I'm sorry for blowing up at you DCrazy. I work as an engineer these days, and that gives me little patience for technical presumption--something that causes a lot of damage in an engineering context. The result is that I now have short fuse: I'll explain technical things once, maybe twice, but if after that the people who don't get it don't
realize they don't get it and are still talking... it's time to raise the volume. I guess that's not quite appropriate online...
I'll try to keep a lid on that in the future.
DCrazy wrote: Doesn't the concept of ID rely on faith in the existence of a higher being? Because I see a problem in arguing that X is complex, therefore it must have had an intelligent creator, and therefore X is proof of the existence of a designer. Replace X with your rock analogy and there is a host of evidence outside of the observable qualities of the rock itself from which one can derive its origin ("local culture and geography" and "erosion patterns and plant growth" were representative of the two paths of study you claimed plausible). Replace X with "the natural world", however, and there's no other evidence accessible to humans to support the existence of a designer, just faith alone. THAT is where my problem with ID-as-a-scientific-theory lies,
No, ID does not require faith in the intelligence studied. It produces evidence
for the intelligence studied. For example, an archeologist might discover an ancient city in Antarctica. He makes a design inference quite naturally--after all, nature doesn't make cities. The city is evidence for a set of intelligent beings--namely primitive people living in Antarctica--which he didn't previously believe existed. This is a design inference as evidence for existence.
Or take another example. Suppose you have a bag of scrabble tiles, and you dump them all out on the table. They land with all of the tiles facing down except fourteen of them, which line up and spell, "CALL YOUR MOTHER". Ten seconds ago, you didn't believe there were intelligent beings who could influence Scrabble times poured out of a bag. Now you do--and furthermore, you start speculating on the nature of those beings and wondering why they would tell you to call your mother. A design inference is
evidence for an intelligent influence which you did not previously believe existed. That isn't "faith" as the term is used to mean irrational belief--quite the contrary, it's belief due to evidence!
Whether this inference is problematic for your belief system depends on what you're studying. A design inference drawn from an email doesn't require anything more problematic than a belief in a human being on the other end. A design inference in biology would require you to believe in God, Aliens, Time Travel, Ancient Genetic Engineers, or... I don't know, something of that sort. A design inference in cosmology would pretty much require belief in God.
But note that--like the scrabble tiles--it doesn't require prior belief in the thing, and has nothing to do with "faith". The design inference--itself--
is the evidence for intelligent influence. You're right that you need further evidence to pick or name the influence, and that requires further study (or you may simply not have the information and be forced to wonder.)
Incidentally, belief works such that that inference can go the other way. You could throw those scrabble tiles and--though what you have looks like a design inference--you could be sure enough that nothing could influence them that you would conclude the design inference
had to be wrong. This is the route a lot of people take on origins--"Well, I may not know where life came from, and yeah, I don't have a good scientific explanation for it, and yeah it does look designed. But that design inference
must be wrong because I
know that life arose from natural causes." (I'd call that faith--but it's the healthy sort if it arises from auxiliary evidence.)
I think the difficulty is that some people see no reason to believe in God or aliens or whatever and conclude that
nobody can have a reason to believe in them--or worse, that such a reason could not
in principle exist. This is ideological bigotry of the highest degree.
WarAdvocat wrote:Whatever ID is being presented as (the science of distinguishing whether things are created or naturally occuring?), and however valid that field of inquiry may (or may not) be....The legitimization of 'ID' is the first step in the legitimization of "Creationism" in the eyes of the not-so-educated public. They're not going to draw fine lines like "oh this isn't ORIGINS, this is just GENERAL ID".
People don't draw the distinction well, that's true. The ID community itself doesn't draw the distinction between ID as a method and ID as an origins position very well. But as you say, unfortunate (or fortunate, depending on your POV) political consequences make a method any more or less valid.
Tricord wrote:In order to recognise text, you have to know what you're looking at. In other words, you need external knowledge prior to conducting the experiment. A monkey doesn't have that knowledge, and to him all pages look the same. He is not able to discern intelligent design among those pages,...
This is true. In order to draw a design inference, one of the necessary prerequisites is to be able to find a pattern or discern meaning in the thing you're looking at. Just what--rigorously speaking--
that means is the subject of deep philosophical fascination for me.
Tricord wrote:... because he himself is not on par with the level of design he is confronted with.
This is where you make your mistake. You don't have to be as smart as the designer you detect, nor do you have to understand all of his purpose. Just some of it--just enough of it to draw a design inference.
For example, if an advanced alien spaceship landed on earth, we would recognize it as designed. The aliens themselves may be far, far intellectually superior to us, and their technology might be entirely incomprehensible. We may not know why they came, what they're saying, or what they want from us. But we can recognize a spaceship as a mechanical device for transporting creatures through space, and recognize that they designed it to do that on p urpose. That is plenty of comprehension of their intellectual activity to allow us to draw a design inference.
Tricord wrote:So, lets accept ID theory for a while. It is in my opinion trivial that we will never be able to understand it, to gather knowledge about our existance, because doing so would put us on par with God himself.
This is not true. All that is necessary--if we are indeed studying God--is that some subset of his motives are comprehensible to us. That is, that his thoughts are not
wholly alien to us. This strikes me as entirely plausable, the same way some of my thoughts and motives are accessible to a dog. Not nearly all of them, of course, but it can certainly understand "belly rub" and understands plenty 'nuff of "No!".
Ferno, maybe we should resurrect that ID brainteasers thread. I was disappointed with the lack of response the first time around, and it's a good way to intuitively explore when a design inference is valid and when it isn't. Maybe I'll start another thread of that sort.
I know the experiment I gave is kinda stupid, but it
would work. It demonstrates that intelligence can be detected under certain circumstances. It's sort of the stupid counter-example you give when people say, "There is no scientific evidence that design can ever be reliably detected". That clearly isn't true. Of course, what they really have in mind is some certain set of circumstances under which design cannot be detected--and
that is the more interesting question.
By the way, I have not yet seen a rigorous method for the detection of design that satisfies me. Dembski has some good ideas, but he didn't get there--and I think he's the only one that has seriously tried. I'm not even sure it's possible in general, but I know it must be in specific cases (see the Stupid Experiment). In the mean time, I applaud those exploring the question and I think the intuitive games are fun.