Intelligent Design

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This shows a misunderstanding of the word “theory”

In the sense that you are using it, compared to scientists, keep in mind that NOTHING is EVER a proven fact. That’s not how knowledge works.

EVERYTHING is a belief. We build arguments for the belief, and at some point we consider the belief, as stated, with its constraints, to be true - a fact.

Within this context, yes, evolution is a proven fact.
You are applying arbitrary criteria to the subject to make it a fact.

It is still not fact. It is popular opinion.

Now if you wish, you can remove the arbitrariness and explain exactly how well known and accepted something must be to be considered a proven fact.
And you should also try to account for the many misunderstandings throughout history that were well known and believed.
 
You are applying arbitrary criteria to the subject to make it a fact.
No, I am applying the definition of theory as accepted by science.
It is still not fact. It is popular opinion.
One could argue, reasonably well, that all facts are popular opinion.

In any case, no, it is a fact.
Now if you wish, you can remove the arbitrariness and explain exactly how well known and accepted something must be to be considered a proven fact.
To the point that there is no reasonable doubt, rested results and general consensus. It’s a process, not a vote.
And you should also try to account for the many misunderstandings throughout history that were well known and believed.
We have. Things change. That’s the point of the process.
 
Sorry but no. Worth an examination? Yes. Worth a definite conclusion, no. (Sorry to those who saw Jesus in their toast this morning.)
NO? Incredible…😦 I believe this is what is called being in denial.
 
TruthSeeker60;7738743:
vz71;7737696:
My biggest issue being the belief that it is proven fact.
It simply is not.
I don’t prefer to use argument from authority, but since I’m about to go to class, I’ll just say that 99+ percent of biologists believe it as a proven fact. If you’re not sure why that is, there are many good books on why evolution is a proven fact.

They may.
Or they may more acurately speak of the theory of evolution.
Just as the course material you posted does.

Theory is not proven fact.
When scientists speak of evolution as a scientific theory, like the theory of gravity, they are speaking of of it as true. 99+ percent of biologists believe that evolution a proven fact.

Look up what the word “theory” means in science. Scientists do not use it in science the same way people commonly use the word “theory”.
 
When scientists speak of evolution as a scientific theory, like the theory of gravity, they are speaking of of it as true. 99+ percent of biologists believe that evolution a proven fact.

Look up what the word “theory” means in science. Scientists do not use it in science the same way people commonly use the word “theory”.
Their belief is philosophical.
 
**The support for IDvolution keeps growing. 🙂
**
Deletion of Ultraconserved Elements Yields Viable Mice

It is widely believed that the most evolutionarily conserved DNA sequences in the human genome have been preserved because of their functional importance and that their removal would thus have a devastating effect on the organism. To ascertain this we removed from the mouse genome four ultraconserved elements—sequences of 200 base pairs or longer that are 100% identical among human, mouse, and rat. To our surprise, we found that the mice lacking these elements are viable, fertile, and show no apparent abnormalities. This completely unexpected finding indicates that extreme levels of DNA sequence conservation are not necessarily indicative of an indispensable functional nature.

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Abiogenesis has amino acids from the Miller Urey experiment, ID has no amino acids because it has no experiment showing its designer making amino acids.
I think that Miller and Urey were able to generate a few amino acids with all their intelligently designed equipment, but no one in science has ever generated life from nonlife. I think that if scientists should ever be able to create life inside their laboratory, it would show only that created laboratory life did not come from nothing, rather it came from enormous amount of thought and an immensely complex laboratory under tightly controlled conditions. In short, this newly created lab life would show that it came about by a very intelligent mind.
 
I think that Miller and Urey were able to generate a few amino acids with all their intelligently designed equipment, but no one in science has ever generated life from nonlife. I think that if scientists should ever be able to create life inside their laboratory, it would show only that created laboratory life did not come from nothing, rather it came from enormous amount of thought and an immensely complex laboratory under tightly controlled conditions. In short, this newly created lab life would show that it came about by a very intelligent mind.
Billions of years is a long time versus a few decades in a lab, and makes up for a lot of directed energy. I don’t think it shows what you claim at all.
 
The support for IDvolution keeps growing. 🙂

Deletion of Ultraconserved Elements Yields Viable Mice

It is widely believed that the most evolutionarily conserved DNA sequences in the human genome have been preserved because of their functional importance and that their removal would thus have a devastating effect on the organism. To ascertain this we removed from the mouse genome four ultraconserved elements—sequences of 200 base pairs or longer that are 100% identical among human, mouse, and rat. To our surprise, we found that the mice lacking these elements are viable, fertile, and show no apparent abnormalities. This completely unexpected finding indicates that extreme levels of DNA sequence conservation are not necessarily indicative of an indispensable functional nature.

http://www.evidentcreation.com/image/NaturalSelectionMisconception.jpg
The above argument doesn’t make any argument for ID.

Mutation is not the sole “fuel” for natural selection, so the cartoon is wrong too.
 
NO? Incredible…😦 I believe this is what is called being in denial.
Not at all. being a skeptic and using a good scientific method has nothing to do with being in denial. But accepting anything with little testing and confirmation leads to bad science.
 
The above argument doesn’t make any argument for ID.

Mutation is not the sole “fuel” for natural selection, so the cartoon is wrong too.
Natural selection and variablilty slow genetic loss (due to corruption) to help keep a species at near optimum level. That would make natural selection a process that conserves species and not create them. That is support for IDvolution.
 
Not at all. being a skeptic and using a good scientific method has nothing to do with being in denial. But accepting anything with little testing and confirmation leads to bad science.
Test the SOS all you want. Go for it. 👍
 
Natural selection and variablilty slow genetic loss (due to corruption) to help keep a species at near optimum level. That would make natural selection a process that conserves species and not create them. That is support for IDvolution.
No, it doesn’t. You’re again equivocating terms.

Do you understand that something can have multiple functions and more than one result?

Think about the phrase “to help keep a species at near optimum level”.

I’m curious - why do you think that supports ID?
 
No, it doesn’t. You’re again equivocating terms.

Do you understand that something can have multiple functions and more than one result?

Think about the phrase “to help keep a species at near optimum level”.

I’m curious - why do you think that supports ID?
Of course, but we would want to consider the dominant result.

Why? Because a designer would try to optimize to handle variables.
 
It’s easy enough to do.

BTW - this very issue is considered in Personal Knowledge. You really should read it, it may clarify a lot for you.
Make your best argument that rocks being arranged to spell out SOS does not have an intelligent agent behind it.
 
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