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06-24-2003, 06:53 AM | #21 | ||||
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Russ |
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06-24-2003, 07:04 AM | #22 | |
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Since I seperate the two into different categories I found the "lumping together" of the two to be approaching an argument from outrage which could easily misrepresent my position. This, combined with the specific parts you quoted from my post, lead me to suspect there may be some subtle implications in your post. If you did not intend it that way then please clarify the purpose of the link on the Holocaust. How does it address the post you quote from? Thanks. Russ |
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06-24-2003, 07:24 AM | #23 | ||||||
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Choices....Choices...Both are so attractive I really cant choose. Could I have a third option please? You make both so appealing I think I need a third Quote:
I guess I better get to work on my cardboard sign which will read..... Cant fiind ayn wurk, so dont bee a jerrk; I knead soom monee tonighite, cuase I am knot veary britte Quote:
Russ "Strumming the ole violen" :boohoo: |
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06-24-2003, 07:48 AM | #24 | |
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Personally, I think the whole idea of an invisible superbeing is both illogical and unscientific, and arguing about whether this irrational delusion is loving or hateful or uncaring or demented or [insert adjective here] is premature and pointless. |
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06-24-2003, 08:13 AM | #25 | |
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I do not think TE is logically false because I fail to see why an intelligent agent could not use evolution to produce the biodiversity we see on earth. I have a very hard time believing that undirected or unaided evolution is capable of producing what we see today. Some of the explanations I have read on purely natural pathways to some biological feature have been very unsatisfying to me. I see alot of "just-so stories and handwaving" in the explanations, so I fail to see why it is logically false that evolution was helped along the way by an outside, intelligent agent. As to the scientific part....TE does have its problems. Testability is a big one. ID also suffers from the testability problem as does any form of creationism. The best we can do is try to apply forensic type methods to determine whether or not something reflects design. Of course nailing down exact criteria for doing this is difficult and in some cases impossible, but I do not think it should be ignored. It has a long was to go, but I think as time goes on it will improve and we will be able to detect design with better precision. I say this because I believe as various fields grow and merge...like microbiology and robotics...we will begin to see design more clearly. I could be wrong, but I do believe this will occur in the near future. I do not agree with Behe and Dembski on many things, but I do not think their ideas are completely worthless either. So logically I find nothing wrong with TE. Scientifically I think testability is a problem that needs further attention. Russ "Strumming the ole violen" :boohoo: |
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06-24-2003, 08:20 AM | #26 |
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Like, as if, God were saying, "you humans have one way of creating things, the way of intelligent design, and you think it's the only way things get created. But I'll show you another way, a way you have never had any conception of: creation by an algorithmic process of evolution by natural selection!"
It wasn't the first time God laughed at human conceptions. The first time was when they thought the earth is flat. The second time was when they thought the earth to be at the centre of the universe and the stars to be just points of light stuck onto the dome of the sky. His ways are not our ways, and His thoughts not our thoughts, definitely. Great is He beyond all comprehension! |
06-24-2003, 08:26 AM | #27 | |
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06-24-2003, 08:38 AM | #28 | |||||
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Your first point is an argument from ignorance. Saying "I fail to see why Gumby and Poky couldn't have made the earth from monkey spit" is not a logical argument for my theory. The rest of your argument is simply from personal incredulity. Saying that you have a "very hard time believing it", when you clearly have a limited education in the subject, is not very persuasive. Quote:
Creationism and ID may have some problems with testability. I've noticed they have a fondness for vague ideas in which the answers will be interpreted to support their theories no matter what they are, and a marked tendency to avoid actually doing any experiments, anyway. The most I've ever seen out of the Discovery Institute, for instance, is haste to carp and whine about the results that real scientists get. Quote:
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06-24-2003, 09:13 AM | #29 | |||||||
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As to the "argument from ignorance" I said I see no reason why it is an ILLOGICAL viewpoint. I did not say that that implied it WAS a logical viewpoint. I simply stated I do not find any arguments that it is illogical to be very convincing. And as far as the "personal incredulity" argument goes....I do not need a doctorate in Biology to spot bull%$^& when I see it. Lets take the flagellum for example. The supposed "pathways" and "physical precursors" I have read about simply do not explain its origin. Alot of speculation and imagination, but not very convincing. Quote:
And yes, my knowledge is limited in this area and many other areas as well. But I am willing to stick my neck out and discuss things and learn stuff as I go along. I have an open mind and a sense of humor as well and if I am wrong I will admit it and move on with life. I am here to discuss, not to inflate my ego. Quote:
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As for Dembski....His attempt to provide a mathematical framework for detecting SC was admirable and was a difficult undertaking. His latest book falls short with regard to false positives (in my opinion) but does have some good points also. I find his use of a universal probability boundary to be compelling. Quote:
Russ "Strumming the ole violen" :boohoo: |
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06-24-2003, 09:35 AM | #30 |
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You know, long ago, when I was an evolution sceptic, it was computer-designed evolution simulations that convinced me of the validity of evolution - Dawkin's biomorphs, Karl Sim's Evolved Virtual Creatures, Tom Ray's Tierra et cetera.
They do indeed demonstrate evolution - how complexly organised entities can arise by a blind algorithmic process. But what is noteworthy about those simulations are that they demonstrate theistic evolution. In each of them, the simulation is not self-started, but requires an initial starter to kick them off. Eg Richard Dawkins is the "god" of biomorph evolution. It isn't an argument for the necessity of theistic evolution, but it shows that theistic evolution is a valid concept. Of course, it may open the can of worms about the designer/starter ("Who created God?"), but that's another topic for another forum... |
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