Yehren on the notion that evolution couldn't work by blind chance:
Me, too. Fortunately, evolutionary theory doesn't say blind chance is how it works.
Actually, in many parts, yes that's all you got.
Nope.
When in comes to life coming about naturalistically, all you have is blind chance,
Two errors there:
1. Evolution isn't about the origin of life. It merely describes how existing life changes.
2. Evolution isn't by blind chance, and neither are the laws of chemistry and physics.
when you have irreducibly complex systems forming, all you have to work on that is blind chance,
The only actual evolution of irreducible complexity that was actually observed, came about by natural selection. The irreducibly complex enzyme/regulator system seen to evolve in Barry Hall's bacteria did so because it was a more efficient system, through natural selection.
and when you have an extra gene not in use because it was copied twice, you have blind chance working on the code to turn it into something useful.
Natural selection, which sorts our mutations, is the antithesis of chance. Random proceses plus nonrandom processes are nonrandom processes.
Yehren on methodological naturalism:
That's how science does it. It might seem foolish to you, but hardly anything humans do works better. Granted, some things, like the supernatural, are completely beyond the reach of science. But that's O.K; we have other ways of understanding those things.
That may be how it does work, but not how it ought work.
You are able to make that assertion to me, only because science is methodologically naturalistic. Methodological naturalism tells us how to make computers out of dirt.
Status quo is not always correct you know.
Scientists are intensely pragmatic. Find a better way, and they'll use it regardless of who objects. If a new way won't work, nothing can make them use it.
Tough game, but science is very effective.