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Topic: Evidence for a Designer...
SkyHook5652's photo
Sat 11/07/09 01:29 PM
creative wrote:

Main Entry: Oc·cam's razor

Variant(s): also Ock·ham's razor \ˈä-kəmz-\

Function: noun

Etymology: William of Occam

Date: circa 1837

: a scientific and philosophic rule that entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily which is interpreted as requiring that the simplest of competing theories be preferred to the more complex or that explanations of unknown phenomena be sought first in terms of known quantities


Abra responded:

So?

The keywords there are "competing theories" not competing guesses.


So what about the bolded, italicized, and underlined key words?
If I may jump in here…

It is true that explanations should first be sought in terms of known quantities.

But the point is that, in this case, known quantities do not provide an explanation – just as “Newtonian quantities” do not provide an explanation for quantum behavior. Thus, if we are to have any explanation at all, we have no choice but to postulate unknown quantities.

One could argue, that "Intelligent Design" at least offers an explanation of how order came to be. Therefore it qualifies as a valid "theory".
Is that why so many scientists are on that bandwagon?
No. The reason for that is the same reason that has always plagued science (and all of mankind for that matter) – “resistance to change”.

It’s perfectly analogous to “inertia” – there are a few centuries of time and effort behind the direction science is now going. Changing the direction of something with that much “inertia” behind it is not easy.

Thankfully, there are some small pockets of change (e.g. PEAR), so at least it’s starting.

So the scientists object and say, "So who designed the designers?" But that objection is futile, because science already explains everything in terms of unexplained fundamental forces and particles. So they aren't any further ahead.

Who designed those things?

It's a two-way street!

Science is standing on quicksand and offering to toss other people a rope?

Get real.
Asking "Who designed those things?" first assumes that they are/were designed. Science does not ask that question because it cannot be answered. It is not a two-way street. Science knows it's limitations.
Actually, there is a missing prerequisite step in both those positions – “Is there a designer?”

That’s what this whole thread is about.

The problem is that, with very few exceptions, that question has never been addressed scientifically. So of course, there can be very little scientific evidence either way.

creativesoul's photo
Sat 11/07/09 01:37 PM
Sky,

Good post. I had not appealed to Occam's razor, I was simply clarifying the idea in an attempt to correct it's misuse.

:wink:

SkyHook5652's photo
Sat 11/07/09 01:51 PM
Sky,

Good post. I had not appealed to Occam's razor, I was simply clarifying the idea in an attempt to correct it's misuse.

:wink:
Yes, I understand that.

I was just replying to the "What about...?" question.

:smile:

Abracadabra's photo
Sat 11/07/09 02:20 PM
Edited by Abracadabra on Sat 11/07/09 02:22 PM
Abra wrote:

You've been arguing relentless for months trying to push the idea that logic and science support no-design over a design.


Creative wrote:

I have?


From my perspective you most certainly have.

I have offered you repeatedly that science simply cannot say. I have even offered this very thing several times throughout this very thread.

You continually refuse to accept that and take the hard-core stance that science favors no-design.

In fact, you've spoken about the "burden of proof". But, in truth, there is no burden of prove on me, because all I'm saying is that science can't say.

The real burden of proof is on you to prove why science favors no-design.

It appears that the only thing that can even remotely be offered in that regard is "Occam's Razor", which you have just pretended to not be appealing to:

Creative wrote:

Sky,

Good post. I had not appealed to Occam's razor, I was simply clarifying the idea in an attempt to correct it's misuse.


Well, if you're not appealing to Occam's Razor then what's your support for claiming that science favors no-design. huh

I say, that science can't make a determination at all. However, if we want to look at evidence for what it could 'potentially favor' (assuming that we are allowed to extrapolate "outside of the box") I would actually suggest that the scientific evidence favors design.

However, I refuse to do that in practice because, like Sky, I'm fully aware that extrapolations from "inside the box" to "outside of the box" are meaningless.

I don't normally go around claiming that science supports "design".

I only took that position in this thread becasue I'm fully aware that your purpose was to try to paint a picture that science supports "no design".

So I took the challenge to show you why that doesn't work. laugh

Normally I don't argue for "design". Instead, I show how the things that science has discovered, observed, and experimentally verified (especially in the realm of quantum physics) can potentially be used to show why certain seemingly supernatural and psychic phenomena can indeed be plausibly explained in terms of the mathematics and observed behavior of the quantum world.

I'm probably the most down-to-earth and skeptical scientist that you'll even encounter.

Where people make a really huge mistake with me is to assume that I'm claiming to have 'proof' of something when, in fact, all I ever do is offer plausibility arguments and serve up food-for-thought. laugh

In the meantime I'll repeat again.

Science is in no position to answer the question of design versus no-design, and arguments based on physical observations can indeed be made for 'both cases', but in neither case can those argument retain any integrity when extrapolated to "outside of the box".

So science simply can't say one way or the other.

That's my current position to date, and always has been. As with all scientific positions, it's subject to change as new evidence becomes available.





creativesoul's photo
Sat 11/07/09 02:56 PM
Abracadabra wrote:

You've been arguing relentless for months trying to push the idea that logic and science support no-design over a design.


Creative wrote:

I have?


From my perspective you most certainly have.


Your perspective is severely flawed.

Abracadabra wrote:

I have offered you repeatedly that science simply cannot say. I have even offered this very thing several times throughout this very thread. You continually refuse to accept that and take the hard-core stance that science favors no-design.


Everything I have written supports the idea that science does not say cannot say. Nothing I have written contradicts that, so I have no idea where you are obtaining the information from which you draw the conclusion that I supposedly take "the hardcore stance that science favors no-design". That is bullsh*t! I have given sound philosophical proof regarding the fallacious form of argument which is required to even begin to delve into the teleological idea of a designed universe.

Simply put, your arguing against things unwritten by me. If you feel as though that is not the case, then by all means...

Quote me!

In fact, you've spoken about the "burden of proof". But, in truth, there is no burden of prove on me, because all I'm saying is that science can't say.


That is not all you have said, though.

Burden of proof is had upon s/he who makes a positive assertion. A claim of "The universe is a design." is such a thing. Your arguing for that idea requires substantive evidence. All you have presented can(and has) been explained away. There would be no point nor need in invoking the idea of burden of proof if your only claim was that science does not or cannot say. That was not your only claim.

The real burden of proof is on you to prove why science favors no-design.


Why would I possibly be required to shoulder the burden of proof for a claim which I have not made?

huh

Abracadabra wrote:

It appears that the only thing that can even remotely be offered in that regard is "Occam's Razor", which you have just pretended to not be appealing to:


Creative wrote:

Sky,

Good post. I had not appealed to Occam's razor, I was simply clarifying the idea in an attempt to correct it's misuse.


Well, if you're not appealing to Occam's Razor then what's your support for claiming that science favors no-design.


Where is yours for saying I have?

laugh

I say, that science can't make a determination at all. However, if we want to look at evidence for what it could 'potentially favor' (assuming that we are allowed to extrapolate "outside of the box") I would actually suggest that the scientific evidence favors design. However, I refuse to do that in practice because, like Sky, I'm fully aware that extrapolations from "inside the box" to "outside of the box" are meaningless.

I don't normally go around claiming that science supports "design".

I only took that position in this thread becasue I'm fully aware that your purpose was to try to paint a picture that science supports "no design".


This says it all, does it not? Your delusion regarding what you thought I was up to affected your mindset(perceptual capabilities) in such a way that your goal was to disprove what you wrongfullythought I was up to. Thank you for admitting it.

ohwell

So I took the challenge to show you why that doesn't work.


To show why what doesn't work? huh

Normally I don't argue for "design". Instead, I show how the things that science has discovered, observed, and experimentally verified (especially in the realm of quantum physics) can potentially be used to show why certain seemingly supernatural and psychic phenomena can indeed be plausibly explained in terms of the mathematics and observed behavior of the quantum world.

I'm probably the most down-to-earth and skeptical scientist that you'll even encounter.


Perhaps you are. I cannot make such a conclusion because I do my best to avoid thought processes which lead to placing a personal value upon you personally.

Where people make a really huge mistake with me is to assume that I'm claiming to have 'proof' of something when, in fact, all I ever do is offer plausibility arguments and serve up food-for-thought.

In the meantime I'll repeat again.

Science is in no position to answer the question of design versus no-design, and arguments based on physical observations can indeed be made for 'both cases', but in neither case can those argument retain any integrity when extrapolated to "outside of the box".

So science simply can't say one way or the other.

That's my current position to date, and always has been. As with all scientific positions, it's subject to change as new evidence becomes available.


I agree.

:wink:

Abracadabra's photo
Sat 11/07/09 03:10 PM

I agree.

:wink:


Well, break open the champagne and let's celebrate! drinker

creativesoul's photo
Sat 11/07/09 03:12 PM
Where is smiless? I am hungry!

laugh

I am poor too though, would cheap beer suffice?

:wink:

SkyHook5652's photo
Sat 11/07/09 03:24 PM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Sat 11/07/09 03:27 PM
Abracadabra wrote:

I have offered you repeatedly that science simply cannot say. I have even offered this very thing several times throughout this very thread. You continually refuse to accept that and take the hard-core stance that science favors no-design.
Everything I have written supports the idea that science does not say cannot say. Nothing I have written contradicts that, so I have no idea where you are obtaining the information from which you draw the conclusion that I supposedly take "the hardcore stance that science favors no-design". That is bullsh*t! I have given sound philosophical proof regarding the fallacious form of argument which is required to even begin to delve into the teleological idea of a designed universe.
I beg to differ.

“Assuming a premise” is not a “fallacious form of argument”. It is exactly what is always done when there is no evidence to the contrary. Philosophers do it. Scientists do it. “Even uneducated humans do it.” (Cole Porter joke).

The only requirement for any argument is a premise (“designer”/”no designer”). If there is no evidence to the contrary, then there is no logical reason to exclude any premise from consideration. And as far as I can tell, everyone is agreed that there is no evidence either way.

So we simply say “What if ____?” and then proceed from there. That is where the "delving in the teleological argument" begins.

Nothing fallacious about that at all.

Abracadabra's photo
Sat 11/07/09 04:25 PM
Edited by Abracadabra on Sat 11/07/09 04:33 PM

Abracadabra wrote:

I have offered you repeatedly that science simply cannot say. I have even offered this very thing several times throughout this very thread. You continually refuse to accept that and take the hard-core stance that science favors no-design.
Everything I have written supports the idea that science does not say cannot say. Nothing I have written contradicts that, so I have no idea where you are obtaining the information from which you draw the conclusion that I supposedly take "the hardcore stance that science favors no-design". That is bullsh*t! I have given sound philosophical proof regarding the fallacious form of argument which is required to even begin to delve into the teleological idea of a designed universe.
I beg to differ.

“Assuming a premise” is not a “fallacious form of argument”. It is exactly what is always done when there is no evidence to the contrary. Philosophers do it. Scientists do it. “Even uneducated humans do it.” (Cole Porter joke).

The only requirement for any argument is a premise (“designer”/”no designer”). If there is no evidence to the contrary, then there is no logical reason to exclude any premise from consideration. And as far as I can tell, everyone is agreed that there is no evidence either way.

So we simply say “What if ____?” and then proceed from there. That is where the "delving in the teleological argument" begins.

Nothing fallacious about that at all.


I agree with Sky on the point he just made.

In fact, isn't this the way that scientists work as well.

First they postulate the existence of strings. Then the decide how many dimensions the strings need to vibrate in, and how big or small the strings have to be, etc, etc, etc.

But the whole entire theory is all based on an imagined postulated string.

That's how a designer theory should work too. You just postulate that a designer exists, and then you go about saying what all properties that designer would need to possess in order to make a consistent theory.

That's how all theories are done.

Abracadabra's photo
Sat 11/07/09 04:41 PM
I feel a need to mention also, that Jeanniebean is the only one working in the correct direction. (well, I guess Sky is too).

JB begins with the only thing that she can know with 100% certainty:

I AM.

That's her starting point. She works outward from there. So she's already starting with an obvious intelligent entity. That's a given that can't be denied. That's her starting point. She begins with her own conscious existence and works outward.

If we stop and think about the scientific approach (as a philosophy) it's utterly weird. Scientists are attempting to start with imaginary strings, and then work backwards to figure out what THEY ARE. laugh

When you stop and think about this, it seems ludicous.

I think Jeanniebean has the right idea. flowerforyou

SkyHook5652's photo
Sat 11/07/09 05:02 PM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Sat 11/07/09 05:06 PM
I feel a need to mention also, that Jeanniebean is the only one working in the correct direction. (well, I guess Sky is too).

JB begins with the only thing that she can know with 100% certainty:

I AM.

That's her starting point. She works outward from there. So she's already starting with an obvious intelligent entity. That's a given that can't be denied. That's her starting point. She begins with her own conscious existence and works outward.

If we stop and think about the scientific approach (as a philosophy) it's utterly weird. Scientists are attempting to start with imaginary strings, and then work backwards to figure out what THEY ARE. laugh

When you stop and think about this, it seems ludicous.

I think Jeanniebean has the right idea. flowerforyou
BOY am I glad to see someone else recognizing this.

I started a thread a year or more ago ("Self-centric.vs.Other-centric", if anyone remembers) that attempted to show exatcly this: "Scientists are attempting to start with imaginary strings, and then work backwards to figure out what THEY ARE. laugh"

But scientists also seem to have a death grip on the idea that "perception/observation is unreliable". So why do they base everything they do on perception/observation??? It truly is ludicrous. The absolute best they can ever come up with is "agreement".

So there doesn't seem to be any better starting point than "I", because if "I" is false, then nothing can considered to be true - simply because "I" is what determines truth or falsehood.

(And yes, Jeannie has pushed the idea more than I have. I have just been more more inclined to try to avoid the ridicule that seems to come with expressing sich a viewpoint.)

So here's to you "sticking to your guns" Jeannie! drinker

And thanks to you Abra! flowerforyou

no photo
Sun 11/08/09 01:40 AM
Edited by Jeanniebean on Sun 11/08/09 01:42 AM

I feel a need to mention also, that Jeanniebean is the only one working in the correct direction. (well, I guess Sky is too).

JB begins with the only thing that she can know with 100% certainty:

I AM.

That's her starting point. She works outward from there. So she's already starting with an obvious intelligent entity. That's a given that can't be denied. That's her starting point. She begins with her own conscious existence and works outward.

If we stop and think about the scientific approach (as a philosophy) it's utterly weird. Scientists are attempting to start with imaginary strings, and then work backwards to figure out what THEY ARE. laugh

When you stop and think about this, it seems ludicous.

I think Jeanniebean has the right idea. flowerforyou
BOY am I glad to see someone else recognizing this.

I started a thread a year or more ago ("Self-centric.vs.Other-centric", if anyone remembers) that attempted to show exatcly this: "Scientists are attempting to start with imaginary strings, and then work backwards to figure out what THEY ARE. laugh"

But scientists also seem to have a death grip on the idea that "perception/observation is unreliable". So why do they base everything they do on perception/observation??? It truly is ludicrous. The absolute best they can ever come up with is "agreement".

So there doesn't seem to be any better starting point than "I", because if "I" is false, then nothing can considered to be true - simply because "I" is what determines truth or falsehood.

(And yes, Jeannie has pushed the idea more than I have. I have just been more more inclined to try to avoid the ridicule that seems to come with expressing sich a viewpoint.)

So here's to you "sticking to your guns" Jeannie! drinker

And thanks to you Abra! flowerforyou



Well I start with the only thing I am certain of and no one can argue with me about what I know.

I AM.

And after all of this deep contemplating I end up right back where I started from.

I AM.

But at least I got to meet all of you. :banana: :banana: bigsmile

I remain. I AM.

Everything else is just an opinion.

But you are real. You are the ONE.

Shoku's photo
Sun 11/08/09 09:17 PM
Abra:
Skoku wrote:

I quite agree. Do you think the designer of our universe has any observable qualities?


Keep in mind that what we are discussing is "evidence" for a designer. We're not attempting to describe the designer itself.

Have I given any descriptions of any designer? I don't think so.

All I gave is 'evidence' for design.
No, you gave fallacies for design n_n

Abra wrote:

However, the universe is the object in question and it's hardly 'invisible', it has plenty of observables that need to be explained.


Shoku replied:

Does the explanation get to be "an invisible unicorn did it" or do we need to observe some indication of it before we can claim it as the cause of things?


Why not? This is what scientists do all the time.
Man you must have been a crappy science teacher.

They can't explain the gravitational behavior of the universe, so they postulate the existence of "an invisible Dark Matter"
Alright, the distinction between dark matter and dark energy are outside my expertise so I guess you win that point.
*that's actually a really terrible reason to say your argument is any good.

They can't explain the accelerated expansion of the universe, so they postulate the existence of "an invisible Dark Energy".
Actually space is expanding rather than the things in it moving outwards and I'm not aware of any equations that say the expansion of space should require energy input so I don't understand that one either.

They can't meld together General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics, so they postulate the existence of "invisible hidden dimensions and vibrating strings".
POSTULATE does not equal STATE. They're saying maybe there are strings and saying generally where to look to find out, but not that is even something you should have heavy expectations of.

And they WILL be wrong. Not necessarily entirely wrong and even right in general but when we actually get a chance to look it's not going to 100% match their expectations through and through.

How is what I'm doing any different?
Well basically you're attacking one view with the implication that if it is wrong yours is the only alternative and when things are different from what you thought you... you don't even acknowledge it, you just edit it out.

We can't explain how this universe can have the obvious order that it has so I postulate the existence of "an invisible designer"
Exactly what do you think things would look like without a creator involved?

How is this any different from postulating invisible Dark Matter, Dark Energy, Hidden Dimensions, and Strings that are so small that the current mathematics of Quantum Mechanics that totally forbids them to even exist much less be observed. spock

Stings need to be far smaller than Planck's Constant. But Quantum Mechanics is founded on the very idea that Planck's Constant is the smallest that anything can be. If we can detect anything smaller than Planck's Constant we will have successfully proven that Quantum Mechanics is WRONG.
That's talking about energy, not sizes.

But what's so bad about proving old ideas didn't te the whole story anyway?

Yet, here scientists are, postulating the existence of "invisible things" that their own theory of Quantum Mechanics forbids. laugh

So how is my postulate of the existence of an "invisible designer" because we observe design in the universe,

If we observe the effect something has it's not entirely invisible.

So tell me what there is that makes the designer not invisible. I tore up the questions you had before, have you got anything else?

any different from their many postulates of "invisible things" to explain the observed behavior that they can't explain otherwise? spock

Wouldn't that be rather hypocritical of a scientist to suggest that I shouldn't do what mainstream science does on a regular basis? huh
I'd be much happier with your doing it if you understood it.

Abra wrote:

Moreover, your example of an "invisible anything" is a bogus example, and quite misleading. Something that has no observable qualities requires no explanation at all. To even talk about such a thing would be a farce.


Shoku replies:

I quite agree. Do you think the designer of our universe has any observable qualities?


No, and I haven't described any either.
You sure keep saying that we can see the design a whole lot.

Ok, maybe this will help. You can't see wind but if your laundry is hanging out to dry you can see the wind push it. We thinks of seeing wind as seeing everything in it's path bend or fall over it the direction the wind is blowing. Show me that stuff for your designer.

However, compare this with String Theory! Which is mainstream science!

They have not only hypotheses the existence of strings to explain what they can't explain, but they have describe 7 additional hidden dimensions required for these string to wiggle in. They are assigning properties to the stings such as size and vibrations attributes etc. So they not only postulate these invisible things, but they are claiming to described precisely what they must be like.
Yep, string theory doesn't fit Occam's razor so it's not a default. If we observed those seven dimensions and they had the properties they should have according to string theory then maybe it would end up the simplest explanation but right now it really is just a popular guess people are excited about finding evidence for or against.

I haven't gone anywhere near that far.
You've said there's unnatural order to EVERYTHING and thrown in an extra consciousness (or several) for that to wiggle in.

All I've done is conclude that there must be a designer.
CONCLUDE does not equal POSTULATE.

I haven't even attempted to say anything about what the designer might be like. Wux thinks the designer whistles through his nose and has smelly feet. But, in truth, I think that's just because wux isn't pleased with the design. :wink:

I don't say anything about the designer at all.
And cosmologists[/russia] say anything about what dark matter or energy are like? This isn't holding up sir.

So I'm nowhere near as bad as the scientists who have spent all our TAX MONEY on designing invisible strings just because they can't figure out how to get their mathematics of General Relativity to match up with their mathematics of Quantum Mechanics. ohwell

And you accuse me of doing silly things? slaphead
Well yes, and you incessant lol'ing at me with so many emoticons doesn't help the case for you wanting to be taken seriously.

Abra wrote:

However, the universe is the object in question and it's hardly 'invisible', it has plenty of observables that need to be explained.


Skoku replied:

Does the explanation get to be "an invisible unicorn did it" or do we need to observe some indication of it before we can claim it as the cause of things?


Well, again, this is just a rehash of what was already said.

Have scientists observed Dark Matter?

Have scientists observed Dark Energy?

Have scientists observed Strings?

Have scientists observed "hidden invisible dimensions"?

If not, then why are you jumping on me?
I think I've made it obvious enough by now.

Jump on the scientists for a while! laugh
Oh I hate the excuse the early rapid inflation. "It's too similar" means what? Too similar on what basis? People say the "stuff" would have to have been much closer to be so similar but wasn't it supposed to have basically been right on top of the same point at the start anyway?

*I understand that it probably matters if things were close before or after the universe went transparent and atoms being present and so forth but I've never had an official explanation of what exactly the reason for that is, just the watered down Discovery channel special explanations that don't really tell you squat about physics.

In fact, they still haven't observed a lone quark. And according to that theory they never will because it's impossible for a lone quark to even exist by itself according to the theory. Yet they still believe in quarks. Because believing in their existence "explains something".
We've split atoms and made the quarks recombine into other particles. Not good enough?

Abra wrote:

Going back to the previous quote above, "happenstance" does not explain the observables that we see.


Shoku wrote:

Ya, happenstance is a f___ing mongoloid explanation for things. Only an brain dead idiot would say it was happenstance.


Well if it wasn't happenstance then what else would it be? spock
Naturalistic causes. Check out every field of science if you'd like to see what some of them look like.

And please stop asking questions I've already answered. Leading things in circles would be alright if you were ritical of my answers but you seem to just ignore them and chop them out of these replies.
Shoku wrote:

Luckily the naturalistic explanation is nearly as different from happenstance as the designer explanation.


What are you talking about now. The process of biological evolution on Earth? After the fact that atoms had already been designed? huh

Only "evidence" I've seen for atoms being designed was your claim that there are 100 specific ones. There aren't 100 specific ones, plain and simple. What other "evidence" have you got of atoms being designed?

What "naturalistic explanation"? What's natural? A universe filled with atoms that can combine to build themselves into self-programming biological robots?
Any reason that shouldn't be?

What makes that a "natural process" other than the observation that this universe can do it with ease? It's only "natural" with respect to the fact that this universe is already equipped with precisely the correct 100 atoms that accomplish this miraculous feat!
It has infinity types of atoms. Some of them split faster than others but you DO NOT HAVE ONE HUNDRED.

So what does "natural" even mean in this context? huh

You're already long past the "Creation" of this universe! That happened way back at the Big Bang, remember? If there's an intelligent designer, the design was already a done deal way back then. So anything that's unfolding now, only appears to be a "natural process" because it's already following a design!

Nice claim. It would be nicer to just postulate it instead of trying to make it the default option but it would be even nicer if you would give some evidence of it.

Abra wrote:

I fully understand all of those processes. I fully understand the theory of evolution and I don't argue with it one iota. Don't kid yourself.


Shoku replied:

Describe it then.


Well, I can only describe it based on what is known. First let me address what we don't yet know.

We don't know what it takes to get DNA off and running. We don't know what the "boot-strap" nucleotide sequence is that is required to get DNA to become a self-programming molecule. All we know at this point is that it clearly has the ability to do this.
Actually no, it doesn't.
RNA has the ability as it folds into ribosomes (and if you know jack squat about DNA you know the roles those serve,) and it folds into little units that match up to other RNA with a ribosome to stick amino acids together. Amino acids do all of the work in cells RNA doesn't and DNA came after that combo.

How does it do it after the "boot-strap" sequence begins?

Well, that's pretty simple. Even human programmers could potentially write self-programming programs. I wrote one myself at one time. I confess that it wasn't very good and it ended up crashing. laugh

In fact, that even begs the question of a designer even more. Not only was the boot-strap DNA sequence good enough to start a self-programming program, but it was a good enough program to not end up crashing!
So programmers make programs that crash. This program doesn't crash.
A: no programmer did it.
B: Scratch out A like it isn't even an option and say that it's just a really good programmer.

Well, we know which option you chose.

Based on our current knowledge, only ONE DNA program has survived. The people at the Human Genome Project believe that all life came from a single boot-strap event. They conclude this because all living beings on planet Earth share a large quantity of DNA which implies that they all came from the same original "program".
No, having all of the proteins and RNA configured to read the DNA the same way and having the same chains of reactions set up in our cells are huge parts of it too.

That may or may not be true. It could be that there is only ONE possible boot-strap sequence that can get DNA off and running.
There's not just one. Even of the amino acids we do use in most cases only four classes they fall into matter and you can interchange any of them within those classes for a protein that will have the same function. And with RNA there are only 4 options to begin with.

And that single boot-strap sequence forces the program to start out in a particular direction. This would force every DNA program to unfold in the same way at the beginning of the program. Thus resulting in any thing that starts off using DNA to have identical DNA up to a certain point before it can begin to diverge from the boot-strap program.

Moreover, if the boot-strap sequence truly is happenstance, and there are more than one possible boot-strap sequence, then we'd expect to see "crashed DNA programs".
Actually we see that a lot- sort of. With C+ and similar languages you should know that they crash about as soon as anything abnormal happens but with Java it tries to keep going and just shrug off the errors. Life falls somewhere in between.

In other words, we'd expect to see life that had died out yet had entirely different DNA sequences from all other life on Earth.
How would we see that? DNA is relatively durable compared to RNA and proteins but even just a few million years and it degrades pretty heavily. How the hell would we still have any from almost four billion years ago?

Or did you completely ignore when I explained why we wouldn't see any programs pop up after our planet already had one going?

But according to the Human Genome Project we don't see that. There is only one DNA sequence that worked. Either it all came from one instance of a single happenstance boot-strap program. Or it came from many happenstance events of the same boot-strap sequence that basically produces the same program even if it start independently.
So you understand that early bacteria would eat the materials it takes for abiogenesis right? And you understand how without the materials you couldn't get a second one popping up right?
And did you catch where I said we could have had lots pop up but before switching to DNA they fused together in a variety of ways?

Well with you bringing that stuff up you obviously didn't so thank you for reading what I say. I'm so glad you value my input -_-;

In any case, getting back to you're question. Once this boot-strap program is up and running, then the process of what you call "natural selection" can take over. But not before.
Actually yes before. Looks like you didn't read where I talked about membranes and making copies of RNA and proteins either.

So to look at more advance living creatures and say, "Look! It's a process of natural selection of survival of the fittest", totally misses the original point of how unnatural the original boot-strap event of creating such a self-programming organism was to start with!
Yes, it would miss it. Good thing I went to all that effort going into the origin of life that you didn't read.

You're already passed the real miracle!

I can see now you're one of those goalpost movers. The "real miracle" is whatever step you think the person you're talking to can't explain. If they do, well, you can move it back to whatever else they can't explain.

Any so-called "explanation of creation" at that point is just a description of how the program runs after it's already up and running. It's meaningless at that point.
If your view was default sure. It's not.

That's not an "explanation" at all. That's just an observation of what happens after the miracle has already occurred!

At that point it's only a "natural process" because you've already assumed a self-programming molecule as a "natural event".

You're already past the actual "Creation of Life". All you're doing at that point is describing what life does.

That's no explanation!

That's like telling God, "You get life started, and I'll explain how it works". laugh

No, that doesn't work. You need to explain how life could get started! And why the atoms in this universe allow for such an "unnatural event".
Survival of the fittest. You can do math can't you? n_n

And I'm allowed to call that an "unnatural event" because the only thing that makes it "natural" is the simple observation that this universe does it!

That's the only justification for calling it a "natural event". ohwell
You don't listen very well. I've already given other justifications for it. I'd give more but I'm going to wait until I think you can be trusted to actually read my posts in a way that you comprehend some of what I say.

Abracadabra's photo
Sun 11/08/09 10:47 PM
Shoku wrote:

Man you must have been a crappy science teacher.


I'm not even taking the stance that you think I'm taking.

You haven't been following the deeper subtles of what's going on here, and you couldn't possibly do that anyway because you're too new here.

This ultimately isn't even about what you think it's about.

The conclusion we've already made is that we can't say anything about a designer using the scientific method.

However, that includes any nonsense about attempting to extrapolate an idea of natural processes "outside of the box".

So before you go around passing personal judgments on people on a forum please get your post count up at least to a point where you can actually say that you know who it is you are conversing with.

In the meantime I won't hold any of this against you, so you don't need to worry about that. drinker


Shoku's photo
Sun 11/08/09 11:36 PM
Edited by Shoku on Sun 11/08/09 11:39 PM

He's heard about science but he hasn't learned or been involved with it.

Or at the very least he sure as hell wasn't a chemistry or physics teacher.


Well, that's the easy out. When you can't keep up with the conversation just discredit your opponent with ad hominem slander. whoa

I don't get how you can know a term like ad hominem but not understand arguments from ignorance or authority etc.

But besides, it's not an ad hominem as I'm not using it as an argument. I was just saying it to hear myself make typing sounds (and to influence you a bit.)

With only 149 posts under your belt, I suppose we can forgive you. Even though your tactics are uncouth and rude.
I'd forgive me because I'm honest. Around here that's fairly significant.

It's funny how you conveniently skipped right over the following:


Have scientists observed Dark Matter?

Have scientists observed Dark Energy?

Have scientists observed Strings?

Have scientists observed "hidden invisible dimensions"?

If not, then why are you jumping on me?

Jump on the scientists for a while!

In fact, they still haven't observed a lone quark. And according to that theory they never will because it's impossible for a lone quark to even exist by itself according to the theory. Yet they still believe in quarks. Because believing in their existence "explains something".
Actually I reply to posts in order as I see them. Being a bit behind in the thread I'm rushing a little but I try to pay decent attention to what people are saying.

You slander other people with no justification, yet you ignore the facts.
Actually I'm focusing pretty clearly on the facts. You claim to have been a science teacher but you don't understand the properties of carbon chains. In recent posts you've mentioned a few decent terms out of astronomy and quantum physics but a college professor would have to know a lot of other material that you don't and neither of those is typically a main course in high school.

But hey, I guess is "there are 100 atoms" counts as a fact to you...

Besides, precisely what did I ever say that was scientifically incorrect? spock
I really haven't the time to repeat everything I've said to you in this thread. Go read the longer blocks of text and you won't be able to ask that question again if you've got a scrap of integrity.

Some of the things that you brought up before were nothing more than your own misunderstandings.

For example, I asked why there are only 100 elements in this entire unviverse that could randomly, by chance, be designed in such a way as to produce the grand feat of evolving into conscious sentient beings.

All you do is try to describe the scientific observations of how that occurs. I already know how it occurs. That wasn't the question.
You clearly don't. You're using 100 because it's a round number and therefore "special" but in focusing on the facts I've thoroughly shown that it's not a special number.

But if you did understand how atoms work you would know that your question is like asking how Newtonian physics should lead to the writing of the declaration of independence. It technically does work that way but demanding someone tell you all about how is rather underhanded.

The question is why THOSE FEW elements exist in the FIRST PLACE.
Because 1 is not the same number as 2 and two is not the same number as 3 and...

I can assure you this much with absolute certainty.

Science has no clue!
The Greeks had no clue when they named them atoms. Now we know they're made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. To understand an atom you can think about magnets. If you've got a bunch of magnets facing positive side in the negative sides are the only parts that could touch other things. 3 magnets will not be as strong as 4 magnets.

Now be careful. Just like how DNA isn't exactly like a program atoms aren't exactly like magnets. 2n^2 describes how many magnets fit in a layer and n goes up 1 every two layers. You only care about the last possible 6 electrons in a layer for saying how the atom will interact with others because those are the ones on the outside and everything else is on the inside and covered up.

...so are you going to ask why things that aren't on the outside shouldn't be the first things to come in contact with other objects the atom bumps into? Are you going to ask why 2 protons aren't the same number of protons as 3 protons?

[qute]And if you claim they do, you're totally misunderstanding the question.
Ya, I guess I'm misunderstanding the question. Can you ask it in a less vague way?

That's all I can say.
You attacked my character the last time I said you didn't understand something.

But for you to make rude comments about other people's knowledge of science just because you can't understand a question, is totally uncalled for.
No, I'm making comments about your knowledge of science because of all of the horribly inaccurate things you have declared to be the way of the world and more importantly because you labeled yourself as an authority on science. So seriously, tell us what you taught already.

Abracadabra's photo
Mon 11/09/09 12:38 AM
Shoku wrote:

No, I'm making comments about your knowledge of science because of all of the horribly inaccurate things you have declared to be the way of the world and more importantly because you labeled yourself as an authority on science. So seriously, tell us what you taught already.


I haven't misrepresented science. You're just over-reacting and misundertanding my points.

I don't disagree with evolution by natural selection as you have erroneously suggested.

You claim that I have declared horribly inaccurate things about science, but I have not. Where did I say anything that isn't mainstream science?

If you're attempting to claim that science supports "no-design" over "design" then I'd say you're the one who's misrepresenting science. huh



jrbogie's photo
Mon 11/09/09 02:12 AM

If you're attempting to claim that science supports "no-design" over "design" then I'd say you're the one who's misrepresenting science. huh





science "supports" nothing. science questions everything. i know of no hypothosis that meets the science standard of a theory that "supports" design or no-design. the big bang is the prevaling theory that we currently see as an explanation of how the visible universe began as we have a great deal of evidence supporting that theory but it's the evidence that supports the theory, not science. the question of design is a theological question, not a science question.

jrbogie's photo
Mon 11/09/09 02:34 AM

Shoku wrote:

Man you must have been a crappy science teacher.


I'm not even taking the stance that you think I'm taking.


considering your earlier "explanation" of what a scientific theory is i think you'd be a crappy science teacher too.

You haven't been following the deeper subtles of what's going on here, and you couldn't possibly do that anyway because you're too new here.

This ultimately isn't even about what you think it's about.

The conclusion we've already made is that we can't say anything about a designer using the scientific method.


well i've been around since the beginning of this thread and i've not a clue what "conclusion we've already made" regarding the scientific method. i don't see that there's much agreement at all as to what the scientific method is much less that we've "concluded" anything.

However, that includes any nonsense about attempting to extrapolate an idea of natural processes "outside of the box".

So before you go around passing personal judgments on people on a forum please get your post count up at least to a point where you can actually say that you know who it is you are conversing with.


post count? what count gets me or him to a point where i know who i'm conversing with and what the hell does it matter if i know who i'm conversing with? is there a credential that's required to participate in open forum? can he not take issue with a single post without knowing who made the post? what does it matter what he knows about a poster if he thinks the post itself is flawed. this post policing crap really begins to wear thin.


Abracadabra's photo
Mon 11/09/09 05:56 AM


If you're attempting to claim that science supports "no-design" over "design" then I'd say you're the one who's misrepresenting science. huh



science "supports" nothing. science questions everything. i know of no hypothosis that meets the science standard of a theory that "supports" design or no-design. the big bang is the prevaling theory that we currently see as an explanation of how the visible universe began as we have a great deal of evidence supporting that theory but it's the evidence that supports the theory, not science. the question of design is a theological question, not a science question.


I'm in 100% agreement with what you just said! drinker

Especially your observation: "i know of no hypothosis that meets the science standard of a theory that "supports" design or no-design"

You can take that to the bank and I'll be right there with you to support the deposit. bigsmile

That's precisely my stance as well.

Abracadabra's photo
Mon 11/09/09 06:24 AM


Shoku wrote:

Man you must have been a crappy science teacher.


I'm not even taking the stance that you think I'm taking.


jrbogie wrote:

considering your earlier "explanation" of what a scientific theory is i think you'd be a crappy science teacher too.


You'd have to be more specific here because my "explanations" of what constitutes a "scientific theory" were taken from "actual examples" that the scientific currently calls "theories".

For example: String "Theory"

Is String "Theory" a valid "scientific" theory?

I would argue that it most certainly is not. It can't be, because it's currently untestable by observation and experiment which is required as part of the "Scientific Method".

By the way, I'm not alone in this view, there are many scientists who take this very same stance. Lee Smolin actually wrote a book on this very view entitled "The Trouble with Physics".

So I was basically addressing what scientists are actually doing, and I'll be the first to agree that they are going off on tangents that do not follow the "Scientific Method".

In fact, Brian Green has a great video called "The Elegant Universe" that has been out for quite some time. If you watch that video you will see several very prominent phsyicists who ask the question, "Is String Theory even Science? Or is is just a philosophy?"

Because it doesn't fit the requirements set forth by the "Scientific Method of Investigation"

So for you to state that I would be a crappy science teacher based on my understanding of what constitutes a scientific theory you better think again.

Even mainstream scientists can't agree!



post count? what count gets me or him to a point where i know who i'm conversing with and what the hell does it matter if i know who i'm conversing with? is there a credential that's required to participate in open forum? can he not take issue with a single post without knowing who made the post? what does it matter what he knows about a poster if he thinks the post itself is flawed. this post policing crap really begins to wear thin.


Well, for one thing I've noticed that Shoku has been getting side-tracked on some "crosstalk" I had with Redykeulous about DNA that wasn't even part of my conversation with HIM.

He's jumping in on a totally seperate conversation and trying to apply that to a totally different argument.

The argument that I gave about the number of different kinds of elements in this universe relative to total number of atoms is not dependent on DNA or the process of evolution by natural selection.

On the contary, the very existence of DNA and the process of evolution by natural selection are totally dependent on the atomic content of this universe.

So by responding to my replies to Di about DNA, he's just confusioning the whole issue.

I'm totally aware of how the process of natural selection works. That's totally after the fact that DNA exists in such a clean universe to begin with.

In fact, this whole conversation with Shoku has actually be quite enlightening for me, because Shoku has shown me precisely why it is that people who are focused on evolution by natural selection actually view the question of "design" whilst wearing complete blinders concerning the physics of this universe that lead up to the conditions that allow DNA to even exist in such a clean universe in the first place.

I gave analogies about car parts in previous posts. Some people "got it" and others didn't.

Unfortunately it seems that the people who "get it" are those who already understand why evolution by natural selection doesn't say anything at all about whether or not there is a need for a designer. That is way far after the fact of other important questions associated with why this universe is the way it is.

Just the same, this has been a real eye-opener for me concerning how differently people view the question of design. So this has been a very productive thread for me from that vantage point.

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