Hi Beltany13,
I applaud you for wanting to see more evidence before being convinced of the Darwinian account of evolution. It is such a taste for evidence in support of our beliefs that is sorely needed.
Best,
Leela
I think the best thing for me to do is quote one of the founders of the theory; namely, Stephen C. Meyer.
And rather than present the entire article, I’m just going to present the parts crucial to my point and the rest people can read for themselves; I hope that is O.K.
Contrary to media reports, ID is not a religious-based idea, but an evidence-based scientific theory about life’s origins. According to Darwinian biologists such as Oxford University’s Richard Dawkins, living systems “give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose”.
But, for modern Darwinists, that appearance of design is illusory, because the purely undirected process of natural selection acting on random mutations is entirely sufficient to produce the intricate designed-like structures found in living organisms.
By contrast, ID holds that there are tell-tale features of living systems and the universe that are best explained by a designing intelligence. The theory does not challenge the idea of evolution defined as change over time, or even common ancestry, but it disputes Darwin’s idea that the cause of biological change is wholly blind and undirected.
What signs of intelligence do design advocates see?
In recent years, biologists have discovered an exquisite world of nanotechnology within living cells - complex circuits, sliding clamps, energy-generating turbines and miniature machines. For example, bacterial cells are propelled by rotary engines called flagellar motors that rotate at 100,000rpm. These engines look like they were designed by engineers, with many distinct mechanical parts (made of proteins), including rotors, stators, O-rings, bushings, U-joints and drive shafts.
The biochemist Michael Behe points out that the flagellar motor depends on the co-ordinated function of 30 protein parts. Remove one of these proteins and the rotary motor doesn’t work. The motor is, in Behe’s words, “irreducibly complex”.
This creates a problem for the Darwinian mechanism. Natural selection preserves or “selects” functional advantages as they arise by random mutation. Yet the flagellar motor does not function unless all its 30 parts are present. Thus, natural selection can “select” the motor once it has arisen as a functioning whole, but it cannot produce the motor in a step-by-step Darwinian fashion.
Natural selection purportedly builds complex systems from simpler structures by preserving a series of intermediates, each of which must perform some function. With the flagellar motor, most of the critical intermediate structures perform no function for selection to preserve. This leaves the origin of the flagellar motor unexplained by the mechanism - natural selection - that Darwin specifically proposed to replace the design hypothesis.
Is there a better explanation? Based on our uniform experience, we know of only one type of cause that produces irreducibly complex systems: intelligence. Whenever we encounter complex systems - whether integrated circuits or internal combustion engines - and we know how they arose, invariably a designing intelligence played a role.
Consider an even more fundamental argument for design. In 1953, when Watson and Crick elucidated the structure of the DNA molecule, they made a startling discovery. Strings of precisely sequenced chemicals called nucleotides in DNA store and transmit the assembly instructions - the information - in a four-character digital code for building the protein molecules the cell needs to survive. Crick then developed his “sequence hypothesis”, in which the chemical bases in DNA function like letters in a written language or symbols in a computer code. As Dawkins has noted, “the machine code of the genes is uncannily computer-like”.
The informational features of the cell at least appear designed. Yet, to date, no theory of undirected chemical evolution has explained the origin of the digital information needed to build the first living cell. Why? There is simply too much information in the cell to be explained by chance alone.
telegraph.co.uk/comment/3622692/Intelligent-design-is-not-creationism.html
Now, I would like to add a bit of commentary.
First of all, I’m not proposing that ID is fact; I simply don’t know. However, I believe ID is a more reasonable theory - philosophically - than evolution, because, looking around, the chance that all of this happened by mere chance - natural selection - is absurd to me.
And it’s not a double standard for the following reasons: 1). I’m not asking that ID be taught as fact; and 2). Regardless of its implications, ID does not necessarily endorse any religion.
Macro-evolution is taught as fact in biology class; at least that’s how it seemed to me when I was there not so long ago. And when you have very little evidence and simply assumptions, it’s probably a good idea to exercise a little prudence. Because a divine figure seems the only other reasonable conclusion, secularists have jumped on the evolution train and are really distorting what evolution is.