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| QUOTE | | Too many people claiming to take the science angle, but sounding like their 'religion' is being threatened. |
I don't know anyone that considers science to be anything like their religion, rather its a tool used to investigate phenomena.
| QUOTE | | ID is NOT the same as Creationism. |
It postulates, in broadest terms, that the world was created.
| QUOTE | | It may be wrong, but it does endeavour to be science. |
The large organizations pushing it, like the Discovery Institute, clearly have an anti-science agenda, as revealed in their internal memo, the "Wedge Document".
| QUOTE | | Creationism in the strict sense comes from a particular fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible. |
What do you mean in the 'strictest' sense? In any sense it comes from the bible. Its people trying to show that there really was a Flood with Noah and pairs of animals. That there was a physical garden and eve was made from adam's rib, etc.
| QUOTE | | ID in its pure form does not stem from 'revelation' but rather from observation and hypothesis, which is how science should work. |
THis is the basic bone of contention. ID probably wouldn't exist without Creationism. Its earliest form was "Natural Theology", in which people thought that they could look at nature and determine the characteristics of god, or rather see that god if good because things in nature are in proportion.
Modern ID starts off with the idea that intelligent design can be detected, and then looks for ways to show it. These attempts ultimately boil down to trying to 'show' that something is too complex to have 'occured naturally'.
Thats not science.
| QUOTE | | Fundamentally ID theory proposes that much of the information content in living organisms cannot be explained by in situ processes and must have been introduced from outside in some way. |
No. It proposes that nature cannot create certain complex systems without a thinking and intelligent agent.
| QUOTE | | Dembski's peer reviewed monograph 'The Design Inference - eliminating chance through small probablities' (published by Cambridge Univeristy Press), |
This is a typical tactic. Cambridge University Press is a business, it publishes books. THe fact that Cambridge University Press has published a book is meaningless in regards to the information content of that book. Why make this silly 'argument from authority' anyway? The authorities on science and biology flatly state that ID isn't science, and ithat Darwinian Natural Selection is essentially the strongest theory out there. I don't find that too meaningful, but its a heck of a lot more meaningful than saying 'something with the name 'Cambrige' printed it, so it must be true' is.
| QUOTE | | and shows how design can be identified in a scientifically rigorous manner. |
Please explain this rigorous argument.
| QUOTE | | ID theory as a science |
Please explain how ID 'theory' can be refuted.
| QUOTE | | does not comment on the source of this design, that would be religion. |
If the postulates of ID are scientific, then the source of the design is in the domain of science, not religion. ID proponents are often very careful to not talk about who's doing the designing, but, clearly, since we are talking about life being designed, then there must be something non-biological that designed biological life, ie, God.
| QUOTE | | The allegation that ID theory is the new brand of Creationism is manifestly untrue. |
You know, there's a reason why one of the big backers of ID is Phil Johnson, a lawyer. Its because the 'movement', by and large, is trying to get science removed from the schools and replaced with irrational metaphysical beleifs. ID is a type of creationism, just like so called "Scientific Creationism" is a type of biblical creationism.
| QUOTE | | Some of the work done by ID proponents has been carried out by properly qualified scientists, employing scientific method and published under peer review. |
Such as?  | QUOTE | | So what makes it not science? |
It would be science, if it were true. Since its not, its not science.
| QUOTE | | It may be wrong, or it may be right, but that's true of all any published science. You dont have to agree with it, but to resort to petty name calling is foolish and childish. If it is wrong, use scientific method to show why. |
I think everyone would rather see evidence that shows Intelligent Design is a good theory. Or even is workable as a theory.
| QUOTE | | Thats a consequence we have to live with. |
And its also one that is essentially irrelevant. No one rejects ID because its not popular in scientific journals. Its noted that its not accepted, but peopel reject it because its simply not a scientific theory and doesn't have any evidence to support it.
| QUOTE | | For many scientists in academia the 'presumption of naturalism' is held as an absolute, which by definition excludes ID, |
And yet, you said that ID doesn't involve any information about the designer and isn't a religion. But now you are saying its all about metaphysics. Which is it, science, or irrational metaphysical beleifs??
| QUOTE | | Surely science should be about using scientific method to take us where ever the evidence leads |
And that methodology can not inform us about metaphysical happenings. Ipso facto, ID is not science. You can not demonstrate that something which exists can't exist naturally. You can not demonstrate the supernatural.
| QUOTE | | not the closed-minded zealot attitude of Dawkins and many others today. |
Dawkins is a scientist. Phil Johnson is a professional rhetorician, a lawyer. Lets not have any mud slung onto Dawkin's. You didn't even show how he is a 'zealot', but rather just slandered the guy and left it at that. So how can you say that people need to not 'reinforce preconceptions'??
| QUOTE | | I do not consider myself to be a creationist, but I do feel that ID has raised many significant questions that so far evolutionary biology has failed to address. |
Fair enough. Such as what?
| QUOTE | | Time will tell what is the truth of the matter, I suspect that a century from now the debate will be settled for good, one way or the other. |
Why? What technological advances could possibly make a difference? The ID arguement is laid out, plain and simple. The ID advocates make the case that it is essentially correct. That case has been reviewed, and found to be fundamentally flawed in that its simply not a scientific methodology.
You'd think that you could detect design. After all, we know that an airplane is designed, so you'd think we could quantify that design aspect, and then see if there are any parrelells in the biological world. But that misses, entirely, the basic ideas of darwinian evolution, things will have this appearance of design, because they've got a 'fit' to a 'function'.
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