BeGood,
Nowhere in your sources does it say anything about proteins assemblying themselves. It talks about the assembly occurring within the cell but it shows the rest of the cell as being an integral part of that process.
Just out of curiosity, do you read your sources before you post links to them? Perhaps you should. In fact, I would ask that you quote the relevant parts because sometimes they are difficult or impossible to find. When you write something and then just provide a link to a really long article or a slide show or something, you are making it very difficult to determine what parts of what you have written are supported by the source and what parts are conjecture on your part. I would ask, again, that you quote the relevant parts so that we don't have to go searching for them. The benefit of the link is that it allows us to quickly check the context of the quote. When all you give is the link you make it much harder to verify the source and particularly so when often you have more conjecture in what you have written than your sources justify.
I think I understand now where you are confused though. You seem to think ID embodys intelligence into the cell - like Dr. Behe and Dr. Meyer think the proteins themselves are intelligent beings and are using intelligence to assemble themselves. That is not the case. Dr. Meyer, Dr. Behe, and other ID proponents don't argue that the cell is intelligent. Rather they argue that intelligence was a part of the process in creating the cell. They point to the cell's ability to create flagella as proof of that intelligence. Nobody is suggesting that the cell itself has intelligence. Of COURSE there are mechanisms within the cell that allow it to create proteins and assemble them into the various components that it needs. Affinities within the cell are a big part of that.
Also, we aren't just talking about creating flagella. We are talking about creating the flagellum. How did it initially come to be? How do you create a flagellum without the mechanism for creating it already in place? How does it come from other, less complex components? You can't just quote sources that take the existance of flagella for granted and show us how a system designed to create flagella works. That doesn't meet the challange. You need to show how the first flagella was created. If all I wanted from you was a biology lesson it wouldn't have been a very good challange.
But the process of building a Flagellum is much more involved than you are letting on. Even though the process doesn't really explain how the first flagellum came about, why don't we illustrate it just to show how complex it really is.
To quote Dr. Behe from Strobel's The Case for a Creator:
"The cell is not a simple bag of soup, with everything sloshing around. Instead, eukaryotic cells - cells of all organisms except bacteria - have a number of compartments, sort of like rooms in a house.
There is a nucleus, where the DNA resides; the mitochondria, which produce energy; the endoplasmic reticulum, which processes proteins; the Golgi apparatus, which is a way station for proteins that are being transported elsewhere; the lysome, which is a garbage disposal unit; and the perixisome, which helps metabolize fats. Each compartment is sealed off by a membrane, just like a room has walls and a door. In fact, the metochondrion has four seperate sections. Counting everything, there are more than twenty different sections in each cell.
Cells are constantly getting rid of old stuff and manufacturing new components, and these components are designed to work in one room but not others. Most new components are made at a central location in the cell on things called ribosomes."
<Lee Strobel:>
Denton has described the ribosome, a collection of some fifty large molecules containing more than one million atoms, as an automated factory that can synthesize any protein that it is instructed to make by DNA. Given the correct genetic information, in fact, it can construct any protein-based biological machine, including another ribosome, regardless of the complexity. Denton marveled:
<Denton>
"It is astonishing to think that this remarkable piece of machinery, which possesses the ultimate capacity to construct every living thing that has ever existed on Earth, from a giant redwood to the human brain, can construct all its own components in a matter of minutes and... is of the order of several thousand million million times smaller than the smallest piece of functional machinery ever constructed by man."
<Behe again>
"Not only is the ribosome amazing, but now you're faced with the challange of getting these new components into the right rooms where they can operate. In order to do that you have to have another complicated system, just like you need a lot of things in place for a Greyhound bus to take someone from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh.
First of all, you've got to have molecular trucks, which are enclosed and have motors attached to them. You've got to be able to identify which components are supposed to go into which truck - after all, it doesn't do any good if you just grab any protein that comes along, because each one needs to go to a specific room. So there has to be a signal attached to the protein - sort of a ticket - to let the protein onto the right molecular truck. The truck has to know where it is going, which means having a signal on the truck itself and a complementary signal on the compartment where the truck is supposed to unload its cargo.
When the truck arrives where it's supposed to go, it's kind of like a big ocean liner that has crossed from London to New York. it pulls up at the dock and everyone's waving - but, oops, they forgot the gang plank. Now what are you going to do? You see, you've got to have a way for the cargo to get out of the truck and into the compartment, and it turns out this is an active process that involves other components recognizing each other, physically opening things up, and allowing the material to go inside.
So you've got numerous components, all of which have to be in place or nothing works. If you don't have the signal, if you don't have the truck, you'r pretty much out of luck. Now, does this microscopic transportation system sound like something that self-assembled by gradual modification over the years? I don't see how it could have been. To me, this has all the earmarks of being designed."
Strobel also quotes the documentary Unlocking the Mystery of Life:
In a process known as transcription, a molecular machine first unwinds a section of the DNA helix to expose the genetic instructions needed to assemble a specific protein molecule. Another machine then copies these instructions to form a molecule known as messenger RNA. When transcription is complete, teh slender RNA strand carries the genetic information... out of the cell nucleus. The messenger RNA strand is directed to a two-part molecular factory called a ribosome.... Inside the ribosome, a molecular assembly line builds a specifically sequence chain of amino acids. These amino acids are transported from other parts of the cell and then linked into chains often hundreds of units long. Their sequential arrangement determines the type of protein manufactured. When the chain is finished, it is moved from the ribosome to a barrel-shaped machine that helps fold it into the precise shape critical to its function. After the chain is folded into a protein, it is then released and shepherded by another molecular machine to the exact location where it is needed.
So what do we end up with? An incredibly complex system of complex and independant parts that function together to first, hold the recipe for a protein, second, take that recipe to a factory that will build the protein, third, build the protein, fourth, take the protein to the exact part of the cell where it is needed, and fifth, assemble the proteins into the necessary machine in a process which, though chemical affinities are a big part, cannot be replicated outside of the cell, and finally, the part must be put to use.
You list five steps. I don't agree with that. It's too simplistic. If we had to label steps we should label more than that. You could easily break it up into 50 or even 100 steps. But the individual steps don't show the need for design. The interactions do. This is an extremely complex process that does not lend itself to an evolutionary model.
And we haven't even gotten to the question of where the DNA came from.