Wall-dog wrote:
Moving on...
No but we must be able to show proof of it other than the artifact. For example if you have no knowledge of water chemistry how can you say that a stalagtite formed from mineral deposition?
We do have examples of intelligence that we can use for empirical analysis. ID Is only a theory when intelligence is applied to things like cellular biology.
Again there is no basis on which to apply it to biochemistry. The parts of a cell come together because of natural laws not because of screws and bolts.
Wall-dog wrote:Again experiments have shown that the mechanisms of evolution occur.
Only on the micro-level. In fact, the fossil record essentially disproves it at the macro-level.
How so?
Wall-dog wrote:But let us say for a moment that there were no fossils. You can show evolution at the micro-level. I can show intelligent design with man-made objects. You assert macro-evolution as a theory to explain the origin of species. I assert intelligent design with things like cellular biology as a theory for the origin of species. We both have empirical evidence in the real world that can be measured, analyzed, tested, and those tests can be reproduced. The only difference I see is that macro-evolution isn't supported by the fossil record.
Don't you see a flaw in your logic here?
"Microevolution" is observed in living organisms.
You're examples of ID are not even organic in some cases.
Wall-dog wrote:Have you actually examined the data, or are you just repeating what you ave been told? I can reopen the cambrian thread if you would like.
I've got a better idea. Since it is pertenant here, why not re-post it here?
For the uninitiated words such as phylum and phylum level changes seem like huge gaps.
But the fossils of the cambrian period are beleived to represent the
first memebers of a group of creatures, which later diversified according to the theory of evolution into what we see around us today.
For example the phylum chordata, which includes animals as diverse as a shark, osprey, and orangutan is represented in Cambrian layers by creatures like Yunnanozoon:
Look carefully and you can see several aortic arches, the only major anatomical difference between this representative of the phylum chordata and an earthworm is the positioning of the main nerve.
Is this the huge gap you were speaking of? The only huge gap is the conceptual gap of body plans which constitute the major groups of animals today came relatively all at once in the cambrian. But this only makes sence, because of the sexually incompatibility between groups of animals, naturally divergence is inevitable.
Think of it like Adam and Eve. At first there was only one family, today there are billions of families, some more related to others, which can be grouped by race or language.
Wall-dog wrote:I have personally examined the data? I'm a computer programmer. What am I going to do with the data? I'm not qualified to form a conclusion from it.
It's not as complex as one might think.
Wall-dog wrote:I rely on the opinions of those who are more qualified than I am.
You absolutely do not, you pick and choose the opinions you like.
Wall-dog wrote:And then I post their conclusions. Would it carry more weight with you if I said it? After my math foible I would doubt it.
I don't discount your intelligence, only because of one mistake, why would I bother continuing this conversation if I beleived you to be unintelligible?
Wall-dog wrote:I don't follow. Have you ever examined the organisms from the Cambrian?
No. Nor would I be qualified to draw conclusions from them if I did. But Dr. Wells is qualified and the conclusions I posted are his.
Perhaps you should, then come back and see what he is really saying.
Wall-dog wrote:Is your argument that you have looked at them yourself and are more qualified than someone like Dr. Wells to form conclusions? I've posted Dr. Wells qualifications. If that is your position, then perhaps you should post yours.
I can post more of the fossils themselves.
Wall-dog wrote:Perhaps you didn't grasp the meaning of proteins which fold by themselves according to the natural laws of the Universe. Would you like me to go into more detail on proteins protein structure and how it relates to DNA?
Please do. And then I'll quote some of America's most promenent experts showing that protein folding is not an explanation for the Cambrian explosion. And, as I've been doing, I won't just post them saying so. I'll post them telling us
why.
???
I never stated that protein folding explains the cambrian explosion. Perhaps all the time I spent discussing the framework of biology was time wasted.
=(
Proteins exist whether or not we need them in each and every one of our cells. Proteins will interact with other proteins in our cells, usually getting lodged into the cell wall and occationally interfereing with necessary cellular functions. But the proteins we are interested are not these types. The cellular function of tree bark and that of a dog is practically the same. What we are looking for here are the proteins which govern, chemically, the organization of the body.
Wall-dog wrote:
I'm not questioning the theory of relativity so I don't know how this is relevant. I'm simply questioning whether the theory of relativity applies to the reality of time and space or the perception of time and space. As 'perception' is not a naturalist term I'm not sure it's possible to say. That notion by the way is as old as the theory itself. It was Einstein who came up with it.
NO Your point was comparing Einsteins theory of relativity to dembski's proof on sets.
Wall-dog wrote:Again the experiments can still be conducted whether or not we have an answer for the origin of life.
But if the theorized natural process cannot be started naturally, then what is the point? Is your position that intelligence was necessary to start evolution?
What process are you talking about?
Wall-dog wrote:
Has there been another experiment that created amino acids through natural processes? If so I'd be interested in hearing about it. If not, then what's your point?
The point is that the failure of that particular experiment did not invalidate the results of other experiments.
Wall-dog wrote:I'm not asking you to test God. I'm asking you to accept that it is possible to test for the probability that intelligence was necessary for any given process. That to me represents experimentation and thus scientific process.
How do we test for a probability? There are two types of probability figures. Computed and Observed.
An observed probability can be discovered by conducting a trial and noting the outcome.
A computed probability can be tested by conducting trials and seeing if the set of outcomes agrees with the figure.
How can we do this for ID?
Wall-dog wrote:The Bible makes specific claims that can be tested in the natural world. You cannot completely divorce religion from science. There is too much overlap.
We'll agree to disaree here. In science the observations stand on their own.
Wall-dog wrote:I'm not targeting biologists. I started a 'problem of cognitive thought' thread because as a computer programmer I find that interesting and I know more about it than I know about cellular biology.
Ok lets target computer scientists then. When they develop an enterprise application for a company are they leaving God out of the equation?
Wall-dog wrote:They could only see where improvements were necessary by building the innitial phones in the first place. I see that you still are having trouble separating factors which are just a byproduct of the example.
No. I think you are having problems with human intelligence as a part of the design process. How do you think the initial phones came about?
Are you saying that you have scientific proof that intelligence is behind the first lifeform?
It sounds like you are saying that the innitial phones are a result of intelligence. I thought we were talking about organisms.
In other words you are taking an analogy and stretching it too far.
Wall-dog wrote:Did proteins fold in a natural event called the ATT explosion and form them without human involvement?
That's why the analogy breaks down, because proteins in a cell do fold acording to natural laws.
Wall-dog wrote:Come on BeGood - your argument here is as flawed as my aborted (and embarassing) math example.
How so? All you have shown is that the innitial stage is different for man made objects and for life.
Wall-dog wrote:Testing and modification is the common denominator here. For example for a new motorola antannae they only had the specifications for the new array. How did they design it? They did computer models of every varient they could think of and tested each one! The ones which worked best were used to test actual varients built in the lab. Does this process sound familiar? the only intelligence involved was in the measurement and the innitial specifications. The actual design was developed through brute force testing.
Brute force testing may be used in some cases, but even then someone decides what the parameters of the test should be and what kinds of results they are looking for. You cannot rationally divorce intelligence from the process of human design.
Again you are failing to see the significance here. Survivability is the process by which natural organisms are tested.
Wall-dog wrote:Perhaps you are trying to do so because admitting that humans utilize intelligence to design man-made objects would legitimize ID as a theory?
Nope.
Wall-dog wrote:Our perception of time is based on entropy. If we build two atomic clocks and set one on Earth and one in orbit the one in orbit will tick slower.
Maybe, but since 'perception' isn't a measurable concept I don't know that atomic clocks really answer the question. I mean, do atomic clocks measure absolute time, or perceived time?
You tell me what is absolute time then?
Wall-dog wrote:No you still think time exists outside of perception. You're logic is based on experiences here on Earth, you have not made your point.
Actually, Einstein had the same questions. I have to say that now because otherwise someone will bring up my math skills again.
That is not what puzzled Einstein, what puzzled him was the quantum nature of reality and how to come to terms with the contradictory nature of general relativity.
Wall-dog wrote:But that's not really the question. The question is whether time is relative or just our perception of time? In other words, is there such a thing as absolute time? We know we age slower when we travel at higher speeds. We know that the effects of time on matter change at higher speeds. But is it time that changes, or just the effects of time? And don't just say I don't get it because Einstein died without finding what he considered a satisfactory answer.
What is your source for this?
It is not length of life, but depth of life. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson