Anyone who works criminal investigations knows how to infer design. I don't, but I have read from people who do. A good reading of Sherlock Holmes is always good to help one learn a bit about the process, too.sandy_mcd wrote:Sorry. What I am interested in here is how the design inference works. Given some system/object, how does one determine if it has been designed?Stu wrote: My reason for posting this was as a rebuttal to the oft-used “Who Designed the Designer” argument, not what criteria are required for a design inference.
I live in Michigan in the US and up north, there used to be a lot of logging- this whole state is pretty well known for furniture and wood production. When you log, you have to replace the trees in order to have harvests later in time. One of my favorite places to visit is called Manistee, and it has a lot of natural forests and a lot of these replanted forests.sandy_mcd wrote:The number doesn't matter; I think attributing intelligence to a row of trees is just plum crazy.Stu wrote:Can we attribute intelligence to 2 plum trees planted in a row; how about 5 in a row; what 2 rows of 3?)
Now, without any knowledge whatsoever that some of the forests were replanted or what they would look like, I found it very easy to identify which forests were 'designed' and which weren't. Rows upon rows of perfectly aligned pine trees screams the fact that they were planted due to logging. It would be 'plum crazy' to think anything else.