ANY sort of intelligence that can predict and plan would fit into the criteria used by ID.Palzon wrote:So show me how we test for Intelligent Design that is not man-made
Scenario 1:
So, say you and I get sent together on a space ship to be the first people to walk on Mars. (we will certainly have interesting discussions on our way there!) We finally arrive and hop out of our little ship. A little exploring, and Lo and Behold!, we come upon a bizarre artifact. Well, *I* think it is an artifact, YOU say it was sculpted by natural geological forces. I'm not going to give any details, because that will just distract us from the question, is it a reasonable scientific question to ask whether the "object" we found was natural, or an artifact constructed by an intelligence completely alien from our own. I don't see how we can reasonably deny the scientific nature of the question. And how will we determine the answer? We will look for elements of the structure that could not reasonably have been shaped by natural forces, we will check for tool marks, we will analyze the structures possible function (if any). In short, we will look for evidence of Intelligent Design. And there will probably be LOTS of debate about who won the argument, but there shouldn't be any debate about whether the argument was a legitimate scientific question.
Scenario 2: SETI picks up a strange signal, they've picked up lots of signals before, but this one, this one certainly seems to be more than just static. But its not like any signal humanity has ever produced. Is there a message hidden in the structure? And can we determine that there *IS* a message even if we can't read it or recognize it's purpose? Cryptanalysis actually has techniques that might be able to do that, to prove that the structure contained information, even if they couldn't determine what the message was. And stellar physicist would certainly be trying to determine if any known phenomenon could possibly have produced the interesting burst. Again, the outcome of the study is uncertain, but the question was obviously worth asking.
Scenario 3: When studying the cosmic background radiation, scientists uncover a "signal". This wasn't being beamed to us, it had to be built into the way the universe expanded after the big bang. Scientist and Cryptographers world wide will spend lifetimes analyzing that signal. They will look, not for patterns, but for information. The cryptographers will help the scientist with this because cryptography is all about separating a SIGNAL with actual information out of noise, and very specifically about determining whether the signal really WAS a signal, or whether any message was put in there only by the reader.
This scenario comes from this article where scientist are, seriously, searching for this message in the cosmic background radiation. I don't think they will find anything, but I don't question that the search can be done in a legitimate and scientific way. Please note, however, the bizarre hypocrisy in the article: ID is science if WE do it, but not if YOU do it.
There is no naturalistic evolutionary path to the Flagellum.Palzon wrote:give me a scientifically testable statement that ID makes.
It's obviously testable because the scientific community has been trying to test it. That's why we keep hearing about the secretory organ that contains 1/3 of the molecules that are in the flagellum.
The most fragile issue in ID right now (from my point of view) is probably the attempt to define IC rigidly. McDonalds reducibly complex mousetrap is one of the best attempts to falsify IC so far. His reducible mousetrap path has holes you could drive an 18 wheeler through, but it still does a lot better than I was expecting it to do and points out a weakness in the way ID defines IC. BOTH sides of this debate need to focus a lot of attention here. ID needs to come up with a really solid way to define IC, and the naturalists need to come up with a complete gradual path to a supposedly IC structure.
What's unreasonable about assuming that planning and predicting requires intelligence? any intelligence that couldn't plan and predict would be difficult for me to define as intelligent, and certainly wouldn't be detectable by ID methods.Birdseye wrote:Your analogy works only because there is an established framwork for what constitutes a human design.
I must be doing a really bad job of this. ID methods could be applied to a virus to determine if it were naturally evolved, or came out of a lab in Korea. ID could be used to determine if Aliens made a face on mars. And while most supporters of ID clearly think that the designer of life is God, that has nothing to do with the theory behind detecting design. IF you are convinced that the science is good and blood clotting or the flagellum or whatever structure could not have evolved, then you have to deal with the philosophical implications of that discovery. It doesn't WORK the other way around, you don't prove there is a Designer and then look for evidence of ID. You look for evidence of ID and, if you find it, then you have to decide who you think the designer is, and ID won't help you there.Birdseye wrote:you have to prove the existance of God for Intelligent Design to be proven.
Please note: if we convinced everyone tomorrow that the flagellum WAS designed, it wouldn't change most naturalists minds. They will come up with some other philisophical scenario to explain the design. ID does NOT equal creationism.
I urge you to pick up Darwin's Black box by Behe and read his arguments. He isn't nit picking at small problems, he is a molecular biologist who is pointing out some major scientific issues that must be addressed. Behe is primarily addressing the issue of Irreducibly Complex structures. This means that the structure doesn't have any useful function unless all of it's parts are there and working. Natural Selection has to work in small steps, where each step has an advantage over the previous step. It can not help us evolve a structure unless you can find a gradual path to that structure. THAT is what ID is about. It's looking for evidence of design. Structures with incremental natures might have evolved, ID isn't interested in them. Not that the DID evolve (or not), they just don't fall under the research area that ID covers.Birdseye wrote:But what you seem to be doing is nit picking small parts that don't seem to work yet, and opting in favor of this "Magic Wand" as a better explanation.
...I think you'll need to explain why natural selection predicting the future is the ONLY way certain life forms could have evolved, which I think you won't be able to do.
...I have no idea what ID is even ABOUT after that statement.
Own it. Good book. There are many strange and wonderful things in the universe, But how would you redefine Natural Selection to allow it to work in any other way than the current definition? We aren't talking about the behavior of light here, we are talking about a pretty well understood process.Birdseye wrote:I reccomend "Schrodinger's Kittens" by John Gribbin of Cambridge University.
Both, I believe that the science behind ID is sound, but the very nature of a Scientific Theory is that it is falsifiable. I'm not so stubborn as to say I wouldn't quit believing in ID if someone falsified it. I'm not expecting that outcome, but I remain open to it.Birdseye wrote:Do you think that ID is but a *possibility* or do you believe it to be true?
And let me clarify again, if I became convinced that ID was false, that wouldn't mean I quit believing the universe was designed, it would mean I quit believing that the methods of ID could DETECT that design. THAT'S what ID is, methods to detect design.
Birdseye wrote:I'm just wondering why there is such resistance to the idea that science is simply describing God's method of creation
Kilarin wrote:I don't resist that idea at all.
I believe that God created this entire universe and all of the laws it follows, so yes, I think studying Science is studying the mind of God. When we study pi, I think we are studying part of the way God built the universe. God designed space in such a way that the ratio of a circles diameter to it's circumfrance is just so. But in studying the universe this way we are studying the creators design, but we aren't finding EVIDENCE of that design. My statement was that ID doesn't cover structures that could have possibly evolved naturalistically, that just means exactly that, the methods don't apply, they don't DETECT design in those circumstances.Birdseye wrote:You sure seem to be
Sagan postulated finding a message in Pi. That would be something incredible to find, if it's there (and no, I don't think it is), of course we would want to find it, and study it, and prove whether or not it was actually proof that pi had been designed. And finding (or not finding) such a message would not, in any way, invalidate the previous point that God created the entire universe and all of the laws that govern it.
Kilarin