We apply probabilites as a means of testing. Values are assigned. The higher the odds, the more probable that design has been detected.
You seem to mistakenly think that we can determine the “probability” that something was designed. We can’t. Either we have examples of it being made by a person or we don’t.
tonyrey:
You are still faced with the problem of how persons have developed the power to reason and design such objects.
No, I’m not. I’m not the one asserting that a disembodied intellience is behind the universe. The burden of proof is on
you to demonstrate that the universe
must have been the result of intelligence.
And when you do, by the way, you’re going to win a nobel prize.
As I’ve said, all evidence points to the fact that complex things come from simple things. If you are suggesting that a disembodied intelligence can exist all by itself, you are making a claim in direct opposition to all observed evidence, and you need to substantiate that claim with much more than an argument from ignorance, which is all that this tonyrey character has ever been capable of doing.


Image of God:
But assuming evolution did occur: It all started somewhere. The first life forms did not perfectly fit the environment. The environment fit them.
Ok, the leading hypothesis – hypothesis, it hasn’t yet been proven and become a theory (things that are proven through mountains of evidence, like evolution, are called theories) – is that the first self-replicating molecule arose from inorganic molecules. It began replicating, with each successive generation changing slightly. Those changes that didn’t work in the environment died off and didn’t pass on their particular changes…and on and on and on.
That’s how evolution works. If a particular change does not increase the chances of survival, it may not get passed on.
Seriously, read a book on evolution because the question of improbability can
only be surmounted by evolution – not by claiming that a disembodied intelligence always existed. That latter claim, as I said above, contradicts all the observed evidence, which indicates that complex things come from simple things.
And with your idea of perfect fit, you’d also have to explain why life exists on Earth and not on other planets.
Well, putting aside for a moment the strong possibility that life does exist elsewhere in the universe – they think, for example, there may have been bacteria on Mars – there’s really no problem here. The process of life arising from inorganic molecules may not have happened on other planets. It might be a rare process.
But let’s pretend, for the sake of argument, that it only happened on this planet and nowhere else. What would that prove? The law of averages assures us that for billions and trillions of suns (and potential planets) that at least one of them would have started to develop life.
And if our planet hadn’t, then we wouldn’t be here. There’s no reason we
have to exist.
That something is made through unintelligent means, does not prove or mean that something is made completely without intention or intelligence. People use tools to make items that go to antique shops. Nonetheless, an intelligent mind is behind their existence.
Sure. And I’m not sitting here telling you “It’s absolutely impossible for there to be an intelligent force behind the universe!” I’m telling you that I don’t accept that claim because there’s no evidence for it and because it would violate all known existing evidence that complex things come from simple things.
You’re the one making the claim here. The burden of proof is on
you to demonstrate your claim, and – as I’ve repeated – since your claim violates the evidence that we do have, you’re fighting an uphill battle.