Well, I think you are evading a point I just made. That your atheism governs your science.
But this was never the topic of this thread. The topic of this thread was the argument from complexity. I believe that you are accusing me of evading your evasion, because you were unable to answer my criticisms of your version of the argument from complexity. Instead, you wanted to flip from defense to offense and attack the “science can explain the complexity” argument.
Now there is exactly one way you could have gone about this:
- Demonstrating that science is incapable of providing an explanation for complexity
But you opted to take a second path:
2. attacking the idea that science
does currently explain complexity (i.e. abiogenesis)
Toneyrey attempted to argue #1 by appealing to purpose and meaning. This approach was a non-starter because such concepts are separate from complexity, and have their own “argument from meaning” or “argument from purpose/design.”
You, on the other hand, attempted attack #2, which was a non-starter for a different reason; even if you successfully showed that science cannot currently explain abiogenesis, it fails to show that science
cannot possibly explain abiogenesis which is the linchpin of the argument from complexity.
The closest you came to making attack #1 was your suggestion that because no one was present to observe abiogenesis, science cannot ever conclusively prove that its account of abiogenesis was the correct one.
[the scientific account is] a myth with not even one iota of documentation (Who was present at the moment of abiogenesis?)
But as I pointed out, this is not the actual issue at hand:
The argument from complexity, as people have described it here, is essentially “there is no way abiogenesis could have happened without God.” Therefore, to disprove that assertion, all that is needed is to show that there is a way abiogenesis could have happened without God, e.g. a viable scientific theory.
Science doesn’t
need to provide conclusive evidence for it’s account of abiogenesis in order to defeat the argument from complexity, only offer a viable non-theistic explanation.
However, if we were to reformulate the argument from complexity such that it
did care about which side has the best evidence, then there would be an equal onus for the theistic account to offer evidence of it’s proposal:
However, do be aware that this sword cuts both ways; there is no “winning by default” in this task. In other words, the “God did it” hypothesis doesn’t immediately become the most likely version of events just because the scientific camp can’t find evidence you deem satisfactory.