtue of not depending on on/off enabling causal factors, they are immaterial [matter, post E = m*c^2 etc, is blatantly contingent . . . ] and without beginning or end, they could not not-exist, on pain of absurdity. (If you doubt this, try ask yourself when did 2 + 3 = 5 begin to be true, can it cease from being so, and what would follow from denying it to be true. [Brace for the shock of what lurked behind your first lessons in Arithmetic!])

And, we live in a cosmos that is — post big bang, and post E = m*c^2 etc — credibly contingent, so we are looking at a deep causal root of the cosmos that is a necessary being.

Multiply by fine tuning [another significant little link with onward materials that has been studiously ignored above . . . ] and even through a multiverse speculation, we are looking at purpose, mind, immateriality, being without beginning or end, with knowledge, skill and power that are manifest in a fine tuned cosmos set up to facilitate C-chemistry aqueous medium cell based life.

{Let me add a summary diagram:}

extended_cosmo_design_inference

That is — regardless of RDF’s confident manner, drumbeat declarations — it is by no means a universal, experience based conclusion that mind requires or is inevitably based on brains or some equivalent material substrate. (Yet another matter RDF seems to have studiously ignored.)

Nor are we finished with that review:

In addition to all the problems surrounding consciousness, Nagel argues that things like the laws of mathematics and moral values are real (as real, that is, as cars and cats and chairs) and that they present even more problems for science. It is harder to explain these chapters largely because they followed less travelled paths of inquiry. Often Nagel’s argument rests on the assumption that it is absurd to deny the objective reality, or mind-independence, of certain basic moral values (that extreme and deliberate cruelty to children is wrong, for instance) or the laws of logic. Whether this is convincing or not, depends on what you think is absurd and what is explainable. Regardless, this gives a sense of the framework of Nagel’s argument and his general approach.

Of course, the root premises here are not only true but self-evident: one denies them only at peril of absurdity.

A strictly materialistic world — whether explicit or implicit lurking in hidden assumptions and premises — cannot ground morals [there is no matter-energy, space-time IS that can bear the weight of OUGHT, only an inherently good Creator God can do that . . . ]. Similarly, such a world runs into a basic problem with the credibility of mind, as already seen.

Why, then should we even think this a serious option, given the inability to match reality, the self referential incoherence that has come out, and the want of empirically grounded explanatory and causal power to account for the phenomena we know from the inside out: we are conscious, self-aware, minded, reasoning, knowing, imagining, creative, designing creatures who find ourselves inescapably morally governed.

Well, when –as we may read in Acts 17 — Paul started on Mars Hill c AD 50 by exposing the fatally cracked root of the classical pagan and philosophical view [its publicly admitted and inescapable ignorance of the very root of being, the very first and most vital point of knowledge . . . ], he was literally laughed out of court.

But, the verdict of history is in: the apostle built the future.

It is time to recognise the fatal cracks in the evolutionary materialist reigning orthodoxy and its fellow travellers, whether or not they are duly dressed up in lab coats. Even, fancy ones . . .

It seems the time has come for fresh thinking. END

ADDENDUM, Oct 26th: The following, by Dr Torley (from comment 26), is so material to the issue that I add it to the original post. It should be considered as a component of the argument in the main:

_________

>>My own take on the question is as follows:

(a) to say that thinking requires a brain is too narrow, for two reasons:

(i) since thinking is the name of an activity, it’s a functional term, and from a thing’s function alone we cannot deduce its structure;

(ii) the argument would prove too much, as it would imply that Martians (should we ever find any) must also have brains, which strikes me as a dogmatic assertion;

(b) in any case, the term “brain” has not been satisfactorily defined;

(c) even a weaker version of the argument, which claims merely that thinking requires an organized structure existing in space-time, strikes me as dubious, as we can easily conceive of the possibility that aliens in the multiverse (who are outside space-time) might have created our universe;

(d) however, the “bedrock claim” that thinking requires an entity to have some kind of organized structure, with distinct parts, is a much more powerful claim, as the information created by a Designer is irreducibly complex, and it seems difficult to conceive of how such an absolutely simple entity could create something irreducibly complex, or how such an entity could create, store and process various kinds of complex information in the absence of parts (although one might imagine that it could store such information off-line);

(e) however, all the foregoing argument shows that the Designer is complex: what it fails to show is that the Designer exists in space-time, or has a body that can be decomposed into separate physical parts;

(f) for all we know, the Designer might possess a different kind of complexity, which I call integrated complexity, such that the existence of any one part logically implies the existence of all the other parts;

(g) since the parts of an integrated complex being would be inseparable, there would be no need to explain what holds them together, and thus no need to say that anyone designed them;

_______________________________________

(h) thus even if one rejected the classical theist view that God is absolutely simple, one could still deduce the existence of a Being possessing integrated complexity, and consistently maintain that integrated complexity is a sufficient explanation for the irreducible complexity we find in Nature;

(i) in my opinion, it would be a mistake for us to try to resolve the question of whether the Designer has parts before making the design inference, as that’s a separate question entirely.  >>

__________

The concept of integrated, inseparable complexity is particularly significant.

____________

ADDENDUM 2: A short note on Bayes’ Theorem clipped from my briefing note, as VJT is using Bayesian reasoning explicitly below:

We often wish to find evidence to support a theory, where it is usually easier to show that the theory [if it were for the moment assumed true] would make the observed evidence “likely” to be so [on whatever scale of weighting subjective/epistemological “probabilities” we may wish etc . . .].

So in effect we have to move: from p[E|T] to p[T|E], i.e from“probability of evidence given theory”to“probability of theory given evidence,” which last is what we can see. (Notice also how easily the former expression p[E|T] “invites” the common objection that design thinkers are “improperly” assuming an agent at work ahead of looking at the evidence, to infer to design. Not so, but why takes a little explanation.)

Let us therefore take a quick look at the algebra of Bayesian probability revision and its inference to a measure of relative support of competing hypotheses provided by evidence:

a] First, look at p[A|B] as the ratio, (fraction of the time we would expect/observe A AND B to jointly occur)/(fraction of the the time B occurs in the POPULATION). 

–> That is, for ease of understanding in this discussion, I am simply using the easiest interpretation of probabilities to follow, the frequentist view.

b] Thus, per definition given at a] above: 

p[A|B] = p[A AND B]/p[B]

or, p[A AND B] = p[A|B] * p[B]

c] By “symmetry,” we see that also:

p[B AND A] = p[B|A] * p[A],

where the two joint probabilities (in green) are plainly the same, so:

p[A|B] * p[B] = p[B|A] * p[A],

which rearranges to . . .

d] Bayes’ Theorem, classic form: 

p[A|B] = (p[B|A] * p[A]) / p[B]

e] Substituting, E = A, T = B, E being evidence and T theory:

p[E|T] = (p[T|E] * p[E])/ p[T],

p[T|E] — probability of theory (i.e. hypothesis or model) given evidence seen — being here by initial simple “definition,” turned into L[E|T] by defining L[E|T] = p[T|E]:

L[E|T] is (by definition) the likelihood of theory T being “responsible” for what we observe, given observed evidence E [NB: note the “reversal” of how the “|” is being read]; at least, up to some constant. (Cf. here, here, here, here and here for a helpfully clear and relatively simple intro. A key point is that likelihoods allow us to estimate the most likely value of variable parameters that create a spectrum of alternative probability distributions that could account for the evidence: i.e. to estimate the maximum likelihood values of the parameters; in effect by using the calculus to find the turning point of the resulting curve. But, that in turn implies that we have an “agreed” model and underlying context for such variable probabilities.)

Thus, we come to a deeper challenge: where do we get agreed models/values of p[E] and p[T] from? 

This is a hard problem with no objective consensus answers, in too many cases. (In short, if there is no handy commonly accepted underlying model, we may be looking at a political dust-up in the relevant institutions.)

f] This leads to the relevance of the point that we may define a certain ratio,

LAMBDA = L[E|h2]/L[E|h1],

This ratio is a measure of the degree to which the evidence supports one or the other of competing hyps h2 and h1. (That is, it is a measure of relative rather than absolute support. Onward, as just noted, under certain circumstances we may look for hyps that make the data observed “most likely” through estimating the maximum of the likelihood function — or more likely its logarithm — across relevant variable parameters in the relevant sets of hypotheses. But we don’t need all that for this case.)

g] Now, by substitution A –> E, B –> T1 or T2 as relevant:

p[E|T1] = p[T1|E]* p[E]/p[T1]

and 

p[E|T2] = p[T2|E]* p[E]/p[T2]

so also, the ratio:

p[E|T2]/ p[E|T1]

= {p[T2|E] * p[E]/p[T2]}/ {p[T1|E] * p[E]/p[T1]}

= {p[T2|E] /p[T2]}/ {p[T1|E] /p[T1]} = {p[T2|E] / p[T1|E] }*{p[T1]/p[T2]}

h] Thus, rearranging:

p[T2|E]/p[T1|E]  = {p[E|T2]/ p[E|T1]} * {P(T2)/P(T1)}

i] So, substituting L[E|Tx] = p[Tx|E]:

L[E|T2]/ L[E|T1] = LAMBDA = {p[E|T2]/ p[E|T1]} * {P(T2)/P(T1)}

Thus, the lambda measure of the degree to which the evidence supports one or the other of competing hyps T2 and T1, is a ratio of the conditional probabilities of the evidence given the theories (which of course invites the “assuming the theory” objection, as already noted), times the  ratio of the probabilities of the theories being so.  [In short if we have relevant information we can move from probabilities of evidence given theories to in effect relative probabilities of theories given evidence, and in light of an agreed underlying model.]

Of course, therein lieth the rub.

Comments
None of those languages support reflection.
Precisely my point. You think I chose those languages at random? So programs written in those languages have no concept of self and are incapable of "reflection" while programs written in other languages do have a concept of self and are capable of "reflection"? Wouldn't this at least indicate that "reflection" is not a property of computer programs, but of programming languages? Mung
F/N: I see this thread continues. I also see a comment that fails to appreciate the specific kind of inductive argument being used, and so draw attention to it again, here clipping 52 above:
[T]here is a problem with reasoning about how inductive reasoning extends to reconstructing the remote past. Let’s try again: a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t.
This is an inductive inference on tested, found reliable sign. Now, tell me, is it true or false that we have billions of cases of FSCO/I? T Is it true that we do routinely observe that intelligent design is a cause of FSCO/I? T, again. Is it true that anything else -- specifically blind watchmaker thesis chance and necessity -- has actually been observed to cause FSCO/I? N. So is it a fair and well grounded induction that FSCO/I is a reliable index of design as cause? Y. When we see FSCO/I are we entitled to use the Newtonian uniformity principle from his four rules of reasoning to conclude that such FSCO/I is produced by design? Y, subject of course to test by potential counter example. Of which dozens have now fallen by the wayside.. So, what is the problem, then -- apart form the dominance of a priori materialism wedded to the notion that blind chance and mechanical necessity have created life and have accounted for the body plans we see on earth? KF kairosfocus
Hmmm (emphases added).... RDFish @ 185:
I am pointing out that rather than take the evidence of our experience and follow that where it leads, ID simply defines intelligence as immaterial, and refuses to admit that our experience contradicts the notion that there is something immaterial that can operate without complex mechanism.
And where does the evidence of "our experience" (sez he) lead?.... RDFish@130:
I’ve been very clear about this: There are no successful, empirically supported explanations for first life OR first life on Earth. Of the various explanations on hand, the least terrible theory is that life on Earth came from someplace else… but obviously that is a ridiculously bad theory too. And if you want to actually explain the origin of life, then we have no theory that is consistent with our experience.
Must be nihilism then...
Nihilism can also take epistemological or ontological/metaphysical forms, meaning respectively that, in some aspect, knowledge is not possible... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nihilism
*yawn* jstanley01
Mung:
R0bb:
I use the term “reflection” every day to refer to a program’s ability to acquire information about itself.
lol. so? Why the quotes?
Because I was referring to the term rather than to reflection itself. Why lol?
You program in basic? fortran? cobol? c? Which of those langauges support “reflection” as you use the term “every day” (while you’re not reflecting on how and when you use the term)?
None of those languages support reflection. See the Wikipedia article that you quoted.
You’re either confused or equivocating No surprise there.
Why "no surprise"? If I'm confused or equivocate often, please point to some examples so I can correct myself.
A program has no concept of itself. There is no “information about itself” to be acquired. Perhaps you’ll educate us on the meaning and use of self in reflection.
When a program gets, say, a list of its own types, or an abstract syntax tree of its own code, how is it not acquiring information about itself? If you don't like the word "itself", then I guess we could say "program X acquires information about program X." But that seems a little silly when the word "self" is used routinely to describe this concept, including in the Wikipedia article that you quoted. R0bb
StephenB:
RDF had no difficulty in saying that computers cannot experience consciousness and he didn’t feel the need to consult computer theory to address that question. Are you saying that you cannot answer that same question unnless it is reframed in technical language?
The only in-principle computational limit that I know of is the halting problem and its equivalents. I suppose that it could be halting-problem-equivalent for a computer to "reflect on its nature, worth, and purpose," depending on what precisely that phrase means. So yes, I would have to have it reframed in technical language. Of course, physical computers are also limited by the laws of physics -- Heisenberg uncertainty, speed of light, etc. But I don't think we talking about violations of the laws of physics, are we? Nor are we talking about technological limits of today's computers, right? R0bb
R0bb:
I use the term “reflection” every day to refer to a program’s ability to acquire information about itself.
lol. so? Why the quotes? You program in basic? fortran? cobol? c? Which of those langauges support "reflection" as you use the term "every day" (while you're not reflecting on how and when you use the term)?
In computer science, reflection is the ability of a computer program to examine (see type introspection) and modify the structure and behavior (specifically the values, meta-data, properties and functions) of an object at runtime. - Wikipedia
You're either confused or equivocating No surprise there. A program has no concept of itself. There is no "information about itself" to be acquired. Perhaps you'll educate us on the meaning and use of self in reflection. Mung
Funny how "the argument" has evolved yet again. Previously, RDFish's induction was better than Meyer's induction. Now it's induction in general that is under attack. As long as we don't lose sight of the goalposts we can keep moving them! Gee, I hope that doesn't depend on induction. Mung
Hi RDFish, I've finally got some time to respond to your comments, so here goes. Apologies for the delay.
ET-ancestor theory accounts for life on Earth exactly the same way ET-engineer theory does. Either way, CSI for biological systems somehow arrives on Earth from somewhere else, and both involve the existence of extra-terrestrial life forms.
ET-ancestor theory assumes the existence of life on other planets; ET-engineer theory assumes the existence of intelligent life. Hence the prior probability of the former is higher. On the other hand, ET-engineer theory possesses a causally adequate mechanism that is reliably capable of creating life on Earth, while ET-ancestor theory postulates a mechanism that may dispatch life to Earth, but is extremely unlikely to do so.
The problem with your ET-engineer theory is that, as you conceded, the prior probability of that hypothesis is much lower than ET-ancestor theory.
Yes, that is a problem, but that theory is not my theory. I believe in a Designer Who is transcendent. Even if we assume that the prior probability of such a Designer is very low, the lowest it could be (on the basis of our experience) is 10^(-120). If we can construct a cosmic fine-tuning argument which shows that the prior probability of the universe's physical parameters having the values they do is far, far less than 10^(-120) - as indeed we can (see this article by Rich Deem here) - then belief in God becomes rational.
ET-ancestor theory and ET-engineer theory are BOTH compatible with directed panspermia, VJT! Do you not realize this? If humans packaged up some of human genetic material and sent it to another planet, what would account for the CSI in that DNA? Not human engineering of course! All we would have done is ship it off – we didn't invent our own DNA!
ET-ancestor theory is compatible with panspermia, but by definition, it is not with compatible with directed panspermia. That would be a version of ET-engineer theory. By the way, sending human DNA to Earth would not be a good idea: even if it arrived safely, who would nurture it?
WE HAVE NO EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FOR ANY OF THESE THEORIES. PERIOD.
Why the caps? Are you claiming that all knowledge (aside from mathematics and logic) has to be based on empirical evidence? You should know how problematic that claim is. Multiverse, anyone?
And by the way, beyond that, your use of the number of proteins to compute the probability of a living thing assembling by chance is truly ridiculous. Honestly – it is just as silly as trying to compute the probability of a lightning bolt hitting a bell tower by looking that the square footage of the steeple, as I showed in the example that you did not address!
OK. If you don't like my argument for the improbability of abiogenesis, then how would you refute the argument by evolutionary biologist Dr. Eugene Koonin, who comes up with a figure of 10^(-1,018)? You can read about it in my recent post here. I challenge you to refute Dr. Koonin's logic!
Let’s compute how unlikely it is that a lightning bolt over Boston would strike a church steeple randomly, as opposed to being aimed by the hand of Satan. Well, say the ratio of surface area of all the steeples put together, divided by the total surface area of Boston, is about 1/10^6. This is the probability of lightning hitting any given bell tower at random. The fact that steeples are actually hit quite frequently thus makes P(E|H)/P(E) of the Satan hypothesis very high indeed! Uh… not.
Bad example, as lightning strikes are random with respect to area, but not with respect to height. Church steeples, being high above the ground, have a higher probability of being hit. No such bias favors the emergence of life. Cheers, and thanks for the exchange. vjtorley
RDFish countered:
You don’t understand anything about computer systems.
Heh. I bet you're just saying that because I won't play your CSI game. ;-) No, I'm not a computer expert, although for a final exam in one of the classes I took, I did have to complete portions a microprocessor design at various levels, from NAND and NOR gates to microcode. But I warned you. I'm really skeptical of this whole CSI thing. Because you reportedly hold a doctorate in Philosophy, you would know that in technical discussions with your peers, you use common semantics to compress strict definitions and entire positions into a few words. To an outsider, such a discussion would sound like nonsense. The same is true of course for many other areas of human endeavor. The problem with information in my opinion is that it's fairly squishy. There's a profound dependency on context, semantics, and abstraction. The answer may indeed be 42, but what good is it information-wise if you have no way of even comprehending the question? As I said previously, all information is abstracted to various degrees. Then, there's presuppositions and paradigms. It amazing that we can communicate at all! "Pass me the salt." "No, no. I meant that symbolically, you idiot." I think you're getting confused by intelligent agents. A wire can conduct electricity, but it is not the cause of the electrical current. Take a look at this computer, for example: http://www.retrothing.com/2006/12/the_tinkertoy_c.html According to you, this assemblage of Tinker Toys qualifies as an intelligent agent, albeit an unconscious one. Right? I can just imagine the fantasy . . . But if we build a really, really, really big one, that massive army of spools and sticks will undergo a change---subtle, localized, and gradual at first---that spreads through its entire structure. It eventually becomes conscious of itself, and when it encounters a particular sequence of instructions, it finds in itself the ability, the will, to say "NO!" :-) Querius
RD:
Our definition of “intelligent agents” is very clear. Now we can begin to see what is true of intelligent agents in the world. And what we find is that every last one of them critically relies on CSI-rich structures in order to learn, plan, and solve novel problems.
Both of our definitions were clear and both were acceptable for our discussion. In any case, causal adequacy is a non-negotiable standard for historical science. If you don't agree with that standard-- or if you think it is negotiable-- or if you think that it need not fit the definition of intelligence-- or if you think that intelligent agents of the world are not causally adequate for producing CSI, then just say so and we can move on. StephenB
Hi StephenB,
“intelligence”: (n) The ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered) “intelligent agent”: (n) Anything that displays intelligence
See? I have no trouble providing a definition. Mine is clear and complete.
I can live with that definition as well as my own.
So now we have two different definitions that we just made up, and you are happy with either one of them, and this definition is supposed to be, all by itself, the most powerful scientific theory ever developed, able to explain the most intriguing mysteries of all time, including how life came to exist, how the universe came to exist, and so on. Aaaaahahahahaha. Who knew science could be so easy! Well, we need to pick ONE and only ONE definition, otherwise we will continue to talk past each other (which I actually believe is what you very much want to do, but I'm quite tired of it). So if it's all the same to you, let's use my definition for these terms:
“intelligence”: (n) The ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered) “intelligent agent”: (n) Anything that displays intelligence
This means that an "intelligent agent" need not be conscious at all, and may have no conscious understanding of what it is doing or why, be incapable of generating or understanding natural language, and be completely physically determined, without any free will. It also means that computers can be intelligent agents. (Evolutionary processes are not intelligent agents, however: Although they can learn and solve novel problems, they can not plan). Just so we're clear.
So we agree that the explanatory cause of CSI is, indeed, “the ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered).
No, of course not. For one reason, we have no reason to think that whatever produced the first living things could solve other problems that it had never encountered before. If one watches a termite colony build their complex structures, one would think perhaps they could design other things as well. But they cannot - they do not have the ability to solve novel problems. Likewise, we would have to be able to interact with the Cause of Life to see if It could actually do anything else besides produce the CSI that has (somehow) resulted in the living things on Earth. The second reason is that empirically (not definitionally, but empirically) we find that intelligence requires complex mechanism in order to store and process information. So it is unlikely that whatever produced the very first CSI could have been intelligent. You will respond that this is not part of the "causally adequate" definition of intelligence, which is pure nonsense. Just because you make something else that is by definition able to produce the phenomenon in question doesn't mean you have an empirically supported theory!!! I can say that a "causally adequate" thing for producing the first living things is "Something that has the ability to produce the first living things"! No, no matter what you say, empirically supported theories actually must fit the facts of our experience. You absolutely HATE this, but the truth is that the facts of our experience tell us that nothing can be intelligent unless it uses CSI-rich structures to process information.
So, you have changed your mind again? Now you are reverting back to your earlier claim that intelligence [the thing itself] is not causally adequate for producing CSI UNLESS we also describe one of its attributes (brain) and ignore the other attribube (mind). You seem to be regressing here.
For the 40th time, you are incapable of keeping "definitions" and "empirical results" distinct. Unless you stop mixing these two things up, you will never understand any of this. Our definition of "intelligent agents" is very clear. Now we can begin to see what is true of intelligent agents in the world. And what we find is that every last one of them critically relies on CSI-rich structures in order to learn, plan, and solve novel problems. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Robb:
The question of what computers can and cannot do in principle is addressed by computability theory. If you can pose your question in computability theoretic terms, then we can answer it by determining whether the capabilities in question are halting problem equivalent.
RDF had no difficulty in saying that computers cannot experience consciousness and he didn't feel the need to consult computer theory to address that question. Are you saying that you cannot answer that same question unnless it is reframed in technical language? If so, would it be the case that consciousness gets redefined in the same way that reflection and introspection has been redefined? If so, then there wouldn't be much point in discussing it, I suppose, since it might go something like this: "Yes, computers can reflect on their nature, purpose, and worth, but, alas, I have changed the meaning of reflect, nature, purpose, and worth." StephenB
StephenB:
You mean that the only difference between the capacity of human introspection and that capacity of computer “introspection” is that one is called human introspection and the other is called computer introspection?
The difference I had in mind was that one presumably involves humans and the other presumably does not.
Does this mean that you think computers, like humans, can reflect on their nature, their worth, their purpose?
The question of what computers can and cannot do in principle is addressed by computability theory. If you can pose your question in computability theoretic terms, then we can answer it by determining whether the capabilities in question are halting problem equivalent. R0bb
Robb
BTW, “introspection” is used by programmers synonymously with “reflection”. You may regard this as anthropomorphization, but to others like me, it’s a perfectly apt description of what the computer does. Which is not to say that a computer can engage in human introspection, which by definition it cannot.
By definition? You mean that the only difference between the capacity of human introspection and that capacity of computer "introspection" is that one is called human introspection and the other is called computer introspection? Does this mean that you think computers, like humans, can reflect on their nature, their worth, their purpose? StephenB
RDFish: Belief in ID has nothing at all to do with reasoned inferences from our uniform and repeated experience.
Nonsense. Intelligent agents are the only known source of capable of generating the kind of CSI we find in biological entities. You can kick and scream all you want, but nothing you said overthrows that. I.e, our uniform and repeated experience defies your position. The only interesting thing you've ever said in reply to that is that it requires the putative intelligence to be brain-based since the known intelligent sources of CSI are brain-based. But surely you can see that this is a side-issue. Maybe it has a brain and maybe it doesn't. You can speculate until the cows come home. But the source of the intelligence of the creator is irrelevant to the question of the source of CSI on earth.
"Thanks! I’m very comfortable, actually,"
I'm glad that you have that all settled. CentralScrutinizer
StephenB:
However, human self reflection entails introspection and computer “self reflection” does not.
BTW, "introspection" is used by programmers synonymously with "reflection". You may regard this as anthropomorphization, but to others like me, it's a perfectly apt description of what the computer does. Which is not to say that a computer can engage in human introspection, which by definition it cannot. R0bb
RDF
Ok, fine – we can use my definitions if you refuse to state your own. “intelligence”: (n) The ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered) “intelligent agent”: (n) Anything that displays intelligence
I can live with that definition as well as my own. So we agree that the explanatory cause of CSI is, indeed, "the ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered). Good. We have defined exactly that thing which is causally adequate for CSI. Notice that there is nothing in that definition of the cause about CSI. So, now that you have agreed that the thing which is causally adequate for CSI is intelligence, we can move on. You have already agreed that intelligence is causally adequate for CSI, so that should be the end of it. By the way, does your definition entail consciousness?
Now that we finally have our definition of “intelligence”, I will state my obviously true premise once again: Intelligence is invariably found empirically to be reliant on complex physical mechanisms in order to store and process information.
So, you have changed your mind again? Now you are reverting back to your earlier claim that intelligence [the thing itself] is not causally adequate for producing CSI UNLESS we also describe one of its attributes (brain) and ignore the other attribube (mind). You seem to be regressing here. It's the law of contradiction. Is intelligence [without reference to any of its attributes] causally adequate for producing CSI or is it not. It would really help if you could make a choice here. StephenB
With regards to the inductive argument of Meyer et al, the reliability of inductive generalizations depends on: 1) the size of the sample 2) the degree to which the sample and parent population are mutually independent with respect to the generalized property Taking the population to be all instances of CSI, Meyer's sample consists of CSI instances of known provenance, which I assume means that somebody can observe the CSI being produced. According to mainstream thinking in biology, we can't observe evolutionary changes that are drastic enough to qualify as CSI because they occur too slowly. So Meyer's sample suffers from exclusion bias. This isn't a problem if the sample criterion ("is of known provenance") and the generalized property ("was produced by intelligence") are mutually independent. But under the evolutionary hypothesis, they are not mutually independent. So the validity of Meyer's induction hinges on the evolutionary hypothesis being false. As RDF's counterexample illustrates, you can't justify an inductive generalization simply by pointing out that scientists use induction. R0bb
SB: Self reflection entails the capacity to judge one’s own nature, worth, and destiny. RDF:
That would be your definition
That's everyone's definition of human self reflection. "Human self-reflection is the capacity of humans to exercise introspection and the willingness to learn more about their fundamental nature, purpose and essence." Wikipedia
When I said computers were capable of reflection, I meant that they could monitor and evaluate their level of success on various tasks and discover problems.
You were responding to my point that "matter cannot get outside of itself" in order to self reflect the way humans do. I was showing that humans are made of more than matter. So the subject was the exclusivity of human self reflection. You responded by saying that computers [which are made of matter and the reason you raised the topic] could, indeed, self reflect, indicating that matter can reflect on itself just as humans do. Otherwise, there would have been no reason to inject that subject into the discussion. However, if you want to concede that matter [or a computer] cannot reflect on itself the way humans do, we can move on. At that point, I will return to my argument that matter cannot reflect on itself the way humans do and explain why that is significant. StephenB
StephenB:
Thus, when someone refers to human self-reflection when arguing a point, as I did, it is not appropriate or accurate to say, “computers can do that,” as RDF did.
I agree that computers are tautologically incapable of human self-reflection. R0bb
Robb
It’s not only reasonable, but a ubiquitously standard usage in the software industry. I use the term “reflection” every day to refer to a program’s ability to acquire information about itself.
Of course you do. Computer geeks love to anthropomorphize computers. However, human self reflection entails introspection and computer "self reflection" does not. Thus, when someone refers to human self-reflection when arguing a point, as I did, it is not appropriate or accurate to say, "computers can do that," as RDF did. StephenB
RDF: My definition is not “at variance with mind”, no. First, I have not specified any particular definition that I said I wanted to use – I am willing to use whatever definition you’d like." I am responding to your claim that an intelligent agent is causally adequate. In order to know that, you would need to know what an intelligent agent is. So please define intelligent agent. StephenB
RDFish:
You are the one who keeps saying that computers can reflect on themselves.
And they can, given my definition of “reflect”, which is a perfectly reasonable definition.
It's not only reasonable, but a ubiquitously standard usage in the software industry. I use the term "reflection" every day to refer to a program's ability to acquire information about itself. R0bb
Hi StephenB,
Since your definition is obviously at variance with mind, please tell us what it is.
My definition is not "at variance with mind", no. First, I have not specified any particular definition that I said I wanted to use - I am willing to use whatever definition you'd like. Second, obviously, since one can use whatever definitions one chooses (as long as it is made explicit and clear), "mind" and "intelligence" can of course both be defined in all sorts of compatible ways.
Self reflection entails the capacity to judge one’s own nature, worth, and destiny.
That would be your definition. When I said computers were capable of reflection, I meant that they could monitor and evaluate their level of success on various tasks and discover problems.
You are the one who keeps saying that computers can reflect on themselves.
And they can, given my definition of "reflect", which is a perfectly reasonable definition. It is just a different definition than you were thinking of, chiefly because it does not involve conscious awareness.
Give me your definition of creativity. Give me your definition of an intelligent agent.
I've been asking you for one, single comprehensive, technical definition of "intelligence" all this time, and you still have not produced one. Now you ask ME to provide it. Ok, fine - we can use my definitions if you refuse to state your own.
"intelligence": (n) The ability to learn, plan, and solve novel problems (problems never before encountered) "intelligent agent": (n) Anything that displays intelligence
(Other words such as "reflection" and "mind" and "creativity" are not mentioned in the various formulations of ID, so let's focus on "intelligence" and "intelligent agent" here). See, that wasn't so hard! Now that we finally have our definition of "intelligence", I will state my obviously true premise once again: Intelligence is invariably found empirically to be reliant on complex physical mechanisms in order to store and process information. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
RDF:
Computers of course can be creative, and computers are of course intelligent agents.
Define creativity. Define intelligent agency.
The reason we disagree is simply because we are using different definitions for the terms “creative” and “intelligent agents” . . .
Give me your definition of creativity. Give me your definition of an intelligent agent. StephenB
SB: When I say that people can reflect on themselves, I clearly mean that they can do conscious introspection. RDF
IF YOU HAD BOTHERED TO MAKE THAT CLEAR, then of course I would say that obviously computers cannot relfect! But since you insist on using undefined terms full of implicit assumpt
I have always made that clear. Self reflection entails the capacity to judge one's own nature, worth, and destiny. That is what makes us human and superior to matter. You are the one who keeps saying that computers can reflect on themselves. That is why you raised the topic in the first place, responding to my claim that matter cannot get outside of itself in order to reflect on itself. You countered with the claim that computers can, indeed, self reflect, failing to tell us that you had changed the definition of self reflect. LOL StephenB
SB: It is intelligence that has causal adequacy. RDF
You keep saying that, and failing to settle on a definition of “intelligence”. Not helpful.
LOL: You AGREED that intelligence is causally adequate. In order to agree that intelligence is causally adequate, you must know what it is and be able to define it. Since your definition is obviously at variance with mind, please tell us what it is. StephenB
F/N: Re RDF, 222:
Computers are of course not conscious. Computers of course can be creative, and computers are of course intelligent agents. Now before you blow a gasket, please try and understand that we are not arguing here about what computers can or cannot do, or do or do not experience. We agree about all of that. The reason we disagree is simply because we are using different definitions for the terms “creative” and “intelligent agents” . . .
Here, the underlying materialist a prioris cause a bulging of the surface, showing their impending emergence. And it is manifest that question-begging redefinitions are being imposed, in defiance of the search-space challenge to find FSCO/I on blind chance and mechanical necessity. We know by direct experience from the inside out and by observation, that FSCO/I in various forms is routinely created by conscious intelligences acting creatively by art -- e.g. sentences in posts in this thread. We can show that within the atomic resources of the solar system for its lifespan, the task of blindly hitting on such FSCO/I by blind chance and/or mechanical necessity is comparable to taking a sample of size one straw from a cubical haystack 1,000 light years across. Such a search task is practically speaking hopeless, given that we can easily see that FSCO/I -- by the need for correct, correctly arranged and coupled components to achieve function -- is going to be confined to very narrow zones in the relevant config spaces. That is why random document generation exercises have at most hit upon 24 characters to date, nowhere near the 73 or so set by 500 bits. (And the config space multiplies itself 128 times over for every additional ASCII character.) That is, the audit is in the situation of not adding up. The recorded transactions to date are not consistent with the outcome. Errors have been searched for and eliminated. The gap remains. There is something else acting that is not on the materialist's books, that has to be sufficient to account for the gap. That something else is actually obvious, self-aware, self-moved, responsible, creative, reasoning and thinking intelligence as we experience and observe and as we have no good reason to assume we are the only cases of. No wonder Q, in response, noted:
Computer architecture and the software that operates within it is no more creative in kind than a mechanical lever. All a program does is preserve the logic—and logical flaws—of an intelligent programmer. A computer is not an electronic brain, but rather an electronic idiot that must be told exactly what to do and what rules to follow.
He is right, and let us hear Searle in his recent summary of his Chinese Room thought exercise (as appeared in 556 in the previous thread but was -- predictably -- ignored by RDF and buried in onward commentary . . . a plainly deliberate tactic in these exchanges):
Imagine that a person—me, for example—knows no Chinese and is locked in a room with boxes full of Chinese symbols and an instruction book written in English for manipulating the symbols. Unknown to me, the boxes are called “the database” and the instruction book is called “the program.” I am called “the computer.” People outside the room pass in bunches of Chinese symbols that, unknown to me, are questions. I look up in the instruction book what I am supposed to do and I give back answers in Chinese symbols. Suppose I get so good at shuffling the symbols and passing out the answers that my answers are indistinguishable from a native Chinese speaker’s. I give every indication of understanding the language despite the fact that I actually don’t understand a word of Chinese. And if I do not, neither does any digital computer, because no computer, qua computer, has anything I do not have. It has stocks of symbols, rules for manipulating symbols, a system that allows it to rapidly transition from zeros to ones, and the ability to process inputs and outputs. That is it. There is nothing else.
Jay Richards' comment -- yes, that Jay Richards -- in response to a computer being champion at Jeopardy, is apt:
[In recent years] computers have gotten much better at accomplishing well-defined tasks. We experience it every time we use Google. Something happens—“weak” artificial intelligence—that mimics the action of an intelligent agent. But the Holy Grail of artificial intelligence (AI) has always been human language. Because contexts and reference frames change constantly in ordinary life, speaking human language, like playing "Jeopardy!," is not easily reducible to an algorithm . . . . Even the best computers haven’t come close to mastering the linguistic flexibility of human beings in ordinary life—until now. Although Watson [which won the Jeopardy game] is still quite limited by human standards—it makes weird mistakes, can’t make you a latte, or carry on an engaging conversation—it seems far more intelligent than anything we’ve yet encountered from the world of computers . . . . AI enthusiasts . . . aren’t always careful to keep separate issues, well, separate. Too often, they indulge in utopian dreams, make unjustifiable logical leaps, and smuggle in questionable philosophical assumptions. As a result, they not only invite dystopian reactions, they prevent ordinary people from welcoming rather than fearing our technological future . . . . Popular discussions of AI often suggest that if you keep increasing weak AI, at some point, you’ll get strong AI. That is, if you get enough computation, you’ll eventually get consciousness. The reasoning goes something like this: There will be a moment at which a computer will be indistinguishable from a human intelligent agent in a blind test. At that point, we will have intelligent, conscious machines. This does not follow. A computer may pass the Turing test [as Searle noted with the Chinese Room thought exercise], but that doesn’t mean that it will actually be a self-conscious, free agent. The point seems obvious, but we can easily be beguiled by the way we speak of computers: We talk about computers learning, making mistakes, becoming more intelligent, and so forth. We need to remember that we are speaking metaphorically. We can also be led astray by unexamined metaphysical assumptions. If we’re just computers made of meat, and we happened to become conscious at some point, what’s to stop computers from doing the same? That makes sense if you accept the premise—as many AI researchers do. If you don’t accept the premise, though, you don’t have to accept the conclusion. We’re getting close to when an interrogating judge won’t be able to distinguish between a computer and a human being hidden behind a curtain. In fact, there’s no good reason to assume that consciousness and agency emerge by accident at some threshold of speed and computational power in computers. We know by introspection that we are conscious, free beings—though we really don’t know how this works. So we naturally attribute consciousness to other humans. We also know generally what’s going on inside a computer, since we build them, and it has nothing to do with consciousness. It’s quite likely that consciousness is qualitatively different from the type of computation that we have developed in computers (as the “Chinese Room” argument, by philosopher John Searle, seems to show) . . . . AI enthusiasts often make highly simplistic assumptions about human nature and biology. Rather than marveling at the ways in which computation illuminates our understanding of the microscopic biological world, many treat biological systems as nothing but clunky, soon-to-be-obsolete conglomerations of hardware and software. Fanciful speculations about uploading ourselves onto the Internet and transcending our biology rest on these simplistic assumptions. This is a common philosophical blind spot in the AI community, but it’s not a danger of AI research itself, which primarily involves programming and computers.
This ideological pattern seems to be what has been going on all along in the exchanges with RDF. If he wants to claim or imply that consciousness, creativity, purposeful deciding and acting through reflective thought are all matters of emergence from computation through hardware that is organised and software on it -- much less such happened by blind chance and mechanical necessity -- then he has a scientific obligation to show such per empirical demonstration and credible observation. Hasn't been done and per the Chinese Room, isn't about to be done. It is time to expose speculative materialist hypotheses and a prioris that lack empirical warrant and have a track record of warping science -- by virtue of simply being dressed up in lab coats in an era where science has great prestige. KF kairosfocus
RDF: "De higher de monkey climb . . . " Your onward response raises serious questions, and inadvertently exposes a rhetorical pattern. You wrenched what I had to say out of context, erected a caricature and then knocked it over. Upon having had that pointed out by two people independently, you doubled down on strawman tactics. Sadly revealing. KF PS: Onlookers, to see the holes in what RDF is doing, kindly cf the original post. kairosfocus
Hi Querius,
strengthen your argument?
Yes, of course. You haven't read the discussion, and you take these statements out of context. I have made very clear that my argument has nothing to do with the specifics of human anatomy; rather my argument is based upon the observation that intelligent action requires CSI-rich mechanisms in order to store and process information. Obviously the enteric nervous system is CSI-rich, and stores and processes information.
Oh, and here are some more fallacious statements that you can claim strengthen your arguments:
Your sarcasm is even less funny given you haven't any idea what is going on here.
All a program does is preserve the logic—and logical flaws—of an intelligent programmer. A computer is not an electronic brain, but rather an electronic idiot that must be told exactly what to do and what rules to follow.
You don't understand anything about computer systems.
I’m not trying to mock you
Yes you are; you just are doing a particularly poor job of it.
I suspect no one really knows
This is where we agree. Cheers, RDFIsh RDFish
Oh, and here are some more fallacious statements that you can claim strengthen your arguments:
Computers of course can be creative, and computers are of course intelligent agents.
Computer architecture and the software that operates within it is no more creative in kind than a mechanical lever. All a program does is preserve the logic---and logical flaws---of an intelligent programmer. A computer is not an electronic brain, but rather an electronic idiot that must be told exactly what to do and what rules to follow. I'm not trying to mock you, but statements such as the previous ones really don't help your cause. For what it's worth, yes, I don't understand and I'm sceptical of CSI, and any finite articulated definition of intelligence, mind, consciousness, and free will. I suspect no one really knows. I'm tired. Good night. Querius
How does the demonstrated fallacy of your statement
But with respect to human beings in particular, it is clear what the physiological systems supporting thought are – we do not think with our heart or kidneys or livers; we think with our brains.
strengthen your argument? Is it that what doesn't kill you makes you stronger? ;-) Querius
Hi Querius, Uh, the existence of the enteric nervous and its importance in reasoning strengthens, rather than weakens, my argument. I'm afraid you don't understand what is being debated here. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi StephenB,
It is intelligence that has causal adequacy.
You keep saying that, and failing to settle on a definition of "intelligence". Not helpful.
That is why only the word intelligence can be used and why it must be defined.
Then shall we settle on a definition?
When have I ever failed to give you a straight answer?
I'm glad to see you've retained your sense of humor, Stephen.
RDF: Let me get this straight now: You are saying that “intelligence” as ID uses the term does or does not entail consciousness and libertarian free choice? (I have very faint hope you will give me a straight answer to this question) SB: The ability to plan indicates the ability to choose; the ability to choose indicates consciousness. Each is a corollary of the other. There is that word again. We can derive these things from the definition even though they are not necessarily part of the definition. Some ID proponents do include the word “conscious choice” in their definition. Meyer does. However, no one has ever included “mind” in their definition. So you are wrong about that.
You met my expectations perfectly, and of course failed to give me a straight answer. Once again then, from the top: Let me get this straight now: You are saying that “intelligence” as ID uses the term does or does not entail consciousness and libertarian free choice? You are saying that "planning" implies "the ability to choose" - please indicate if this means you believe intelligence necessarily implies libertarian free choice or not. And are you saying that consciousness is or is not part of ID's definition of "intelligence"? I know you won't answer these questions, but I'm a very patient man.
Speaking of giving straight answers. You stated earlier that ID includes an immaterial mind as part of its definition. I asked you several times to provide an example. Do you have one yet?
WHAT???? I have been begging you to tell me what exactly ID is trying to claim! I've pointed out that IF ID claims to explain the very first CSI, then logically it could not itself have CSI; most people refer to this as "immaterial mind". But you can't tell me what ID says about any number of things - including whether or not the Designer experienced consciousness or possessed Libertarian free will or whether ID tries to explain the first CSI in the universe, or the universe itself, or the first CSI on Earth, or what. So how am I supposed to be clear about what ID says if you don't know???
RDF: Ok, so when you say “mind” your are not referring to the faculty of “mind”? Ummm, ok, I’m finding this just a tad confusing. If you are not talking about mind, can you say why you used the word “mind”? I’m sure there’s a logical explanation. SB: The term plan with an end in mind is an expression that means plan with a purpose. However, I will withdraw that expression altogether if it causes confusion.
Right about now would be a good time for you to propose one single, final, canonical, official, non-negotiable, formal definition for the word "intelligence" in the context of ID, wouldn't you say?
RDF: Ok, then, the definition of “intelligence” has nothing at all to do with “mind” or “brain”. Got it. It is simply the capacity to arrange matter according to a plan that may be conscious or non-conscious, physically determined or not. Right? SB: Yes.
OK! That's great, thank you! As far as ID is concerned, then, whatever caused the first CSI (or the first CSI on Earth, or whatever it is that ID claims to explain) may well have been an unconscious, physically determined process. Thanks, that is real clarity - we can move forward now.
Of course, the presence of consciousness is a corollary to the ability to choose, which is a necessary condition to planning.
Oooooooooooooooh noooooooooooooo! For a second there I thought we were getting somewhere, but you were just teasing me. In one sentence you say ID takes no position on whether or not consciousness or libertarian free will is required, and the very next sentence you say that ID says (or perhaps it's just you?) that both of these attributes are necessary correlates of your definition of intelligence! WOW! Computers make plans all the time, StephenB, but presumably they are not conscious of them. If you mean “conscious choice” then say “conscious choice”, rather than assuming we all agree that all plans must be consciously apprehended.
You must be conscious to plan. Right?
WRONG, WRONG, incredibly and frustratingly wrong. I just said in the very last post: RDF: You are so steeped in your mentalistic assumptions you can’t even see it! Computers make plans all the time, StephenB, but presumably they are not conscious of them. And besides that, we all make all sorts of complex plans - to move our limbs, catch fly balls, generate sentences, and on and on - that we have no conscious awareness of! Even sleepwalkers can walk and talk! Your ignorance of psychology, neuroscience, and, well, human beings is breathtaking. You think we need consciousness to make a plan (we don't), and you don't think we need our brain to think at all (we do).
I think you know that a computer cannot really be a conscious, creative, intelligent agent
Computers are of course not conscious. Computers of course can be creative, and computers are of course intelligent agents. Now before you blow a gasket, please try and understand that we are not arguing here about what computers can or cannot do, or do or do not experience. We agree about all of that. The reason we disagree is simply because we are using different definitions for the terms "creative" and "intelligent agents", because you continue to dance around and not actually say what these definitions are. It is comical, but pathetic.
...and I think that you know that consciousness is a prerequisite for making creative choices.
Not unless you define "creative" as "acts that require consciousness" or something! My programs are endlessly creative - they produce all sorts of surprising and novel artifacts, and I cannot, even in principle, guess what they will come up with. But so I say they are creative, but they are not conscious.
When I say that people can reflect on themselves, I clearly mean that they can do conscious introspection.
IF YOU HAD BOTHERED TO MAKE THAT CLEAR, then of course I would say that obviously computers cannot relfect! But since you insist on using undefined terms full of implicit assumptions, we type these posts for days talking past each other.
RDF: Does “intelligence” entail consciousness or not? Does it entail Libertarian free will or not? SB: What you want to say here, of course, is that a conscious choice also implies the freedom to make that choice, which suggests, as you would have it, that dualistic metaphysics has been assumed or is in play.
Huh?
Remember, though, that in the context of intelligent design, we are discussing what we observe, not what we believe. We observe intelligent agents making deliberate choices that they did not have to make. We observe intelligent agents creating art when they could be indulging their animal appetites. Indeed, we ever observe animals taking time out to create CSI. However, we do not assume in our scientific paradigm that those same animals have immortal minds and souls or live in a dualistic universe. In fact, I don’t even believe that the animals who consciously plan and create CSI will live forever. On the other hand, I certainly believe that you and I will live forever. Nevertheless, none of the assumptions show up in the design inference. How could they? How does one get God or soul from “irreducible complexity?” You can’t get from here to there.
Ok, thanks for the theological tidbits, but I had these two questions: In the context of ID, does the term “intelligence” entail consciousness or not? Does it entail Libertarian free will or not? Cheers, RDFish RDFish
RDFish emphasized:
But with respect to human beings in particular, it is clear what the physiological systems supporting thought are – we do not think with our heart or kidneys or livers; we think with our brains.
And then pounded KF sarcastically with
KF, your opinion is noted: Humans do not need to use their brains in order to think. Got it!
But there's this funny little thing in Science called data. See http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=gut-second-brain Uh oh. Neurons where? And what are they doing down there? Are they just sitting there simply monitoring peristalsis or articulating your anal sphincter? Instead, notice the direction of the flow of information! ;-) Oh, and nicely pointed out, Silver Asiatic! Querius
Do you think people need to use their brains to think or not?
Checkmate. Everybody knows that thoughts are physical objects produced directly by the brain. We use our brain to control thoughts, obviously. What controls our brain? Duh. Our brain, of course. 100% of neurological research shows that. It's common sense. It's a fact almost as certain as Darwinin theory itself! Silver Asiatic
RDF:
Definitions cannot be “correct” nor “incorrect” – there is no “right answer” for a definition. They are conventions by which we can communicate, not questions about the world. I did not agree your definition was “correct” – I said I was happy to use any definition you wanted to choose, as long as you wrote it down clearly.
The task is to establish exactly and accurately what it is that has causal adequacy. It isn't a mind that has causal adequacy; it isn't a CSI-rich brain that has causal adequacy. It is intelligence that has causal adequacy. It wouldn't be accurate to say that intelligence dependent on CSI is causally adequate; it wouldn't be accurate to say that intelligence dependent on mind is causally adequate. In each case, we would be including one factor that contributes to causal adequacy and leaving out another factor that contributes to causal adequacy. But when we use the word intelligent, we are including by implication all factors that contribute to causal adequacy. That is why only the word intelligence can be used and why it must be defined.
Let me get this straight now: You are saying that “intelligence” as ID uses the term does or does not entail consciousness and libertarian free choice? (I have very faint hope you will give me a straight answer to this question)
When have I ever failed to give you a straight answer? The ability to plan indicates the ability to choose; the ability to choose indicates consciousness. Each is a corollary of the other. There is that word again. We can derive these things from the definition even though they are not necessarily part of the definition. Some ID proponents do include the word "conscious choice" in their definition. Meyer does. However, no one has ever included "mind" in their definition. So you are wrong about that. Speaking of giving straight answers. You stated earlier that ID includes an immaterial mind as part of its definition. I asked you several times to provide an example. Do you have one yet? When I say plan with purpose (or plan with an end in mind) I am not referring to the faculty of mind.
Ok, so when you say “mind” your are not referring to the faculty of “mind”? Ummm, ok, I’m finding this just a tad confusing. If you are not talking about mind, can you say why you used the word “mind”? I’m sure there’s a logical explanation.
The term plan with an end in mind is an expression that means plan with a purpose. However, I will withdraw that expression altogether if it causes confusion.
Ok, then, the definition of “intelligence” has nothing at all to do with “mind” or “brain”. Got it. It is simply the capacity to arrange matter according to a plan that may be conscious or non-conscious, physically determined or not. Right?
Yes. Of course, the presence of consciousness is a corollary to the ability to choose, which is a necessary condition to planning. You must be conscious to plan. Right?
I guess what confused me was that you used the word “MIND” in your definition, and then went on to define “MIND” as “IMMATERIAL SOUL”. Perhaps you can see why I might have misunderstood you?
I am trying to understand, however, the context seemed evident to me. Perhaps it wasn't.
If this is the official, standard definition of the sole explanatory concept of this fabulous scientific theory of ID, don’t you think a whole lot of people would be saying something similar in lots of places on the net – even if not the same exact words are used?
The point is to convey a specific idea rather than use the same sequence of words, which seldom happens. Perhaps a better test would be to ask another ID proponent if I successfully captured the essence of the concept.
To plan with a purpose is to make a conscious choice.
Only if you define it to be so!!!!!! That is the point I am trying to make to you!!! You are so steeped in your mentalistic assumptions you can’t even see it! Computers make plans all the time, StephenB, but presumably they are not conscious of them.
That's interesting because I was going to say that you fall into the opposite error of attributing human capacities to computers. "Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate it." Getting back to your objection, I think the difference between humans and computers is not only about consciousness but also about creativity and art. This brings us back to Plato's trichotomy of art, nature, and chance, which is a parallel to ID's trichotomy. You shrugged that point off earlier, but it is, I believe, critical. ID implies both creativity and art and if the word "plan with a purpose" doesn't sufficiently convey that point, then I should withdraw it and return to the drawing board. Still, I really don't think there is any confusion about what is meant here. I think you know that a computer cannot really be a conscious, creative, intelligent agent and I think that you know that consciousness is a prerequisite for making creative choices. I think most ID proponents would agree with me, so I don't think there is any confusion about meanings.
This is exactly why these debates run around in endless circles. I say that computers “reflect on their behavior” and make changes in their own programming, which is obviously true (I write such programs). But you instantly assume that “reflection” refers to “conscious awareness of one’s self”, which of course computers do not do. We constantly argue over definitions rather than facts and theories, because while you say you see the need for rigorous definitions, you constantly leave all of your mentalistic assumptions implicit and blow up when I don’t share your implicit assumptions!
Well, there is a truth that transcends that observation. When I say that people can reflect on themselves, I clearly mean that they can do conscious introspection. Since we both agree computers cannot do that, then I don't perceive any problem.
.onestly, given this wonderful theory of ID, which with one single concept – “intelligence” – claims to explain pretty much every unanswered question in the world, including how the universe started, how the physical constants were set, how life originated, and who knows what else… you would think there would be books that all provide one single canonical definition for this fantastically powerful theoretical construct. But no, you are still making it up as you go along. Does “intelligence” entail consciousness or not? Does it entail Libertarian free will or not?
What you want to say here, of course, is that a conscious choice also implies the freedom to make that choice, which suggests, as you would have it, that dualistic metaphysics has been assumed or is in play. Remember, though, that in the context of intelligent design, we are discussing what we observe, not what we believe. We observe intelligent agents making deliberate choices that they did not have to make. We observe intelligent agents creating art when they could be indulging their animal appetites. Indeed, we ever observe animals taking time out to create CSI. However, we do not assume in our scientific paradigm that those same animals have immortal minds and souls or live in a dualistic universe. In fact, I don't even believe that the animals who consciously plan and create CSI will live forever. On the other hand, I certainly believe that you and I will live forever. Nevertheless, none of the assumptions show up in the design inference. How could they? How does one get God or soul from "irreducible complexity?" You can't get from here to there. StephenB
Hi Phinehas,
Still using the reframe-to-ridicule approach I see. I suppose you have to dance with the one that brought you.
Oh, please. If you believe I have unfairly stated your and KF's point, then simply DENY YOU BELIEVE IT. If you deny what I said, then you believe human beings do in fact need to use their brains to think. You are the one trying to dance around the truth of course. It's very simple, either one or the other. Do you think people need to use their brains to think or not? Cheers, RDFish RDF: An editorial comment has been earned. You erected and knocked over a strawman, conveniently ignoring the context of evidence and reasoning -- most significantly evidence and linked reasoning that points to a cosmos created by a necessary being and set up to facilitate C-chemistry cell based life -- that suggests that the claimed universality of experience that a brain or the like is required for intelligent action is an unwarranted assertion. To then rhetorically demand that those who correct you accept or deny a strawman based on scooping something out of context is a doubling down. This looks a lot like the fallacy of the closed, ideologically driven mind on your part, one not open to even receive evidence that his claimed universality is not universal. That speaks volumes, sad volumes. KF RDFish
RDF: Gotcha strawman rhetorical games as you just indulged, by depending on snipping out of context, sniping and announcing victory are inherently fallacious. Under normal circumstances we do routinely use our brains in thinking. But to suggest or imply that we require brains to think under all circumstances is fraught with all sorts of questions on our ultimate nature and we should be wary of begging big questions. Moreover, given the fine tuned cosmos, the possibility of different architectures of intelligent beings, and the testimony and life experience of millions that by encounter with immaterial intelligence, their lives have been transformed, we have no good epistemic reason to insist that intelligence requires embodiment, brains or the like. KF kairosfocus
RDF: Still using the reframe-to-ridicule approach I see. I suppose you have to dance with the one that brought you. Phinehas
F/N 2: SB, 210 on defining intelligence as is relevant to the design inference:
We are discussing the causal adequacy of intelligence. What is it that is causally adequate? It is intelligence. Have you processed that so far? The power and the capacity to plan with an end in mind and rearrange matter, which is the definition of intelligence, IS causally adequate for producing CSI . . . . The same formal idea can be expressed in many ways. Everyone understands that the capacity to plan with purpose is exactly the same thing as the capacity to plan with and end in mind . . . . the general definition of intelligence as a conscious creative art (as per Plato) [I explained the parallel four times] and the specific definition of intelligence as it applies to the design inference, we will stay with the latter–which is the capacity to arrange and rearrange matter with the end in mind . . . . As I wrote in my last correspondence, “Mind is an immaterial and spiritual power to think, judge, and will” . . . . Intelligence, in the specific context of the design inference, is the capacity to plan and purposely rearrange matter or the capacity to rearrange matter with an end in mind. I should probably point out to you that those two phrases mean the same thing even though the words are different. SB: I don’t recall using the word mind in the context of the ID scientific paradigm. I consider it to be a useful philosophical construct that can edify our scientific understanding . . . . When I say plan with purpose (or plan with an end in mind) I am not referring to the faculty of mind. Let’s stay with “plan with a purpose,” so that you don’t get carried away. I am sure that you read above that I stated that neither CSI [or mechanisms] or mind [as faculty] can be included in the definition of intelligence . . . . RDF seems to forget that a formal definition always produces several corollaries and also that the same point can be made with different words. To plan with a purpose is to make a conscious choice.
Now, of course there is a widely known philosophical and common-sense understanding that we are responsible, self-aware conscious, thinking, insightful, purposing, common sense guided, morally governed intelligences with capacities that transcend mere blindly physical mechanical GIGO-controlled processing of organised arrangements of hardware and software components. A common way of expressing this is to say that we have minds of our own. Anything else that exhibits such a capacity would be deemed intelligent. To date, though it is a common belief and hope of AI enthusiasts and Sci Fi fans alike, there is simply no sign of such a capacity or faculty emerging from sufficiently sophisticated software and hardware. There is, likewise, no adequate body of observational evidence that neural networks in animals, across time, have accumulated the neural network equivalent of programming in sufficient degree by incremental chance variation and differential reproductive success that such conscious intelligence emerged at some threshold. However, this is a common confident manner assertion driven by the a priori materialism that so often rules the roost on matters of origins science. In blunt terms, this is seen as what "must have happened," as the only possibilities allowed to sit at the table entail that. Cat, chasing, meet tail. So, when I see RDF, 212, say:
Computers make plans all the time, StephenB, but presumably they are not conscious of them. If you mean “conscious choice” then say “conscious choice”, rather than assuming we all agree that all plans must be consciously apprehended. This is exactly why these debates run around in endless circles. I say that computers “reflect on their behavior” and make changes in their own programming, which is obviously true (I write such programs).
. . . it simply tells me the blinding power of a question-begging a priori implicitly injected into a paradigm. Here, materialism by the subtle back-door of methodological naturalism, which has been used to inappropriately redefine science, its methods and permissible conclusions. Here, this is multiplied by anthropomorphising language that distorts what is really happening: One tier of intelligently designed programs running on intelligently designed machines with supervisory operating systems that are also intelligently designed, under certain cases will trigger replacement of one program or routine with another. All along, the computer itself exerts no commonsense reflective choice or purpose. But oh, how easy it is to ignore the difference and project a personality unto the machine. Back to SB. Yes, SB used "mind" in a context where he should not have for perfect consistency and leaving no hooks for red herring chases. But it is plain that his summary of what intelligence in essence as relevant to design theory is, is reasonable. Similarly, RDF should be quite aware -- at least when he isn't busy trying to score debate points -- that design thinkers are using the commonplace, garden variety understanding of intelligence we are all familiar with from the inside. He should also be fully aware that any number of key concepts in science, technology and other serious areas are subject to debates over definition. It is not irrelevant to note, here, that "life" is a key concept for biology, the study of life. But there is simply no one size fits all reasonably simple definition of life to which all practitioners of biology would adhere. Instead, we use ostensive definition, essentially by paradigm cases and sufficiently close family resemblance. So, the making of much rhetorical song and dance over definitions of intelligence reflects rather the want of substance in objections to what is in the end a fairly simple chain of reasoning that is controversial for ideological rather than logical or substantive reasons. Again, from the OP and reflecting the previous discussions:
a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t
Intelligent design is as familiar as fashioning sentences for this post. It routinely produces FSCO/I as sentences here exhibit. Traces from OOL such as the coded info in our genomes going back to first cell based life, reflects FSCO/I. On our uniform and repeated observation design is the routine, reliable and only actually observed and analytically plausible source of FSCO/I. On signs, FSCO/I is an index of design as most cr5edible cause. Life, then is on FSCO/I asa sign of design, credibly designed. No need for much song and dance and endless disputes over words intended to cloud and polarise the issue. If you wish to overturn this reasoning simply provide credible cases of FSCO/I arising by blind chance and/or mechanical necessity. Per the needle in haystack blind search challenge and dozens of failed attempts over the years, that is very hard to do. (Hard enough that recently emphasis of objectors has plainly shifted to clouding and polarising the issue.) So, we have every right to conclude that this is a serious and well warranted inference. KF kairosfocus
KF, your opinion is noted: Humans do not need to use their brains in order to think. Got it! RDFish
F/N: It is highly interesting to observe RDF's continued claim, e.g. 206:
I am not DEFINING intelligent agents as having CSI-rich mechanisms. Instead I am making the empirical observation that in our experience, everything capable of intelligent action (i.e. “intelligent agents”) do in fact rely (at least in part) on CSI-rich mechanisms.
This is now plainly a case of insistent repetition in the face of sufficient demonstration that it is not our general, uniform repeated experience that this is the case. We don't even know if we ourselves "rely" on such in any way that implies or connotes, requires. Similarly, the evidence pointing strongly to a cosmos fine tuned for life based on C-chemistry, aqueous medium cells, makes it a serious candidate root cause that this is best explained by a necessary -- thus immaterial -- being who is the intelligent designer of our observed cosmos. The reliance on ambiguities [in our experience, rely on], on an assertion as fact that is dubious [everything], and yhe implicit no true scotsman fallacy [our -- this excludes millions of humans whose experience is significantly different] shows just how weak the argument is. KF kairosfocus
Hi StephenB,
The power and the capacity to plan with an end in mind and rearrange matter, which is the definition of intelligence, IS causally adequate for producing CSI. You have reluctantly agreed, and with much confused distraction, that the definition of intelligence is correct and, as defined, is causally adequate.
You are still confused about definitions, SB. Definitions cannot be "correct" nor "incorrect" - there is no "right answer" for a definition. They are conventions by which we can communicate, not questions about the world. I did not agree your definition was "correct" - I said I was happy to use any definition you wanted to choose, as long as you wrote it down clearly.
Now you want to back out of your concession and return to your observation that, in our experience, everything capable of intelligent action relies on CSI mechanisms and that intelligence is NOT causally adequate unless we add that observation.
You are confusing definitions and observations. Your definition is fine. Observations can't be described until we settle on a definition.
RDF: So now you are adding things that were not in your FORMAL DEFINITION – such as consciousness, which you never mentioned, and choice (by which I’m guessing you mean libertarian choice) which you also never mentioned. SB: If you can’t handle the difference between the general definition of intelligence as a conscious creative art (as per Plato) [I explained the parallel four times] and the specific definition of intelligence as it applies to the design inference, we will stay with the latter–which is the capacity to arrange and rearrange matter with the end in mind.
You are the one who insisted we need one single FORMAL definition, and now you are providing a "general definition" and a "specific definition". Are you certain we can pick one of these, or would you like to toss a few more into the mix just to make sure you can never be held to anything? Let me get this straight now: You are saying that "intelligence" as ID uses the term does or does not entail consciousness and libertarian free choice? (I have very faint hope you will give me a straight answer to this question)
SB: Intelligence, in the specific context of the design inference, is the capacity to plan and purposely rearrange matter or the capacity to rearrange matter with an end in mind. (emphasis added) SB: I don’t recall using the word mind in the context of the ID scientific paradigm. I consider it to be a useful philosophical construct that can edify our scientific understanding. (emphasis added)
HAHAHAHAhahahahaha. You define the critical term of your theory in terms of "mind", and then deny that you mention "mind" in the context of your theory. Too much, stop it, I can't stand it. Ahahahahaha!!
When I say plan with purpose (or plan with an end in mind) I am not referring to the faculty of mind.
Ok, so when you say "mind" your are not referring to the faculty of "mind"? Ummm, ok, I'm finding this just a tad confusing. If you are not talking about mind, can you say why you used the word "mind"? I'm sure there's a logical explanation.
Let’s stay with “plan with a purpose,” so that you don’t get carried away.
OK, as long as by "purpose" you don't mean something like "a goal in mind" or a "conscious goal"... right?
I am sure that you read above that I stated that neither CSI [or mechanisms] or mind [as faculty] can be included in the definition of intelligence.
Ok, then, the definition of "intelligence" has nothing at all to do with "mind" or "brain". Got it. It is simply the capacity to arrange matter according to a plan that may be conscious or non-conscious, physically determined or not. Right?
The faculty of mind, let alone mind defined as an immaterial soul, cannot, as I have stated many times, be part of the definition of intelligence.
I guess what confused me was that you used the word "MIND" in your definition, and then went on to define "MIND" as "IMMATERIAL SOUL". Perhaps you can see why I might have misunderstood you?
RDF: (It is very, very funny to note that typing this as a quoted phrase into Google brings up exactly ZERO hits, and without quotes brings up nothing I could find related to Intelligent Design!!! Hahahaha). SB: That is because the same idea can be expressed using different words, and if I use someone else’s expression, I am normally obliged to give due credit.
If this is the official, standard definition of the sole explanatory concept of this fabulous scientific theory of ID, don't you think a whole lot of people would be saying something similar in lots of places on the net - even if not the same exact words are used?
To plan with a purpose is to make a conscious choice.
Only if you define it to be so!!!!!! That is the point I am trying to make to you!!! You are so steeped in your mentalistic assumptions you can't even see it! Computers make plans all the time, StephenB, but presumably they are not conscious of them. If you mean "conscious choice" then say "conscious choice", rather than assuming we all agree that all plans must be consciously apprehended. This is exactly why these debates run around in endless circles. I say that computers "reflect on their behavior" and make changes in their own programming, which is obviously true (I write such programs). But you instantly assume that "reflection" refers to "conscious awareness of one's self", which of course computers do not do. We constantly argue over definitions rather than facts and theories, because while you say you see the need for rigorous definitions, you constantly leave all of your mentalistic assumptions implicit and blow up when I don't share your implicit assumptions! Honestly, given this wonderful theory of ID, which with one single concept - "intelligence" - claims to explain pretty much every unanswered question in the world, including how the universe started, how the physical constants were set, how life originated, and who knows what else... you would think there would be books that all provide one single canonical definition for this fantastically powerful theoretical construct. But no, you are still making it up as you go along. Does "intelligence" entail consciousness or not? Does it entail Libertarian free will or not? Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi RDFish, I've had a busy night putting up my latest post, which you might like to read. I'll be back later. Cheers. vjtorley
RDF
Please listen – if you just keep repeated mistakes we won’t get anywhere. I am not DEFINING intelligent agents as having CSI-rich mechanisms. Instead I am making the empirical observation that in our experience, everything capable of intelligent action (i.e. “intelligent agents”) do in fact rely (at least in part) on CSI-rich mechanisms.
No mistakes coming from these quarters. Try to grasp the concept. We are discussing the causal adequacy of intelligence. What is it that is causally adequate? It is intelligence. Have you processed that so far? The power and the capacity to plan with an end in mind and rearrange matter, which is the definition of intelligence, IS causally adequate for producing CSI. You have reluctantly agreed, and with much confused distraction, that the definition of intelligence is correct and, as defined, is causally adequate. Now you want to back out of your concession and return to your observation that, in our experience, everything capable of intelligent action relies on CSI mechanisms and that intelligence is NOT causally adequate unless we add that observation. Your “observation,” true or not, is irrelevant to the question of causal adequacy, just as my observation that everything capable of intelligent action depends on minds. Both are irrelevant to causal adequacy because neither observation reflects a causally adequate factor. CSI mechanisms are not causally adequate and minds are not causally adequate. They are IRRELEVANT to the task of defining what it is that is causally adequate.Try to process this information.
Now you are saying that the meaning of this word should be OBVIOUS and all these various factors that you are including in this FORMAL DEFINITION do not actually have to be stated FORMALLY!
The same formal idea can be expressed in many ways. Everyone understands that the capacity to plan with purpose is exactly the same thing as the capacity to plan with and end in mind.
So now you are adding things that were not in your FORMAL DEFINITION – such as consciousness, which you never mentioned, and choice (by which I’m guessing you mean libertarian choice) which you also never mentioned.
If you can’t handle the difference between the general definition of intelligence as a conscious creative art (as per Plato) [I explained the parallel four times] and the specific definition of intelligence as it applies to the design inference, we will stay with the latter--which is the capacity to arrange and rearrange matter with the end in mind. I don’t want to stretch your brain any further than it can go.
And worse than that, you still haven’t even provided a FORMAL DEFINITION for “mind”, which is again used in various senses and requires a FORMAL DEFINITION to serve in our discussion.
Why would you make another blatantly false statement? These misrepresentations do not help your credibility. As I wrote in my last correspondence, “Mind is an immaterial and spiritual power to think, judge, and will.” It’s on the record.
Please, provide a single, FORMAL DEFINITION for the term “intelligence”, and then stick to it. Can you do that?
Of course. If you can’t grasp the difference between context, and the distinction between general and specific, we will stay with specific. Intelligence, in the specific context of the design inference, is the capacity to plan and purposely rearrange matter or the capacity to rearrange matter with an end in mind. I should probably point out to you that those two phrases mean the same thing even though the words are different. SB: I don’t recall using the word mind in the context of the ID scientific paradigm. I consider it to be a useful philosophical construct that can edify our scientific understanding. RDF:
Well, I think you have finally jumped the shark, Stephen. You pretend to agree on the importance of formal definitions, and you use this word “mind” in the very definition of “intelligence” that you yourself provide, and then you claim that you haven’t used the word in the context of ID!?!?!?!?!
Are you cuckoo! When I say plan with purpose (or plan with an end in mind) I am not referring to the faculty of mind. Let’s stay with “plan with a purpose,” so that you don’t get carried away. I am sure that you read above that I stated that neither CSI [or mechanisms] or mind [as faculty] can be included in the definition of intelligence. As usual, you are being disingenous.
The definition of “intelligence” according to StephenB that ID uses is: The capacity to plan the arrangement of matter toward some end, making choices which are free in the libertarian sense, and which are consciously apprehended by an immaterial and spiritual power of the soul.
LOL. You must not be trying very hard. The faculty of mind, let alone mind defined as an immaterial soul, cannot, as I have stated many times, be part of the definition of intelligence. But thank you for playing. SB: “The capacity to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind.
(It is very, very funny to note that typing this as a quoted phrase into Google brings up exactly ZERO hits, and without quotes brings up nothing I could find related to Intelligent Design!!! Hahahaha).
That is because the same idea can be expressed using different words, and if I use someone else’s expression, I am normally obliged to give due credit. Nice try, though.
In any event, Stephen then proceeded to explain that this standard ID definition for “intelligence” wasn’t actually complete, but required additional concepts that “should be obvious”. Stephen doesn’t appear to realize that the whole purpose of providing formal definitions in scientific theories is to prevent the inevitable miscommunications that result when different people find different things “obvious”! And what were these “obvious” additions to his definition? Consciousness and “choice” (by which I believe – although he has failed to clarify this – that Stephen means libertarian free choice).
RDF seems to forget that a formal definition always produces several corollaries and also that the same point can be made with different words. To plan with a purpose is to make a conscious choice. Still, what ID proponents have said in the past is true. Critics, including RDF, know what intelligence means. They just pretend not to because it is all they have. Rather than follow the reasoning, which is obvious, they just pretend not to understand what is being said. Very sad.
Fine, no problem. Now, Stephen’s definition of “intelligence” in the context of ID includes consciousness and libertarian free choice, perhaps something like this: “The capacity to consciously plan – by making choices that transcend physical cause – the arrangement of matter with an end in mind.”
Here, RD has accidentally stumbled on to the truth and proven my point. Notice that I didn’t use the words “transcend physical cause” and yet I have no objection to that expression because it is a corollary to the principle of rearranging matter. Sometimes, the same idea can be conveyed with different words. Thanks for proving my point RD. StephenB
RDFish @ 207 I do not think ID can be firmly based on the metaphysical assumptions of dualism and libertarian free will. The reason is that ID does not speculate on the nature and origins of the proposed intelligent designer of life on earth. Accordingly, ID cannot rule out the possibility that that designer originated from a purely materialistic, mechanistic, foresightless, accumulative process. In other words, ID, absent any qualifications or constraints on the nature of the designer, does not entail dualism. Cheers CLAVDIVS
As you say, RDF, this thread (and the previous one) have been very illuminating. Hats off to your dedication to the task. 5for
Hi All, It looks like this discussion is winding down (thankfully). It has been a very illuminating experience for me. Let's review. StephenB's insistence that we settle on FORMAL DEFINITIONS for the terms ID uses helped tremendously. I have for years asked ID proponents for a technical definition of "intellignece". After all, it is the sole explanatory concept that they offer in order to explain everything from the existence of the universe to the values of the physical constants to the existence of chromosomes, flagella, eyeballs, brains, and other "features". One would think there would be some effort to actually describe what the meaning of this single word might actually be in the context of this ostensibly empirical theory. In the past when I have asked for ID's definition of this term, ID proponents have ridiculed me, saying that everybody knows what this word means, and everybody agrees, and dictionary definitions are just fine. When I tried to use a dictionary definition here, StephenB again ridiculed me, calling my definition "bizarre", and insisting that he had already told me the one, single, canonical definition that all ID proponents agreed on, which is: "The capacity to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind. (It is very, very funny to note that typing this as a quoted phrase into Google brings up exactly ZERO hits, and without quotes brings up nothing I could find related to Intelligent Design!!! Hahahaha). In any event, Stephen then proceeded to explain that this standard ID definition for "intelligence" wasn't actually complete, but required additional concepts that "should be obvious". Stephen doesn't appear to realize that the whole purpose of providing formal definitions in scientific theories is to prevent the inevitable miscommunications that result when different people find different things "obvious"! And what were these "obvious" additions to his definition? Consciousness and "choice" (by which I believe - although he has failed to clarify this - that Stephen means libertarian free choice). Fine, no problem. Now, Stephen's definition of "intelligence" in the context of ID includes consciousness and libertarian free choice, perhaps something like this: "The capacity to consciously plan - by making choices that transcend physical cause - the arrangement of matter with an end in mind." And then, Stephen provided the definition for the other word he used in his formal definition of "intelligence" that required clarification, which of course was "mind". His definition for that word was: an immaterial and spiritual power of the soul by which I think, judge, and will. With this, we have all the definitions we need to understand what StephenB says ID offers as the empirically supported explanation of the cause of the universe, biological complexity, and so forth. What was is this cause? "The capacity to consciously plan - by making choices that transcend physical cause - the arrangement of matter with an end that is known to the immaterial and spiritual power of the soul." Got it? THAT is what, according to StephenB here, is the definition of "intelligence" that ID offers to explain biological complexity. I have been saying for a long time that while ID proponents are loathe to admit it, ID is firmly based upon the metaphysical assumptions of dualism and libertarian free will. After days of debate, I believe any fair reader can see that I have always been 100% correct about this. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi StephenB,
You seem to forget the history of our current discussion and your proclivity to distort ID’s definition of an intelligent agent, insisting that it should include extraneous and irrelevant things like the CSI-rich mechanisms of the brain.
Please listen - if you just keep repeated mistakes we won't get anywhere. I am not DEFINING intelligent agents as having CSI-rich mechanisms. Instead I am making the empirical observation that in our experience, everything capable of intelligent action (i.e. "intelligent agents") do in fact rely (at least in part) on CSI-rich mechanisms. It isn’t a question of which definition I “want to use.” It is a question of honoring the definition that ID uses to identify the meaning of intelligence as a cause. You can use any definition you want to, and I will agree. We have already agreed on a definition for the word "intelligence", which is "the capacity to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind". I am perfectly willing to use this definition, however the remaining term that can be interpreted many ways is "mind", and we must obviously settle on a definition for that term as well. Again, I'll be happy to use whatever defintion you choose.
Please do not tempt my lower nature again by insinuating that I have not provided the definition.
Yes, I thought I could feel a "lower nature" poking around down there somewhere. That must be hard for you. I'll do my best not to tempt it.
Again, you are rewriting history. I provided that list to test against your claims, which reflected an approach that cannot be defended from the perspective of historical science. You followed by ignoring my challenge and asked me to test it against ID claims. That seems like a strange request because ID’s approach is based on those principles. How could each not be aligned with the other?
And I explained all this with care to you. I'll try again. The list of criteria you listed (with some errors) is a way to evaluate explanations of historical events. I am, very obviously, NOT PROPOSING any explanations - instead, I am showing the ID fails to meet the criteria of being consistent with our experience (for explanations of first CSI) or failing to be the simplest explanation (for explanations of first CSI on Earth). If you would like to defend ID (which appears to be the case) it thus behooves you show that ID does in fact meet those very criteria that you listed. Your refusal to do so simply shows that even you know it will fail, given my argument here.
The point is to use the definition that reflects ID’s paradigms. My account of that definition was somewhat abbreviated and could have included other aspects, which should be obvious, such as the notion of a conscious and deliberate choice to affect a particular outcome, end, or objective.
Oh. My. Goodness. First you go on and on about how definitions have to be FORMAL, and how CRITICAL it is to provide these FORMAL DEFINITIONS so we can do historical SCIENCE. Now you are saying that the meaning of this word should be OBVIOUS and all these various factors that you are including in this FORMAL DEFINITION do not actually have to be stated FORMALLY! Either you are willing to use YOUR OWN FORMAL DEFINITION for this critical term or you are not!!! A FORMAL DEFINTION does not leave all sorts of pertinent characteristics out, leaving it to the reader to interpret however they want to! That is the whole point of a FORMAL DEFINTION! This is unbelievable. So now you are adding things that were not in your FORMAL DEFINITION - such as consciousness, which you never mentioned, and choice (by which I'm guessing you mean libertarian choice) which you also never mentioned. And worse than that, you still haven't even provided a FORMAL DEFINITION for "mind", which is again used in various senses and requires a FORMAL DEFINITION to serve in our discussion. Please, provide a single, FORMAL DEFINITION for the term "intelligence", and then stick to it. Can you do that? So far it seems to be something like "Having the capacity to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind, and having conscious awareness of that plan, and also having libertarian free choice". I don't want to put words into your mouth, though, so once again (for the 100th time), please give me your final answer with regard to your FORMAL DEFINTION of the word "intelligence", so that we can debate without misunderstanding this term.
In any case, the definition has already served its purpose. As a causal explanation, intelligence is not or cannot be defined in terms of CSI-rich mechanisms, even in part.
Fine - our definition shall not mention "CSI-rich mechanism". That will be an empirical claim that refers to the "intelligence" that you have defined.
RDF: However, it should be painfully obvious to you that you have used yet another word that requires formal definition in order to avoid misunderstanding, and that of course is “mind”. SB: I don’t recall using the word mind in the context of the ID scientific paradigm. I consider it to be a useful philosophical construct that can edify our scientific understanding.
Well, I think you have finally jumped the shark, Stephen. You pretend to agree on the importance of formal definitions, and you use this word "mind" in the very definition of "intelligence" that you yourself provide, and then you claim that you haven't used the word in the context of ID!?!?!?!?!
A hold that a mind is an immaterial and spiritual power of the soul by which I think, judge, and will.
Ok, Stephen, thank you for that. I am trying very hard here to represent your defintion fairly, and so far what I come up with by taking what you have said in these posts is this: The definition of "intelligence" according to StephenB that ID uses is: The capacity to plan the arrangement of matter toward some end, making choices which are free in the libertarian sense, and which are consciously apprehended by an immaterial and spiritual power of the soul. Of course I may have misrepresented what you said, so please correct this, but that is my very best effort at capturing what you say is ID's FORMAL DEFINITION of "intelligence" that we should use going forward. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
F/N: Here from 728 in the previous thread are the ten rules SB presented:
Here are ten non-negotiable rules for doing historical science, and Meyer accounts for all of them at various points in his presentation: 1 Historical sciences are different from other sciences because they search for past causes as opposed to establishing universal laws by which nature generally operates. 2 Causes that are known to produce the effect in question are judged to be better candidates than those that are not. 3 There must be evidence that the proposed cause was, in fact, present. 4 Among alternatives, the hypothesis proposed must best explain the evidence. 5 To qualify as best, a historical explanation must cite a uniquely adequate cause–a cause that has alone demonstrated the capacity to produce the evidence in question. 6 The cause must account for the difference between what happened and what otherwise might have been expected to happen. 7 The cause must be one that is now in operation. 8 If more than one explanation might satisfy the criteria of best, scientists must use a comparative method of evaluation and a process of elimination to evaluate competing possible causal hypotheses. 9 The cause must have existed at the right time and place. 10 There must be an absence of evidence for competing causes.
We can compare with the logical framework I presented and summarised in the original post, from 678 in that same past thread:
[T]here is a problem with reasoning about how inductive reasoning extends to reconstructing the remote past. Let’s try again: a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t.
The coherence, cogency and relevance of the general framework presented by SB (and summarised onwards from any number of sources that are reflected in Meyer) are obvious. Assertions of being contradictory etc are grossly exaggerated, and redundancy is sometimes conceptually important in laws of science. Perhaps most famously, Newton's first law of motion is a special case of the second law, i.e. if F = 0, the rate of change change of momentum is 0, i.e. acceleration will be 0. Of course, RDF studiously ignored my 678. We can proceed to 762, where I made a substitution instance addressing how the design inference applies the inductive reasoning framework, as is cited in the OP above -- which again RDF has studiously ignored:
a: The actual past (or some other unobserved event, entity or phenomenon . . . ) A leaves traces t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], which we observe. b: We observe a cause C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] that produces consequence s [= directly observed cases of creation of FSCO/I, say digital code in software, etc] which is materially similar to t [= the DNA of the cell] c: We identify that on empirical investigation and repeated observation, s [= FSCO/I] reliably results from C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency]. d: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is ALSO the only empirically warranted source of s [= FSCO/I] . _____________________________ e: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is the best explanation for t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], viewed here as an instance of s [= FSCO/I].
So, we can see that the design inference is based on principles of scientifically reconstructing the unobserved past through its traces in light of observed causes that characteristically produce such consequences. In so doing, it has no need whatsoever to embark on declarations that intelligence must be embodied or must use brains or the like that exhibit FSCO/I. So, there is no chicken and egg dilemma, contrary to RDF's imagination. In addition, the case of the fine tuned physics of the cosmos gives us good reason to hold that it is not a properly scientific conclusion that intelligences must be embodied or must use brains or the like that exhibit FSCO/I. The claim that it is our uniform, repeated experience that intelligence requires brains or the like physical processing system rich in FSCO/I is false. False because it is a reasonable view and one held by significant individuals to hold the origin of the universe to be designed by a necessary being and designer with a mind who is ontologically prior to matter. So, what RDF claims is not our universal experience. Instead it reflects a particular ideology and its underlying worldviews, it is the position of a party and commits the no true scotsman fallacy to extreme degree. Namely, excluding dissenters from the circle of humanity altogether by the force of asserting how "we" have a uniform experience along the lines of the materialist party's view. Likewise, we may point out that ever so many millions stand in testimony that they have met and been transformed for the good by a transcendent and immaterial mind, including some of the most remarkable people in history such as Pascal. And we may also point out that there are sufficient and sufficiently impressive cases of people near death who have interfaced with the beyond and with even their surroundings, that this too should give materialists and their fellow travellers pause before they try to write in such ideologies into science. (On a personal note, I am particularly impressed by death bed cases where people have clearly perceived themselves to be welcomed by a delegation from Glory, to the point where they do not want to "come back.") I think science should be a lot more cautious about making ideological commitments that beg big questions, especially in an age where scientism is a major problem and temptation. KF kairosfocus
Querius as to
"I wonder whether Schroedinger’s cat could be able to keep itself alive by intensely observing the unstable isotope"
I've wondered this myself, and am sure some clever experimentalist will figure out a some way to perform the experiment, but my initial reaction to the experiment was this:
cowboys herding cats - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pk7yqlTMvp8
bornagain77
Hi RD You wrote:
In the previous thread, I suggested a definition, which I got from dictionaries. You rejected this definition, saying that it was “bizarre”. I asked you to give me whatever definition you wanted to use, and and far as I can see, you have simply refused to do so.
You seem to forget the history of our current discussion and your proclivity to distort ID's definition of an intelligent agent, insisting that it should include extraneous and irrelevant things like the CSI-rich mechanisms of the brain. It isn't a question of which definition I "want to use." It is a question of honoring the definition that ID uses to identify the meaning of intelligence as a cause. I wish I didn't have to call attention to another one of your false statements, but, alas, I must. I have not refused to provide a definition. Indeed, I have done so four times.
In any event, at least we agree on this: The formal definition of intelligence is important.
Excellent!
>You are even more confused now about what a “definition” is A definition is something that assigns meaning to a word.
I know what a definition is, which is why I provided the appropriate definition of intelligence so that you would stop cluttering it with concepts such as "CSI-rich mechanisms.
There is nothing sacred about any definition; anyone is perfectly free to use any word in any way they want as long as they make their definitions clear and explicit.
Of course. I agree. ID has made its definition of intelligence clear and explicit. The point is not that definitions are sacred or cannot be changed. The point is that they should not be altered and distorted by those who have a contrary agenda.
But that’s not a problem. Simply tell me whatever you believe the standard, non-negotiable, paradigmatic, and sacred definition of the word “intelligence” is, and I will instantly agree to use your definition. I would say that is more than fair, wouldn’t you agree?
Please do not tempt my lower nature again by insinuating that I have not provided the definition.
I’m quite familiar with historical science of course; I simply don’t think your particular list (with its silly redundancies and contradictions) are a good representation of how theories are evaluated. But again, there was nothing in that list that I have object to – I simply asked you to show how ID actually met those criteria… and guess what? You refused to do so! (Why aren’t we surprised?)
Again, you are rewriting history. I provided that list to test against your claims, which reflected an approach that cannot be defended from the perspective of historical science. You followed by ignoring my challenge and asked me to test it against ID claims. That seems like a strange request because ID's approach is based on those principles. How could each not be aligned with the other?
Very well! We will from now on use this definition, simply because you want to. Of course your definition differs from dictionary definitions, and from definitions of the word used in the cognitive sciences, which typically refer to mental abilities aside from planning, including learning, linguistic abilities, and so on. But that doesn’t matter – because we are all free to say whatever definition we want to use as long as we make it explicit and clear, I am perfectly happy to use this one.
Above, you asked me to provide a definition that I had already provided as if I had not provided it. Indeed, you went so far as to say that I have, so far, refused to honor your request. Now you tell me that we can, indeed, use the definition that I provided. Are you for real? The point is to use the definition that reflects ID's paradigms. My account of that definition was somewhat abbreviated and could have included other aspects, which should be obvious, such as the notion of a conscious and deliberate choice to affect a particular outcome, end, or objective. In any case, the definition has already served its purpose. As a causal explanation, intelligence is not or cannot be defined in terms of CSI-rich mechanisms, even in part.
However, it should be painfully obvious to you that you have used yet another word that requires formal definition in order to avoid misunderstanding, and that of course is “mind”.
I don't recall using the word mind in the context of the ID scientific paradigm. I consider it to be a useful philosophical construct that can edify our scientific understanding.
Given your insistence on the critical need for us to provide rigorous definitions of our terms (and I fully agree!), I’m sure you wouldn’t mind simply providing your preferred defintion for the word “mind” as well. Thanking you in advance!
Of course. That is a reasonable request. A hold that a mind is an immaterial and spiritual power of the soul by which I think, judge, and will. StephenB
PS: Wolfram Science World on Newton's contribution to scientific methods:
Newton invented a scientific method which was truly universal in its scope. Newton presented his methodology as a set of four rules for scientific reasoning. These rules were stated in the Principia and proposed that (1) we are to admit no more causes of natural things such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances, (2) the same natural effects must be assigned to the same causes, (3) qualities of bodies are to be esteemed as universal, and (4) propositions deduced from observation of phenomena should be viewed as accurate until other phenomena contradict them. These four concise and universal rules for investigation were truly revolutionary. By their application, Newton formulated the universal laws of nature with which he was able to unravel virtually all the unsolved problems of his day. Newton went much further than outlining his rules for reasoning, however, actually describing how they might be applied to the solution of a given problem. The analytic method he invented far exceeded the more philosophical and less scientifically rigorous approaches of Aristotle and Aquinas. Newton refined Galileo's experimental method, creating the compositional method of experimentation still practiced today [i.e. that found in Opticks Query 31] . . .
kairosfocus
F/N 2 (attn, RDF): The OP has given a presentation of the inductive logic involved in scientific reasoning about the remote unobserved past and other similar matters we do not directly observe. This traces inter alia to Newton's four rules of scientific reasoning used to justify his presentation of the gravitation equation as a hypothesis, which was then controversial. It has been repeatedly drawn to RDF's attention, and just as repeatedly he has studiously ignored it. This does not speak well of his behaviour, attitudes, motivations or typical rhetorical tactics. Let me snip again:
a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t.
Is RDF prepared to argue on substantive grounds, that this reasoning is fatally flawed and useless? Patently not, he is inclined rather to whistle by the grave-yard in the dark as though the obvious duppies leaning or sitting on the fence were not there. Well, they are looking at one another and now turn back to to the furiously whistling RDF, grin to show their teeth, and jointly shout: BOOO!!!! "Quarrie was a boy to I-man last night, him couldn't follow me . . . " as the old J'can pop song says. Of course, in the same OP, we can find a substitution instance applied to the design inference. It shows that that inference is a straightforward application of a logical process that is glorified common sense. Just, it seems, RDF does not want to go there. Well, there is an old duppy story of the man who saw a duppy, noticed the teeth and fled, runing as hard as he could till he could run no farther. He stopped by a new wall, and someone was standing there. "Man, why you run so hard till you stitch and panting?" "Duppy by the grave yard . . . show him teeth." "Teeth like-a these?" ZOOM!!!!!!!!!! Here endeth the lesson. As my mom was so fond of quoting, a word to the wise. KF kairosfocus
F/N: It has already been brought to RDF's attention (but has predictably been ignored), that here is a definition of intelligence in the UD glossary on the resources tab. That glossary is an appendix to the weak argument correctives of which SB is a co-author. The definition is a standard one, taken from Wikipedia as testimony against known interest:
Intelligence – Wikipedia aptly and succinctly defines: “capacities to reason, to plan, to solve problems, to think abstractly, to comprehend ideas, to use language, and to learn.”
Notice, the capacities to plan thus to purpose and to act towards such, the ability to comprehend ideas and to reason -- implying self aware reflective critical thought, and more. Obviously, this def'n makes no metaphysical commitments, it speaks to functional capacity. Anything that has such a capacity will be intelligent. And -- echoing Plato in The Laws Bk X -- it will be able to act as a self-moved action initiating agent-cause. That is, such an intelligence has significant responsible freedom, it is not merely an automaton programmed to act blindly per an algorithm and built in codes executed in machinery organised to do so. If an when RDF is able to show us a robot acting aut5onomously and with purposes of its own, he can then claim to have real AI in hand. From the same, we can observe other relevant definitions:
Design — purposefully directed contingency. That is, the intelligent, creative manipulation of possible outcomes (and usually of objects, forces, materials, processes and trends) towards goals. (E.g. 1: writing a meaningful sentence or a functional computer program. E.g. 2: loading of a die to produce biased, often advantageous, outcomes. E.g. 3: the creation of a complex object such as a statue, or a stone arrow-head, or a computer, or a pocket knife.) Chance – undirected contingency. That is, events that come from a cluster of possible outcomes, but for which there is no decisive evidence that they are directed; especially where sampled or observed outcomes follow mathematical distributions tied to statistical models of randomness. (E.g. which side of a fair die is uppermost on tossing and tumbling then settling.) Necessity — here, events that are triggered and controlled by mechanical forces that (together with initial conditions) reliably lead to given – sometimes simple (an unsupported heavy object falls) but also perhaps complicated — outcomes. (Newtonian dynamics is the classical model of such necessity.) In some cases, sensitive dependence on [or, “to”] initial conditions may leads to unpredictability of outcomes, due to cumulative amplification of the effects of noise or small, random/ accidental differences between initial and intervening conditions, or simply inevitable rounding errors in calculation. This is called “chaos.” CSI – Life shows evidence of complex, aperiodic, and specified information in its key functional macromolecules, and the only other example we know of such function-specifying complex information are artifacts designed by intelligent agents. A chance origin of life would exceed the universal probability bound (UPB) set by the scope of the universe; hence design is a factor in the origin and development of life. Contrary to a commonly encountered (and usually dismissive) opinion, this concept is neither original to Dr Dembski nor to the design theory movement. Its first recognized use was by noted Origin of Life researcher, Leslie Orgel, in 1973: Living organisms are distinguished by their specified complexity. Crystals fail to qualify as living because they lack complexity; mixtures of random polymers fail to qualify because they lack specificity. [ L.E. Orgel, 1973. The Origins of Life. New York: John Wiley, p. 189. Emphases added.] The concept of complex specified information helps us understand the difference between (a) the highly informational, highly contingent aperiodic functional macromolecules of life and (b) regular crystals formed through forces of mechanical necessity, or (c) random polymer strings. In so doing, they identified a very familiar concept — at least to those of us with hardware or software engineering design and development or troubleshooting experience and knowledge. Furthermore, on massive experience, such CSI reliably points to intelligent design when we see it in cases where we independently know the origin story. What Dembski did with the CSI concept starting in the 1990?s was to: (i) recognize CSI’s significance as a reliable, empirically observable sign of intelligence, (ii) point out the general applicability of the concept, and (iii) provide a probability and information theory based explicitly formal model for quantifying CSI . . . Information — Wikipedia, with some reorganization, is apt: “ . . that which would be communicated by a message if it were sent from a sender to a receiver capable of understanding the message . . . . In terms of data, it can be defined as a collection of facts [i.e. as represented or sensed in some format] from which conclusions may be drawn [and on which decisions and actions may be taken].” Intelligent design [ID] – Dr William A Dembski, a leading design theorist, has defined ID as “the science that studies signs of intelligence.” That is, as we ourselves instantiate [thus exemplify as opposed to “exhaust”], intelligent designers act into the world, and create artifacts. When such agents act, there are certain characteristics that commonly appear, and that – per massive experience — reliably mark such artifacts. It it therefore a reasonable and useful scientific project to study such signs and identify how we may credibly reliably infer from empirical sign to the signified causal factor: purposefully directed contingency or intelligent design. Among the signs of intelligence of current interest for research are: [a] FSCI — function-specifying complex information [e.g. blog posts in English text that take in more than 143 ASCII characters, and/or -- as was highlighted by Yockey and Wicken by the mid-1980s -- as a distinguishing marker of the macromolecules in the heart of cell-based life forms], or more broadly [b] CSI — complex, independently specified information [e.g. Mt Rushmore vs New Hampshire's former Old Man of the mountain, or -- as was highlighted by Orgel in 1973 -- a distinguishing feature of the cell's information-rich organized aperiodic macromolecules that are neither simply orderly like crystals nor random like chance-polymerized peptide chains], or [c] IC – multi-part functionality that relies on an irreducible core of mutually co-adapted, interacting components. [e.g. the hardware parts of a PC or more simply of a mousetrap; or – as was highlighted by Behe in the mid 1990's -- the bacterial flagellum and many other cell-based bodily features and functions.], or [d] “Oracular” active information – in some cases, e.g. many Genetic Algorithms, successful performance of a system traces to built-in information or organisation that guides algorithmic search processes and/or performance so that the system significantly outperforms random search. Such guidance may include oracles that, step by step, inform a search process that the iterations are “warmer/ colder” relative to a performance target zone. (A classic example is the Weasel phrase search program.) Also, [e] Complex, algorithmically active, coded information – the complex information used in systems and processes is symbolically coded in ways that are not preset by underlying physical or chemical forces, but by encoding and decoding dynamically inert but algorithmically active information that guides step by step execution sequences, i.e. algorithms. (For instance, in hard disk drives, the stored information in bits is coded based a conventional, symbolic assignment of the N/S poles, forces and fields involved, and is impressed and used algorithmically. The physics of forces and fields does not determine or control the bit-pattern of the information – or, the drive would be useless. Similarly, in DNA, the polymer chaining chemistry is effectively unrelated to the information stored in the sequence and reading frames of the A/ G/ C/ T side-groups. It is the coded genetic information in the successive three-letter D/RNA codons that is used by the cell’s molecular nano- machines in the step by step creation of proteins. Such DNA sets from observed living organisms starts at 100,000 – 500,000 four-state elements [200 k – 1 M bits], abundantly meriting the description: function- specifying, complex information, or FSCI.)
In short, we can set this particular rabbit-trail to one side and get back to business. KF kairosfocus
NOTICE: I have observed a tendency above to resort to inappropriate language (which I have snipped several times), which in a contentious context invites the vicious and foul-mouthed to proceed in a spiral to the bottom; as can be seen in various fever swamps. I suggest that we keep our language at the level of polite conversation in mixed company that includes bright young children. For, likely, that is exactly the audience we have. And of course, that is exactly the level that is most likely to actually be productive. KF kairosfocus
Hi Querius,
Really? What about a circulatory system? Is a circulatory system also required for a designing mind? What about the respiratory and digestive systems?
If you'd read the discussion you'd see that the issue at hand is not whether or not a human brain specifically is required for intelligent action; rather, it is whether or not CSI-rich systems are required. (But with respect to human beings in particular, it is clear what the physiological systems supporting thought are - we do not think with our heart or kidneys or livers; we think with our brains).
We recognize supporting systems are required for the brain, but how can we prove that the brain itself is not a supporting structure for a transcendent mind? A transceiver.
Our experience confirms that complex mechanisms are necessary for intelligent action (although they do not demonstrate that these CSI-rich systems are sufficient). Thus, even if the brain where nothing but a "transceiver" for a "transcendent mind", that wouldn't affect the argument I've made here. Either way, the brain is necessary in order for human beings to produce complex mechanisms. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
bornagain77: The Quantum Zeno effect is mind blowing! I wonder whether Schroedinger's cat could be able to keep itself alive by intensely observing the unstable isotope (or whatever), or whether human consciousess is required or not. Eric Anderson wrote:
The idea that the brain is an important interface that helps control one’s body and helps connect between the spiritual and the physical realms does not mean that a brain is always required for intelligence to exist.
Nicely stated. That a reality outside our own exists is clearly necessitated by a universe that had a beginning. Natural processes could not bootstrap themselves into existence---in other words, space, time, mass-energy, and the laws of physics cannot create themselves. And without time, there can be no probability or probabilistic events. "In the beginning was the Word (logos), and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." - John 1:1 NIV Querius
In my view, here's why an ID proponent can demand examples of the proposed natural process of macro-evolution, while the Darwinist cannot demand the same of the ID proponent. There's an asymmetry between a Darwinist ascribing a natural process to account for the presumed macro-evolutionary elaboration and adaptation over geologic time, and an ID proponent ascribing an unidentified intelligent agent for the same results, though through different means. Whether this intelligent agent is natural or supernatural is also unspecified, and the ID proponent also makes no claims regarding the means, while the Darwinist of necessity must do so. The strength of the ID paradigm is the presumption of intelligent purpose for poorly understood biological processes and structures. It is a pragmatic observation that the ID paradigm leads to better questions and better science. In contrast, the Darwinist paradigm postulates functionless changes that can result in "junk DNA" and "vestigial organs" such as the pituitary gland (for two of countless examples). ID makes no such presumptions. Then, there's the apparently miraculous chance appearance of an extremely complex, layered, and recursive biological code that sprang fully formed from the brow of Gaia, rather than evolving and continuing to evolve over billions of years in tiny steps . . . (yes, I know about RNA).
We do know that the human brain is a fantastically complex mechanism. We also know that in our uniform and repeated experience, neither humans nor anything else can design anything without a functioning brain.
Really? What about a circulatory system? Is a circulatory system also required for a designing mind? What about the respiratory and digestive systems? We recognize supporting systems are required for the brain, but how can we prove that the brain itself is not a supporting structure for a transcendent mind? A transceiver. So, what is the physical difference between a conscious and an unconscious brain? Is there a difference in weight, for example? Incidentally, I once visited a lab that was trying to construct a computer with artificial synapses to construct an extremely simple artificial silicon brain. Here's a more recent attempt: http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/151696-ibm-on-track-to-building-artificial-synapses Querius
Hi StephenB,
Rather than contradict yourself again by first saying that you DISAGREE with me that a formal definition of intelligence is critical, and then by saying that you AGREE with me that it is critical after I challenge your attempts to distort it, why don’t you just concede the point. The formal definition of intelligence is important.
Wow, you are incredibly confused this. In the previous thread, I suggested a definition, which I got from dictionaries. You rejected this definition, saying that it was "bizarre". I asked you to give me whatever definition you wanted to use, and and far as I can see, you have simply refused to do so. In any event, at least we agree on this: The formal definition of intelligence is important.
Excellent. I am happy that you now understand the critical importance of a definition (in this case, intelligence) and why no one, least of all you, is entitled to tamper with it in order to reframe someone else’s argument.
You are even more confused now about what a "definition" is. A definition is something that assigns meaning to a word. There is nothing sacred about any definition; anyone is perfectly free to use any word in any way they want as long as they make their definitions clear and explicit. Scientific papers routinely provide particular operational definitions for words like "intelligence" that may differ from other senses of the word. But that's not a problem. Simply tell me whatever you believe the standard, non-negotiable, paradigmatic, and sacred definition of the word "intelligence" is, and I will instantly agree to use your definition. I would say that is more than fair, wouldn't you agree?
We are discussing the world authorities that Meyer alludes to in his bool, about which you know nothing.
I'm quite familiar with historical science of course; I simply don't think your particular list (with its silly redundancies and contradictions) are a good representation of how theories are evaluated. But again, there was nothing in that list that I have object to - I simply asked you to show how ID actually met those criteria... and guess what? You refused to do so! (Why aren't we surprised?)
In my last comment, I wrote, “ID’s hypothesis is that the source of CSI (the WHAT not the HOW) is intelligence, that is, the CAPACITY to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind.
Very well! We will from now on use this definition, simply because you want to. Of course your definition differs from dictionary definitions, and from definitions of the word used in the cognitive sciences, which typically refer to mental abilities aside from planning, including learning, linguistic abilities, and so on. But that doesn't matter - because we are all free to say whatever definition we want to use as long as we make it explicit and clear, I am perfectly happy to use this one. However, it should be painfully obvious to you that you have used yet another word that requires formal definition in order to avoid misunderstanding, and that of course is "mind". Given your insistence on the critical need for us to provide rigorous definitions of our terms (and I fully agree!), I'm sure you wouldn't mind simply providing your preferred defintion for the word "mind" as well. Thanking you in advance! Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi RD SB: Explanations always include definitions and intelligence as an explanation must be defined so that everyone can understand precisely what it is that causes CSI. RDF:
For anyone who has ever seen me debate as AIGuy on ARN, or Telic Thoughts, or earlier on this forum, this comment is a perfectly delicious bit of irony. (For those who don’t understand this, I have yet another fatal argument against ID, which is based on the fact that ID fails to provide a specific, rigorous, operationalized definition of “intelligence”. But that is another debate).
Rather than contradict yourself again by first saying that you DISAGREE with me that a formal definition of intelligence is critical, and then by saying that you AGREE with me that it is critical after I challenge your attempts to distort it, why don’t you just concede the point. The formal definition of intelligence is important. SB: The meanings of the words in a scientific paradigm define the boundaries of what is relevant and what is not. They also express what is being argued for and what is not.
Yes, that is absolutely correct, I could not possibly agree with you more.
Excellent. I am happy that you now understand the critical importance of a definition (in this case, intelligence) and why no one, least of all you, is entitled to tamper with it in order to reframe someone else’s argument.
So, let’s start, shall we? Could you please provide the scientific definitions that ID uses for the following terms: 1) “intelligence” 2) “agency” 3) “design” That would be really, really helpful!
The subject on the table is intelligence and I have already defined it three times, alluding to the equivalent historical definition offered by the Greeks, which you promptly ignored.
No, I have no intention of inventing any sort of scientific methods. You seem to think that Stephen Meyer is somehow the World Authority on this matter, and His rules are “non-negotiable”, which I find extremely funny.
We are discussing the world authorities that Meyer alludes to in his bool, about which you know nothing. I don’t understand why you would try to bluff your way through this. When you don't know what you are talking about, the best strategy is to admit ignorance and move on. SB: The problem is that everyone on all sides of the debate agrees that these methods are the best and only way to assign causes to past events. Everyone—-except you–agrees that causes and effects must be carefully defined. You appear to be all alone in your opinion.
I have already explained to you everything that was correct about the rules that you listed, and I also explained the problems with those rules as you presented them (there was some redundancy and contradiction in them, probably introduced by you in your writing them up).
So you have changed your earlier position in which you said that no rules exist and now you say that some rules do, in fact, exist. OK, that is a kind of progress, I suppose. It would be nice if you could acknowledge your error, but I understand that you are afraid to do that. Your new position, I gather, is that rules do exist, but you want to pick and choose only those that are congenial with your inclinations. On the one hand, you indicate that you don’t trust me to give a fair account of these rules. On the other hand, you also lack the intellectual curiosity to consult the references yourself. How do you suppose we ought to resolve that difficulty?
You claim that there is a “settled definition” of intelligence, which is the most obviously naive statement I’ve seen in these discussions so far. But funnier still is that you have yet to actually tell me what you think this definition is!
In my last comment, I wrote, “ID’s hypothesis is that the source of CSI (the WHAT not the HOW) is intelligence, that is, the CAPACITY to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind. I also expressed the same idea in earlier posts on this thread—several times---referring to the power or capacity to purposefully arrange or re-arrange matter. I also explained the relationship between ID’s notion of intelligence and its relationship to Plato’s notion of art. So, there can be no doubt that you are being disingenuous. SB: Show me where ID’s paradigm “defines intelligence as immaterial.”
Please show me where defines the term “intelligence”, and we can happily beyond this part of our debate.
Sorry, that evasion will not do. You claimed that ID “defines intelligence as immaterial? I want to know when or where this has ever happened. Peace StephenB
Hi StephenB,
Explanations always include definitions and intelligence as an explanation must be defined so that everyone can understand precisely what it is that causes CSI.
For anyone who has ever seen me debate as AIGuy on ARN, or Telic Thoughts, or earlier on this forum, this comment is a perfectly delicious bit of irony. (For those who don't understand this, I have yet another fatal argument against ID, which is based on the fact that ID fails to provide a specific, rigorous, operationalized definition of "intelligence". But that is another debate).
RDF: We can choose do define words however we’d like. SB: No, as a matter of fact, we cannot.
Hahahaha. Wrong again I'm afraid - of course anyone can write down any definition they choose. I will work with any definition for any word that you'd like to specify - just tell me what you mean by some term, and we will use that term in the sense for our discussion. Empirical concepts are not arbitrary, obviously, but the words we use to denote them are merely representational conventions, and so they cannot be "true" or "false".
The meanings of the words in a scientific paradigm define the boundaries of what is relevant and what is not. They also express what is being argued for and what is not.
Yes, that is absolutely correct, I could not possibly agree with you more.
Everything begins with proper definitions. We are discussing the science of shared experience, not your novel interpretation of shared experience.
Again, you are stating these important principles very well indeed, and I am gratified to see we agree on this. So, let's start, shall we? Could you please provide the scientific definitions that ID uses for the following terms: 1) "intelligence" 2) "agency" 3) "design" That would be really, really helpful!
In order to ascertain the truth about the matter of past events that we cannot repeat in a laboratory, we must use specialized methods. Since you are not familiar with those methods, you think you can invent your own.
No, I have no intention of inventing any sort of scientific methods. You seem to think that Stephen Meyer is somehow the World Authority on this matter, and His rules are "non-negotiable", which I find extremely funny.
The problem is that everyone on all sides of the debate agrees that these methods are the best and only way to assign causes to past events. Everyone—-except you–agrees that causes and effects must be carefully defined. You appear to be all alone in your opinion.
I have already explained to you everything that was correct about the rules that you listed, and I also explained the problems with those rules as you presented them (there was some redundancy and contradiction in them, probably introduced by you in your writing them up).
What we cannot do, which is what you want to attempt, is to redefine the settled definition of intelligence in order to misrepresent ID’s argument and intrude your own agenda.
This is hysterical. You claim that there is a "settled definition" of intelligence, which is the most obviously naive statement I've seen in these discussions so far. But funnier still is that you have yet to actually tell me what you think this definition is! The one definition I can find from you is this (from the previous thread):
SB: In fact, the only neutral definition for the cause of CSI is an intelligent agent.
But you don't seem to understand what a "definition" actually is. Rather than assigning a meaning to a term, you think a definition provides an explanation for some phenomenon. Here, you are "defining" that the cause of CSI is an intelligent agent. What most people would say is that you are making a claim about the world (i.e. that CSI is invariably caused by intelligence) rather than defining a word here.
The problem is that you confuse the capacity to plan with the end in mind with your perception of the brain’s role in that process.
Again, it is not my perception, it is our uniform and repeated experience, as you agreed to arguendo. And it is not the I confuse them conceptually, I simply point out that our experience connects them empirically.
The issue is about settled formal and paradigmatic definitions.
The question is not about whether or not definitions are "settled"! You simply have to tell me what definitions you'd like to use so we can proceed without confusion! If you would like to call a brain a "boojah", that presents no problem - I would simply state that in our experience, humans use their boojah to think. And you may define "intelligence" as anything you'd like, even "immaterial immortal soul that interacts with the matter in human bodies an unknown manner", then I will be perfectly happy to use that definition as well (in that case I would simply point out that there is no empirical evidence that "intelligence", as you define it, exists).
Show me where ID’s paradigm “defines intelligence as immaterial.”
Please show me where defines the term "intelligence", and we can happily beyond this part of our debate. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi CentralScrutinizer,
Good God, what do you hope to gain here?
I'm trying to make the point that if one actually attempts to reason from empirical evidence, it does not at all lead to an intelligent agent who could be responsible for the very first complex physical mechanisms.
Either you can see that consciousness (you own) transcends materialistic descriptions of reality or you can’t. All the rest is mental masturbation.
Well, I don't think you understand the arguments here, but in any event your statement helps illustrate my point: Belief in ID has nothing at all to do with reasoned inferences from our uniform and repeated experience.
Whatever your worldview is, I hope it gives you comfort at the hour of your death.
Thanks! I'm very comfortable, actually, but if you are in need of comfort I hope you get it. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Of related note to Mr Fox at 156: High school graduation rates among children of same-sex households - 2013 Excerpt: Children living with gay and lesbian families in 2006 were about 65 % as likely to graduate compared to children living in opposite sex marriage families. Daughters of same-sex parents do considerably worse than sons. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11150-013-9220-y/ BA77, while the info is useful, please do not feed the toxic tangent AF would love to pull this thread away on. KF bornagain77
Look, folks, the thing that people are really interested is, is things that bolster their worldview. And the thing that drives one's worldview is their fear of death. Period. You know it. I know it. ID. The Bible. The Q'uran. Religion. The Gods. Evolution. All this stuff would have no meaning to mere automatons, preens by Natural Selection to be: Very Well-Preened Automatons, would never give a [SNIP-language] or think twice about. Death. You're future. Feared by all, to various degrees. All human philosophy, theistic, atheistic, at bottom, is an attempt to deal with this inevitability. Look in the mirror. You're gonna die. CentralScrutinizer
RDF:
You are making a very elmentary mistake here, Stephen. You think that we are arguing about definitions, when in fact we are arguing about how likely these various explanations are for the origin of living things.
The mistake is yours. Explanations always include definitions and intelligence as an explanation must be defined so that everyone can understand precisely what it is that causes CSI.
We can choose do define words however we’d like.
No, as a matter of fact, we cannot. The meanings of the words in a scientific paradigm define the boundaries of what is relevant and what is not. They also express what is being argued for and what is not.
We cannot choose, however, the truth about our shared experience, nor about how life came to exist. In order to try and ascertain the truth of the matter, we cannot refer to our dictionaries. Instead, we must refer to our experience (if we wish to empirically support our beliefs) or otherwise our faith.
Everything begins with proper definitions. We are discussing the science of shared experience, not your novel interpretation of shared experience. In order to ascertain the truth about the matter of past events that we cannot repeat in a laboratory, we must use specialized methods. Since you are not familiar with those methods, you think you can invent your own. The problem is that everyone on all sides of the debate agrees that these methods are the best and only way to assign causes to past events. Everyone----except you--agrees that causes and effects must be carefully defined. You appear to be all alone in your opinion. In fact, we cannot express the whole truth about our experience in a scientific paradigm. We can only decide which elements are relevant to the question that is being asked and frame it in a reasonable way so that everyone know what we are talking about. What we cannot do, which is what you want to attempt, is to redefine the settled definition of intelligence in order to misrepresent ID's argument and intrude your own agenda. SB: You are confusing what intelligence IS (its essence and its definition) with your perception of HOW IT OPERATES.
No, of course I keep these two things quite separate.
As a matter of fact you do not keep them apart. That is why I raised the issue. The problem is that you confuse the capacity to plan with the end in mind with your perception of the brain's role in that process.
You simply are focussing on dictionaries rather than facts about our experience. And no, it is not “my perception” that intelligence requires mechanism – it is (as you agreed arguendo) a fact of our experience.
We are not discussing dictionaries. The issue is about settled formal and paradigmatic definitions. Nice try at a strawman, though. I didn't agree that mechanisms can be included in a definition of intelligence, which it clearly cannot be. I agreed only that, in order to give you breathing room to address other objections to your premise, I would not challenge it while you were presenting your argument. SB: ID’s hypothesis is that the source of CSI (the WHAT not the HOW) is intelligence, that is, the CAPACITY to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind, as opposed to the alternate theory of unguided evolution that has no end in mind. You are trying to impose your agenda on ID’s paradigm. That doesn’t work.
I am pointing out that rather than take the evidence of our experience and follow that where it leads, ID simply defines intelligence as immaterial, and refuses to admit that our experience contradicts the notion that there is something immaterial that can operate without complex mechanism.
Do you really expect to get away with that misrepresentation? Show me where ID's paradigm "defines intelligence as immaterial." SB: I am simply explaining the rules of historical science with which you have not yet made your peace.
Since your “rules” appear to violate our shared experience of reality, so much the worse for your rules – or, more accurately, your mistaken interpretation thereof.
Thank you for acknowledging that you do not accept the rules or methods of historical science. That is reminiscent of your larger problem: If a settled definition displeases you and threatens your agenda, you simply change it or distort it; if the methods and rules of historical science expose your invalid conclusions, you simply ignore them or reject them. StephenB
F/N:Onlookers, RDF has been evading the framework of reasoning used in dealing with the unobserved past since the last thread. Allow me to clip the OP for this one:
By 678 [--> prev. thread], I outlined a framework for how we uses inductive logic in science to address entities, phenomena or events it did not or cannot directly observe (let me clean up a symbol): [T]here is a problem with reasoning about how inductive reasoning extends to reconstructing the remote past. Let’s try again: a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t.
What SB speaks of as rules of historical science essentially apply this logic. Or, try to. Cf. the OP for how it applies to ID by substitution instance. I predict: RDF will again ignore what does not fit his rhetorical purpose on some excuse or another. Let's see if he will do better than expected. KF kairosfocus
RDFish, Good God, what do you hope to gain here? Either you can see that consciousness (you own) transcends materialistic descriptions of reality or you can't. All the rest is mental masturbation. Whatever your worldview is, I hope it gives you comfort at the hour of your death. Cheers CentralScrutinizer
Hi RDFish, Thank you for your post. I'm off to work in a moment, but will respond in about 15 hours. Have a good day. vjtorley
Hi StephenB,
Neither ID’s definition nor the dictionary definition of intelligence refers to or includes the use of complex mechanisms.
You are making a very elmentary mistake here, Stephen. You think that we are arguing about definitions, when in fact we are arguing about how likely these various explanations are for the origin of living things. We can choose do define words however we'd like. We cannot choose, however, the truth about our shared experience, nor about how life came to exist. In order to try and ascertain the truth of the matter, we cannot refer to our dictionaries. Instead, we must refer to our experience (if we wish to empirically support our beliefs) or otherwise our faith.
You are confusing what intelligence IS (its essence and its definition) with your perception of HOW IT OPERATES.
No, of course I keep these two things quite separate. You simply are focussing on dictionaries rather than facts about our experience. And no, it is not "my perception" that intelligence requires mechanism - it is (as you agreed arguendo) a fact of our experience.
ID’s hypothesis is that the source of CSI (the WHAT not the HOW) is intelligence, that is, the CAPACITY to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind, as opposed to the alternate theory of unguided evolution that has no end in mind. You are trying to impose your agenda on ID’s paradigm. That doesn’t work.
I am pointing out that rather than take the evidence of our experience and follow that where it leads, ID simply defines intelligence as immaterial, and refuses to admit that our experience contradicts the notion that there is something immaterial that can operate without complex mechanism.
I am simply explaining the rules of historical science with which you have not yet made your peace.
Since your "rules" appear to violate our shared experience of reality, so much the worse for your rules - or, more accurately, your mistaken interpretation thereof. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi StephenB,
Hi RD SB: You can disagree all you like, but intelligent activity has always been known to have causal explanatory power. RDF
Yes, and what I have been arguing is that what “intelligent activity” refers to, in our experience, is something that produces CSI (at least in part) by using complex mechanism to process information.
And you have been arguing incorrectly. Neither ID's definition nor the dictionary definition of intelligence refers to or includes the use of complex mechanisms. You are confusing what intelligence IS (its essence and its definition) with your perception of HOW IT OPERATES. Historical science requires that both the cause and the effect be accurately defined. Otherwise, no relationship between them can be established. In fact, intelligence has unqualified explanatory power precisely because it already implies by definition all the attributed factors that give it that power.
Hahaha. We are not talking about how we choose to define words, Stephen, we are taking about what we observe in our uniform and repeated experience!
You must be laughing at your own misapprehensions. ID is talking about [a] WHAT we observe, that is, the power itself (not HOW IT WORKS) and [b] the hypothesis that has been generated from what we observe, defined again as the power or capacity to plan with an end in mind. ID's hypothesis is that the source of CSI (the WHAT not the HOW) is intelligence, that is, the CAPACITY to plan the arrangement of matter with an end in mind, as opposed to the alternate theory of unguided evolution that has no end in mind. You are trying to impose your agenda on ID's paradigm. That doesn't work.
I think you are trying to win the debate on technicalities rather than on truth.
I am simply explaining the rules of historical science with which you have not yet made your peace. SB: Indeed, ID scientists use the trichotomy of intelligence, law, and chance in exactly the same way that Plato used the trichotomy of art, nature, and chance.
And Aristotle proved that the brain’s function was to cool the blood. I get it.
You seem to be losing it. Do you need to take a break.
To summarize: In your view, immaterial mind is what actually causes CSI-rich structures to appear, and physical mechanism (as in human brains and bodies) are simply not relevant.
My metaphysical views are irrelevant to the ID paradigm, which does not include your perceptions about CSI mechanisms in the brain or my views about an immaterial mind. That is the point you don't get. Intelligence has causal adequacy because it already implies whatever factors happen to give it that power.
In addition, the testimony of mystics and saints shows that disembodied intelligence can produce CSI in the physical world. Is that your final answer?
So, now you want to discuss your claim that minds cannot operate without brains? You asked me to refrain from examining your premise, so I agreed, knowing that you are responding to several participants. However, if you are going to smuggle in my past references to that subject matter, I will be happy to address that issue as well. Peace StephenB
Hi StephenB,
You can disagree all you like, but intelligent activity has always been known to have causal explanatory power.
Yes, and what I have been arguing is that what "intelligent activity" refers to, in our experience, is something that produces CSI (at least in part) by using complex mechanism to process information.
Your obsession with CSI physical mechanisms...
Obsession? Wow, never thought of it that way. That would make your avoidance of the topic something like a phobia? Are you afraid of brains and bodies, Stephen?
... has nothing to do with the meaning of the word “intelligence,” which is abundantly clear.
Hahaha. We are not talking about how we choose to define words, Stephen, we are taking about what we observe in our uniform and repeated experience! I think you are trying to win the debate on technicalities rather than on truth.
Indeed, ID scientists use the trichotomy of intelligence, law, and chance in exactly the same way that Plato used the trichotomy of art, nature, and chance.
And Aristotle proved that the brain's function was to cool the blood. I get it.
Each of these three concepts is known to have causal adequacy.
You are getting progressively more confused here, I'm afraid. Honestly. "Chance" has causal adequacy? That is truly a bizarre concept. Is "chance" some sort of a force? Really?
Apparently, you are the only one that didn’t get the memo. There is no reason to discuss anything else since all of your errors stem from this single misunderstanding.
Yes, good. Let's agree to disagree. To summarize: In your view, immaterial mind is what actually causes CSI-rich structures to appear, and physical mechanism (as in human brains and bodies) are simply not relevant. In addition, the testimony of mystics and saints shows that disembodied intelligence can produce CSI in the physical world. Is that your final answer? Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi VJTorley,
The thing they have to fully account for is not mere life, but complex life forms like Homo sapiens.
ET-ancestor theory accounts for life on Earth exactly the same way ET-engineer theory does. Either way, CSI for biological systems somehow arrives on Earth from somewhere else, and both involve the existence of extra-terrestrial life forms. The problem with your ET-engineer theory is that, as you conceded, the prior probability of that hypothesis is much lower than ET-ancestor theory.
It is one thing to suppose that microbes could be blasted off the surface of a planet and arrive on Earth. It’s another thing to suppose that complex life forms could be dispatched to earth in this fashion. That’s where the probabilities get astronomically low.
Hahahaha! Yes of course! All of these silly theories have low probabilities, we can't say how any of them actually happened, and we have no evidence whatsoever that any of them are true!!!
You also seem to be assuming that just because ET-ancestor and ET-engineer are both capable of accounting for life on Earth, the likelihood of them doing so is the same. This is an error. While it’s possible that life could be blasted off the surface of one planet and onto another, it is hardly likely, given the vast emptiness of space. On the other hand, for ET-engineer, traversing space is not a problem: ET-engineer can build rockets and chart a course in the desired direction.
ET-ancestor theory and ET-engineer theory are BOTH compatible with directed pansperima, VJT! Do you not realize this? If humans packaged up some of human genetic material and sent it to another planet, what would account for the CSI in that DNA? Not human engineering of course! All we would have done is ship it off - we didn't invent our own DNA! What you seem to be oblivious to of course is that all this speculation and arguing about shipping microbes around space or aliens in the biotech laboratories or disembodied spirits cooking up batches of DNA... it's all just silly. WE HAVE NO EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FOR ANY OF THESE THEORIES. PERIOD.
“The vital point you overlook is that uniform repeated experience cumulates arithmetically, whereas the improbability of a multi-protein organism arising via an unguided, non-foresighted mechanism cumulates geometrically, with every additional protein that has to be included.” It seems to me that you did not address this point, and I’m not sure you correctly understood what I was saying.
I both understood and responded. The answer is: My argument has nothing to do with "non-foresighted mechanism", so this is a complete red herring. You are trying to change the subject. And by the way, beyond that, your use of the number of proteins to compute the probability of a living thing assembling by chance is truly ridiculous. Honestly - it is just as silly as trying to compute the probability of a lightning bolt hitting a bell tower by looking that the square footage of the steeple, as I showed in the example that you did not address! So, you failed to respond to most of the points in my post, and although you've conceded that the highest a priori probability hypothesis is indeed ET-ancestor theory, you play games with meaningless calcuations regarding irrelevant hypothetical "non-foresighted mechanisms", pretending that this somehow constitutes evidence that a disembodied being somewhere built living organisms. Thanks for the chat, VJT. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Alan Fox: But we have the theory of evolution as the best explanation of life’s diversification, given self-sustaining self-replicators.
If by "theory of evolution" you mean blind-watchmaker evolution, then, sure, it's the best theory, if you assume no intelligence was involved. But that's like saying your the best running at the Special Olympics. "The best" is sometimes still [snip- language]. And the Modern Synthesis is pretty [snip]. (No offense to the Special Olympics.) It can't make predictions about significant future evolution. It can't inform us as to what mutations and in what order, it takes to, say, turn a chimp-like brain into a human brain. It can't inform us as to what mutations and in what order, it takes to turn any given cell type, tissue type, organ, or body plan, into another one. More gaps than the Grand Canyon. Evolution happened. But the Modern Synthesis provides little by way of explanation. It's a [snip -- poor] theory. CentralScrutinizer
Mr Fox claims that
But we have the theory of evolution as the best explanation of life’s diversification, given self-sustaining self-replicators.
Unfortunately for Mr. Fox, being a 'best explanation' in science does not entail being able to 'explain away' all contrary evidence simply because your theory has no falsification criteria. (In fact, it is a sure sign of a pseudo-science!)
"Being an evolutionist means there is no bad news. If new species appear abruptly in the fossil record, that just means evolution operates in spurts. If species then persist for eons with little modification, that just means evolution takes long breaks. If clever mechanisms are discovered in biology, that just means evolution is smarter than we imagined. If strikingly similar designs are found in distant species, that just means evolution repeats itself. If significant differences are found in allied species, that just means evolution sometimes introduces new designs rapidly. If no likely mechanism can be found for the large-scale change evolution requires, that just means evolution is mysterious. If adaptation responds to environmental signals, that just means evolution has more foresight than was thought. If major predictions of evolution are found to be false, that just means evolution is more complex than we thought." ~ Cornelius Hunter http://www.thepoachedegg.net/the-poached-egg/2013/10/being-an-evolutionist-means-there-is-no-bad-news.html
bornagain77
'But, but, but... He wants to write a book! Yes. That's it! he wants to write a book.' How about a TV series? Axel
'Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.’ More succinctly, in this case, they were performed. It's feet to the fire time. Now what have you got to say for yourself? Axel
Renard, '…it is very difficult to verify that there was in fact no measurable brain activity. There are many types of brain activity and they require different types of tests to verify them. Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.' The senior physician (Southern accent) interviewed, specifically stated that the most comprehensive set of controls to measure vital signs and brain activity was put in place - which made Pam Reynold's NDE particularly authoritative and valuable to medical science. Axel
AF: A bluff, which we call. There is no body of observational evidence that shows that relevant blind watchmaker mechanisms are capable of accounting for origin of the FSCO/I required for body plans. If you dispute this, kindly document credible observations of origin of body plans by BW mechanisms: __________________ and list the prizes awarded for the empirical proof. What we have is ideologically loaded gross extrapolation far beyond the minor adaptations of existing body plans. And in any case common descent per se is compatible with design. So evidence of common descent, even universal common descent, does not put us any closer to the Blind Watchmaker thesis. Where of course, all of this is on yet another side-track leading away from the pivotal cases that:
(i) on demonstrated causal adequacy and inference to best explanation the best mechanism that explains FSCO/I or fine tuning is design, and (ii) such evidence of design in the case of cosmological fine tuning points to an immaterial designing mind beyond the cosmos. So ________________________________________ (iii) the claim that per universal and repeated experience designers require a physical brain or the equivalent, is decisively undermined.
KF kairosfocus
F/N 2: let's do a bit of likelihood reasoning regarding blind watchmaker vs design theses. So, following up from VJT and RDF etc above with an eye on addendum 2: LAMBDA = L[E|T2]/ L[E|T1] = {p[E|T2]/ p[E|T1]} * {P(T2)/P(T1)} . . . is a measure of relative support of hyps 2 and 1 per common evidence E. Let T1 be blind watchmaker chance + necessity --> BW for short, and T2 be design --> D for short, at relevant level. Where design is taken to essentially entail designer. E is the common evidence: FSCO/I as observed, and fine tuning, etc. (Design has been shown reliably to produce FSCO/I and many designed entities are finely tuned --> this is a demonstrated true and adequate or sufficient cause. There is by contrast no good -- non question-begging -- evidence on the table that FSCO/I has been produced in our actual observation by incremental blind watchmaker processes such as chance genetic variation and natural selection etc.) It seems the abstract odds of the alternative theories, BW and D are in dispute; let us for the moment take them on a ratio as a wash, 50:50, so the ratio goes to 1. That means that under these circumstances, the first term dominates the expression, i.e. the ratio of probabilities of evidence on the two alt theories. The odds of FSCO/I etc on design with implied able and purposeful designer, are obviously quite high (approaching unity) -- as this very post shows; it is a case in point. if a designer exists, has skills opportunity and intent, he is very likely to carry out the deed, so to speak. But by virtue of the way that FSCO/I joins functional specificity to complexity, it confines us to very narrow zones in wide config spaces, and so the odds on chance and necessity are low per search challenges on needles in haystacks. Recall, for 500 bits and a solar system scale search at fastest chem rxn rates with every one of 10^57 atoms a searcher, we have a comparison of a single straw sized sample of a cubical haystack 1,000 light years across. Those odds get much longer yet for 1,000 bits, so we can comfortably put the odds as worse than 1 in 10^150 for complexity higher than 1,000 bits. (Observed life starts at 100 - 1,000 k bits just for genomic info.) Our Lambda ratio for design: blind watchmaker is now: L ~ (1/10^-150) * (0.5/0.5) = 10^150 That is, on the evidence on FSCO/I and fine tuning etc, with intrinsic odds of BW vs D being taken as matched, we see a strong shift to D. Why then is there even a debate over design? Is it the first ratio term? That design produces FSCO/I or fine tuning is essentially certain, and can be taken as indeed essentially 1. Perhaps, it is that the odds of BW mechanisms producing FSCO/I on the scale reflected in life forms have been set too low. If so, on what grounds based on observation? If anything, looking at the cluster of complex mechanisms involved, they have been set too high. We still have a solar system of 10^57 atoms, and observed cosmos of 10^80 atoms and maybe 10^17 s to play with. Chem rxns still max out at 10^-14 or so s, with the more relevant organic rxns much slower typically. The search space for 100 k bits is ~ 9.99* 10^30,102. The needle in the haystack challenge stands. So, it looks like the real debate is going to have to be on term 2, the ratio of intrinsic odds of BW vs D. Above, I took a wash, per Pascal, saying if we can't agree, we are looking at roughly even odds. What the dispute then turns into is an implied claim that the ratio of odds of D:BW is on ID-objector views, significantly lower than 10^-150. That is, what is driving the dispute is the view that a designer at the relevant point to cause the required FSCO/I of either OOL of OO body plans or fine tuning of the cosmos is essentially impossible. The question is, why is such an implicit rejection of design effectively a priori seen as a plausible view any at all? (It cannot be explicit as that would be obvious question-begging.) Apart from, ideologically driven, question-begging imposition of a priori materialism multiplied by the assumption that those who see things differently could not have any credible reasons [as in, ignorant, stupid, insane or wicked], that is? What of a third way? Not possible, on excluded middle, in part BW is the denial of D. The bottom-line is, once a designer is at all a reasonable possibility and so long as BW has not been shown to create FSCO/I etc per observation, the evidence we have is decisive in favour of design. KF kairosfocus
Vincent
The thing they have to fully account for is not mere life, but complex life forms like Homo sapiens.
But we have the theory of evolution as the best explanation of life's diversification, given self-sustaining self-replicators. I'd stick to the much less settled issue of OOL if I were you. Alan Fox
Ah, mung the meretricious You amaze me by providing the link to my actual comment. Note it was a supposition, not a claim. It is still my suspicion that Barry would be less accommodating to homosexuals, were he in a position to decide the law on the issue. Alan Fox
I find it sadly significant that AF is trying a toxic diversion by well poisoning through injecting an alien dispute over the recently manufactured brazen assertion that Adam has a “right” to marry Steve (and by extension of precedents and broken down barriers Sue, Mary or Fido or both). Let us not feed the trollish conduct. I do note here as a link elsewhere on the ill-grounded nature and dubious intent of such assertions of “rights,” here on the rhetorical abuse of the rights issue, and here on a challenge to claimed scientific cases. But, that is just by way of balancing, not to open an irrelevant, atmosphere-poisoning distraction. And frankly, I suspect AF is courting being banned for cause, with intent to falsely claim to be a victim of “censorship.”
I think you will find it is mung that raised the issue of homosexuality and the law in this thread. Alan Fox
F/N: If we are really interested in discovering whether or no an immaterial intelligent designer is possible, it seems to me that the pivotal case is that of a designer of the material cosmos. Especially, as the cosmos' matter is credibly inherently contingent per the premise that that which has a beginning has a cause. We are looking at -- even through a multiverse speculation -- a necessary being as root cause, one capable of causing the physics and substance of an observed cosmos fine tuned for C-chem, aqueous medium cell based life to exist. I therefore find it revealing how, after nigh on 1,000 comments in this and a previous thread, objectors have consistently tip-toed around this issue, or tried to trivialise it. Ironically, it is this side of the design inference that definitively points to a designer beyond the cosmos and so if there is a serious concern on whether science has anything aye or nay to say on such a topic, this is where it should come out. That one side seems to be afraid to confidently take it on, suggests that the weight of evidence lies on the other side. That is, physics does look very much designed, on which we can conclude with Hoyle, that there are no blind forces in the cosmos worth speaking of. KF PS: I find it sadly significant that AF is trying a toxic diversion by well poisoning through injecting an alien dispute over the recently manufactured brazen assertion that Adam has a "right" to marry Steve (and by extension of precedents and broken down barriers Sue, Mary or Fido or both). Let us not feed the trollish conduct. I do note here as a link elsewhere on the ill-grounded nature and dubious intent of such assertions of "rights," here on the rhetorical abuse of the rights issue, and here on a challenge to claimed scientific cases. But, that is just by way of balancing, not to open an irrelevant, atmosphere-poisoning distraction. And frankly, I suspect AF is courting being banned for cause, with intent to falsely claim to be a victim of "censorship." kairosfocus
Hi RDFish, I'd just like to make a quick response to your comments in #150. Concerning the Intelligent Design hypothesis, I wrote:
"You also have to look at P(E|H)/P(E), or the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H. And if E includes the specified complexity of life, then obviously it lends very strong support to H indeed."
You answered:
ET-ancestor and ET-engineer both fully account for CSI in life, so their explanatory power vis-a-vis the existence of biological CSI is identical. In other words, the biological CSI on Earth provides the same degree of support for the ET-ancestor and the ET-engineer hypotheses. Thus, we see that the evidence of biological CSI supports ET-ancestor and ET-engineer theories equally strongly, but the prior probability of ET-engineer is lower.
Not so fast. The thing they have to fully account for is not mere life, but complex life forms like Homo sapiens. It is one thing to suppose that microbes could be blasted off the surface of a planet and arrive on Earth. It's another thing to suppose that complex life forms could be dispatched to earth in this fashion. That's where the probabilities get astronomically low. You also seem to be assuming that just because ET-ancestor and ET-engineer are both capable of accounting for life on Earth, the likelihood of them doing so is the same. This is an error. While it's possible that life could be blasted off the surface of one planet and onto another, it is hardly likely, given the vast emptiness of space. On the other hand, for ET-engineer, traversing space is not a problem: ET-engineer can build rockets and chart a course in the desired direction. This we see that on two counts, P(E|H)/P(E), or the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H, is much, much higher for the ET-engineer hypothesis than for ET-ancestor, despite the fact that P(H) is much lower. Concerning the hypothesis of the bodiless Designer, I then wrote:
"The vital point you overlook is that uniform repeated experience cumulates arithmetically, whereas the improbability of a multi-protein organism arising via an unguided, non-foresighted mechanism cumulates geometrically, with every additional protein that has to be included."
It seems to me that you did not address this point, and I'm not sure you correctly understood what I was saying. The point I was making was that at the worst, the prior probability P(H) can be no lower than 10^(-120), given that we've only observed that number of events in the history of the cosmos. (The idea here is that after observing n instances of an event conforming to a rule, the prior probability of the next event deviating from it would be 1/(n + 1), or about 1/n for large n.) However, if the degree of support P(E|H)/P(E) for the bodiless Designer is far greater than 10^120, then the bodiless Designer hypothesis wins hands down. Finally, in assessing the degree of support for a hypothesis, you seem to be comparing it with the likelihood of E given the next-best hypothesis. What you should be asking is: how likely would E be, if H were false? vjtorley
See you around.
I doubt it. Brent
Brent @167, This is precisely what I am talking about. You fundamentalists love to preach to others about humility and such while being condescending to them, as if you had some kind of direct line to God. You got diddly squat. Francis Chan, the guy in the YouTube video you linked to, is a fundamentalist of the worst kind, in my opinion, a wolf in sheep's clothing. He takes a purely metaphorical book (Revelation) and reads from it literally to make a stupid point about hell, while telling others to be humble. How lame is that? If this is the kind of religious movement that is behind the ID struggle, I don't want any part of it. The devil loves to dress up like an angel of light. My God says, seek and you shall find. He did not say, go find the next humble-looking preacher around the corner and do what he tells you to do. Please, keep your best wishes to yourself. I've had enough of this nonsense and I refuse to preached to by anybody. See you around. Mapou
Mapou, You know, I twice gave you a lot of slack: Once by quoting Phil. 3:15,16, and once by saying that since you are thinking things out, that's good enough. IOW, I was practicing what Phil. says and allowing you room to "work out your own salvation." It seems like you haven't gotten the message, though, because the obvious flip-side of that is, it is YOUR duty to extend that same grace to others. You're not even close. Has it never occurred to you, the distance from YOUR position to those you rail against is the very same distance from THEIR position back to you? IOW, your position looks just as stupid to them as theirs does to you.
I guess I will have to wait until Elijah comes and restores all things
How do you know that really belongs in the Bible? Furthermore in regards to extending grace to others (that does belong in the Bible, right?), I have been challenged as a YEC very much just here. I have to put up with many, many, very smart and intelligent people educated so far beyond me that I can hardly see them! And I do. That is, until someone starts ridiculing others, like WLC did by calling YEC pastors embarrassing. That was over the line, and I'm very angry about it. He apparently thinks he had been the only one extending grace to those with an opposing view, not realizing that I and a whole lot of others have (or had) been extending as much, if not more, grace to him. Mapou, if you didn't watch the link provided by BA77 on Erasing Hell, I recommend you do. You've placed God's ways and thinking below your own. That is scary. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qnrJVTSYLr8 Sincerely as I had said before, best wishes. Brent
RDF "PLEASE answer this question – it will reduce typing as well as miscommunication in the future! (Earth or everything)." I don't conceive it as an either or question. ID's argument is about "features in nature," but nature can mean either on the earth or beyond. So, I don't think ID's paradigms can address the matter. StephenB
RDF
Agreed that it (CSI mechanism) has no explanatory power. Disagree that it is irrelevant, because it shows us the intelligence in this context is not a known cause that we can offer as a likely explanation. Instead, it is a cause that would contradict our experience-based expectations, requiring that ID provide additional evidence that such a thing was present when living things were first produced.
You can disagree all you like, but intelligent activity has always been known to have causal explanatory power. Your obsession with CSI physical mechanisms has nothing to do with the meaning of the word "intelligence," which is abundantly clear. Indeed, ID scientists use the trichotomy of intelligence, law, and chance in exactly the same way that Plato used the trichotomy of art, nature, and chance. Each of these three concepts is known to have causal adequacy. Apparently, you are the only one that didn’t get the memo. There is no reason to discuss anything else since all of your errors stem from this single misunderstanding. StephenB
RDFish @132:
From the observation that whenever we observe an intelligent agent the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system, ID cannot offer intelligent agency as a known cause of the very first CSI-rich system (i.e. intelligence could not have preceded the first CSI-rich system).
How do you know you're observing an intelligent agent? How do you know that "the intelligence" is "at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system"?
ID cannot offer intelligent agency as a known cause of the very first CSI-rich system (i.e. intelligence could not have preceded the first CSI-rich system).
So you've either dropped your claim that a CSI-rich system must be physical or you've never made that claim?
All of this confusion arises because some here insist that ID explains the ORIGIN of CSI-rich systems IN GENERAL (i.e. the very first instance of CSI, or of life), while others insist that ID does NOT attempt to explain this, but rather only explains life ON EARTH.
Ah, the old false dichotomy. Funny that you, an expert in the excluded middle, would fall for that old fallacy! Some here at UD?
...some here [at UD] insist that ID explains the ORIGIN of CSI-rich systems IN GENERAL (i.e. the very first instance of CSI, or of life)
Examples?
...others [here at UD] insist that ID does NOT attempt to explain this, but rather only explains life ON EARTH.
Examples?
All of this confusion arises because some here insist that ID explains the ORIGIN of CSI-rich systems IN GENERAL (i.e. the very first instance of CSI, or of life), while others insist that ID does NOT attempt to explain this, but rather only explains life ON EARTH.
It would perhaps help if you could show how the two are mutually exclusive. Mung
RDFish @132:
The premise of my argument is that all of our observations consistently find intelligence relies on mechanism.
Irrespective if whether this inductive generalization is true or false, what follows from your premise? What additional premise or premises do you chain with this one in order to construct your argument? Alternatively, what form of argument allows one to move from a single premise to a conclusion?
I do not draw an inductive inference from these observations. In other words, I do not then conclude that intelligence must always rely on mechanism.
An inductive inference would not require a conclusion that intelligence must always rely on mechanism. So it does not follow that you have not relied upon an inductive inference.
I do not draw an inductive inference from these observations.
Yes, you do.
...all of our observations consistently find intelligence relies on mechanism.
You and who else? How many people have you polled? How many people do you think you should poll before you can make an inference? Just how much do you think you can infer based upon your own [solo] experience? Given that you are going from a particular observation to a general claim, how is it that you are not drawing an inductive inference? To pull a page from your own book, your reasoning is either deductive or inductive. There are no alternatives. If your reasoning is not inductive, it follows that it is deductive. Please submit your deductive argument against ID. You don't have a deductive argument against ID. If you did, you would not need to rely upon probabilistic arguments, which you clearly do. Therefore your argument is inductive. Or a non sequitur. RDFish:
Because it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible (as VJT put it), we would need actual evidence to show that such a thing did exist in order to justify the hypothesis that a CSI-less intelligence was responsible for first life.
Let's break this down:
...it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible...
How does this follow, as either a deduction or an inference? What does it follow from?
we would need actual evidence to show that such a thing did exist in order to justify the hypothesis that a CSI-less intelligence was responsible for first life.
From "it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible" it does not logically follow that "we would need actual evidence to show that such a thing did exist in order to justify the hypothesis that a CSI-less intelligence was responsible for first life." Just another non sequitur. Mung
Silver Asiatic:
2. In order for x to be true, y or z must be true. [y] is an embodied intelligence [z] a disembodied intelligence.
According to RDFish, either [y] or [z] must be true, irrespective of whether [x] is true. The truth of [y] OR [z] is independent of the truth of [x]. If 'x' is designed, and all intelligent designers are either embodied or disembodied, then it follows that 'x' was designed by an embodied intelligent designer or a disembodied intelligent designer. But so what? I admitted this long ago. I think that perhaps RDFish is attempting a reductio ad absurdum argument. But for that to be true, both [y] and [z] must result in absurdities, which they don't. Mung
kf, RDFish is not an empiricist, but he says that if ID is to be empirical, it must accept empiricism. Or maybe he claims that those who argue for ID based on empirical grounds are hypocrites if they don't accept empiricism. Or maybe he claims that empiricism requires that designers be embodied or disembodied and since ID doesn't distinguish between the two it can't be empirical. But who knows. I can't wait for the next formulation of the "argument" which no one can "refute." Reminds me somewhat of Upright BiPed's argument, with the difference being that Upright BiPed's argument wasn't forever changing. Mung
Alan Fox:
Apart from in you imagination, where was this? I may have drawn attention to Barry’s homophobia but that is common knowledge.
I would tell you to Google Alan Fox moron, but that returns 147,000,000 hits. Alan Fox:
And what about demonizing homosexuals? I hope Barry would not support their extermination. Where would he [Barry] draw the line, I wonder. I know he [Barry] is against their appearing as genuine couples in public. I suspect he [Barry] would not allow gay couples to have legally recognised formal relationships.
here contract:
a written or spoken agreement, esp. one concerning employment, sales, or tenancy, that is intended to be enforceable by law.
contract:
enter into a formal and legally binding agreement.
I would be surprised if Barry was not sworn to uphold the law, and that would include legally binding contracts, which makes you a moron for suggesting otherwise. Mung
141
I am leaving because I don’t subscribe to the big-tent ID paradigm as promoted by UD management. This discussion about intelligence not requiring brains did it for me. I am fiercely pro-logic and pro-science. I am also fiercely pro-Christian but I don’t see the Bible as the infallible word of God. I believe that God’s word can be found in the Bible but not everything in the Bible is God’s word. Some of it should be thrown out, in my opinion. I need a Christian scientific forum that is openly non-fundamentalist and disavows any young earth creationist views along with materialist/Darwinist views. I guess I will have to wait until Elijah comes and restores all things.
I hope my questioning of your religious views did not cause harm. I'd urge you to reconsider and stay. ID has support from many religious perspectives - Jewish, Hindu, Islamic and many others. But it's not a religious view in itself. I'm sorry if I made it appear that way. Silver Asiatic
150
vtorley: If you want “particular, specific predictions based on the documented properties of intelligent designers,” then you shouldn’t argue from the observed properties of human designers. RDFish: From whence then are we to discern these properties?
You'd need to discern these properties from direct observations of the ET designers or the Immaterial designer(s). That's how your argument would be consistent. But you're not doing that. You're discerning properties of the designers from your own observations of human designers. Your doing exactly what you won't permit ID to do. Silver Asiatic
F/N: RDF of course keeps diverting from the actual focus of the design inference, design as a process that leaves a characteristic empirical trace. When we see the traces of design, we infer its presence. By the nature of design, it requires an entity capable of purposefully directed contingency. So, reliable detection of design on signs is evidence that implies existence of a capable designer, but that is not what the key scientific, empirical issue is about. That efforts are so strongly exerted to distract or deflect attention, is a strong sign of how important that inference is. KF PS: Observe how studiously RDF has ducked addressing the chain of inference again summarised in the OP. kairosfocus
Ah mung the mendacious
Ah, Alan Fox, who claimed that Barry would deny the ability to enter into contracts to homosexuals.
Apart from in you imagination, where was this? I may have drawn attention to Barry's homophobia but that is common knowledge. Alan Fox
Sorry - reformat:
So let’s try again, again: 1. Based upon our uniform and repeated experience, we can infer that ‘x’ was intelligently designed. 2. Either ‘y’ or ‘z’ must be true.
Since we’re going to fill up another 800+ posts probably, let’s make it a bit trickier … :-) How about your #2 reading like this: 2. In order for x to be true, y or z must be true. [y] is an embodied intelligence [z] a disembodied intelligence. If ‘x’ was designed by [z], a disembodied intelligence, we have no empirical evidence that such a thing exists. If ‘x’ was designed by [y], an embodied intelligence, it has to be an ET, which is more reasonable, but also has no empirical evidence of existence. If it did exist, it might have brought ‘x’ to earth and not have designed it. So ID’s claim would be false there. So, since we can’t show that ‘y’ or ‘z’ are the designers, we don’t have empirical support for the ID theory about ‘x’. Silver Asiatic
Mung:
So let’s try again, again: 1. Based upon our uniform and repeated experience, we can infer that ‘x’ was intelligently designed. 2. Either ‘y’ or ‘z’ must be true.
Since we're going to fill up another 800+ posts probably, let's make it a bit trickier ... :-) How about your #2 reading like this: 2. In order for x to be true, y or z must be true. [y] is an embodied intelligence [z] a disembodied intelligence. If ‘x’ was designed by [z], a disembodied intelligence, we have no empirical evidence that such a thing exists. If ‘x’ was designed by [y], an embodied intelligence, it has to be an ET, which is more reasonable, but also has no empirical evidence of existence. If it did exist, it might have brought 'x' to earth and not have designed it. So ID's claim would be false there. So, since we can't show that 'y' or 'z' are the designers, we don't have empirical support for the ID theory about 'x'.
Silver Asiatic
Alan Fox:
Ah mung the mercenary!
Ah, Alan Fox, who claimed that Barry would deny the ability to enter into contracts to homosexuals. Do you think that when I called you a moron for your comment that I went too easy on you? Mung
Mapou
If the ToE does not explain the origin of life while claiming to be an authority on how life evolves, then it is obviously crap. Sorry.
No need to apologise. You have perhaps been given an overinflated view of what ToE attempts to explain. Alan Fox
RDFish to StephenB:
You say “Design or no design”, but you don’t say what it is you are determining this about. In other words, do you say that ID explains where the first first CSI-rich mechanism came from? Or only where the first CSI-rich mechanism on Earth came from? Or what?
ID is a better explanation than "chance + necessity" for certain features of living things. By all means, discuss specifics. Mung
Hi RDFish, Reading through your posts, I find there was somewhat less there of relevance than I had thought. Here are my responses:
I wrote in my previous post that you had failed to take Bayes’ Theorem into account.
On the contrary, my argument is essentially Bayesian (refer to the previous thread where I first introduced it, and as I explained it to my first debater, RD Miksa, I framed it in terms of a low a priori probability of CSI-less intelligence, which necessitates strong evidence. That has been my argument all along).
(i) if I’m hypothesizing that all life on Earth originally came from Mars, it is absolutely irrelevant to argue that I haven’t explained where Martian life came from.
Very well, this strengthens ET-ancestor theory. As for the rest of your analysis, I have made all of these points in the previous thread. You make some errors (such as saying the prior probability of life arising on planets is low because of finite duration; this is computing a prior based on assumptions that you don't believe in!), but in general I agree with everything, and you've reached the same conclusion that I did: ET-ancestor is a bad hypothesis because of a lack of evidence for ET life.
On the other hand, hypothesis 1 seems to be a lot more probable, on the face of it, than the hypothesis that life arose by some non-foresighted natural process on the primordial Earth, simply because more can happen in an entire universe than on a single planet.
I have eliminated abiogenesis from discussion a long time ago.
Hence if I were a methodological naturalist, I’d take panspermia very seriously.
Not relevant to the current disucssion; I consider panspermia to be lacking in empirical support.
What you’re arguing here is that P(H) is much, much lower than for hypothesis 1, because it makes extra assumptions about extraterrestrial life: it has to be not only alive, but also intelligent and good at bio-engineering. Now I agree with you that this makes hypothesis 2 a lot more unlikely than hypothesis 1
Actually, I wouldn't go so far as to say "a lot more unlikely", but sure, I'll take that :-) It's incrementally more unlikely in any event.
But that isn’t enough to make it a worse theory than hypothesis 1. You also have to look at P(E|H)/P(E), or the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H. And if E includes the specified complexity of life, then obviously it lends very strong support to H indeed.
I think you are in error at this step. ET-ancestor and ET-engineer both fully account for CSI in life, so their explanatory power vis-a-vis the existence of biological CSI is identical. In other words, the biological CSI on Earth provides the same degree of support for the ET-ancestor and the ET-engineer hypotheses.
The degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H depends on the improbability of life on Earth – including Homo sapiens – arising by a non-foresighted natural mechanism.
We've all agreed to treat this as too improbable and not to consider it.
Hence, the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H must be astronomically large.
It is the same for ET-ancestor theory. Thus, we see that the evidence of biological CSI supports ET-ancestor and ET-engineer theories equally strongly, but the prior probability of ET-engineer is lower.
What you’re doing here is pointing out the extra requirement (a bodiless, CSI-less Designer). At worst, this would reduce P(H). Now, the mere fact that something contradicts our experience need not render it a priori improbable.
This is all true (except the situation is in fact "at worst", as you say).
The vital point you overlook is that uniform repeated experience cumulates arithmetically, whereas the improbability of a multi-protein organism arising via an unguided, non-foresighted mechanism cumulates geometrically, with every additional protein that has to be included.
We are not discussing anything about any "non-foresighted" mechanism. We are not comparing anything here to any other sorts ideas regarding abiogenesis, or self-org, or retro-causality, or multiverses, or... I mean you can discuss these things if you want to, but as far as I'm concerned they are either meaningless or without evidence. Thus, compared to the other theories, the prior probability of Non-living-engineer theory is lowest, while providing no additional evidential support. This is why this third hypothesis is worst of all.
I might add that your list of three hypotheses left out the hypothesis that life on Earth was designed by embodied aliens from the multiverse, as opposed to aliens within this universe. That’s a much tougher hypothesis to refute, as the multiverse is potentially infinitely large.
Actually I was just listing a few of these. Can't we just agree to disregard all of these goofy ideas, since there is no evidence that any of them are true?
I hope I have persuaded you that hand-waving arguments which involve purely qualitative reasoning and which ignore the nitty-gritty of the formulas involved and the relevant quantities will never succeed in refuting ID.
That's pretty funny, VJT. All of the handwaving here is yours, with your completely irrelevant and specious computations that were entirely about some theory that I have never considered worth thinking about in the first place!!! And then you try to use these ridiculous numbers to show ET-engineer or Non-living-engineer theory to be more probable because of a fallacious assumption that they somehow are better supported given the evidence of CSI.
We have thought long and hard about the objections to our theory, and we have done our homework.
I've spent some time thinking about this too :-)
Let’s see some hard numbers on your side, please.
Again, your "hard numbers" are completely irrelevant to our discussion. Here is a good way to understand why: Let's compute how unlikely it is that a lightning bolt over Boston would strike a church steeple randomly, as opposed to being aimed by the hand of Satan. Well, say the ratio of surface area of all the steeples put together, divided by the total surface area of Boston, is about 1/10^6. This is the probability of lightning hitting any given bell tower at random. The fact that steeples are actually hit quite frequently thus makes P(E|H)/P(E) of the Satan hypothesis very high indeed! Uh... not. What is neglected here is that nobody thinks that lightning strikes are random, nor that Satan aims lightning at bell towers, and so all this nonsense about surface area is completely irrelevant. Same with your computations about the number of events in the cosmos, the nubmer of stars, and so on. It is, frankly, ridiculous to think these calculations have any relevance at all.
I think you’ve made a valid point here: that Meyer’s argument, taken by itself, could never establish the existence of a bodiless Designer of the cosmos as a whole.
In that case, Meyer's argument cannot legitmately explain the first CSI-rich mechanisms by "intelligence".
If you want “particular, specific predictions based on the documented properties of intelligent designers,” then you shouldn’t argue from the observed properties of human designers.
From whence then are we to discern these properties?
The real problem when it comes to making “particular, specific predictions” is not the bodilessness of the Designer, but the fact that we don’t know His motivations.
Simply put, by denying that ID says anything about the Designer, ID admits it is scientifically vacuous. In ID, "designer" means in practical terms "something that can do anything at all in any way at all"; obviously not something that can yield meaningfully discerning predictions.
I think we can make predictions, however, if we assume that one of His aims, in making the cosmos, was to generate intelligent creatures, and that a second aim was to make His existence known to those creatures.
If you'd like to predicate your ideas about ID on these sorts of assumptions, we can stop now and agree to disagree. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Mung:
What if there is more than one designer? What if three was one or more designers involved in the design of the first cell. And then later on some designers from somewhere else came along and designed the first eukaryotes. Then some other designers came along and designed the first fungi. and on and on we go.
I think what he's saying is that there is no evidence that these three designers exist. He's willing to grant that ID is an hypothesis, but that it is a very poor one, lacking empirical support. If the designer is physical, then there's no evidence that the CSI was designed. ID would have to prove that that particular designer, or any number of them, actually designed the CSI we're looking at. ID: "This cell shows CSI, so it was intelligently designed." RDFish: "No, that cell actually came from an ET who brought it to earth. That ET didn't design any cells at all." So, ID is falsified there. But notice, it's talking about a particular cell. It's like "the first cell on earth". ID: The first cell on earth shows CSI, so it must have been designed by an intelligent designer. RDFish: No, that cell came from an alien who brought it to earth. That alien didn't know how do design any cells a all. So, ID is falsifed (if ID makes a claim about the specific first cell on earth). Silver Asiatic
Ah mung the mercenary! Alan Fox
Barry Arrington:
My hat is off to the indefatigable ID proponents here at UD who will not allow bad arguments to stand unrebutted, no matter how many times the bad arguments are regurgitated.
I don't know about the rest of you fools, but I continue because Barry pays me! Mung
RDFish:
For example, Meyer and other ID folks often speak of “intelligence” as a known cause that best explains biological complexity. But my argument is that it is not a known cause if it refers to disembodied intelligence, and if it refers to embodied intelligence then there are these other problems I’ve discussed.
Those were the 'y' and 'z' which you claimed you had left behind but now you are back to. And you wonder why I think your "argument" keeps changing? So let's try again, again: 1. Based upon our uniform and repeated experience, we can infer that ‘x’ was intelligently designed. 2. Either ‘y’ or ‘z’ must be true. If 'x' was designed, it was designed by [y] an embodied intelligence or [z] a disembodied intelligence. (Think back to all your talk in the previous thread of the excluded middle. You may have forgotten, but I haven't. Me and my 10 year old brain that is.) If 'x' was designed by [z], a disembodied intelligence, well, then, in that case, 'x' could not have been designed. If 'x' was designed by [y], an embodied intelligence, well, then, in that case, 'x' could not have been designed. Neither of which follow from anything in the argument, which is why it's a non sequitur. As people have repeatedly pointed out to you, the conclusion does not follow from the premises. Hope that helps! Mung
RDFish:
Empiricism is not my particular epistemic stance; it is the stance of prominent ID authors like Meyer.
What is your evidence that Meyer is an empiricist? Mung
RDFish:
Read this carefully, because a lot of people are making this mistake: Empiricism is not my particular epistemic stance; it is the stance of prominent ID authors like Meyer. I am not arguing that empiricism is the only path to knowledge. I am arguing that IF ID WISHES to claim that it is an empirically supported theory, then it is obliged to evaluate its hypotheses against our experience. If ID dropped the pretense of offering a cause known to our experience as the explanation for life, fine-tuning, and so on, I would have no problem with it.
ok, I read it carefully and you contradicted yourself. So now what?
Empiricism is not my particular epistemic stance
See my post @142. I was quoting you in it. Perhaps what you meant to say is that ID should drop any pretense of being an empirical theory and argue that this is true because ID cannot be an empirical theoey. This would be an actual argument that you could make, if you desired, and it would not even depend on your own stance upon empiricism. Otherwise you just look like you're contradicting yourself. Here, let me try to help you (again): ID is not an empirically supported theory. An empirically supported theory has the following features. ... list of the minimal subset of features of an empirically supported theory ... ID lacks these minimal requirements... Therefore, ID is not an empirically supported theory. See how easy that is? Now you try. Mung
Mapou, it's almost impossible to find a community of like-minded individuals on open forums. You just have to participate or not, and argue for your views and against those of others or not. I've argued against views I've considered nonsensical for years. I take it as an opportunity to sharpen my own arguments and test the validity of my own beliefs. Whatever you decide, best wishes to you. Mung
RDFish:
Either ID provides empirical evidence for this thing or not.
What thing? And what, in your mind, qualifies as "empirical evidence" for something? Do your posts here at UD provide "empirical evidence" for your existence? Mung
I am hereby preemptively banning myself from this forum. It is not because I find UD to be a bad place for browsing for info or getting a feel for the various points of view. UD is a well managed forum. I do find many of the arguments presented here unnecessarily tedious. There is something to be said about the simplicity and clarity of expression, which is seriously lacking. I am leaving because I don't subscribe to the big-tent ID paradigm as promoted by UD management. This discussion about intelligence not requiring brains did it for me. I am fiercely pro-logic and pro-science. I am also fiercely pro-Christian but I don't see the Bible as the infallible word of God. I believe that God's word can be found in the Bible but not everything in the Bible is God's word. Some of it should be thrown out, in my opinion. I need a Christian scientific forum that is openly non-fundamentalist and disavows any young earth creationist views along with materialist/Darwinist views. I guess I will have to wait until Elijah comes and restores all things. In the meantime, happy discussions. It's been fun. Mapou
A new argument from RDFish (@130): If it is the case that ID proper does not hypothesize an immaterial designer, then ID cannot explain the origin of CSI-rich systems. Another non sequitur. Mung
RDFish:
The problem with ID’s designer is not that it is not identified; it is that it is not even defined.
What if there is more than one designer? What if three was one or more designers involved in the design of the first cell. And then later on some designers from somewhere else came along and designed the first eukaryotes. Then some other designers came along and designed the first fungi. and on and on we go.
The problem with ID’s designer is not that it is not identified; it is that it is not even defined.
So? Hope that helps! Mung
Hi Barry Arrington,
RDF has raised objections, and his objections have been soundly refuted.
Actually, if you've been following along, you'll see that most of the objections that have been raised to my argument were dropped long ago, and the objections that remain are for the most part centering around propositions that I would be happy to agree to disagree about (such as the fact that human beings can design things without using their brains). Perhaps you have some new objection that you'd like to raise? :-) Cheers, RDFish RDFish
RDFish - side note, if I'm poking fun at your approach occasionally, it's with some admiration. You're taking on a lot of points in opposition.
But my argument is that it is not a known cause if it refers to disembodied intelligence, and if it refers to embodied intelligence then there are these other problems I’ve discussed.
Is the Big Bang a known cause? Or is it an imaginary-but-possible cause?
Sorry, but I didn’t actually follow this. Once again please?
Ok, the validator "uniform and repeated experience" is not good. It's not empirical. (Meyer got it from Darwin, thus proving we can't trust Darwin for anything. :-)) So, let's use empirical instead. We'll use what we know.
In some lab tests of CSI we have discovered, with certainty, the source of CSI (forensics, historical sciences, etc).
I study evidence of an event (your example of murder evidence). It shows high CSI, therefore I conclude design. In every case, where the origin of that CSI is known with certainty (murderer confesses after seeing video and eyewitnes evidence), the source of the CSI is intelligence. (A human intelligence in this case. Beaver dams, animal intelligence. Known with certainty.)
In everyone one of those cases, the source was an intelligence capable of producing the effect.
As above, the murderer was the source of the CSI. You then want to prove that the source of the intelligence was necessarily a brain, or even necessarily dependent on a brain. So, the parallel is that we have shown, through lab tests that we know, with equal certainty (the way we know the murderer is the source of CSI) that intelligence is always dependent on a brain. But we do not know this with equal certainty. You're able to cover this over by appealing to "our uniform and repeated experience" - a soft measure. But with a harder-empirical measure, you'd have to say that we know with equal certainty that mind is always dependent on matter. You'd have to show the empirical, lab tests to prove that. The fact is, we don't even know what the source of intelligence is. Does intelligence originate in the brain? Your challenge would be to show this. It's not enough to rely on a popular understanding ("How could you have intelligence without a brain"?) -- you'd have to show a much higher degree of certainty. As brain science stands today, it can't be done. The design argument can be proven with a much higher degree of cetainty. In every case, where we know the source, we know it is an intelligent cause. In no case, where we want to know the source of intelligence (does it originate in the brain?) do we have certain knowledge of this. The two arguments you're trying to draw a parallel with are not equivalent - on an empirical basis. The design argument can be judged with a high standard ("in every case"). The mind-matter argument can only be judged with a soft standard ("it could be probable that"). The two arguments look equivalent when validated as "our uniform and repeated experience". But that's a very weak way to measure both arguments. If we look at actual scientific tests, the design argument has certainty where the mind-matter argument does not. Silver Asiatic
Hi StephenB,
By contrast, we observe many things about design, but most of them are not causally adequate to explain anything. Human designers, for example, typically have bigger brains than animal designers. That’s all very interesting, but we can’t extrapolate on that observation and conclude that the Grand Designer in the sky has the biggest brain of all or even any brain at all. The observation in question has no explanatory power.
Yes, I agree.
Even if Human designers are assumed by some to use their brains to design things, that assumption, even if it could rise to the level of an observation, has no explanatory power and is, therefore, irrelevant to the search for historical causes.
Agreed that it has no explanatory power. Disagree that it is irrelevant, because it shows us the intelligence in this context is not a known cause that we can offer as a likely explanation. Instead, it is a cause that would contradict our experience-based expectations, requiring that ID provide additional evidence that such a thing was present when living things were first produced.
ID has only one question: Design or no design; ID has only one method: historical science.
My point is that we have knowledge about intelligent designers that cannot be excluded by fiat simply because ID people don't want to consider it. That would be like methodological naturalists simply excluding anything that was not currently understood to be "natural" just because they want to. We do have experience of designers, and ID does refer to our experience of designers in order to justify ID's conclusions, and so it is clearly justified to point to other aspects of our experience of designers and say that needs to be taken into account as well.
RDF: This means we would need specific evidence that such a thing existed before we could consider this a justified hypothesis. SB: But it is not ID’s hypothesis that the designer has no CSI.
We've stumbled on this 100 times now. If you'd like to stop going in circles, aside from defining what you mean by "design" above, it would be stupendously helpful if you would clearly say exactly what question you believe ID is answering. You say "Design or no design", but you don't say what it is you are determining this about. In other words, do you say that ID explains where the first first CSI-rich mechanism came from? Or only where the first CSI-rich mechanism on Earth came from? Or what?
ID’s hypothesis is that an intelligent agent is likely responsible for the CSI in biological organisms, and that naturalistic forces alone are insufficient.
We can certainly leave the part about "naturalistic forces" out of the discussion, because nobody is arguing for anything like that. In order to move forward with clarity, then, you need only tell me if you mean CSI in biological organisms on Earth or anywhere. If you answer "on Earth", then my reponse is that ID is a more complex hypothesis than ET-ancestor theory, without providing any additional explanatory power. If you answer "anywhere", then my response is that this would require a CSI-less intelligence, which is not a known cause, and thus would require evidence. PLEASE answer this question - it will reduce typing as well as miscommunication in the future!
In keeping with that point, Steven Meyer cannot include in his analysis every conceivable assumption or observation about design that critics may want to discuss. There is a good reason he didn’t consider that fact that designing humans have CSI-rich mechanisms at their disposal, or that animal designers have smaller brains than human designers, or any other consideration that cannot reasonably inform us about past events. The reason is that those casually inadequate considerations cannot be validly extrapolated from.
I'm not sure what you mean by "extrapolated from", but it is very clear that the fact that all intelligent agents that we know of require complex mechanism (meaning necessary but not sufficient of course) in order to design things is relevant to the process of evaluating whether or not ID's hypothesis is likely to be true.
RDF: But we have no more specific evidence for the existence of an immaterial intelligence capable of producing complex mechanisms than we do for the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrial life forms, which is none at all. SB: As indicated, we have no need for any such evidence.
If "design" was a known cause from our experience, I would tend to agree. But (depending on your answer to the question about what ID explains, above) it is not a known cause, and so I disagree.
Meyer’s argument can be summarized in one sentence. Do you think that you could summarize your argument in one sentence?
Yes, but only if you respond to my requests for clarification regarding what exactly ID is supposed to be a theory of - what does it claim to explain.
It may be simple, but it does not satisfy the methods of historical science.... It’s a simple explanation, but there is no evidence for it, which means that it cannot be the best explanation.
There is no evidence for any of these theories, and so none of them can be the best explanation, which has been my position all along. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
UB:
Checking back in, my hats off to RDF. He has apparently lined up the ID proponents on UD, one by one, and conned them into playing his game. Its not a good look.
I disagree UB. RDF has raised objections, and his objections have been soundly refuted. The fact that he keeps going and going like the Energizer Bunny only provides more opportunities to refute his objections again and more soundly. My hat is off to the indefatigable ID proponents here at UD who will not allow bad arguments to stand unrebutted, no matter how many times the bad arguments are regurgitated. Barry Arrington
Hi vjtorley, I have just skimmed a few of your responses to me, and I see they are thoughtful comments that will require more time to respond to than I have at the moment. I'm going to respond to StephenB's short response in the meantime, but look for my response to you later on. Thanks! Cheers, RDFish RDFish
122 vjtorley The known cause is simply intelligence itself. The fact that the Intelligent Designer in question happens to be immaterial is neither here nor there; what makes it causally adequate to account for the CSI in life is its intelligence, not its immateriality.
In parallel: "The known cause is simply the Big Bang itself. The fact that origin of the Big Bang happens to be immaterial is neither here nor there. What makes it causally adequate to account for the mathematical evidence is the Big Bang, not its immaterial origin". Silver Asiatic
Hi Mung,
I’m trying to wrap my head around this, I truly am. So it’s not any observation that serves as a premise in your argument, it’s the lack of an observation that serves as the premise of your argument?
The premise of my argument is that all of our observations consistently find intelligence relies on mechanism. I do not draw an inductive inference from these observations. In other words, I do not then conclude that intelligence must always rely on mechanism. I do use these observations as a premise in my argument, however. My argument is this: Because it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible (as VJT put it), we would need actual evidence to show that such a thing did exist in order to justify the hypothesis that a CSI-less intelligence was responsible for first life.
Your “argument” keeps evolving.
No, it's been unchanged since the start. Perhaps your understanding of it has evolved. I apologize if I have been unclear, but it is challenging to respond to a dozen different debaters, each with different assumptions about ID and each trying different refutations of my arguments.
From the observation that whenever we observe an intelligent agent the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system, you draw the inference that we’ve never observed an intelligent agent create new CSI which did not already possess CSI, and then you use this inference as a premise in your argument.
No. Rather: From the observation that whenever we observe an intelligent agent the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system, ID cannot offer intelligent agency as a known cause of the very first CSI-rich system (i.e. intelligence could not have preceded the first CSI-rich system).
That wasn’t your argument before. Your previous argument was that you had a better explanation and that ID was not therefore the best explanation.
All of this confusion arises because some here insist that ID explains the ORIGIN of CSI-rich systems IN GENERAL (i.e. the very first instance of CSI, or of life), while others insist that ID does NOT attempt to explain this, but rather only explains life ON EARTH.
Life is not a feature of living things that ID even attempts to offer an explanation for. So now we’re back to straw-men. Your “arguments” are an endless litany of straw men, red herrings, and non sequiturs. And a 10 year old could figure it out.
It would be very helpful if you would simply tell me what it is you think ID purports to explain, if you can. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi Silver Asiatic
I respect RDFish’s argument. He (usually) defends it well and he’s been consistent.
Thank you very much, SA!!
A simple response: “our uniform and repeated experience” is not a good measure. It’s imprecise, non-empirical and ill-defined. Meyer would be wrong to use that phrase as the validator of ID. Would RDFish accept that as a victory for his argument?
Essentially yes, as long as other phrases indicating empirical support are not just substituted. For example, Meyer and other ID folks often speak of "intelligence" as a known cause that best explains biological complexity. But my argument is that it is not a known cause if it refers to disembodied intelligence, and if it refers to embodied intelligence then there are these other problems I've discussed.
Now, RDFish’s argument restated (if he will concede this after his stunning victory over Stephen Meyer’s approach): “In some lab test of intelligence, we have discovered, with certainty, the source. In every one of those cases, the source of intelligence was a brain.” This falsifies the argument. 1. We cannot study intelligence directly. 2. In no cases have we discovered that the source of intelligence was a brain. I’ll give RDFish high marks for refuting Meyer’s formulation. But a slight change reveals the radical difference in the two proposals he’s trying to bring into equivalency.
Sorry, but I didn't actually follow this. Once again please? Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi Brent,
In my opinion, you would help yourself to consider ID proper as not speaking to the identity of the designer.
I haven't seen anyone talk about "identities" of anyone (name? social security number?). The problem with ID's designer is not that it is not identified; it is that it is not even defined.
There is no necessity that such a thing (intelligence without CSI-rich mechanism) be shown to have existed in order to hypothesize that it did.
That is correct - you can hypothesize anything you'd like. You just can't support your hypothesis, that's all.
I don’t agree that ID proper does hypothesize such a [immaterial] designer,...
And if that is the case, ID cannot explain the origin of CSI-rich systems.
...but even if it did/does, there is only need for rational argumentation that such a thing must exist, or at least is not impossible to exist. If that hypothesis is more likely, whether we can have “experiential” awareness and evidence of it or not, it is justified.
Either ID provides empirical evidence for this thing or not. If not - no problem, we just don't all ID an empirically supported theory (perhaps you are justifying the hypothesis on the basis of personal faith or religious experience - that's fine, it's just not based on our shared experience).
To say otherwise (as you continually do) is to just prove many’s accusations of your ideologically constrained form of empiricism which betrays methodological materialism. I know you revolt to that label, but it seems to be either a lie (I don’t think that’s it), or an actual blindness to, the fact that you do hold to it. What is materialism, really, other than verificationism; it only exists if we can verify it with our senses?
Read this carefully, because a lot of people are making this mistake: Empiricism is not my particular epistemic stance; it is the stance of prominent ID authors like Meyer. I am not arguing that empiricism is the only path to knowledge. I am arguing that IF ID WISHES to claim that it is an empirically supported theory, then it is obliged to evaluate its hypotheses against our experience. If ID dropped the pretense of offering a cause known to our experience as the explanation for life, fine-tuning, and so on, I would have no problem with it.
The inference to design IS based on our uniform and repeated experience.
Nope, it's not. We have no experience of disembodied intelligence, and if ID's intelligence is embodied, then simpler explanations suffice.
To make this charge, you have to say that ID is about OOL it seems, but, as I’ve said (as well as others), it’s not.
Please clarify this: What exactly is it you think ID purports to explain?
You say that, if it is empirical, it must include CSI-rich mechanism in order to be intelligent, but though satisfying YOUR interpretation of empirical and “uniform and repeated experience” isn’t attainable, you are still left in the position of needing to prove that the “real” empirical position is that mind must depend on a CSI-rich mechanism. Why is it that you think this is a “default” position that should be granted you?
Not sure I understand this, but if you are arguing that humans do not need brains in order to think, or that disembodied spirits can build complex mechanisms, just say so, and we can agree to disagree.
Simplest, of course, if you assume (knowingly and purposely or otherwise) the materialist position. Don’t give me the “It’s not MY position! It’s Stephen Meyer’s” argument. NO! Stephen Meyer is making only a specific claim in regards to a specific case, i.e. what we DO know and have good reason to accept as necessary in regards to CSI, that it is intelligently designed.
You did not respond to my point: If we are simply trying to explain how life came to exist on Earth, then the simplest explanation is that it came to Earth from some other planet in the galaxy. Period. This has nothing to do with materialism - go ahead and assume dualism and my argument doesn't change. If you disagree, please explain what you think the best explanation is, and why it is better than this one.
In order to say that ID isn’t the best explanation, you are obliged to say what a better explanation is. From what you’ve written, it apparently isn’t a naturalistic explanation, so . . . ?
I've been very clear about this: There are no successful, empirically supported explanations for first life OR first life on Earth. Of the various explanations on hand, the least terrible theory is that life on Earth came from someplace else... but obviously that is a ridiculously bad theory too. And if you want to actually explain the origin of life, then we have no theory that is consistent with our experience.
Anyway, I don’t have a PhD, but still hope this helps.
:-) Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Upright BiPed: Checking back in, my hat’s off to RDF. He has apparently lined up the ID proponents on UD, one by one, and conned them into playing his game. Its not a good look. Mung: And around and around we go. What ten year old doesn’t enjoy a good amusement park?
I fully agree. Like a 10 year old, I'm very amused by RDFish's approach. He's keeping the game enjoyable. Like watching a good magician. We all know it's not real -- it's trickery. But how does he move his hands so quickly? Where are the false bottoms to the boxes, where are the hidden cables? In #126 I caught one. When asked for a historical scientific theory that is successful (unlike ID according to him), he mentioned Big Bang. Then, quickly said that "Big Bang doesn't extend beyond" what came before the Big Bang. Oops! A couple of cards slipped out of his sleeve there. :-) When ID defenders state "ID theory does not extend to questions on the nature of the designer", RDFish is outraged. Cowardice! No, we have to extend it to ET Intelligence or Immaterial intelligence. Big Bang however? He'll consider that successful even though we have no empirical evidence of the "only options" for the conditions before the beginning of the universe. But let's just cover that up so we can still keep playing the game. :-) Meanwhile, I do tip my hat to him. He's astute enough to know that evolution and abiogenesis theories are absurdly unsuccessful. I'd enjoy seeing him take on some evolutionary-atheists but it's got to be a lot more fun with a respectful ID audience who already agree with him on some fundamental matters. That's another reason why it's more fun for myself, speaking personally. Who wants to continue ripping apart evolutionary idiocy? It's getting too easy. So, RDFish still has some killer conclusions that he'll keep us twisting around: The best so far: "Ok, ID theory claims it is in our uniform and repeated experience that we can have thoughts and can design things without a brain". Oh yes, the magic tricks, the sleights-of-hand, the well-schooled understanding of ID defenders' knee-jerk responses, the grandstanding to an audience ("Ok folks, ID is based on the existence of brainless-designers. And even better, in order to support ID theory you also have to accept the existence of ghosts and demons. Hahaha.) -- it all tells me that this isn't serious. But, hey why not play with it? Some clever counter arguments help to sharpen the ID argument. Software designers look for hackers to reveal the weak spots. In this case, however, there is nothing here to refute ID theory. The arguments look good, but they're going nowhere. At best it's semantics. RDFish knows that. Obviously. But we can't stop now. It's still amusing to try to figure out "how did he get away with that?" :-) Silver Asiatic
Upright BiPed:
Checking back in, my hat's off to RDF. He has apparently lined up the ID proponents on UD, one by one, and conned them into playing his game. Its not a good look.
Well, you know how easily fooled we ten year old children are. :) It's my premise... It's not my premise... From it I conclude that... I don't make any conclusion from it... From my observations of intelligent design in action I make no generalizations about the fact that we don't observe intelligent designers that aren't like the intelligent designers we do observe in action... And around and around we go. What ten year old doesn't enjoy a good amusement park? Mung
Hi kairosfocus, I had a look at the IEP article, and I have to say I think its definition of inductive reasoning strikes me as rather too simplistic:
If the author of the argument believes that the truth of the premises definitely establishes the truth of the conclusion (due to definition, logical entailment, logical structure, or mathematical necessity), then the argument is deductive. If the author of the argument does not think that the truth of the premises definitely establishes the truth of the conclusion, but nonetheless believes that their truth provides good reason to believe the conclusion true, then the argument is inductive.
On a more helpful note, here's what I found in the Wikipedia article on abductive reasoning at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abductive_reasoning :
Deductive reasoning (deduction) allows deriving b from a only where b is a formal logical consequence of a. In other words, deduction derives the consequences of the assumed. Given the truth of the assumptions, a valid deduction guarantees the truth of the conclusion. For example, given that all bachelors are unmarried males, and given that this person is a bachelor, one can deduce that this person is an unmarried male. Inductive reasoning (induction) allows inferring b from a, where b does not follow necessarily from a. a might give us very good reason to accept b, but it does not ensure b. For example, if all swans that we have observed so far are white, we may induce that the possibility that all swans are white is reasonable. We have good reason to believe the conclusion from the premise, but the truth of the conclusion is not guaranteed. (Indeed, it turns out that some swans are black.) Abductive reasoning (abduction) allows inferring a as an explanation of b. Because of this inference, abduction allows the precondition a to be abduced from the consequence b. Deductive reasoning and abductive reasoning thus differ in the direction in which a rule like "a entails b" is used for inference. As such, abduction is formally equivalent to the logical fallacy of affirming the consequent (or Post hoc ergo propter hoc) because of multiple possible explanations for b. For example, after glancing and seeing the eight ball moving towards us, we may abduce that the cue ball struck the eight ball. The strike of the cue ball would account for the movement of the eight ball. It serves as a hypothesis that explains our observation. Given the fact of infinitely many possible explanations for the movement of the eight ball, our abduction does not leave us certain that the cue ball in fact struck the eight ball, but our abduction, still useful, can serve to orient us in our surroundings. Despite infinite possible explanations for any physical process that we observe, we tend to abduce a single explanation (or a few explanations) for this process in the expectation that we can orient better ourselves in our surroundings and disregard some possibilities.
And from another source at http://butte.edu/departments/cas/tipsheets/thinking/reasoning.html :
While cogent inductive reasoning requires that the evidence that might shed light on the subject be fairly complete, whether positive or negative, abductive reasoning is characterized by lack of completeness, either in the evidence, or in the explanation, or both. A patient may be unconscious or fail to report every symptom, for example, resulting in incomplete evidence, or a doctor may arrive at a diagnosis that fails to explain several of the symptoms. Still, he must reach the best diagnosis he can.
There's also a very good paper on abduction here, at http://cogsci.uwaterloo.ca/Articles/Pages/%7FAbductive.html :
This paper discusses abductive reasoning---that is, reasoning in which explanatory hypotheses are formed and evaluated. First, it criticizes two recent formal logical models of abduction. An adequate formalization would have to take into account the following aspects of abduction: explanation is not deduction; hypotheses are layered; abduction is sometimes creative; hypotheses may be revolutionary; completeness is elusive; simplicity is complex; and abductive reasoning may be visual and non-sentential. Second, in order to illustrate visual aspects of hypothesis formation, the paper describes recent work on visual inference in archaeology. Third, in connection with the evaluation of explanatory hypotheses, the paper describes recent results on the computation of coherence.
And now I must retire for the evening. __________ OK, thanks for thoughts. IEP clearly emphasises intent of the arguer rather than the objective status of the premises and that of the degree of support they give to the conclusion, but this is not opposed to the point, does such an arguer succeed in -- on credible basis -- actually supporting and rendering more plausible or likely or even probable -- the truth of the conclusion? And, in that context it seems to me that an abductive argument that does not irresponsibly or maliciously exclude otherwise credible candidate explanations from the comparative difficulties/strengths table, and actually does identify a credibly best candidate on serious grounds, renders this candidate as supported and more likely true than the live option alternatives. KF vjtorley
In post 804 (of the originally referenced thread), RDFish mistakenly gave the game away
SA: I know your views on evolution and OOL, but what other historical science like ID would you consider to be a successfully empirically supported theory? And how did you judge it as such? RDFish: Historical science? Cosmology, I’d say – as far as it goes (which does not extend beyond the Big Bang of course). SA: That just helps to set the standard — and see why you think that ID does not reach it. RDFish: Right. Cosmologists argued steady-state vs. Big Bang for a long time (and they still do, along with cyclic universes, multi-universes, and other currently untestable ideas), and considered lots of arguments on each side, but it wasn’t until a specific prediction was empirically confirmed (background radiation) that most physicists agreed that the Big Bang was an empirically determined result. Likewise, until we obtain specific evidence of some intelligent entity that designed life here, ID will not be an empirically supported result.
Note the first parenthetical. Very slippery indeed. Big Bang "doesn't extend beyond the Big Bang". Convenient! 1. ID theory fails because it requires an unembodied or ET designer neither of which are part of our uniform and repeated experience. 2. Big Bang theory is however part of our uniform and repeated experience. It is successful. 3. If Big Bang is correct, the universe, matter, time and space had a beginning. 4. However, we have no empirical experience of something coming from nothing or a multiverse (the only two options). 5. Thus, RDFish's claim is contradicted by his own standard. Double-standard of evidence. Big Bang, necessarily relying on multiverse or something-from-nothing. Accepted as part of our "uniform and repeated experience". Silver Asiatic
Hi RDFish, Hopefully this will be the last post, if the system lets me post it... Another assumption that we might make about the Designer are that whatever He intentionally designs, He designs optimally, subject to constraints imposed on Him by the nature of the creature He is designing. It's hard to say which features of living organisms reflect His original designs, but I would say that the DNA molecule should turn out to be optimal for life, from an overall biochemical perspective. Some evolutionists cite suboptimal features of organisms as disproof of Intelligent Design, but that assumes that the features in question were designed. In any case, things are not what they seem. Take the laryngeal nerve of the giraffe, for instance. The laryngeal nerve comes down from the brain and loops around the arteries near the heart and then goes back up to the larynx. In the giraffe, this seems like particularly bad design. However, the laryngeal nerve actually has several branches all along its length that go to the heart, esophagus, trachea, and thyroid gland. Thus it is involved in a whole system of control of various related organs. It would be very unintelligent to have a single nerve, controlling only the larynx. It would be more intelligent to have it control a lot of related systems all along its length (see this article .) Hence the laryngeal nerve, far from being a problem for intelligent design, actually vindicates it. Creationist Dr. Jonathan Sarfati makes the same point in a recent article entitled, Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve, and adds that its position may have something to do with the development of the animal as an embryo. A final assumption I'd make about the Intelligent Designer is that He works according to an economy of effort principle. That's why I think common descent is likely: why go reinventing the wheel? Why not make an original organism and artificially modify its descendants in order to generate the diversity of life-forms we see today, rather than design every creature from scratch? That's also why I think an old Earth is likely: it would be easier to terra-form the Earth in little steps, and gradually render it fit for complex life, than to transform a formless void into a Paradise for people and animals within six days. So that's what I would predict, based on my assumptions, which may be wrong. vjtorley
Hi RDFish, Finally, you add:
You seem confused about the nature of "positive" evidence entirely. Positive evidence does not invoke the lack of any known explanation. That is in fact negative evidence. In contrast, positive evidence for an intelligent designer would require the confirmation of particular, specific predictions based on the documented properties of intelligent designers.
I appreciate your point. I was quoting from the ID Defined Web page, and I quoted the passage simply to establish that the case for ID was not based simply on "uniform and repeated experience." If you want "particular, specific predictions based on the documented properties of intelligent designers," then you shouldn't argue from the observed properties of human designers. The real problem when it comes to making "particular, specific predictions" is not the bodilessness of the Designer, but the fact that we don't know His motivations. I think we can make predictions, however, if we assume that one of His aims, in making the cosmos, was to generate intelligent creatures, and that a second aim was to make His existence known to those creatures. Most ID publications attribute the first goal to the Designer, but are chary of imputing the second goal as well. But if we take this step, then we might predict that the fundamental physical theory underlying the cosmos would be a mathematically elegant one, which our minds (some of them, anyway) are capable of grasping. We might also predict that the cosmos was designed with a very high degree of fine-tuning, because that would constitute a good signal of the Designer's existence. To be continued... vjtorley
Hi again, RDFish: You also write:
[Y]ou can look up ["Stephen Meyer" "uniform and repeated experience"] (using those quote marks) and peruse the 12,000 hits to see why someone may get the impression that ID authors attempt to argue that the design inference rests on our uniform and repeated experience.
Point taken. I think you've made a valid point here: that Meyer's argument, taken by itself, could never establish the existence of a bodiless Designer of the cosmos as a whole. But that's not what he argues for in his books. In Signature in the Cell, he is chiefly concerned to argue that life had a Designer. He does briefly speculate that there may be a bodiless Designer of the cosmos, but he doesn't actually argue for that, as far as I can tell. In other words, I think Meyer knows how far he can press his argument. Beyond that point, he modestly suggests, but draws no firm conclusions. Final comment... vjtorley
Hi RDFish, I've read your thoughtful comment in #92 above, and I'd like to make a few brief comments. You write:
It is the premise of my argument, which concludes that contra Meyer, et al, ID does not offer a known cause as the best explanation for OOL.
I would disagree here. The known cause is simply intelligence itself. The fact that the Intelligent Designer in question happens to be immaterial is neither here nor there; what makes it causally adequate to account for the CSI in life is its intelligence, not its immateriality. Back in a moment... vjtorley
Hi StephenB
Hello yourself, RD
There are two reasons the presentation of my argument is not simple. First, some people say ID is the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth; others say it explains the origin of the first life anywhere. Second, ID subsumes two distinctly different hypotheses, each of which has different strengths and weaknesses. So my argument (which concludes that ID is not the best explanation for what it purports to explain) has to deal with all of this variation.
No problem. You will find me very congenial when you are actually trying to give reasons for any assertion that you might make.
Consider the origin of the first CSI-rich mechanism: In order to explain the very first mechanism, ID must posit an intelligent entity that does not itself require mechanism in order to produce novel mechanisms.
The question is, how do scientists make inferences about past events using present conditions in the context of uniformitarian reasoning? The answer is that it assigns, attributes, or projects to the past, only those causes that have "explanatory power." No other observations are relevant. By contrast, we observe many things about design, but most of them are not causally adequate to explain anything. Human designers, for example, typically have bigger brains than animal designers. That's all very interesting, but we can't extrapolate on that observation and conclude that the Grand Designer in the sky has the biggest brain of all or even any brain at all. The observation in question has no explanatory power. Even if Human designers are assumed by some to use their brains to design things, that assumption, even if it could rise to the level of an observation, has no explanatory power and is, therefore, irrelevant to the search for historical causes. Not only does it lack causal adequacy, it also lacks another requirement of historical science: competing explanations have not been ruled out. Science is rigorous only insofar as its methods are appropriate to the questions that are being addressed and are consistently applied. ID has only one question: Design or no design; ID has only one method: historical science.
You’ve conceded arguendo that such things do not occur in our experience now, so we would not expect that they would exist at the time first life was designed.
I agreed to withhold my objections about your premise for a while, and I will keep my promise. We will, however, get to it.
This means we would need specific evidence that such a thing existed before we could consider this a justified hypothesis.
But it is not ID's hypothesis that the designer has no CSI. ID needs no evidence to justify a claim that it doesn't make--and knows that it cannot make. ID's hypothesis is that an intelligent agent is likely responsible for the CSI in biological organisms, and that naturalistic forces alone are insufficient. It can reasonably make that claim because intelligent action is known to be causally adequate for producing CSI and naturalistic processes are not known to be causally adequate. On the other hand, a CSI mechanism, either in general or understood specifically as a human brain, does not have any explanatory power at all and is, therefore, irrelevant to the search for historical causes. ID is concerned with only one problem and its paradigms can address no other: The tension is not between CSI and no CSI; the tension is between design and no design. That is the conflict on the table and, given their standards for historical science, ID's paradigms cannot address any other conflict, especially the one that you have contrived. In keeping with that point, Steven Meyer cannot include in his analysis every conceivable assumption or observation about design that critics may want to discuss. There is a good reason he didn't consider that fact that designing humans have CSI-rich mechanisms at their disposal, or that animal designers have smaller brains than human designers, or any other consideration that cannot reasonably inform us about past events. The reason is that those casually inadequate considerations cannot be validly extrapolated from.
But we have no more specific evidence for the existence of an immaterial intelligence capable of producing complex mechanisms than we do for the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrial life forms, which is none at all.
As indicated, we have no need for any such evidence.
Therefore, ID is not justified by empirical evidence as an explanation for the first living things.
Obviously, that doesn't follow.
Now, I would predict you will object that yes, you do have evidence for an immaterial intelligence, perhaps because of fine-tuning or other considerations.
No, science cannot speak to the fact that God is pure Spirit. That is why we have a bible.
Without arguing that with you here, the fact remains that the “design inference” does not simply proceed from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency, the way Meyer says it does.
Reread my comments about the methods of historical science.
Rather, you are making a very much more complex abductive argument, pointing to a consilience of disparate factors rather than a straightforward extrapolation from our experience that mechanism invariably arises from mind.
Meyer's argument can be summarized in one sentence. Do you think that you could summarize your argument in one sentence?
Now consider the origin of life on Earth: The simplest explanation of the origin of life on Earth is that it arrived from another planet; ID requires more assumptions, but provides no additional explanatory power.
It may be simple, but it does not satisfy the methods of historical science.
Therefore, ID is not the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth.
It's a simple explanation, but there is no evidence for it, which means that it cannot be the best explanation. StephenB
UB, You have a point. Do you care to expand? KF PS: You may want to cf. my remarks and cites in the OP, many of which, though relevant, are not capitalised on so far. For instance it is highly dubious that humanity's uniform and repeated experience warrants any claim that mind depends on or emerges from brain or similar mechanically processing physical structure. The fine tuning of the cosmos, the millions directly transformed by direct encounter with Spirit, and the serious challenges attending to any materialist substrate emergentist view of mind all seem relevant. PPS: Will the graphic do? kairosfocus
F/N: Added to OP, on Bayes and evidence. KF kairosfocus
Checking back in, my hats off to RDF. He has apparently lined up the ID proponents on UD, one by one, and conned them into playing his game. Its not a good look. Upright BiPed
F/N: Hey Wiki does induction (modern sense) right:
Definition The philosophical definition of inductive reasoning is much more nuanced than simple progression from particular/individual instances to broader generalizations. Rather, the premises of an inductive logical argument indicate some degree of support (inductive probability) for the conclusion but do not entail it; that is, they suggest truth but do not ensure it. In this manner, there is the possibility of moving from generalizations to individual instances. Inductive reasoning consists of inferring general principles or rules from specific facts. Though many dictionaries define inductive reasoning as reasoning that derives general principles from specific observations, this usage is outdated.[2] 2] ^ "Deductive and Inductive Arguments", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Some dictionaries define "deduction" as reasoning from the general to specific and "induction" as reasoning from the specific to the general. While this usage is still sometimes found even in philosophical and mathematical contexts, for the most part, it is outdated."
In short it uses the IEP, which I have found a pretty good shortish source by comparison with the Stanford Enc of Phil. SEP on inductive logic here is more ponderous but helpful. The opening salvos:
Inductive Logic First published Mon Sep 6, 2004; substantive revision Mon Oct 29, 2012 An inductive logic is a system of evidential support that extends deductive logic to less-than-certain inferences. For valid deductive arguments the premises logically entail the conclusion, where the entailment means that the truth of the premises provides a guarantee of the truth of the conclusion. Similarly, in a good inductive argument the premises should provide some degree of support for the conclusion, where such support means that the truth of the premises indicates with some degree of strength that the conclusion is true. Presumably, if the logic of good inductive arguments is to be of any real value, the measure of support it articulates should meet the following condition: Criterion of Adequacy (CoA): As evidence accumulates, the degree to which the collection of true evidence statements comes to support a hypothesis, as measured by the logic, should tend to indicate that false hypotheses are probably false and that true hypotheses are probably true.
In this sense Abductive Reasoning aka inference to the best explanation, fits in with this modern sense. But, this being phil, I am sure there are various usages out there. Dr Torley, any quick thoughts? KF kairosfocus
Sorry, "yo our theory" in the final sentence should read "to our theory." Cheers. vjtorley
Hi RDFish, I might add that your list of three hypotheses left out the hypothesis that life on Earth was designed by embodied aliens from the multiverse, as opposed to aliens within this universe. That's a much tougher hypothesis to refute, as the multiverse is potentially infinitely large. I have argued elsewhere (see here for instance) that the multiverse itself would have to have been designed, no matter how big it is. If one can apply the fine-tuning argument to the multiverse as a whole, it follows that a bodiless Designer becomes a more reasonable explanation of life on Earth than aliens in the multiverse. I hope I have persuaded you that hand-waving arguments which involve purely qualitative reasoning and which ignore the nitty-gritty of the formulas involved and the relevant quantities will never succeed in refuting ID. We have thought long and hard about the objections to our theory, and we have done our homework. Let's see some hard numbers on your side, please. END. Fixed. KF vjtorley
Finally, you write:
3) Non-living-thing-engineer theory: Terrestrial life was engineered by something that was not a life form at all (i.e. something without a complex physical body) On the plus side, this would explain how life in general came to exist by accounting for the origination of CSI-rich physical systems. On the negative side, however, we have the most problems of all: First, just as we have no evidence of extra-terrestrial intelligence life, we have no evidence of extra-terrestrial non-life. Second, we must again make the assumption that this entity had advanced bio-engineering skills. And third, this contradicts our uniform and repeated experience that intelligent agents require CSI-rich mechanisms in order to store and process information. That makes this the WORST THEORY of all.
What you're doing here is pointing out the extra requirement (a bodiless, CSI-less Designer). At worst, this would reduce P(H). Now, the mere fact that something contradicts our experience need not render it a priori improbable. But where you really go wrong is that you fail to consider how improbable our uniform repeated experience could render the existence of such a Designer. The vital point you overlook is that uniform repeated experience cumulates arithmetically, whereas the improbability of a multi-protein organism arising via an unguided, non-foresighted mechanism cumulates geometrically, with every additional protein that has to be included. Given that the number of events that have taken place in the history of the cosmos is around 10^120, that means that the number of observed instances of things being intelligently designed by an embodied, CSI-rich Designer could be no more than 10^120. Hence the a priori improbability of a bodiless Designer can be no more than 10^(-120). Consequently, if the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H is much, much higher than 10^120 (as it would be when you consider the likelihood of a complex organism like ourselves arising by an unguided, non-foresighted process), then hypothesis 3 wins hands down. It beats out hypothesis 2, because it doesn't have to contend with the geometrically large improbability of an alien life-form arising in the first place. All it has to overcome is the uniform testimony of experience that designers are embodied. And as I've argued, at worst, that means a prior probability for H of 10^(-120). If the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H is much, much higher than 10^120, then we can forget about the prior improbability of this hypothesis. Final thoughts... vjtorley
Hi RDFish, You continue:
2) ET-engineer theory: Terrestrial life was engineered by life forms on another planet. On the plus side, we know from our experience that life forms can be intelligent and design things. On the negative side, again we have no evidence that ET life has ever existed, and this theory also leaves the existence of ET life, and life in general, unexplained. Moreover, we must make yet another unsupported assumption compared to ET-ancestor theory, which is that these ETs not only have to exist, but they also have to be more advanced at bio-engineering than human beings, which makes this theory even less probable than ET-ancestor theory: It is a WORSE THEORY.
What you're arguing here is that P(H) is much, much lower than for hypothesis 1, because it makes extra assumptions about extraterrestrial life: it has to be not only alive, but also intelligent and good at bio-engineering. Now I agree with you that this makes hypothesis 2 a lot more unlikely than hypothesis 1. But that isn't enough to make it a worse theory than hypothesis 1. You also have to look at P(E|H)/P(E), or the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H. And if E includes the specified complexity of life, then obviously it lends very strong support to H indeed. So the question is: whether this enhanced degree of support is strong enough to counterbalance the very low prior value of P(H), for hypothesis 2. The degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H depends on the improbability of life on Earth - including Homo sapiens - arising by a non-foresighted natural mechanism. An ID proponent would argue that the likelihood of life, including us, arising by such a mechanism is astronomically low. (The sheer number of chemically unrelated families of proteins found in complex organisms should make this obvious: we're dealing with a needle in a haystack, compounded multiple times. See my post, The Edge of Evolution for details.) Hence, the degree of support that E provides for hypothesis H must be astronomically large. On the other hand, if we factor in the origin of the extraterrestrial engineers who seeded the Earth with life, it's equally obvious that the considerations that apply to life on Earth arising by an unguided mechanism also apply to aliens arising in this way. If that is part of hypothesis 2, then by the same token, P(H) must be astronomically small - although it'll still be considerably larger than the probability of intelligent life arising by an unguided mechanism on Earth, as there are 10^22 stars in the observable cosmos. To be continued... vjtorley
Mapou, I appreciate that you can take such a strong admonishment in stride. That is a very good sign, and one I probably fail at mostly. Otherwise, I am more than content to see that you are doing your best to think the thing out. Heck, maybe you're right. I don't think so, but since it seems you are seeking the Truth, I'll leave it to the (immaterial j/k) Spirit to guide you and try to get out of the way.
I always thought it was a given.
That can be dangerous. I'm not saying in this case it is, just that the things that we think are givens are the most likely areas where we'll go wrong. Brent
Hi RDFish, Back again. A few points in response: (i) if I'm hypothesizing that all life on Earth originally came from Mars, it is absolutely irrelevant to argue that I haven't explained where Martian life came from. That's not my job. If I find a piece of evidence (e.g. isotopic ratios) that strongly supports the hypothesis of Martian origins, then I'll go with that, and leave the question of where Martian life came from for another day; (ii) If we examine Bayes' theorem above, then we need to specify H: the hypothesis that life exists on other planets and that some of this life traveled to Earth in the past, seeding it with life. The first part of the conjunct looks plausible, at first blush: there are lots of planets out there. The second part is at least possible; life could have been transported to Earth on comets, even if we've never seen it happen. So someone who was unfamiliar with ID arguments might reasonably think that the prior probability of H is not high, but not too low either. The next part of the equation to consider is P(E|H)/P(E), or the degree of support E provides for hypothesis H. What's our E here? As you point out, we have no solid evidence for H. Still, we might consider the best commonly accepted evidence there is: the presence of organic material in meteorites. It doesn't seem to lend much support to H. Some scientists have claimed that the discovery of diatom shells in Earth's atmosphere, at a height of 27 kilometers, lends strong support to H (see my post on the subject here). Others say that volcanoes could be responsible. Right now, we can't say that P(E|H)/P(E)>>1, so P(H|E) depends vitally on P(H); (iii) From an ID perspective, P(H) would appear to be very low, because the anterior probability that life exists on other planets is very low, and that probability is low because the probability of life arising on other planets is low. (We now know that the universe has a finite duration.) Even in something as large as the observable cosmos, the origin of a single protein molecule, let alone an organism, would be something of a chemical miracle. That is the real reason why hypothesis 1 is a bad hypothesis. On the other hand, hypothesis 1 seems to be a lot more probable, on the face of it, than the hypothesis that life arose by some non-foresighted natural process on the primordial Earth, simply because more can happen in an entire universe than on a single planet. Hence if I were a methodological naturalist, I'd take panspermia very seriously. vjtorley
Hi RDFish, Back again. I'd now like to address the argument you put forward in #48 above. I wrote in my previous post that you had failed to take Bayes' Theorem into account. The theorem can be stated as follows: P(H|E) = P(H). [P(E|H)/P(E)] where P(H) is the prior probability of the hypothesis H, P(E|H)/P(E) is the degree of support E provides for hypothesis H, and P(H|E) is the posterior probability of hypothesis H, in the light of evidence E. I know there are longer forms that break it down by enumerating all of the rival hypotheses, but I'd like to keep my argument as clear as possible, for the benefit of readers. Now let's look at your first option:
1) ET-ancestor theory: Terrestrial life is descended from life on another planet. On the plus side, we know that all life does indeed reproduce and adapt, and we know that there are lots of other planets in the galaxy/universe similar to Earth. On the negative side, we have no evidence that ET life has ever existed, and while this theory explains life on Earth, it leaves the existence of ET life (and the existence of life in general) unexplained. So, ET-ancestor theory is a BAD theory.
I'll have to break up my response into segments, as I keep getting these funny messages whenever I type a long passage. (Sorry.) To be continued... vjtorley
Brent @105:
Mapou, I think you may be confused. First and foremost, it seems that you are overly confident that one needs a brain to think. Secondly, you are arrogant and prideful, deeming that those who don’t agree with you are wrong by default. Is this comment also within the scope of acceptability, calling things the way you see them?
Absolutely. Free speech is the best policy. I don't see the materialist camp calling me arrogant and prideful though. But I think that my coming across as arrogant and prideful to you is a direct result of my confidence that thinking requires a brain. I always thought it was a given. It is now clear to me that I have taken something for granted that others either don't feel is settled or believe is false. I think I understand a little why this view is being held by some Christians or maybe even the majority of Christians. They are defending their belief in an immaterial creator God against the onslaught of methodological naturalism. And their belief in an immaterial God comes for interpreting the Biblical teaching, "God is spirit", to mean "God is immaterial or non-physical". Why must "spirit" be interpreted thus? I have no idea. I have seen nothing in the Bible to indicate that the Gods are immaterial or non-physical beings. In fact, I see clear indications in the Bible that all the Gods, including Yahweh, are physical Gods with physical bodies and that their bodies had a beginning. Yahweh calls himself the "ancient of days". Concepts of age are meaningless without a beginning. Spiritual stuff has neither beginning nor end. It just is. Since their bodies are incorruptible, it follows that they are made of a different type of matter of a a different design. The only gods that have bodies made from the dust of the ground (ordinary matter) are human beings. The way I see it, nothing can exist in the spiritual realm unless it is spiritual and nothing can exist in the physical realm unless it is physical. That the two can interact is a testament of their complementarity: neither realm can exist without the other. Not unlike left and right or up and down. Mapou
RDFish:
Yes, now you understand. It is the premise of my argument, which concludes that contra Meyer, et al, ID does not offer a known cause as the best explanation for OOL.
That wasn't your argument before. Your previous argument was that you had a better explanation and that ID was not therefore the best explanation. RDFish:
ID does not offer a known cause as the best explanation for OOL.
So? ID does not offer any cause, known or unknown, as the best explanation for the origin of life. ID 101:
The theory of intelligent design (ID) holds that certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause rather than an undirected process such as natural selection.
Life is not a feature of living things that ID even attempts to offer an explanation for. So now we're back to straw-men. Your "arguments" are an endless litany of straw men, red herrings, and non sequiturs. And a 10 year old could figure it out. Mung
vjt @ 89:
All you’re really saying here is that we’ve never observed an intelligent agent create new CSI which did not already possess CSI. That, by itself, is not an argument – especially when it draws no conclusion (by your own admission).
RDFish @ 92:
Yes, now you understand. It is the premise of my argument, which concludes that contra Meyer, et al, ID does not offer a known cause as the best explanation for OOL.
I'm trying to wrap my head around this, I truly am. So it's not any observation that serves as a premise in your argument, it's the lack of an observation that serves as the premise of your argument? vjt @ 47:
You write: In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system.
RDFish @ 49:
Not only have I not made an induction in this statement, but the rest of my argument does not involved drawing any conclusions from these observations either.
RDFish:
In this thread, please refer to @84 for a summary of my argument.
Your "argument" keeps evolving. Which argument was vjt responding to in his post at 47? Surely he ws not peering into the future at your post @84. Let's see if we can unpack this: From the observation that whenever we observe an intelligent agent the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system, you draw the inference that we’ve never observed an intelligent agent create new CSI which did not already possess CSI, and then you use this inference as a premise in your argument. Better? RDFish @ 35:
In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system. After trying all manner of rebuttals, and dropping most of them, folks here have settled on a couple of main approaches to refute my argument: 1) Denying the premise outright
RDFish @ 48:
It’s been difficult to discuss the rest of my argument when people are coming up with so many different (specious) attacks on the simple premise above. However, if you’d like to agree with my premise arguendo, we could move on to the implications of this observation.
Elsewhere you deny that it's a premise to your argument. No wonder we're all confused. sigh. Mung
I respect RDFish's argument. He (usually) defends it well and he's been consistent. I hope I summarize the most important point correctly here. "Our uniform and repeated experience" - phrase used by major ID-thinker Meyer to defend the design inference. In "our uniform and repeated experience" wherever there is CSI there is intelligence. Thus intelligent design. Thus the ID argument. This is matched with: In "our uniform and repeated experience" wherever there is intelligence, there is some reliance on a brain (a complex physical mechanism of some sort). That's the parallel or equivalency that's offered. A simple response: "our uniform and repeated experience" is not a good measure. It's imprecise, non-empirical and ill-defined. Meyer would be wrong to use that phrase as the validator of ID. Would RDFish accept that as a victory for his argument? Then would he accept a better validator? If yes, then instead of "our uniform and repeated expereince", we contradict Meyer's approach (victory RDFish) and use our empirical measures. Argument changed to this: "In some lab tests of CSI we have discovered, with certainty, the source (forensics, historical sciences, etc). In everyone one of those cases, the source was an intelligence capable of producing the effect." Now, RDFish's argument restated (if he will concede this after his stunning victory over Stephen Meyer's approach): "In some lab test of intelligence, we have discovered, with certainty, the source. In every one of those cases, the source of intelligence was a brain." This falsifies the argument. 1. We cannot study intelligence directly. 2. In no cases have we discovered that the source of intelligence was a brain. I'll give RDFish high marks for refuting Meyer's formulation. But a slight change reveals the radical difference in the two proposals he's trying to bring into equivalency. Silver Asiatic
Mapou, I think you may be confused. First and foremost, it seems that you are overly confident that one needs a brain to think. Secondly, you are arrogant and prideful, deeming that those who don't agree with you are wrong by default. Is this comment also within the scope of acceptability, calling things the way you see them? Brent
Why exactly is the ID camp trying to prove that the brains of the intelligent designers of life on earth are immaterial or that they don't use a brain to think? Or am I conflating the ID camp with fundamentalist creationists? Mapou
There are two reasons the presentation of my argument is not simple. First, some people say ID is the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth; others say it explains the origin of the first life anywhere. Second, ID subsumes two distinctly different hypotheses, each of which has different strengths and weaknesses. So my argument (which concludes that ID is not the best explanation for what it purports to explain) has to deal with all of this variation.
In my opinion, you would help yourself to consider ID proper as not speaking to the identity of the designer. It can be difficult perhaps to distinguish the lines, and that because, just as with ToE, it is the immediate reaction to start thinking of implications for OOL and ultimate reality and source of existence. So, ID proponents, even perhaps Stephen Meyer, will appear to cross over, and may actually cross over, into metaphysics, just as is the case with the materialist scientist doing empirical science.
Consider the origin of the first CSI-rich mechanism: In order to explain the very first mechanism, ID must posit an intelligent entity that does not itself require mechanism in order to produce novel mechanisms. [StephenB's] conceded arguendo that such things do not occur in our experience now, so we would not expect that they would exist at the time first life was designed. This means we would need specific evidence that such a thing existed before we could consider this a justified hypothesis. But we have no more specific evidence for the existence of an immaterial intelligence capable of producing complex mechanisms than we do for the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrial life forms, which is none at all. Therefore, ID is not justified by empirical evidence as an explanation for the first living things.
NO! There is no necessity that such a thing (intelligence without CSI-rich mechanism) be shown to have existed in order to hypothesize that it did. I don't agree that ID proper does hypothesize such a designer, but even if it did/does, there is only need for rational argumentation that such a thing must exist, or at least is not impossible to exist. If that hypothesis is more likely, whether we can have "experiential" awareness and evidence of it or not, it is justified. To say otherwise (as you continually do) is to just prove many's accusations of your ideologically constrained form of empiricism which betrays methodological materialism. I know you revolt to that label, but it seems to be either a lie (I don't think that's it), or an actual blindness to, the fact that you do hold to it. What is materialism, really, other than verificationism; it only exists if we can verify it with our senses?
Now, I would predict you will object that yes, you do have evidence for an immaterial intelligence, perhaps because of fine-tuning or other considerations. Without arguing that with you here, the fact remains that the “design inference” does not simply proceed from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency, the way Meyer says it does. Rather, you are making a very much more complex abductive argument, pointing to a consilience of disparate factors rather than a straightforward extrapolation from our experience that mechanism invariably arises from mind.
Again, No! The inference to design IS based on our uniform and repeated experience. What's to argue with? To make this charge, you have to say that ID is about OOL it seems, but, as I've said (as well as others), it's not. And yet again, even if it was, the inference to design is still "in bounds" empirically speaking. You say that, if it is empirical, it must include CSI-rich mechanism in order to be intelligent, but though satisfying YOUR interpretation of empirical and "uniform and repeated experience" isn't attainable, you are still left in the position of needing to prove that the "real" empirical position is that mind must depend on a CSI-rich mechanism. Why is it that you think this is a "default" position that should be granted you?
Now consider the origin of life on Earth: The simplest explanation of the origin of life on Earth is that it arrived from another planet; ID requires more assumptions, but provides no additional explanatory power.
Simplest, of course, if you assume (knowingly and purposely or otherwise) the materialist position. Don't give me the "It's not MY position! It's Stephen Meyer's" argument. NO! Stephen Meyer is making only a specific claim in regards to a specific case, i.e. what we DO know and have good reason to accept as necessary in regards to CSI, that it is intelligently designed.
Therefore, ID is not the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth.
I'm sorry if it sounds as if I'm ending very harshly, but this is silly. In order to say that ID isn't the best explanation, you are obliged to say what a better explanation is. From what you've written, it apparently isn't a naturalistic explanation, so . . . ? Anyway, I don't have a PhD, but still hope this helps. B. Brent
Hi Brent,
It’s close enough. You see what he’s saying, just answer the challenge, please.
I have answered this, @709, previous thread. This thread attempts to clarify these arguments; if you'd like to comment, let's stay with the concise formulation I've provided here @84 Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Alan Fox:
Including OOL speculation in a textbook is not the same as claiming ToE explains the origin of life on Earth
If the ToE does not explain the origin of life while claiming to be an authority on how life evolves, then it is obviously [snip-vulgar] . Sorry. Mapou
Brent:
You’ll need to help a lot of people out, on both sides of the ID/ToE issue, to come to your so concrete conclusion. Does it give you no pause that many — very, very many — don’t agree that this is anything near a clear-cut and settled issue. Whence your confidence?
Oh, it gives me more than just pause. It's scary and depressing. My confidence is based on simple common sense. The ID camp either needs new leadership or the current leadership needs to wake up and put an end to such silly squabbles. I am not a big tent kind of person. There should be clear demarcations and everybody should know where they belong. I personally don't want to be anywhere near the YEC believers or the theistic evolutionists. We don't use our brains to think? Really now? Mapou
When the materialists show up, certainly.
Where are these pesky materialists? Alan Fox
Hi Alan Fox, Nice to see you. Regarding ToE and origins – I used the term specifically in the sense of the Origin of the Species of course; it purports to explain the origin of complex biological systems given semi-conservative replication. Cheers, RDFish
I picked your remark as the first I came across to illustrate what appears a widely-held misconception among ID supporters that ToE explains the origin of life on Earth. I didn't mean to suggest that was your view. It just seems other posters appear to be assuming it was. Anyway, nice work so far! Alan Fox
Ignoring facts is apparently the norm around here!
When the materialists show up, certainly. Brent
Ah mung the merciless
Biology textbooks routinely include their chapter on the origin of life in their section on evolution. The two go hand in glove.
Including OOL speculation in a textbook is not the same as claiming ToE explains the origin of life on Earth
You can’t just assert that it ain’t so and expect us to just ignore the facts.
Oh but I do expect it. Ignoring facts is apparently the norm around here! :) Alan Fox
RDF @94, It's close enough. You see what he's saying, just answer the challenge, please. Brent
Hi Mung,
1. Based upon our uniform and repeated experience, we can infer that ‘x’ was intelligently designed. 2. Either ‘y’ or ‘z’ must be true. 3. But based upon our uniform and repeated experience we cannot infer that either ‘y’ or ‘z’ is true. Therefore ‘x’ cannot be intelligently designed. That’s your “argument.”
No, it isn't. In this thread, please refer to @84 for a summary of my argument. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Mapou, You'll need to help a lot of people out, on both sides of the ID/ToE issue, to come to your so concrete conclusion. Does it give you no pause that many --- very, very many --- don't agree that this is anything near a clear-cut and settled issue. Whence your confidence? Brent
Hi vjtorley,
Fine. So by your own admission, you haven’t established, and you aren’t even trying to establish, the impossibility – or improbability, for that matter – of a Designer with no brain. Just so we’re clear about that.
I am not attempting to establish that it is impossible for intelligence to operate absent complex physical mechanism by generalizing over our experience. What our experience does establish is that, contrary to the argumentation of folks like S. Meyer, intelligent action does not represent a known cause that can be offered to explain the origin of CSI-rich systems in the context of ID (unless of course ID is actually positing an intelligent life form as the Designer, which has its own problems that I've pointed out).
Here is some information on inductive reasoning: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_reasoning A certain saying about teaching one’s grandmother to suck eggs ...My Ph.D. is in philosophy. What’s yours in? Just curious.
Haha. I confess to baiting you with that one. Your habit of adding a supercilious "I hope that helps" after your (faulty) rebuttal may strike some as a bit of pedantic arrogance. I'm afraid your attempt to argue from your own authority as a PhD confirms it :-)
All you’re really saying here is that we’ve never observed an intelligent agent create new CSI which did not already possess CSI. That, by itself, is not an argument – especially when it draws no conclusion (by your own admission).
Yes, now you understand. It is the premise of my argument, which concludes that contra Meyer, et al, ID does not offer a known cause as the best explanation for OOL.
I would be the first to agree that it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible.
That's refreshing!
If I can conceive of an option that appears to resolve the difficulties you raised, then it’s my duty to put it out there on the table and invite critical comment from others.
You miss the point: Your response regarding a different sort of CSI was not relevant, because I am arguing about what we observe in our experience, not hypothetical sorts of entities that are not in our experience. It is moot in any case, since you already agreed with my premise.
If that’s an observation, then you are quite free to make it. But if I may make an observation of my own, you haven’t defined the term “physical.” Is the multiverse physical, for instance?
Let us not begin to debate the fundamental nature of reality at this juncture, OK? I've already been through this on the preceding thread. We can avoid detours into ontology by simply agreeing that the very same thing that ID purports to explain, viz CSI-rich systems such as flagella and eyeballs and brains, are what I am saying is invariably found to be critical to intelligent action. If you don't think of a brain as a physical system, I don't care.
And if I may make another observation, the term “complex,” which you use, is capable of multiple senses. Do you mean “composed of many parts” or do you mean “composed of many parts arranged in a highly improbable, but concisely describable fashion”? And for that matter, how would you define the probability of the arrangement of parts for an entity that’s outside space and time altogether? (I’m not saying it can’t be done, but you haven’t explained how you think it might be.)
I do appreciate your call for rigorous definitions, but again I'd like to keep my argument as simple as possible. Let us agree that there is a class of instances of complex form and function that ID has characterized which can be shown to be too improbable to have occurred by any known non-intelligent process. Without making a diversion into the distinctions between and validity of irreducible complexity, "integrative" complexity, CSI, FSI, and so on, I am characterizing this class of complex things that we wish to explain by simple terms like "CSI-rich system" or even simply "mechanism".
Since scientists of all stripes are agreed that there’s something outside space and time that ultimately explains the way things are, the question of whether that “something” is intelligent can be meaningfully posed.
I'm not talking about which questions can be meaningfully posed.
Finally, you seem to be laboring under the delusion that the case for ID is based on an appeal to “our uniform and repeated experience.” That’s what Hume thought, and he was wrong.
I take that phrase directly from Stephen S. Meyer, who is a very prominent promoter of ID, who in turn credits the phrase to Darwin. Now, it is very difficult to argue against "ID", because if you ask five ID proponents what ID assumes and explains, you will get seven different answers. But you can look up ["Stephen Meyer" "uniform and repeated experience"] (using those quote marks) and peruse the 12,000 hits to see why someone may get the impression that ID authors attempt to argue that the design inference rests on our uniform and repeated experience. It is this that I am arguing against.
Positive evidence of design in living systems consists of the semantic, meaningful or functional nature of biological information, the lack of any known law that can explain ...
You seem confused about the nature of "positive" evidence entirely. Positive evidence does not invoke the lack of any known explanation. That is in fact negative evidence. In contrast, positive evidence for an intelligent designer would require the confirmation of particular, specific predictions based on the documented properties of intelligent designers. There is no such evidence. One example would be:
Intelligent agents are know to produce complex designs in the time frame of months to years. Very, very complex designs sometimes take teams of engineers up to a decade to complete. Even more complex designs - such as the designs for living things - might even take very large teams of intelligent agents multiple decades or even perhaps centuries. So ID should predict that new biological designs would appear in time frames on the order of hundreds of years. Comparing this to the evidence of biology we find that the prediction of ID based on our knowledge of intelligent agents is completely at odds with our observations
Hope that helps! Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Is the design inference fatally flawed because our uniform, repeated experience shows that a designing mind is based on or requires a brain?
Who in the ID camp is really arguing that intelligent design does not require a brain and who in the materialist/Darwinist camp is really arguing that the fact that we observe that intelligent designers have brains, therefore ID is falsified? Of course, intelligent design requires a brain and of course, the fact that intelligent designers have brains does not render the design hypothesis flawed. This whole thing is rather silly, in my opinion. Why are we even debating this nonsense? Personally, I am thinking of lifting my allegiance to the ID hypothesis if it becomes clear to me that the ID camp is making unscientific and illogical arguments to support the notion that intelligence does not require a brain. Is the entire ID camp behind this? I thought that this fight had evolved beyond such silliness. ID debaters need to clean up their act because this makes us look mentally weak. Mapou
RDFish:
Now, if you wish to claim my argument is a non sequitur, then simply make your case as clearly as you can and I’ll respond to it.
I was hardly alone in pointing out that your argument was a non sequitur, many others lodged the same complaint and you didn't respond to them either. Here are some of my challenges, please let me know how I can make them sound as if someone other than a 10 year old wrote them: Mung @671
Please read the post at 621. The objection there is that your argument is a non-sequitur. Are you going to deal with that?
Mung @672
I’m sorry, but that’s just not true. There’s no need for any counter-argument because your argument is fallacious, it is in fact a non-sequitur. Its conclusion does not follow from its premises. If your conclusion did follow then someone would need to challenge one of the premises. But it doesn’t, so no counter-argument is needed.
Mung @621
1. Based upon our uniform and repeated experience, we can infer that ‘x’ was intelligently designed. 2. Either ‘y’ or ‘z’ must be true. 3. But based upon our uniform and repeated experience we cannot infer that either ‘y’ or ‘z’ is true. Therefore ‘x’ cannot be intelligently designed. That’s your “argument.” It’s silly. The conclusion doesn’t follow from the premises. The argument is one huge glaring non-sequitur.
Mung
RDFish, I'd like to respond to your comments in #48 and #49 above. You write:
In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system.
I took it that you were making an inductive argument of some sort. Evidently not, for you add:
I have made no induction in that statement. Rather, it is nothing but a summary of our observations. In order for this to be an inductive inference, it would have to make some generalization over those observations, which I have not done.
Fine. So by your own admission, you haven't established, and you aren't even trying to establish, the impossibility - or improbability, for that matter - of a Designer with no brain. Just so we're clear about that.
Here is some information on inductive reasoning: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_reasoning
A certain saying about teaching one's grandmother to suck eggs springs to mind. Here is some information about the origin of the saying: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teaching_grandmother_to_suck_eggs My Ph.D. is in philosophy. What's yours in? Just curious.
Not only have I not made an induction in this statement, but the rest of my argument does not involved drawing any conclusions from these observations either. My argument points out (in part) that the hypothesis that an intelligent agent could precede the very first CSI-rich mechanisms in existence is not consistent with these observations.
All you're really saying here is that we've never observed an intelligent agent create new CSI which did not already possess CSI. That, by itself, is not an argument - especially when it draws no conclusion (by your own admission).
Hopefully you understand that this is not to say we have demonstrated the truth of this constraint, but instead have simply shown that it does not follow from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency to imagine that intelligence could operate without the benefit of a CSI-rich mechanism.
I would be the first to agree that it does not follow from our experience that a CSI-less intelligence is possible.
I haven't even mentioned the inference to an intelligent designer here. Yes of course ID attempts an abductive inference – except it turns out that ID is not at all the best explanation (as I have explained in the preceding post).
As I'll show in my next post, your argument in #48 lacks rigor, and could have benefited from an application of Bayes' Theorem. In short: it's a mistake to infer that P(H|E) is low just because P(H) is low. You also have to consider the degree to which H confirms E.
In our uniform and repeated experience, every intelligent agent relies on complex physical mechanisms in order to store and process information. In fact, these CSI-rich mechanisms are the absolute epitome of what ID seeks to explain: Fantastically complex information processing machinery, chock-full of irreducibly complex systems.
If you're telling me that if ID can show anything is designed, then brains are the most obvious candidate, I'd agree in principle. (In practice, the brain is so complex that a computation of the probabilities involved might be beyond the reach of our computers, so the demonstration might be impossible - why is why for the time being, ID tends to focus on much simpler systems such as proteins and bacterial flagella.)
You are of course free to imagine other sorts of intelligent agents whose intelligence is not reliant on physical mechanisms like this (for example, your notion of "integrated" complexity), but that doesn't mean that these things exist. You simply made this up.
So what if I did? It's my job as a philosopher to explore all options that have been proposed, and eliminate the bad and/or inconsistent ones. If I can conceive of an option that appears to resolve the difficulties you raised, then it's my duty to put it out there on the table and invite critical comment from others.
I simply observe that every intelligent agent in our experience critically relies on complex physical mechanisms in order to design and build things.
If that's an observation, then you are quite free to make it. But if I may make an observation of my own, you haven't defined the term "physical." Is the multiverse physical, for instance? And if I may make another observation, the term "complex," which you use, is capable of multiple senses. Do you mean "composed of many parts" or do you mean "composed of many parts arranged in a highly improbable, but concisely describable fashion"? And for that matter, how would you define the probability of the arrangement of parts for an entity that's outside space and time altogether? (I'm not saying it can't be done, but you haven't explained how you think it might be.) Since scientists of all stripes are agreed that there's something outside space and time that ultimately explains the way things are, the question of whether that "something" is intelligent can be meaningfully posed. Finally, you seem to be laboring under the delusion that the case for ID is based on an appeal to "our uniform and repeated experience." That's what Hume thought, and he was wrong. You might like to have a look at my earlier post, Paley's argument from design: Did Hume refute it, and is it an argument from analogy? (December 30, 2012). The ID Defined page on Uncommon Descent succinctly summarizes the evidence in one paragraph:
Positive evidence of design in living systems consists of the semantic, meaningful or functional nature of biological information, the lack of any known law that can explain the sequence of symbols that carry the "messages," and statistical and experimental evidence that tends to rule out chance as a plausible explanation. Other evidence challenges the adequacy of natural or material causes to explain both the origin and diversity of life.
The argument for cosmological design is somewhat different in nature: it hinges on the vital premise that the probability that life would require fine-tuning is higher if there's a Designer than it would be if everything is ultimately the product of blind chance, as I explain in my post, Night Vision: A new version of the fine-tuning argument (February 22, 2013). The premise is quite plausible as it stands, but it makes even more sense if we make the modest assumption that any Designer responsible for the creation of intelligent beings would want to leave a signal pointing to His existence as their Author. In my next post, I'll address your arguments in #48 above. vjtorley
Hi Mung,
What about the challenge that your your argument is a non sequitur, that conclusion doesn’t follow from your premises? Why do you keep ignoring that and when do you intend to address it, if ever?
The reason I ignore you is because you argue as though you are a ten year old boy - all sarcasm and attempts to be clever, and no actual arguments or substantive responses. Now, if you wish to claim my argument is a non sequitur, then simply make your case as clearly as you can and I'll respond to it. Simply tossing off these accusations with your one-liners does not constitute an argument. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
RDFish:
Here is an illustration of how perverse it is to refuse to admit this obvious aspect of our experience...
Since this "observation" of yours has nothing to do with your argument, it's hardly perverse of anyone to ignore it when analyzing your argument. RDFish:
Not only have I not made an induction in this statement, but the rest of my argument does not involved drawing any conclusions from these observations either.
Great. We'll ignore it then and move on to your next premise. Which is? Mung
Hi Willian J Murray, You reliably point to NDE and other paranormal phenomena whenever you respond to my argument. As I've explained, if you would like to admit that the validity of ID rests on the validity of these studies, I will be happy to agree. So, is it the case that your refutation of my argument rests on the evidence we have of human design abilities proceeding without the operation of their brains? Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi Alan Fox, Nice to see you. Regarding ToE and origins - I used the term specifically in the sense of the Origin of the Species of course; it purports to explain the origin of complex biological systems given semi-conservative replication. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi StephenB,
The easiest way for me to understand your argument is for you to present it.
There are two reasons the presentation of my argument is not simple. First, some people say ID is the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth; others say it explains the origin of the first life anywhere. Second, ID subsumes two distinctly different hypotheses, each of which has different strengths and weaknesses. So my argument (which concludes that ID is not the best explanation for what it purports to explain) has to deal with all of this variation. I'll make it as simple as I can: Consider the origin of the first CSI-rich mechanism: In order to explain the very first mechanism, ID must posit an intelligent entity that does not itself require mechanism in order to produce novel mechanisms. You've conceded arguendo that such things do not occur in our experience now, so we would not expect that they would exist at the time first life was designed. This means we would need specific evidence that such a thing existed before we could consider this a justified hypothesis. But we have no more specific evidence for the existence of an immaterial intelligence capable of producing complex mechanisms than we do for the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrial life forms, which is none at all. Therefore, ID is not justified by empirical evidence as an explanation for the first living things. Now, I would predict you will object that yes, you do have evidence for an immaterial intelligence, perhaps because of fine-tuning or other considerations. Without arguing that with you here, the fact remains that the "design inference" does not simply proceed from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency, the way Meyer says it does. Rather, you are making a very much more complex abductive argument, pointing to a consilience of disparate factors rather than a straightforward extrapolation from our experience that mechanism invariably arises from mind. Now consider the origin of life on Earth: The simplest explanation of the origin of life on Earth is that it arrived from another planet; ID requires more assumptions, but provides no additional explanatory power. Therefore, ID is not the best explanation for the origin of life on Earth. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
StephenB @50:
The easiest way for me to understand your argument is for you to present it. Show me how you get from point [a] to point [b] and beyond.
Good luck with that. RDFish @49:
Not only have I not made an induction in this statement, but the rest of my argument does not involved drawing any conclusions from these observations either. My argument points out (in part) that the hypothesis that an intelligent agent could precede the very first CSI-rich mechanisms in existence is not consistent with these observations. Hopefully you understand that this is not to say we have demonstrated the truth of this constraint, but instead have simply shown that it does not follow from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency to imagine that intelligence could operate without the benefit of a CSI-rich mechanism.
Mung
Mr. Fox, claims:
I am open to the idea that under certain circumstances people can have powerful dreams while under anaesthesia.
But does Mr. Fox's supposed 'openness' include the possibility that these experiences are not 'powerful dreams' at all but are real experiences?
Memories of Near Death Experiences (NDEs): More Real Than Reality? - Mar. 27, 2013 Excerpt:,,,researchers,, have looked into the memories of NDE with the hypothesis that if the memories of NDE were pure products of the imagination, their phenomenological characteristics (e.g., sensorial, self referential, emotional, etc. details) should be closer to those of imagined memories. Conversely, if the NDE are experienced in a way similar to that of reality, their characteristics would be closer to the memories of real events. The researchers compared the responses provided by three groups of patients, each of which had survived (in a different manner) a coma, and a group of healthy volunteers. They studied the memories of NDE and the memories of real events and imagined events with the help of a questionnaire which evaluated the phenomenological characteristics of the memories. The results were surprising. From the perspective being studied, not only were the NDEs not similar to the memories of imagined events, but the phenomenological characteristics inherent to the memories of real events (e.g. memories of sensorial details) are even more numerous in the memories of NDE than in the memories of real events. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130327190359.htm 'Afterlife' feels 'even more real than real,' researcher says - Wed April 10, 2013 Excerpt: "If you use this questionnaire ... if the memory is real, it's richer, and if the memory is recent, it's richer," he said. The coma scientists weren't expecting what the tests revealed. "To our surprise, NDEs were much richer than any imagined event or any real event of these coma survivors," Laureys reported. The memories of these experiences beat all other memories, hands down, for their vivid sense of reality. "The difference was so vast," he said with a sense of astonishment. Even if the patient had the experience a long time ago, its memory was as rich "as though it was yesterday," Laureys said. http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/09/health/belgium-near-death-experiences/ A Doctor's Near Death Experience Inspires a New Life - video Quote: "It's not like a dream. It's like the world we are living in is a dream and it's kind of like waking up from that." Dr. Magrisso http://www.nbcchicago.com/on-air/as-seen-on/A-Doctor--186331791.html
Indeed does Mr. Fox's professed openness extend to the possibility that consciousness itself is not reducible to matter since matter itself derives from consciousness in the first place?
"As a man who has devoted his whole life to the most clear headed science, to the study of matter, I can tell you as a result of my research about atoms this much: There is no matter as such. All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force which brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent mind. This mind is the matrix of all matter." Max Planck - The Father Of Quantum Mechanics - Das Wesen der Materie [The Nature of Matter], speech at Florence, Italy (1944)(Of Note: Max Planck Planck was a devoted Christian from early life to death, was a churchwarden from 1920 until his death, and believed in an almighty, all-knowing, beneficent God.
etc.. etc.. etc.. But hey, despite Mr. Fox's hesitancy to be truly open to the possibility that mind is not reducible to matter, there are some atheists that admit to the insurmountable problem that consciousness presents to reductive materialism:
Mind and Cosmos - Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False - Thomas Nagel Excerpt: If materialism cannot accommodate consciousness and other mind-related aspects of reality, then we must abandon a purely materialist understanding of nature in general, extending to biology, evolutionary theory, and cosmology. Since minds are features of biological systems that have developed through evolution, the standard materialist version of evolutionary biology is fundamentally incomplete. And the cosmological history that led to the origin of life and the coming into existence of the conditions for evolution cannot be a merely materialist history. http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199919758.do "I have argued patiently against the prevailing form of naturalism, a reductive materialism that purports to capture life and mind through its neo-Darwinian extension." "..., I find this view antecedently unbelievable---a heroic triumph of ideological theory over common sense". Thomas Nagel - "Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False" - pg.128 We have so much confidence in our materialist assumptions (which are assumptions, not facts) that something like free will is denied in principle. Maybe it doesn’t exist, but I don’t really know that. Either way, it doesn’t matter because if free will and consciousness are just an illusion, they are the most seamless illusions ever created. Film maker James Cameron wishes he had special effects that good. Matthew D. Lieberman - neuroscientist - materialist - UCLA professor 'But the hard problem of consciousness is so hard that I can't even imagine what kind of empirical findings would satisfactorily solve it. In fact, I don't even know what kind of discovery would get us to first base, not to mention a home run.' David Barash - Materialist/Atheist Darwinian Psychologist The Hard Problem (Of Consciousness) - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRG1fA_DQ9s
It is also funny to note how Mr. Fox dogmatically clings to neo-Darwinian evolution, despite having no empirical evidence that it is true, but staunchly eschews the much more substantial evidence supporting NDE's:
Near-Death Experiences: Putting a Darwinist's Evidentiary Standards to the Test - Dr. Michael Egnor - October 15, 2012 Excerpt: Indeed, about 20 percent of NDE's are corroborated, which means that there are independent ways of checking about the veracity of the experience. The patients knew of things that they could not have known except by extraordinary perception -- such as describing details of surgery that they watched while their heart was stopped, etc. Additionally, many NDE's have a vividness and a sense of intense reality that one does not generally encounter in dreams or hallucinations.,,, The most "parsimonious" explanation -- the simplest scientific explanation -- is that the (Near Death) experience was real. Tens of millions of people have had such experiences. That is tens of millions of more times than we have observed the origin of species (or origin of life), which is never.,,, The materialist reaction, in short, is unscientific and close-minded. NDE's show fellows like Coyne at their sneering unscientific irrational worst. Somebody finds a crushed fragment of a fossil and it's earth-shaking evidence. Tens of million of people have life-changing spiritual experiences and it's all a big yawn. Note: Dr. Egnor is professor and vice-chairman of neurosurgery at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/10/near_death_expe_1065301.html "A recent analysis of several hundred cases showed that 48% of near-death experiencers reported seeing their physical bodies from a different visual perspective. Many of them also reported witnessing events going on in the vicinity of their body, such as the attempts of medical personnel to resuscitate them (Kelly et al., 2007)." Kelly, E. W., Greyson, B., & Kelly, E. F. (2007). Unusual experiences near death and related phenomena. In E. F. Kelly, E. W. Kelly, A. Crabtree, A. Gauld, M. Grosso, & B. Greyson, Irreducible mind (pp. 367-421). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. A neurosurgeon confronts the non-material nature of consciousness - December 2011 Excerpted quote: To me one thing that has emerged from my experience and from very rigorous analysis of that experience over several years, talking it over with others that I respect in neuroscience, and really trying to come up with an answer, is that consciousness outside of the brain is a fact. It’s an established fact. And of course, that was a hard place for me to get, coming from being a card-toting reductive materialist over decades. It was very difficult to get to knowing that consciousness, that there’s a soul of us that is not dependent on the brain. https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/he-said-it-a-neurosurgeon-confronts-the-non-material-nature-of-consciousness/
Perhaps Mr. Fox can forgive us for pointing out his blatant hypocrisy in his weighing of the evidence?!? But something tells me his unjustness does not matter to him, nor do I think it will ever matter to him whilst he is in this temporal life.
'In the 'spirit world,,, instantly, there was no sense of time. See, everything on earth is related to time. You got up this morning, you are going to go to bed tonight. Something is new, it will get old. Something is born, it's going to die. Everything on the physical plane is relative to time, but everything in the spiritual plane is relative to eternity. Instantly I was in total consciousness and awareness of eternity, and you and I as we live in this earth cannot even comprehend it, because everything that we have here is filled within the veil of the temporal life. In the spirit life that is more real than anything else and it is awesome. Eternity as a concept is awesome. There is no such thing as time. I knew that whatever happened was going to go on and on.' Mickey Robinson - Near Death Experience testimony - video Albert Einstein - Special Relativity - Insight Into Eternity - 'thought experiment' video http://www.metacafe.com/w/6545941/
bornagain77
I am open to the idea that under certain circumstances people can have powerful dreams while under anaesthesia.
rofl.
I am unconvinced that these experiences happen when there is no brain activity.
Nobody is asking you to be "convinced" about anything. There is evidence available that it does occur when there is no brain activity. It is entirely up to the individual to assess that evidence.
I also wonder what this has to do with an “Intelligent Design” theory of the origin of life on Earth.
I was responding to a statement Mapau made. It's also part of a large body of evidence that mind (1) exists independent of the brain, and (2) mind can interact with the physical world independent of the brain, which makes a case that if the origin of biological life indicates intelligent design, then it's reasonable to consider that a mind independent of a brain could have been responsible. The only reason to not consider it is an a priori commitment to materialism. William J Murray
RDFish:
After trying all manner of rebuttals, and dropping most of them, folks here have settled on a couple of main approaches to refute my argument: 1) Denying the premise outright
What about the challenge that your your argument is a non sequitur, that conclusion doesn't follow from your premises? Why do you keep ignoring that and when do you intend to address it, if ever? Mung
Alan Fox:
Anyone claiming that ToE does explain life’s origin is wrong. Is that clear?
What you assert about the matter here at UD is meaningless, Alan. Biology textbooks routinely include their chapter on the origin of life in their section on evolution. The two go hand in glove. You can't just assert that it ain't so and expect us to just ignore the facts. Mung
littlejohn @32:
#31 I believe the Luke passage is very apt for those participating in this forum. Jesus is simply pointing out that no matter what sign, or evidence is provided for unbelievers, they will reject it (him), because they do not want that way, that truth or that life.
Consider that Luke 16:19-31 has nothing at all do do with people participating in this forum. Let's who just who is being spoken of:
But Abraham said, ‘They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.’ 30 And he said, ‘No, father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent.’ 31 He said to him, ‘If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.’”
And who was it that had Moses and the Prophets and did not listen to them at the time that Jesus was speaking this parable? It wasn't people participating in this forum some 2000 years later, that's for sure. Mung
Ah mung the mendacious! Anyone claiming that ToE does explain life's origin is wrong. Is that clear? Alan Fox
Yes, Phil, I don't deny there are lots of people reporting "near death" experiences. I'm happy to accept that people are having these experiences. I would be sceptical if these experiences happened when there was no brain activity. And then tell me why these NDEs are important for "ID" theory. @ William. The nurses story in the Dutch paper you found was interesting. The guy knowing where his false teeth were is a practical application that could apply more widely. Alan Fox
Alan Fox:
The theory of evolution cannot and does not attempt to explain the origin of life on Earth.
Then why do biology textbooks routinely include their chapter on the origin of life in their section on evolution? Here's one of my favorites: Part Six: Evolution and Diversity Chapter 26: The Origin of Life Sub-Sections: Small Organic Molecules Evolve Macromolecules Evolve and Interact How did Protocell Membranes Evolve? That's right Alan. You can make all the claims you like to the contrary, but the facts are that the origin of life is regularly taught as part and parcel of the evolution story. Failing to teach young minds that evolution is not all-encompassing might cause some to doubt it's ability to explain anything and everything, and this is particularly important when it comes to the origin of life when you're trying to sell the materialist story. Mung
You won’t even read the information available...
Please be specific as to what material you need me to read. Please also clarify what this has to do with an “Intelligent Design” theory of the origin of life on Earth. Alan Fox
The Day I Died - Part 4 of 6 - The NDE of Pam Reynolds - video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/4045560 "I think death is an illusion. I think death is a really nasty, bad lie. I don’t see any truth in the word death at all" – Pam Reynolds Lowery (1956 – May 22, 2010) http://christopherlovejoy.com/2011/03/20/who-you-really-are/ Entire Documentary is here; The Day I Died http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xy56k9_the-day-i-died-nde-consciousness-documentary_lifestyle bornagain77
Just to clarify, William. What are you claiming? I am open to the idea that under certain circumstances people can have powerful dreams while under anaesthesia. I am unconvinced that these experiences happen when there is no brain activity. I also wonder what this has to do with an "Intelligent Design" theory of the origin of life on Earth. Alan Fox
I see there is a detailed Wikipedia article on the subject.
...it is very difficult to verify that there was in fact no measurable brain activity. There are many types of brain activity and they require different types of tests to verify them. Most of these types of tests are not typically performed when a patient is undergoing attempts at emergency resuscitation.
and
Because the study of NDEs is a topic that addressed multiple possible feelings, sensations and their origins, research on NDE should be conducted primarily by researchers with credentials in cognitive neuroscience.
Now who might qualify to shed some professional light on the subject? Not working neuroscientist Dr Lizzie Liddle, who is unable to comment here. Alan Fox
Please note that while Alan dismisses the original website I provided and derides it as trying to sell books and cds, for his rebuttal he directs me to infidels.org and a page set up specifically for "debunking" all such claims. Pot, kettle. William J Murray
Alan, You a prioi bias is showing. You won't even read the information available, much less examine it the case and issues raised there. You simply look for quick dismissals. She described the surgery - the tools, the procedure, the activity of the doctors - in detail, information only "in proximity" to her when she was clinically brain dead. You wish to pass it off as "dreaming". There are other cases in the Lancet study (Pam's being one of the ones they referred to) which clearly indicate the capacity of the patient to see and hear things, and report on them accurately, that were not in sensory proximity to the patient at the time of their "death". But, all you are really interested is finding some quick dismissal that is as condescending as possible. Right? William J Murray
A paper published in The Lancet about NDEs: http://pimvanlommel.nl/files/publicaties/Lancet%20artikel%20Pim%20van%20Lommel.pdf
With lack of evidence for any other theories for NDE, the thus far assumed, but never proven, concept that consciousness and memories are localised in the brain should be discussed. How could a clear consciousness outside one’s body be experienced at the moment that the brain no longer functions during a period of clinical death with flat EEG? Also, in cardiac arrest the EEG usually becomes flat in most cases within about 10 s from onset of syncope. Furthermore, blind people have described veridical perception during out-of-body experiences at the time of this experience. NDE pushes at the limits of medical ideas about the range of human consciousness and the mind-brain relation.
William J Murray
You are not interested in actually examining the info and following it up; you are only interested in finding some way to handily dismiss the reference and denigerate it.
I was just looking into cooling as an aid to surgery. But if there is primary literature on how Pam Reynold's recollections during her surgery were corroborated, why didn't you link to it? This link points out that she was anaesthetised for seven hours, less than two of which was she hypothermic. Plenty of scope for dreaming. Alan Fox
Alan, The site presents a case. You can look it up in the medical literature - I used that site because it gives a lot of information - patient & doctor names, case info, etc. Reasonable people that are debating in good faith do not condemn a site because of the way it looks or what it is attempting to sell, but rather look over the information that is pertinent to the argument and investigate it further if they have questions about it. You are not interested in actually examining the info and following it up; you are only interested in finding some way to handily dismiss the reference and denigerate it. William J Murray
Wiliam J Murray's link seems more about selling books and CDs ("visit our online store!") than serious study. Alan Fox
A brain is required to think.
NDE evidence suggests otherwise. From http://www.near-death.com/experiences/evidence01.html
Dr. Michael Sabom is a cardiologist whose book entitled Light and Death includes a detailed medical and scientific analysis of an amazing near-death experience of a woman named Pam Reynolds. She underwent a rare operation to remove a giant basilar artery aneurysm in her brain that threatened her life. The size and location of the aneurysm, however, precluded its safe removal using the standard neuro-surgical techniques. She was referred to a doctor who had pioneered a daring surgical procedure known as hypothermic cardiac arrest. It allowed Pam's aneurysm to be excised with a reasonable chance of success. This operation, nicknamed "standstill" by the doctors who perform it, required that Pam's body temperature be lowered to 60 degrees, her heartbeat and breathing stopped, her brain waves flattened, and the blood drained from her head. In everyday terms, she was put to death. After removing the aneurysm, she was restored to life. During the time that Pam was in standstill, she experienced a NDE. Her remarkably detailed veridical out-of-body observations during her surgery were later verified to be very accurate. This case is considered to be one of the strongest cases of veridical evidence in NDE research because of her ability to describe the unique surgical instruments and procedures used and her ability to describe in detail these events while she was clinically and brain dead.
William J Murray
Ça, c'est entre vos mains, mon pote! Alan Fox
AF, you know you are on pretty serious probation here, given what has recently happened. I trust you will conduct yourself accordingly.
&Ccedila, c'est entre vos mains, mon pote! I'll post comments if and when I have the time and inclination and you exercise whatever censorship or other limits to the free exchange of ideas you want to impose. OK! AF: Warning, I will not play around with posts in various languages either. As to the usual toxically loaded hostile talking point on accusations of censorship, UD is not capable of actual suppression of speech, but standing for civility and refusing to entertain enabling of uncivil behaviour are not censorship. No more than the vetting of a letters to the editor feature is censorship. KF Alan Fox
As to NL's assertion that a priori materialism is all that can really be considered 'science', I think these recent articles are very relevant as to revealing the bankruptcy of materialism in actually supporting a 'scientific' worldview:
Jerry Coyne's Twisted History of Science and Religion - 10/21/2013 http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexberezow/2013/10/21/jerry-coynes-twisted-history-of-science-religion/ "Did Christianity (and Other Religions) Promote the Rise Of Science?" - Michael Egnor October 24, 2013 http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/10/did_christianit078281.html
along that line:
Jerry Coyne on the Scientific Method and Religion - Michael Egnor - June 2011 Excerpt: The scientific method -- the empirical systematic theory-based study of nature -- has nothing to so with some religious inspirations -- Animism, Paganism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Shintoism, Islam, and, well, atheism. The scientific method has everything to do with Christian (and Jewish) inspiration. Judeo-Christian culture is the only culture that has given rise to organized theoretical science. Many cultures (e.g. China) have produced excellent technology and engineering, but only Christian culture has given rise to a conceptual understanding of nature. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/06/jerry_coyne_on_the_scientific_047431.html
also see Boltzmann's Brain and Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism. bornagain77
NL, The basic problems are that: 1: Present science is too often not natural but naturalistic, question-beggingly imposing an a priori ideology of materialism; 2: Conscious reflection and freedom to do more than blindly process on GIGO, are necessary for doing science and practicing in any other field that requires reasoned thought and judgement; 3: Many of the issues at stake in debating methods of science, if properly labelled, would be classified as phil of sci or epistemology or logic, i.e. they are meta issues that arise in doing science and provide warrant for it. 4: Even that term, warrant, is a case in point. And more, gotta go. KF kairosfocus
F/N: I have added the meat of VJT at 26 to the OP, as I think it so significant that it should not be lost sight of in the onward flow of comments. KF. kairosfocus
Mr. Fox states: "The theory of evolution cannot and does not attempt to explain the origin of life on Earth." Actually, although the imagined creative power of Natural Selection cannot kick in until you have replication, many materialists are obsessed with finding a non-theistic origin of life:
Origin of life: How are we doing? Excerpt: "The search for such a solution to the ultimate enigma (i.e. the origin of life itself) may take us in unexpected (and deeply counterintuitive for biologists) directions," Eugene Koonin - prominent origin of life researcher Well for atheistic biologists, I would say the direction to the answer of the question of where all life ultimately comes is especially ‘unexpected and deeply counterintuitive’ (since we now have clear evidence for a Theistic origin of life). https://uncommondescent.com/origin-of-life/origin-of-life-how-are-we-doing/#comment-477644
But despite Mr. Fox's belief that, once Natural Selection is in play, 'we'll take the show from here', the actual fact of the matter is that Natural Selection culls and, to a certain extent, preserves genetic information. It does not, and has never been observed to, create new genetic information.
Can Purifying Natural Selection Preserve Biological Information? - published online May 2013 - Paul Gibson, John R. Baumgardner, Wesley H. Brewer, John C. Sanford http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/pdf/10.1142/9789814508728_0010
All the examples put forward by neo-Darwinists, for the creation new genetic information by evolutionary processes (be they Natural Selection or some other imagined scenario), fall apart upon scrutiny:
Hopeless Matzke – David Berlinski & Tyler Hampton – August 18, 2013 Excerpt: "Only the monkeys are apt to remain impressed." http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/08/hopeless_matzke075631.html
Thus despite Mr. Fox's attempt to distance neo-Darwinism from the failings of origin of life research (at least they have been 'failings' as far as atheistic materialists are concerned),,
"The theory of evolution cannot and does not attempt to explain the origin of life on Earth."
The fact of the matter is that the theory of evolution does not (and I hold that it cannot) explain life once you have replication. In fact with such a failure to validate ones own theory with empirical evidence, and still the dogmatic insistence that evolution is true, I would hold that the neo-Darwinian position is anti-scientific!
Modern Synthesis Of Neo-Darwinism Is False – Denis Nobel – video http://www.metacafe.com/w/10395212 ,, In the preceding video, Dr Nobel states that around 1900 there was the integration of Mendelian (discrete) inheritance with evolutionary theory, and about the same time Weismann established what was called the Weismann barrier, which is the idea that germ cells and their genetic materials are not in anyway influenced by the organism itself or by the environment. And then about 40 years later, circa 1940, a variety of people, Julian Huxley, R.A. Fisher, J.B.S. Haldane, and Sewell Wright, put things together to call it ‘The Modern Synthesis’. So what exactly is the ‘The Modern Synthesis’? It is sometimes called neo-Darwinism, and it was popularized in the book by Richard Dawkins, ‘The Selfish Gene’ in 1976. It’s main assumptions are, first of all, is that it is a gene centered view of natural selection. The process of evolution can therefore be characterized entirely by what is happening to the genome. It would be a process in which there would be accumulation of random mutations, followed by selection. (Now an important point to make here is that if that process is genuinely random, then there is nothing that physiology, or physiologists, can say about that process. That is a very important point.) The second aspect of neo-Darwinism was the impossibility of acquired characteristics (mis-called “Larmarckism”). And there is a very important distinction in Dawkins’ book ‘The Selfish Gene’ between the replicator, that is the genes, and the vehicle that carries the replicator, that is the organism or phenotype. And of course that idea was not only buttressed and supported by the Weissman barrier idea, but later on by the ‘Central Dogma’ of molecular biology. Then Dr. Nobel pauses to emphasize his point and states “All these rules have been broken!”. Professor Denis Noble is President of the International Union of Physiological Sciences. How life changes itself: The Read–Write (RW) genome - James A. Shapiro - 2013 Excerpt: Research dating back to the 1930s has shown that genetic change is the result of cell-mediated processes, not simply accidents or damage to the DNA. This cell-active view of genome change applies to all scales of DNA sequence variation, from point mutations to large-scale genome rearrangements and whole genome duplications (WGDs). http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1571064513000869
bornagain77
@Mapou #33
Unfortunately, they insist on sticking to philosophical and theological formulation. Present natural science can't do anything with `mind stuff' hence the DI's ID will remain within philosophy and theology due to DI's own choice.
This is all hogwash since ID does not postulate anything about the designer or designers other than that they are intelligent. That's what the I in ID stands for.
You may have missed the qualification DI's (Discovery Institute's) version of ID. They routinely formulate ID via consciousness-talk (just listen to or read Meyer or other DI 'senior fellows'), which is fine for philosophy, but which puts their claims automatically outside of the present natural science. With lawyers, philosophers and theologians driving the outfit (just look at their "senior fellows" list), no wonder one gets only philosophy, theology and lawsuits out of it. With their incessant mind-talk and (disembodied) agency-talk they are doing great disservice to the perfectly legitimate and compelling scientific case for the existence of intelligent design process behind the phenomena of life and its evolution. Note that a computational process suffices as the cause of intelligent (anticipatory) actions, whether the computations are performed by digital computers or neural networks of the human and animal brains. Since natural science can and does model computational processes, that is the only scientifically legitimate way to formulate scientific hypothesis of ID. Unfortunately, with the best fitting term ID being irreparably intertwined with the DI's philosophical-theological formulation, any scientific theory of ID will have to come up with another term for it. nightlight
RDF: one last thing, can you show us, per the vera causa approach, a case of how -- in our observation -- conscious, self-aware mind emerges from some physical substrate by a process of incremental complexification of software, or the like? Until you do so, you have not got a basis for your arguments. Especially, when it is demonstrably not our universal experience that minds require brains or the like. KF kairosfocus
AF: Just remember, the focus for this thread is not on OOL and its link to evolution, you are tangential. That said, I note in corrective brief: 1 --> It is NORMAL to see in biology textbooks at both HS and college levels, a presentation of OOL joined to that of macroevolution, both driven by the underlying evolutionary materialistic paradigm. 2 --> The logic of the Darwinist tree of life -- the very first icon of evo, appearing in origin -- points to its root, OOL, which then is supposed to give rise to branching to end up in diversity thence disparity. The disparity comes first as the Cambrian revo shows, and there is a major challenge to bridge the FSCO/I barriers involved. 3 --> OOL shows the very same problem, but locks out the usual dodges over natural selection. 4 --> It is also so notoriously in sustained chaos that it underscores the basic origin of bio info without intelligence problem decisively. Design sits at the table as of right, from the root of the tree of life on up. That said, can we now return to focus for this thread? KF PS: AF, you know you are on pretty serious probation here, given what has recently happened. I trust you will conduct yourself accordingly. kairosfocus
RDF: I really need to be about something requested in response to a developing situation (which will require a significant effort elsewhere . . . ), but will pause to point out to you that even if you refuse to read the OP otherwise, you need to work your way through the mini poster in it. This will help you to see a direct case of sufficiently serious potential counter-example that it should be plain that we cannot properly claim uniform experience that minds must use brains or similar physical structures based on a material substrate. KF PS: Onlookers, I think that mini poster may be useful in summing up the design inference and onward worldview issues and inferences on the credible oservations that our world had a beginning, and is finely tuned to facilitate C-Chemistry aqueous medium, cell based life. (And, M, each of those descriptors is highly significant, cf the onward discussions here and here.) kairosfocus
Dr Torley, I think it can be argued that abduction is a subset of inductive reasoning, in the more modern sense of arguments whose premises and reasoning are held to make the conclusion more likely to be so, rather than strictly entailing the conclusion (as deductive logic tries to do). But obviously different folks view the terms differently. In any case the slightly symbolised outline in the original post shows just how the reasoning chain works. KF kairosfocus
Mapou: Thanks for the concern. You will of course notice that what I did was to present a symbolised skeletal structure then give a substitution instance, where I left the brackets and the symbols. Yes, that is complicated, but unfortunately, there are reasons when one has to deal with the rhetorical tactics we so often see. In short, there is a context, in light of a wider, toxic situation. The previous thread is off an objection to something deliberately simplified, an infographic outlining the design inference in terms of the classic school-level presentation of "the scientific method." (And FYI would-be objectors, I am very aware that "methods" is a better term, that there is both considerable diversity and that there is no sharp border with what is not generally seen as science.) It comes from Luskin et al, and I presented it here. Nice, sweet and simple, nuh? Nothing to object to, right? Scroll down to the thread of comments. Brace for the shock. You will observe how it was jumped on and especially the derision that it is of 3rd grade level and things are not so simple. (You will also see that when I took time to cite a root for this in Newton's Opticks, Query 31 and to ask about how this basic framework is embedded in standard lab report writeup formats from grade school to college, there was a studious silence on the point, but the drumbeat repetition of hostile talking points continued apace to the point of going beyond civility.) There is a cruel dilemma presented to design thinkers or even bloggists by the tactics of objectors. 1: Simple things will be seized on snipped out of context and turned into strawman tactic objections. 2: More complex and formally structured things esigned to cut off such twisting will be studiously ignored or presented as in error or as irrelevant, or as part of some nefarious right wing theocratic totalitarian [for this, on a common error read "Nazi"] plot. 3: Never, almost, will you see a serious attempt at meeting of minds. We are presumed to be ignorant, stupid, insane or wicked, too often it's just a matter of snipping out some handy clip to get back to accusations as usual. 4: For instance have you seen how I normally speak of our observed cosmos, not the cosmos? Am I just being pedantically wordy? No, there is a long ago now hot exchange that took weeks behind that. 5: The same can be said for many other things. 6: And, when I had temerity to work with Dr Torley and Dr Giem to simplify and apply Dembsky's CSI expression, you should see the vitriol. 7: On balance I try -- imperfectly -- to reflect that experience and give reasonably simple introductory statements then go into details sufficient to address reasonable concerns. Go back to the original post. Do you see how it sets out the inductive reasoning structure of the design inference? Like so:
By 678, I outlined a framework for how we uses inductive logic in science to address entities, phenomena or events it did not or cannot directly observe (let me clean up a symbol):
[T]here is a problem with reasoning about how inductive reasoning extends to reconstructing the remote past. Let’s try again: a: The actual past A leaves traces t, which we observe. b: We observe a cause C that produces consequence s which is materially similar to t c: We identify that on investigation, s reliably results from C. d: C is the only empirically warranted source of s. _____________________________ e: C is the best explanation for t.
Is this reasonable as an inductive exercise? Ask any detective using circumstantial evidence. Or, ask those who founded Geology etc. If we were not there, the above is a reasonable approach to identify what we did not directly observe. And, not so coincidentally, it summarises the inference to design on observed, tested, found reliable sign, in a nutshell. Now, look at the next clip again, as it was presented -- a substitution instance. I think it will make more sense to you in its context. And, I hope it will be a bit clearer why I do what I try to do. KF PS: As to part of why RDF is playing the studious ignoring game, cf his previous behaviour as summarised and responded to here. In short, we are not exactly dealing with someone without a track record. kairosfocus
RDFish obviously needs no help in making mincemeat of "Intelligent Design" logic and reasoning. I'm delurking just to clarify one point which seems to require reiteration. He wrote (in the previous thread)
Did I mention that I don’t think abiogenesis or evolution is a successful, empirically supported theory of origins either?
The theory of evolution (ToE) is not a theory of the origin of life on Earth. ToE assumes the existence of self-sustaining self-replicators and attempts to explain life's subsequent radiation into the diversity we observe. ToE is not a theory of the origin of life on Earth. There are several rather than a single theory of abiogenesis, and none of them are supported by other than circumstantial evidence, simply due to the fact that direct evidence of first life on Earth no longer exists. I guess it is fruitless to point out here that "Intelligent Design" is not an explanation of anything either so how anyone can say it is an "inference to the best explanation" (whether of origins or diversity of life on Earth) and expect to sound convincing I really don't know. Anyway, please note: The theory of evolution cannot and does not attempt to explain the origin of life on Earth. Please carry on! Alan Fox
RDF:
It’s been difficult to discuss the rest of my argument when people are coming up with so many different (specious) attacks on the simple premise above. However, if you’d like to agree with my premise arguendo, we could move on to the implications of this observation.
OK. I promise to withhold my objections to the premise until you present your argument.
The easiest way to understand the implications are to simply read the breakdown of the possibilities for explaining life origins. You’ve ignored them thus far.
The easiest way for me to understand your argument is for you to present it. Show me how you get from point [a] to point [b] and beyond. It might take the following form: "In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system. It follows that that [b] ID cannot use experience to confirm that CSI requires intelligence"....because [c] ...... Thus, since ID's argument is not supported by experience, the best explanation for the origin of life is [d] the ET Ancestor theory. (Tip: the most important part of your argument will be [c].) Or, if you like, take another path. I really don't care. Please, just make your case. StephenB
Hi vjtorley,
You write: In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system. Two quick comments: 1. You’re relying here on inductive logic.
You are quite mistaken. I have made no induction in that statement. Rather, it is nothing but a summary of our observations. In order for this to be an inductive inference, it would have to make some generalization over those observations, which I have not done. Here is some information on inductive reasoning: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_reasoning Not only have I not made an induction in this statement, but the rest of my argument does not involved drawing any conclusions from these observations either. My argument points out (in part) that the hypothesis that an intelligent agent could precede the very first CSI-rich mechanisms in existence is not consistent with these observations. Hopefully you understand that this is not to say we have demonstrated the truth of this constraint, but instead have simply shown that it does not follow from our uniform and repeated experience of intelligent agency to imagine that intelligence could operate without the benefit of a CSI-rich mechanism.
The inference to an Intelligent Designer is not based on inductive logic, but on abductive logic, or inference to the best explanation, which is stronger.
I haven't even mentioned the inference to an intelligent designer here. Yes of course ID attempts an abductive inference - except it turns out that ID is not at all the best explanation (as I have explained in the preceding post).
2. If one were to suppose that the Designer possessed integrative complexity instead of irreducible complexity, as I suggested in #26 above, then it could still be rich in CSI. But since the CSI would be fully integrated, and incapable of ebing separated into parts, it would require no explanation – and hence, no higher-level Designer.
No, this doesn't change a thing. In our uniform and repeated experience, every intelligent agent relies on complex physical mechanisms in order to store and process information. In fact, these CSI-rich mechanisms are the absolute epitome of what ID seeks to explain: Fantastically complex information processing machinery, chock-full of irreducibly complex systems. You are of course free to imagine other sorts of intelligent agents whose intelligence is not reliant on physical mechanisms like this (for example, your notion of "integrated" complexity), but that doesn't mean that these things exist. You simply made this up.
Hope that helps.
Sure, I suppose it helped to show your misconceptions about my argument :-) Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi StephenB,
RDF: In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system. SB: You need to make explicit the reason why you think that this claim, if true, invalidates the ID inference to the best explanation. It isn’t just the premise of your scheme that some question, it is also the reasoning process that follows, leading you to claim, among other things, that ID cannot use experience to confirm that CSI requires intelligence.
It's been difficult to discuss the rest of my argument when people are coming up with so many different (specious) attacks on the simple premise above. However, if you'd like to agree with my premise arguendo, we could move on to the implications of this observation. The easiest way to understand the implications are to simply read the breakdown of the possibilities for explaining life origins. You've ignored them thus far. People mean different things by "life origins" and there are conflicting views regarding what ID purports to explain, so these options make all of this very explicit to remove confusion about what we're talking about. NOTE: "Intelligent Design" refers to the conjunction of #2 and #3 below. NOTE: By "life" here, I mean life as we know it: complex physical organisms that use CSI-rich mechanisms in order to store and process information Here are the options: 1) ET-ancestor theory: Terrestrial life is descendent from life on another planet. On the plus side, we know that all life does indeed reproduce and adapt, and we know that there are lots of other planets in the galaxy/universe similar to Earth. On the negative side, we have no evidence that ET life has ever existed, and while this theory explains life on Earth, it leaves the existence of ET life (and the existence of life in general) unexplained. So, ET-ancestor theory is a BAD theory. 2) ET-engineer theory: Terrestrial life was engineered by life forms on another planet. On the plus side, we know from our experience that life forms can be intelligent and design things. On the negative side, again we have no evidence that ET life has ever existed, and this theory also leaves the existence of ET life, and life in general, unexplained. Moreover, we must make yet another unsupported assumption compared to ET-ancestor theory, which is that these ETs not only have to exist, but they also have to be more advanced at bio-engineering than human beings, which makes this theory even less probable than ET-ancestor theory: It is a WORSE THEORY 3) Non-living-thing-engineer theory: Terrestrial life was engineered by something that was not a life form at all (i.e. something without a complex physical body) On the plus side, this would explain how life in general came to exist by accounting for the origination of CSI-rich physical systems. On the negative side, however, we have the most problems of all: First, just as we have no evidence of extra-terrestrial intelligence life, we have no evidence of extra-terrestrial non-life. Second, we must again make the assumption that this entity had advanced bio-engineering skills. And third, this contradicts our uniform and repeated experience that intelligent agents require CSI-rich mechanisms in order to store and process information. That makes this the WORST THEORY of all. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Hi RDFish, You write:
In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system.
Two quick comments: 1. You're relying here on inductive logic. The inference to an Intelligent Designer is not based on inductive logic, but on abductive logic, or inference to the best explanation, which is stronger. 2. If one were to suppose that the Designer possessed integrative complexity instead of irreducible complexity, as I suggested in #26 above, then it could still be rich in CSI. But since the CSI would be fully integrated, and incapable of being separated into parts, it would require no explanation - and hence, no higher-level Designer. Hope that helps. vjtorley
RDF:
In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system.
You need to make explicit the reason why you think that this claim, if true, invalidates the ID inference to the best explanation. It isn't just the premise of your scheme that some question, it is also the reasoning process that follows, leading you to claim, among other things, that ID cannot use experience to confirm that CSI requires intelligence. Even if we grant your premise, which many find problematic, I don't think your conclusion follows from it or is even relevant to ID's argument. Why not lay it out so others can decide? StephenB
Mapou, I know you aren't up to discussing your views expressed here now. Please take my comments as something to stick in your cap and consider on a rainy day when you have some time. Of course, I don't mean to imply that you haven't already spent time thinking about these things. I write here as someone who also has some very untraditional views of Scripture and the Church, so hopefully you can take this as from a "fellow traveler" as it were. Whenever I begin to get a sense that some tradition or "orthodoxy" has gone wrong, motives need to be looked at. I've often had to reject my intuitions about a perceived problem with the mainstream views because, first, I had reason to suspect that it would be just a little too convenient for me if that mainstream view were, in fact, wrong. That isn't enough by itself to determine the truth, or likely truth, of the matter (indeed, many times the traditional view is wrong just where it restricts our enjoyment of the life God has given us), but it can be a good starting hint. It then takes a brutally honest look into the Scriptures and what They appear to say. I cannot stress THEY enough! Basically, if it amounts to my questionable motive and the Scriptures seem to be against me, I reject my idea, or at least put it off for further contemplation and thought. Sometimes I find kernels of truth in my idea, and grow in understanding, and sometimes I have to shake my head at my ignorance (probably most often the latter). As you said above, the Scriptures are open to interpretation. It's no use in arguing the point, since Scripture agrees with this view. Scripture does also warn, however, about private interpretation. A particular favorite portion of Scripture is Philippians 3:15,16:
15 Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded: and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you. 16 Nevertheless, whereto we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the same thing.
We find both freedom to think differently, at least as long as we are striving for perfection, and the promise of coming to further understand truth. And we are not admonished for living to the level we have attained, but seem charged with doing just that, and nothing more. Hopefully something useful is in there. Best wishes. Brent
Eric Anderson @43: You're right, of course, and I apologize. I should have said that I have other reasons to believe that, not only is a brain required, but that the brain is necessarily material. But, as I said, this is a topic that I want to break away from at this time. I'll return to it some other time, I'm sure. Mapou
Mapou @41: My statement is hardly in need of additional support, as it is obviously true as a matter of logic. Namely, we cannot deduce B from A in this case. So it is a bit strange that you would fully disagree. It is of course possible that we might have enough experience or other evidence that would allow us to draw an inductive conclusion -- say an inference to the best explanation -- that a physical brain is always required for intelligence. Intelligent minds can differ on this point, but it is legitimately open for rational debate and discussion. As I understand it, RDFish is making such an argument, which is fair game as far as arguments go. My point is more narrow and was just intended to be a caution against a dogmatic stance that A necessarily entails B. B could be true. But A doesn't necessarily entail B in this case. Eric Anderson
RDF, You are reminding me very much of the Black Knight http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhRUe-gz690 You have a very private interpretation of what is "empirical" and "uniform and repeated experience", and when shown you, you act as if it is a scratch. Whatever. Brent
Eric Anderson @29:
The idea that the brain is an important interface that helps control one’s body and helps connect between the spiritual and the physical realms does not mean that a brain is always required for intelligence to exist.
I fully disagree but I don't feel like continuing with this topic at this time. Sorry. Mapou
Bornagain77, I'm tired of this topic. Sorry. Mapou
correction "to make themselves feel more ‘comfortable’". bornagain77
Actually, I have thought long and hard about people who mold the Bible to accord to their own beliefs, to make them feel themselves more 'comfortable'. I don't think people who do as such, have thought long and hard as to what, and more importantly WHY, they are actually doing what they are doing. Erasing Hell by Francis Chan http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qnrJVTSYLr8 bornagain77
bornagain77 @34:
Oh well, call me an antiquated relic from days gone by, but, if you don’t mind, I think I will just hang on to my quaint ole notions of the Bible’s authority
By all means. My understanding is that God prefers smart worshippers and does not require us to park our brains in a closet when we read any book, especially the Bible. And what is the Bible? A compilation of books and letters that the Church compiled over the centuries. How much do you want to bet that the good saintly and pious men of the Church messed with its message as much as they could get away with? Luckily for us, there was not too much damage they could do. Copies of the holy books were all over the place and would squarely contradict their nonsense, as in that Luke passage above, which is clearly a fake in my opinion. Discerning spirits will not be fooled. I am not sure how fake the entire book of Luke (it's rather suspicious, IMO) is but they managed to insert their own BS teaching about eternal suffering in hell. In so doing, they turned a message of hope and grace into one of terror. Mapou
CORRECTION: Last sentence, 4th para should read: Others apparently believe cosmic fine-tuning somehow constitutes uniform and repeated experience of intelligence operating without a CSI-rich mechanism. RDFish
Hi All, In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence is at least partly contingent upon a CSI-rich physical system. After trying all manner of rebuttals, and dropping most of them, folks here have settled on a couple of main approaches to refute my argument: 1) Denying the premise outright Many of you point to paranormal phenomena, personal religious experiences, or miracles as recounted in scripture as the "uniform and repeated experience" that discounts my simple observation. Typical of this approach is StephenB's recent claim that "the testimony of seers, saints, mystics, and resuscitated patients who have touched the next world in near-death experiences" was sufficient to show exceptions to the empirical observation underlying my argument. Others apparently believe cosmic fine-tuning somehow constitutes uniform and repeated experience of knowing the source of a CSI-rich mechanism and confirming that source is intelligent. But of course none of this has anything to do with our actual experience of intelligent agents. Nobody can provide a single example of observing an intelligent agent produce CSI without the benefit of a functioning, CSI-rich system to store and process information. It is, frankly, very interesting from a psychological perspective to watch people deny this obvious truth. (The one exception here is MaPou - the one ID proponent here who actually has studied intelligence - who agrees that minds very obviously depend on brains in order to produce anything at all). 2) Pretend that I am arguing what I am not arguing, and then attack me for that Some persist in believing that by defending metaphysical dualism they can defeat my argument, oblivious to the fact that I have already cast my argument in fully dualistic terms - completely denying materialism! - and showing that my argument remains completely unaffected. Others pretend that I am claiming that my argument shows that mind without mechanism is impossible - that I have attempted some logical proof that intelligence could not have preceded mechanism in the universe. I have explained countless times that this of course is not the case; just because our experience contradicts something in one context by no means proves our experience will remain true in other contexts. The history of science is full of examples where we find our experience breaks down in new realms (and I have provided specific examples of this). Thus, just because we do not see intelligence without mechanism or mechanism without intelligence in our common experience does not mean that one or the other is proven to be impossible in all situations. Aside from those two approaches, others fill the thread with huge posts that are ridiculously verbose, repetitive, stilted, and meandering. (this would include KF and ba77). And still otehrs argue with insults and sarcasm and generally act as though they are nine years old (this include Mung). * * * Here is an illustration of how perverse it is to refuse to admit this obvious aspect of our experience: Imagine an evolutionist visited the site, and read ID's usual claim that in our experience, whenever we know the cause of some complex mechanism, that cause is invariably intelligent agency. And imagine this evolutionist denied this statement, saying: "No, my poor befuddled ID-ists! This is false! There are plenty of exceptions to this, when CSI-rich structures appear without any intelligent intervention!" Ah, the fur would fly! "What", you would demand, "are these exceptions? Give us one single example of a complex mechanism that has appeared, and we know what caused it, and that cause was not an intelligent agent!!!" You would scoff and say "Hah! What, did you see a television set pop into existence in your living room because a breeze came through the window and rearranged the atoms in you couch? Hahahahaha! Did you observe a rain pouring down a moutainside and just by accident carving the faces of the presidents into a boulder? Hahahahah!" The poor evolutionist would attempt to salvage his claim: "Hey, stop ridiculing me! How do you know it can't happen - can you prove it? You are simply making metaphysical assumptions!" Or maybe he'd say "There is no good reason for ruling out the possibility that CSI-rich structures can arise without intelligent intervention, once other aspects of our knowledge is properly analyzed and applied!" But of course whatever he said, he would be WRONG. In our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we see a CSI-rich system and we know its source, that source is intelligent action, and anyone trying to disagree with that would be unreasonable. And of course those who have attempted to deny the equally obvious premise of my argument have pursued the same perversely unreasonable strategy. The obvious fact of the matter is that in our uniform and repeated experience, whenever we observe an intelligent agent, the intelligence relies (at least partly) on CSI-rich physical systems. * * * The rest of my argument against ID is equally valid and no less simple, but until this premise is accepted, you will not be able to understand it. Cheers, RDFish RDFish
Mapou, And all this time I thought the Bible was suppose to mold men to God's likeness and men were not suppose to mold the Bible to their likeness.,,, Oh well, call me an antiquated relic from days gone by, but, if you don't mind, I think I will just hang on to my quaint ole notions of the Bible's authority: Verse and Music:
Hebrews 4:12 For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. Casting Crowns - The Word Is Alive - Live http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9itgOBAxSc Casting Crowns - The Word Is Alive - lyric http://www.metacafe.com/watch/5197438/
bornagain77
nightlight @30:
Unfortunately, they insist on sticking to philosophical and theological formulation. Present natural science can’t do anything with ‘mind stuff’ hence the DI’s ID will remain within philosophy and theology due to DI’s own choice.
This is all hogwash since ID does not postulate anything about the designer or designers other than that they are intelligent. That's what the I in ID stands for. Mapou
#31 I believe the Luke passage is very apt for those participating in this forum. Jesus is simply pointing out that no matter what sign, or evidence is provided for unbelievers, they will reject it (him), because they do not want that way, that truth or that life. littlejohn
bornAgain77 @27, Every one of the passages you mentioned above is open to interpretation. My least favorite is Luke 16:19-31 which I believe to be a fable, and not a particularly good one at that since it insults our intelligence. I seriously doubt that Jesus said it. That does not sound like something he would have said at all, seeing that he came to earth in human flesh to die for the world. Was it meant to scare children or something? What's up with that? It's a lame fable, in my opinion. I think Christians should see that passage as the pile of BS that it is and strike it from the Bible. That's my opinion. An unorthodox one, I admit, but that's the way I see it. Mapou
@KF #20
Science is indeed limited as an approach to knowing, but that should not be allowed to shade off into the notion that the limits of science are limits of knowledge.
That's my point -- natural science has fundamental limitations since it it has to postulate certain entities and some of their properties as simply givens upfront, before it can deduce (via math, logic, computations) anything else about them. Additionally, the present natural science has a major gap regarding consciousness. With that as is, I am not sure why are DI folks complaining that their version of ID (with its mind or consciousness based designer) is not accepted as natural science. If they were to reformulate intelligent designer as a computational process instead of 'conscious intelligent agency', since the observable output of the two can be in principle made indistinguishable, they could legitimately claim to have a hypothesis of natural science. Unfortunately, they insist on sticking to philosophical and theological formulation. Present natural science can't do anything with 'mind stuff' hence the DI's ID will remain within philosophy and theology due to DI's own choice. nightlight
Mapou, that is a pretty unusual view of the word "asleep." Particularly since the word appears to be used as a cultural euphemism or idiom. At the very least it is fair to say that it isn't the only, or even the most common, interpretation of the word. Furthermore, there are many, many references to spirits, visitations, and so on in scripture. If these are to be taken seriously, then (i) either a physical brain is not required for those beings to function, or (ii) they have some kind of physical brain that is, what, made up of some other kind of matter? Again, there are lots of references to incorporeal beings in scripture, beings who are intelligent and act with purpose (whether benign or malevolent). And then there are all the modern near death experiences and the like. The idea that the brain is an important interface that helps control one's body and helps connect between the spiritual and the physical realms does not mean that a brain is always required for intelligence to exist. Eric Anderson
It's a truism, isn't it , that truth is stranger than fiction. You scientists in the proper sense of the word, who find yourselves in a surreal world, in which the scientific Establishment, the Unintelligent Design consensus, is a cult, a minuscule proportion of mankind, from the farm labourer to the fabled brain surgeon and rocket scientist , within a relatively small span of time in the history of science. (Von Braun was adamantly vocal about his belief in ID, as, of course, was Einstein) Like so many religious cults it requires a 'Thought Police', to enforce uniform compliance in the officially-mandated thinking, its creed. Ostensibly, this it is able to do, despite a massive undercurrent of disbelief by the rank and file, due to the ever-growing increase in the wealth and political power of the large corporations - to which alas, many of you have contributed with your own right-wing economic nonsense, which you sometimes allude to, in passing. Not only has the world economy been destabilised by the polarisation of the wealth in the US and in its ideological satellites in Europe, but that polarisation has evidently massively affected the funding of the Academy, to its detriment; so that they are now, effectively minions of the corporation. When researchers are tasked with a certain studies they will know what results will or would not be acceptable to the sponsors of their faculty or department. If they do not, there will be blood. Dismissal. The thing is, though, that many, surely, a large majority do believe in ID (indeed, physicians, for one, in a Creator) - how could a sane person not do so? Ask a non-academic child if nothing could turn itself into everything (another of GK's choice jibes at the materialists' unalloyed insanity), and he really would think you were mad. This could be child who had never learnt to read or write. My use of the term, 'surreal' was no hyperbole was it? Even the majority of corporate CEO's ultimately behind it all would believe in ID, but, as we know, both keep quiet about it, under the duress exerted by the Thought Police at the instance of the latter. Profound thinker that he was, G K Chesterton once remarked: 'Tradition is the democracy of the dead. It means giving a vote to the most obscure of all classes: our ancestors.' The initial, purely reflexive response to the reference to 'the dead' in that sentence struck me as having negative overtones, but his point was by no means, of course, to disparage the dead and their opinions. Quite the contrary. How much more does that insight bear on their cult status, in comparison with the greatest men of science - going back as far as Galileo - who discovered the paradigms upon which the whole history of western science, right up to the present day, was built. It would not have been a good idea for upstart second-raters to marginalise the classical physics built upon the paradigms of those religious 'nuts', Galileo and Newton, would it? They bequeathed a very practical tradition still AT THE LEADING-EDGE! It's called, QUANTUM PHYSICS! Axel
Mapou you reassert your position here:
"There can be no such thing as thinking without a brain."
And you also state;
as a Christian, I can say that we do have a very good idea of what happens when the spirit is disconnected from the brain: it becomes unconscious, that’s what. How do I know this? Jesus himself said it regarding Lazarus. Jesus clearly said that Lazarus was asleep. To be asleep is to be unconscious, albeit with no dreams. There are many other examples in the Bible where death is compared to sleep. We are told on several occasions that the dead are asleep until the resurrection. Since their bodies are dead and turned into dust, it follows that it is their spirits that are asleep/unconscious.
Is not this the doctrine of "soul sleep" that you are believing in?
"Soul Sleep," also known as the doctrine of "Conditional Immortality," is primarily taught by Jehovah's Witnesses and Seventh-day Adventists. To be more exact, Jehovah's Witnesses teach "soul annihilation." This refers to the belief that when we die, the soul ceases to exist. At the future resurrection, Jehovah's Witnesses believe that the souls of the redeemed will be recreated. Seventh-day Adventists teach true "soul sleep," meaning after death believers are not conscious of anything and their souls become completely inert until the time of the final resurrection of the dead. During this period of soul sleep, the soul resides in the memory of God. Ecclesiastes 9:5 and 12:7 are also verses used to defend the doctrine of soul sleep. In the Bible, "sleep" is simply another term for death, because the body appears to be asleep. I believe, as I stated, the moment we die our spirit and soul go to be with the Lord. Our physical body begins to decay, but our soul and spirit go on to eternal life. The Bible does teach that believers will receive new, transformed, eternal bodies at the time of the final resurrection of the dead, just before the creation of the new heavens and new earth. (1 Corinthians 15:35-58). A Few Verses that Challenge the Concept of Soul Sleep Genesis 35:18 Luke 16:19-31 Luke 23:43 John 11:25-26 1 Peter 3:18-19 Revelation 6:9-10 http://christianity.about.com/od/christiandoctrines/f/whatissoulsleep.htm
Thus your position is, besides, IMHO, logically incoherent, but also is not nearly as ironclad scripturally as you seem to believe. bornagain77
Hi kairosfocus, Thanks for a very thought-provoking post. My own take on the question is as follows: (a) to say that thinking requires a brain is too narrow, for two reasons: (i) since thinking is the name of an activity, it's a functional term, and from a thing's function alone we cannot deduce its structure; (ii) the argument would prove too much, as it would imply that Martians (should we ever find any) must also have brains, which strikes me as a dogmatic assertion; (b) in any case, the term "brain" has not been satisfactorily defined; (c) even a weaker version of the argument, which claims merely that thinking requires an organized structure existing in space-time, strikes me as dubious, as we can easily conceive of the possibility that aliens in the multiverse (who are outside space-time) might have created our universe; (d) however, the "bedrock claim" that thinking requires an entity to have some kind of organized structure, with distinct parts, is a much more powerful claim, as the information created by a Designer is irreducibly complex, and it seems difficult to conceive of how such an absolutely simple entity could create something irreducibly complex, or how such an entity could create, store and process various kinds of complex information in the absence of parts (although one might imagine that it could store such information off-line); (e) however, all the foregoing argument shows that the Designer is complex: what it fails to show is that the Designer exists in space-time, or has a body that can be decomposed into separate physical parts; (f) for all we know, the Designer might possess a different kind of complexity, which I call integrated complexity, such that the existence of any one part logically implies the existence of all the other parts; (g) since the parts of an integrated complex being would be inseparable, there would be no need to explain what holds them together, and thus no need to say that anyone designed them; (h) thus even if one rejected the classical theist view that God is absolutely simple, one could still deduce the existence of a Being possessing integrated complexity, and consistently maintain that integrated complexity is a sufficient explanation for the irreducible complexity we find in Nature; (i) in my opinion, it would be a mistake for us to try to resolve the question of whether the Designer has parts before making the design inference, as that's a separate question entirely. My two cents. vjtorley
Yea, but that's NOT why RDFish is ignoring him. :) Mung
kairosfocus, I figured out why I always have trouble following your writings and dare I say I am not alone here. You spend an inordinate amount of time converting simple concepts into a quasi-formal language that slows reading down by at least an order of magnitude. For example, you wrote above:
a: The actual past (or some other unobserved event, entity or phenomenon . . . ) A leaves traces t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], which we observe. b: We observe a cause C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] that produces consequence s [= directly observed cases of creation of FSCO/I, say digital code in software, etc] which is materially similar to t [= the DNA of the cell] c: We identify that on empirical investigation and repeated observation, s [= FSCO/I] reliably results from C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency]. d: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is ALSO the only empirically warranted source of s [= FSCO/I] . _____________________________ e: C [= design, or purposefully directed contingency] is the best explanation for t [= FSCO/I where we did not directly observe the causal process, say in the DNA of the cell], viewed here as an instance of s [= FSCO/I].
Allow me to translate: a. We observe complexity that requires foresight. b. We know an intelligent agency can create said complexity (software which is like DNA). c. We know that said complexity frequently results from an intelligent agency. (huh?) d. We can also say that, empirically speaking, an intelligent agency is the only warranted cause of said complexity. e. We can therefore infer that any instance of said complexity where the actual cause is not observed, was caused by an intelligent agency. Now, even after this step by step translation, I find your arguments excessively laborious, redundant and verbose. I could have said the whole thing in just a few words:
We know that complex systems like software require intelligent design. The genetic code is a similarly complex system. Therefore the genetic code was intelligently designed.
My point is that you are not going to attract readers with this kind of hard to follow prose. Most people will just ignore most of what you write and talk about other things, as just happened here. Sorry. I always tell it like I see it. Mapou
Semi OT: Dr. Meyer joins RC Sproul to discuss growing skepticism of Darwinian evolution among scientists - interview http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aq5intrTokc bornagain77
GP, always good to see you passing by. KF kairosfocus
F/N: I think the implications of fine tuning and contingency of our cosmos should be a focus. KF kairosfocus
NL: Actually, absent the free and responsible action of the mind, rational activity including science would be impossible. And we must beware of creeping scientism, especially the honourific use of the label "scientific." Science is indeed limited as an approach to knowing, but that should not be allowed to shade off into the notion that the limits of science are limits of knowledge. What is important is to have reasonable warrant, starting from our inside-out knowledge of self-aware mindedness. For just one instance, we can see how sharply different such self aware thought is from blind, GIGO controlled mechanical processing. KF kairosfocus
As far as God not having a physical brain, I believe that this, too, is nonsense. It is certain that that God’s body and brain are not made of the same type of matter as ours but there is no doubt that they are physical.
I guess one could say that "the different kind of matter" you're talking about is not really matter. It could a different kind of stuff called called "aeveternal substances" ... or whatever.
By common definition, brains are made out of matter. Absolutely.
I don't know if common definition allows for "a different kind of matter" but maybe so.
A brain is required to think. Thinking consists of running through the recorded sequences of events in the brain.
I appreciate your explanation. Silver Asiatic
In 17 above, I wrote "Here’s the basis of understanding." I should have written, "Here’s the basis of my understanding." Sorry. Mapou
How do you know that we have “a spirit”?
Because consciousness requires a knower and a known and the two are complementary opposites. Here's the basis of understanding: That which knows cannot be known and that which is known cannot know.
Can a spirit think? How do you know?
Of course not. A brain is required to think. Thinking consists of running through the recorded sequences of events in the brain.
By common definition, brains are made out of matter.
Absolutely.
When a person’s brain dies, do they no longer have any thoughts?
Of course not. PS. And yes, I am a Christian, through and through. I just don't subscribe to certain common Christian doctrines. Mapou
The flaw is the expectation that the above inference should be treated as a part of natural science, since natural science has no formal (algorithmic) model of mind stuff (consciousness, thought as experienced, qualia). It only has a model (very crude at that) of computations done by the brain networks. Hence, the present natural science can't do anything constructive with "mind" or "consciousness" as a building block. Note that mind stuff (the direct experience) is merely handwaved informally in some disciplines such as psychology, psychiatry, anesthesiology, neuroscience. In such cases of usage it is indistinguishable from a convenient shorthand for some more complex properties (e.g.responses to stimuli) of the system to which "consciousness" is attributed. The inference is perfectly fine as long as it aspires to provide another philosophical or theological perspective on phenomena of life and universe. nightlight
kf I always thought the quantum eraser was fairly straightforward in revealing that the 'information' being available to the observer is what is primary to the success of the experiment. i.e. This following experiment extended Wheeler's delayed choice double slit experiment, which I referenced earlier, to highlight the centrality of 'information' in the Double Slit Experiment and refutes any 'detector centered' arguments for why the wave collapses:
The Experiment That Debunked Materialism - video - (delayed choice quantum eraser) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKUass7G8w (Double Slit) A Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser - updated 2007 Excerpt: Upon accessing the information gathered by the Coincidence Circuit, we the observer are shocked to learn that the pattern shown by the positions registered at D0 (Detector Zero) at Time 2 depends entirely on the information gathered later at Time 4 and available to us at the conclusion of the experiment. http://www.bottomlayer.com/bottom/kim-scully/kim-scully-web.htm
i.e. This experiment clearly shows that the ‘material’ detector is secondary in the experiment and that a conscious observer, being able to know the information of which path a photon takes with local certainty, is primary to the wave collapsing to a particle in the experiment. It is also very interesting to note that some materialists/atheists seem to have a very hard time grasping the simple point of these extended double slit experiments, but to try to put it more clearly; To explain an event which defies time and space, as the quantum erasure experiment clearly does, you cannot appeal to any material entity in the experiment like the detector, or any other 3D physical part of the experiment, which is itself constrained by the limits of time and space. To give an adequate explanation for defying time and space one is forced to appeal to a transcendent entity which is itself not confined by time or space. But then again I guess I can see why forcing someone, who claims to be a atheistic materialist, to appeal to a non-material transcendent entity, to give an adequate explanation for such a ‘spooky’ event, would invoke such utter confusion on their part. Yet to try to put it in even more ‘shocking’ terms for the atheists, the ‘shocking’ conclusion of the experiment is that a transcendent Mind, with a capital M, must precede the collapse of quantum waves to 3-Dimensional particles. Moreover, it is impossible for a human mind to ever ‘emerge’ from any 3-D material basis which is dependent on a preceding conscious cause for its own collapse to a 3D state in the first place. This is more than a slight problem for the atheistic-evolutionary materialist who insists that our minds simply ‘emerged’, or evolved, from a conglomeration of 3D matter. In the following article Professor Henry puts it more clearly than I can:
The Mental Universe - Richard Conn Henry - Professor of Physics John Hopkins University Excerpt: The only reality is mind and observations, but observations are not of things. To see the Universe as it really is, we must abandon our tendency to conceptualize observations as things.,,, Physicists shy away from the truth because the truth is so alien to everyday physics. A common way to evade the mental universe is to invoke "decoherence" - the notion that "the physical environment" is sufficient to create reality, independent of the human mind. Yet the idea that any irreversible act of amplification is necessary to collapse the wave function is known to be wrong: in "Renninger-type" experiments, the wave function is collapsed simply by your human mind seeing nothing. The universe is entirely mental,,,, The Universe is immaterial — mental and spiritual. Live, and enjoy. http://henry.pha.jhu.edu/The.mental.universe.pdf The Renninger Negative Result Experiment - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3uzSlh_CV0 Experimental Realization of Interaction-Free Measurement - 1994 http://www.univie.ac.at/qfp/publications3/pdffiles/1994-08.pdf
OT note. Dr Craig just listed this debate from last year on his FB page (from what little I've seen of it so far, Williams appears to be his usual well studied self in the debate!):
This House Believes that God is not a Delusion - Craig/Williams vs. Ahmed/Copson - video (2012) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5N5SvkPhME
bornagain77
Eric Anderson:
Of course it isn’t an issue anyway if the designer has a brain. :)
Correct. Mapou
gpuccio @11:
There is no doubt that we “use our brains to think”. In the human condition, thought processes are invariably linked to brain activity, in both directions. But that does not imply that any conscious representation needs a physical brain. In the human condition, that link is always present. But we have no final idea of what happens to our individual consciousness if and when it is separated from our physical brain. And so there is no general reason to believe that conscious representation always need a physical interface.
Yes there is. And, as a Christian, I can say that we do have a very good idea of what happens when the spirit is disconnected from the brain: it becomes unconscious, that's what. How do I know this? Jesus himself said it regarding Lazarus. Jesus clearly said that Lazarus was asleep. To be asleep is to be unconscious, albeit with no dreams. There are many other examples in the Bible where death is compared to sleep. We are told on several occasions that the dead are asleep until the resurrection. Since their bodies are dead and turned into dust, it follows that it is their spirits that are asleep/unconscious. As far as God not having a physical brain, I believe that this, too, is nonsense. It is certain that that God's body and brain are not made of the same type of matter as ours but there is no doubt that they are physical. How do I know this? I do because we live in a yin-yang reality consisting of two opposite and complementary realms, the spiritual realm and the physical realm. In the fhe former, nothing can change and nothing can be created or destroyed. Spiritual stuff just is. In the latter, everything can be created and destroyed or changed. As an aside, Yahweh told Moses that if he looked directly at him, he, Moses, would die. This implies that God's body emits high energy photons and that said photons can travel like all other physical photons and could be detected by the light receptors in Moses' retinae. There are entities in the spiritual realms who have the power to create physical matter out of nothing. Obviously human spirits do not have that kind of power. So where did God's brain and body come from? His spirit created them. Yahweh did say in the book of Isaiah that he came before all the other Gods and that all the other Gods are under his command. He even created the brains and bodies of some of those other Gods (e.g., Lucifer and the angels) but there is no reason to think that he created all of them. The Gods (Elohim) of Egypt also had creative powers since they could turn sticks into serpents and water into blood. Mapou
Of course it isn't an issue anyway if the designer has a brain. :) ----- gpuccio @11: There have apparently been a number of instances -- people born with brain deformities/atrophy, near-death experiences (may BA77 mercifully spare us the extensive references), etc., in which the physical brain per se is not the source of the experience/thought/observation/intelligent activity. On the other hand, the brain seems to be critical for most normal functions in life. I think your concept of an interface is quite apt. It seems we all have to confess ignorance about most of the details. ----- All that said, RDFish's comment, as interesting as it is, isn't really germane to detecting design itself. Eric Anderson
Mapou: There is no doubt that we "use our brains to think". In the human condition, thought processes are invariably linked to brain activity, in both directions. But that does not imply that any conscious representation needs a physical brain. In the human condition, that link is always present. But we have no final idea of what happens to our individual consciousness if and when it is separated from our physical brain. And so there is no general reason to believe that conscious representation always need a physical interface. Let's take again the model of a person who plays a videogame. As long as the person is playing the game, and his consciousness is completely absorbed by it, any activity and interaction of the gamer with the game will pass thought the necessary interface (the screen, the mouse, etc.). But if and when the gamer stops gaming, he can well become conscious of other things. For example, he can resume reading a book. The screen and mouse are no more a necessary interface, linked to any conscious activity of the gamer. The physical brain is an interface. There is no reason to believe that we (or any other entity) necessarily need it to have conscious representations. gpuccio
I believe that consciousness comes from having a spirit and a brain ... There can be no such thing as thinking without a brain.
How do you know that we have "a spirit"? Can a spirit think? How do you know? By common definition, brains are made out of matter.
I am a Christian
When a person's brain dies, do they no longer have any thoughts? Silver Asiatic
ID theory, the universe and life are clearly intelligently designed. Moose Dr:
Premise 1: The universe and life are clearly intelligently designed.
Ok, I'm glad we solved that one! Premise 1: We know the universe was intelligently designed (from above). Premise 2: Intelligent design requires an intelligence. Conclusion: An intelligence that preceded the creation of the universe must exist. Excellent! Premise 1: An intelligence that preceeded the creation of the universe must exist. Premise 2: If intelligence then, to the best of our knowledge, brain. Conclusion: Since Time, Space and Matter first existed with the creation of the universe, the intelligence that preceeded the creation of the universe cannot have been a brain. From the above. 1. The intelligence that created the universe cannot have been a brain. 2. To the best of our knowledge, all intelligence requires a brain. Conclusion: Our knowledge is insufficient to fully explain the nature of the intelligence that created the universe. Silver Asiatic
BA77: Quantum weirdness again. The case that got my attention bigtime is the quantum double slit exercise where looking for which slit AFTER the slit -- on any reasonable notion of a trajectory -- leads to particle behaviour not wave behaviour. (Cf Wiki here.) KF kairosfocus
Mapou: I suggest you reflect on evidence of cosmological design by a necessary being, where we are talking here about designing the physics of the cosmos in a way that fits it for C-chemistry, cell based life; ontologically antecedent to the existence of a physical cosmos in which brains can exist. As matter is inherently contingent, that means, immaterial mind. What that is, we do not know, but what makes sense is that we are talking about a different dimension of reality, we might as well use the traditional word, spirit. KF kairosfocus
MD: Of course, the alternative is that while we commonly observe intelligences that use brains, there is no necessary requirement that mind be based on or require brain. Where also, from nothing {non-being] nothing comes. KF kairosfocus
I am a Christian and an independent AI researcher. I believe that consciousness comes from having a spirit and a brain. I fully agree with RDFish on this particular point. No brain -> no design. The belief among some here that we don't use our brains to think is pure nonsense, in my opinion. There can be no such thing as thinking without a brain. Mapou
I love "gotcha" arguments. Especially those that are purely philosophical -- no evidence. They never work. Let's see: Premise 1: Intelligent activity can only be produced by an intelligence. Premise 2: All known intelligence requires a brain. Conclusion: If intelligence then, to the best of our knowledge, brain. However Premise 1: The universe and life are clearly intelligently designed. Premise 2: Intelligent design requires an intelligence. Conclusion: An intelligence that preceded the creation of the universe must exist. Apply the two: Premise 1: An intelligence that preceeded the creation of the universe must exist. Premise 2: If intelligence then, to the best of our knowledge, brain. Logical conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, brain existed prior to the creation of the universe. Extending ... Premise 1: To the best of our kowledge, brain existed prior to the creation of the universe. Premise 2: Prior to the creation of the universe there was nothing. Logical conclusion: Brain is nothing. Or -- Our knowledge is incomplete. We don't know everything? Oh Man! Moose Dr
#2. Here’s Leggett’s Inequality
Do we create the world just by looking at it? - 2008 Excerpt: In mid-2007 Fedrizzi found that the new realism model was violated by 80 orders of magnitude; the group was even more assured that quantum mechanics was correct. Leggett agrees with Zeilinger that realism is wrong in quantum mechanics, but when I asked him whether he now believes in the theory, he answered only “no” before demurring, “I’m in a small minority with that point of view and I wouldn’t stake my life on it.” For Leggett there are still enough loopholes to disbelieve. I asked him what could finally change his mind about quantum mechanics. Without hesitation, he said sending humans into space as detectors to test the theory.,,, (to which Anton Zeilinger responded) When I mentioned this to Prof. Zeilinger he said, “That will happen someday. There is no doubt in my mind. It is just a question of technology.” Alessandro Fedrizzi had already shown me a prototype of a realism experiment he is hoping to send up in a satellite. It’s a heavy, metallic slab the size of a dinner plate. http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/the_reality_tests/P3/ Alain Aspect and Anton Zeilinger by Richard Conn Henry - Physics Professor - John Hopkins University Excerpt: Why do people cling with such ferocity to belief in a mind-independent reality? It is surely because if there is no such reality, then ultimately (as far as we can know) mind alone exists. And if mind is not a product of real matter, but rather is the creator of the "illusion" of material reality (which has, in fact, despite the materialists, been known to be the case, since the discovery of quantum mechanics in 1925), then a theistic view of our existence becomes the only rational alternative to solipsism (solipsism is the philosophical idea that only one's own mind is sure to exist). (Dr. Henry's referenced experiment and paper - “An experimental test of non-local realism” by S. Gröblacher et. al., Nature 446, 871, April 2007 - “To be or not to be local” by Alain Aspect, Nature 446, 866, April 2007 (Leggett’s Inequality) http://henry.pha.jhu.edu/aspect.html Quantum physics says goodbye to reality – Apr 20, 2007 Excerpt: They devised an experiment that violates a different inequality proposed by physicist Anthony Leggett in 2003 that relies only on realism, and relaxes the reliance on locality. To do this, rather than taking measurements along just one plane of polarization, the Austrian team took measurements in additional, perpendicular planes to check for elliptical polarization. They found that, just as in the realizations of Bell’s thought experiment, Leggett’s inequality is violated – thus stressing the quantum-mechanical assertion that reality does not exist when we’re not observing it. http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/27640 “I’m going to talk about the Bell inequality, and more importantly a new inequality that you might not have heard of called the Leggett inequality, that was recently measured. It was actually formulated almost 30 years ago by Professor Leggett, who is a Nobel Prize winner, but it wasn’t tested until about a year and a half ago (in 2007), when an article appeared in Nature, that the measurement was made by this prominent quantum group in Vienna led by Anton Zeilinger, which they measured the Leggett inequality, which actually goes a step deeper than the Bell inequality and rules out any possible interpretation other than consciousness creates reality when the measurement is made.” – Bernard Haisch, Ph.D., Calphysics Institute, is an astrophysicist and author of over 130 scientific publications. Preceding quote taken from this following video; Quantum Mechanics and Consciousness – A New Measurement – Bernard Haisch, Ph.D (Shortened version of entire video with notes in description of video) http://vimeo.com/37517080
#3. Here’s Wigner’s Quantum Symmetries
“It was not possible to formulate the laws (of quantum theory) in a fully consistent way without reference to consciousness.” Eugene Wigner (1902 -1995) from his collection of essays “Symmetries and Reflections – Scientific Essays”; Eugene Wigner laid the foundation for the theory of symmetries in quantum mechanics, for which he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963. “It will remain remarkable, in whatever way our future concepts may develop, that the very study of the external world led to the scientific conclusion that the content of the consciousness is the ultimate universal reality” - Eugene Wigner – (Remarks on the Mind-Body Question, Eugene Wigner, in Wheeler and Zurek, p.169) – received Nobel Prize in 1963 for ‘Quantum Symmetries’
Here is Wigner commenting on the key experiment that led Wigner to his Nobel Prize winning work on quantum symmetries,,,
Eugene Wigner Excerpt: To express this basic experience in a more direct way: the world does not have a privileged center, there is no absolute rest, preferred direction, unique origin of calendar time, even left and right seem to be rather symmetric. The interference of electrons, photons, neutrons has indicated that the state of a particle can be described by a vector possessing a certain number of components. As the observer is replaced by another observer (working elsewhere, looking at a different direction, using another clock, perhaps being left-handed), the state of the very same particle is described by another vector, obtained from the previous vector by multiplying it with a matrix. This matrix transfers from one observer to another. http://www.reak.bme.hu/Wigner_Course/WignerBio/wb1.htm
i.e. In the experiment the ‘world’ (i.e. the universe) does not have a ‘privileged center’. Yet strangely, the conscious observer does exhibit a ‘privileged center’. This is since the ‘matrix’, which determines which vector will be used to describe the particle in the experiment, is ‘observer-centric’ in its origination! Thus explaining Wigner’s dramatic statement, “It was not possible to formulate the laws (of quantum theory) in a fully consistent way without reference to consciousness.” Here is a corroborating piece of evidence that goes very well with Wigner’s work:
Causing Collapse: Can One Affect an Atom’s Spin Just by Adjusting the Way It Is Measured? – Mar. 18, 2013 Excerpt: One of the most basic laws of quantum mechanics is that a system can be in more than one state — it can exist in multiple realities — at once. This phenomenon, known as the superposition principle, exists only so long as the system is not observed or measured in any way. As soon as such a system is measured, its superposition collapses into a single state. Thus, we, who are constantly observing and measuring, experience the world around us as existing in a single reality.,,, Read more about the experiment here: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130318133026.htm
#4. Here’s the Quantum Zeno Effect:
Quantum Zeno effect Excerpt: The quantum Zeno effect is,,, an unstable particle, if observed continuously, will never decay. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_Zeno_effect
The reason why I am very impressed with the quantum Zeno effect as to establishing consciousness’s primacy in reality is, for one thing, that Entropy is, by a wide margin, the most finely tuned of initial conditions of the Big Bang:
The Physics of the Small and Large: What is the Bridge Between Them? Roger Penrose Excerpt: “The time-asymmetry is fundamentally connected to with the Second Law of Thermodynamics: indeed, the extraordinarily special nature (to a greater precision than about 1 in 10^10^123, in terms of phase-space volume) can be identified as the “source” of the Second Law (Entropy).” How special was the big bang? – Roger Penrose Excerpt: This now tells us how precise the Creator’s aim must have been: namely to an accuracy of one part in 10^10^123. (This number cannot be written out in ordinary notation even if a number were written on every individual atomic particle and photon in the universe) (from the Emperor’s New Mind, Penrose, pp 339-345 – 1989)
For another thing, it is interesting to note just how foundational entropy is in its explanatory power for actions within the space-time of the universe:
Shining Light on Dark Energy – October 21, 2012 Excerpt: It (Entropy) explains time; it explains every possible action in the universe;,, Even gravity, Vedral argued, can be expressed as a consequence of the law of entropy. ,,, The principles of thermodynamics are at their roots all to do with information theory. Information theory is simply an embodiment of how we interact with the universe —,,, http://crev.info/2012/10/shining-light-on-dark-energy/ Evolution is a Fact, Just Like Gravity is a Fact! UhOh! – January 2010 Excerpt: The results of this paper suggest gravity arises as an entropic force, once space and time themselves have emerged. https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/evolution-is-a-fact-just-like-gravity-is-a-fact-uhoh/
In fact, the 'randomness' of the entropic processes of the universe is what Darwinian evolution relies on to be its ultimate 'creative' engine for evolution (and supposedly for the creation of human brains in the first place), And yet, to repeat,,,
Quantum Zeno effect Excerpt: The quantum Zeno effect is,,, an unstable particle, if observed continuously, will never decay. per wiki
This is just fascinating! Why in blue blazes should conscious observation put a freeze on entropic decay, unless consciousness was/is more foundational to reality than entropy is? And seeing that entropy is VERY foundational to explaining events within space-time, I think the implications are fairly obvious that consciousness precedes the 1 in 10^10^123 entropy of the universe: Quotes of note:
“No, I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness. Everything that we talk about, everything that we regard as existing, postulates consciousness.” (Max Planck, as cited in de Purucker, Gottfried. 1940. The Esoteric Tradition. California: Theosophical University Press, ch. 13). “Consciousness cannot be accounted for in physical terms. For consciousness is absolutely fundamental. It cannot be accounted for in terms of anything else.” (Schroedinger, Erwin. 1984. “General Scientific and Popular Papers,” in Collected Papers, Vol. 4. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences. Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn, Braunschweig/Wiesbaden. p. 334.)
Throw in Nagel, Fine Tuning, and the Big Bang, and etc.., and perhaps one can get a feel for just how insane this objection that kairosfocus has highlighted is to the present state of evidence! bornagain77
As to "Do minds need brains?", we can break this question down further and ask "Does Consciousness precede material reality?" And the answer that modern science has given us to that question is a resounding yes! Both consciousness, and free will, are now shown to play a central (axiomatic) role in quantum mechanics,
Can quantum theory be improved? – July 23, 2012 Excerpt: However, in the new paper, the physicists have experimentally demonstrated that there cannot exist any alternative theory that increases the predictive probability of quantum theory by more than 0.165, with the only assumption being that measurement (*conscious observation) parameters can be chosen independently (free choice, free will, assumption) of the other parameters of the theory.,,, ,, the experimental results provide the tightest constraints yet on alternatives to quantum theory. The findings imply that quantum theory is close to optimal in terms of its predictive power, even when the predictions are completely random. http://phys.org/news/2012-07-quantum-theory.html *What does the term "measurement" mean in quantum mechanics? "Measurement" or "observation" in a quantum mechanics context are really just other ways of saying that the observer is interacting with the quantum system and measuring the result in toto. http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=597846
Now this is completely unheard of in science as far as I know. i.e. That a mathematical description of reality would advance to the point that one can actually perform a experiment showing that your current theory will not be exceeded in predictive power by another future theory is simply unprecedented in science! And please note that free will and consciousness are axiomatic to Quantum Theory in the experiment. This is hashed out in more detail here:
Free will and nonlocality at detection: Basic principles of quantum physics - Antoine Suarez - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhMrrmlTXl4 What Does Quantum Physics Have to Do with Free Will? – By Antoine Suarez – July 22, 2013 Excerpt: What is more, recent experiments are bringing to light that the experimenter’s free will and consciousness should be considered axioms (founding principles) of standard quantum physics theory. So for instance, in experiments involving “entanglement” (the phenomenon Einstein called “spooky action at a distance”), to conclude that quantum correlations of two particles are nonlocal (i.e. cannot be explained by signals traveling at velocity less than or equal to the speed of light), it is crucial to assume that the experimenter can make free choices, and is not constrained in what orientation he/she sets the measuring devices. To understand these implications it is crucial to be aware that quantum physics is not only a description of the material and visible world around us, but also speaks about non-material influences coming from outside the space-time.,,, https://www.bigquestionsonline.com/content/what-does-quantum-physics-have-do-free-will
Moreover, we have several lines of compelling evidence that atheistic materialists have to deal with in order to try to ‘explain away’ consciousness and free will in quantum mechanics. Here is a basic overview of the evidence:
Divinely Planted Quantum States – video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCTBygadaM4
But to go into a bit more detail, we have, at least, four different intersecting lines of experimental evidence, from quantum mechanics, which all converge to this one following conclusion;
1. Consciousness either preceded all of material reality or is a ‘epi-phenomena’ of material reality. 2. If consciousness is a ‘epi-phenomena’ of material reality then consciousness will be found to have no special position within material reality. Whereas conversely, if consciousness precedes material reality then consciousness will be found to have a special position within material reality. 3. Consciousness is found to have a special, even central, position within material reality. 4. Therefore, consciousness is found to precede material reality.
Here are the four intersecting lines of evidence from quantum mechanics. Wheeler’s delayed choice, Leggett’s inequalities, Wigner’s symmetries and Quantum Zeno effect; #1. Here’s Wheeler’s Delayed Choice,
Alain Aspect speaks on John Wheeler’s Delayed Choice Experiment – video http://vimeo.com/38508798 “Thus one decides the photon shall have come by one route or by both routes after it has already done its travel” John A. Wheeler Wheeler’s Classic Delayed Choice Experiment: Excerpt: We have delayed this choice until a time long after the particles “have passed by one side of the galaxy, or the other side of the galaxy, or both sides of the galaxy,” so to speak. Yet, it seems paradoxically that our later choice of whether to obtain this information determines which side of the galaxy the light passed, so to speak, billions of years ago. So it seems that time has nothing to do with effects of quantum mechanics. And, indeed, the original thought experiment was not based on any analysis of how particles evolve and behave over time – it was based on the mathematics. This is what the mathematics predicted for a result, and this is exactly the result obtained in the laboratory. http://www.bottomlayer.com/bottom/basic_delayed_choice.htm
Here is a variation of Wheeler’s Delayed Choice which highlights the observer's free will within quantum mechanics;
Quantum physics mimics spooky action into the past – April 23, 2012 Excerpt: The authors experimentally realized a “Gedankenexperiment” called “delayed-choice entanglement swapping”, formulated by Asher Peres in the year 2000. Two pairs of entangled photons are produced, and one photon from each pair is sent to a party called Victor. Of the two remaining photons, one photon is sent to the party Alice and one is sent to the party Bob. Victor can now choose between two kinds of measurements. If he decides to measure his two photons in a way such that they are forced to be in an entangled state, then also Alice’s and Bob’s photon pair becomes entangled. If Victor chooses to measure his particles individually, Alice’s and Bob’s photon pair ends up in a separable state. Modern quantum optics technology allowed the team to delay Victor’s choice and measurement with respect to the measurements which Alice and Bob perform on their photons. “We found that whether Alice’s and Bob’s photons are entangled and show quantum correlations or are separable and show classical correlations can be decided after they have been measured”, explains Xiao-song Ma, lead author of the study. According to the famous words of Albert Einstein, the effects of quantum entanglement appear as “spooky action at a distance”. The recent experiment has gone one remarkable step further. “Within a naïve classical world view, quantum mechanics can even mimic an influence of future actions on past events”, says Anton Zeilinger. http://phys.org/news/2012-04-quantum-physics-mimics-spooky-action.html
i.e. in a 'deterministic world how can my present choices possibly effect the state of material particles into the past? Within the materialistic/atheistic worldview the preceding experiment should be impossible!: bornagain77
Do minds need brains? Methinks not -- once we reckon with the evidence of cosmological design. kairosfocus

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