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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 4:58:26 AM
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ferdgoodfellow
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Any statistics guys out der?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 2:13:24 PM
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hellohellohi
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hello ferd, Do you see, tho, how I am arguing that being able to "specify" a complex pattern, i.e.: describe it in terms shorter than a parallel representation of the pattern or array itself, seems to contradict the notion of it being complex, per Kolmogorov's definition?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 3:12:52 PM
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hellohellohi
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Interesting briefs by Hubert Yockey concerning his being quoted in support of ID.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 5:06:30 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud Sorry for the big words - I am simply saying that based on the list of pretend mechanisms for the origin of life proposed by materialists, a miracl would be no worse an alternative. They are not pretend mechanisms. They are mechanisms that are being researched. Only an IDist would prefer a miracle over research. quote:
ID is concerned with causes - of which three are known. The cause with which ID concerns itself is the inteligence that derives from a mind, there are a variety of mechanisms possible. Given the finite history of our Universe there had to be a mind that came about without help from another intelligence. Why couldn't Earth be that place?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 5:10:45 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ferdgoodfellow Not nessararily. Let's say I slightly tinkered with the genetic code of some bacterium or udder and then released it into the wild. If a scientist came across the bug in the wild he would have no ability to know it was engineered. He would definitely have that ability. That is how the anthrax strain in recent news was tracked back to a specific lab. It carried specific alterations that were done in that lab. I do tinker around with the genetics of bacteria and I do know the signs. A plasmid with a multiple cloning site is a dead giveway, as are common expression systems which use T7 initiators, lac repressors, and antibiotic resistance markers. In addition, many of the bacteria I have engineered express eukaryotic proteins which is a major violation of the twin nested hierarchy. In fact, violations of the nested hierarchy is the hallmark of human genetic design. Give me a bacterial plasmid and chances are I can tell you if it was designed or not.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 5:16:56 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ferdgoodfellow But I am a loss to suggest tell-tale signs of ID other than what Dembski has already proposed: specified complexity. I don't see how that helps since there is nothing specified in biology. For example, there are (as of right now) 6 billion ways to put together a human at the genetic level. So much for specification. Also, there is no observed goal in nature so there is not a specific target that evolution is aiming for. Specified complexity fails in describing biology. quote:
But do ID guys have to produce the mechanisms used by the designer? Nah. Umm, yes they do if ID wants to be science. quote:
Behe is a good example. He is looking at experiments already conducted by nature to see how well EB has performed. Malaria is his primary example and he claims it is the "Michelson-Morley" experiment that demonstrates the limits of the Darwinian mechanism. How did this demonstrate the limits of Darwinian mechanisms? From recollection, the malaria were under a single selective pressure away from their current state and they evolved a single solution. How does this demonstrate limits when the overwhelming selective pressure is stasis. Also, how did Behe determine that there were no other possible solutions? How did Behe determine that given different selective pressures that they could not evolve a new morphology or lifestyle?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/5/2008 5:20:04 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ferdgoodfellow How is SC practically applied? Let's say we were looking a particular DNA sequence. We are trying to determine whether there is warrant to claim comes as a result of random mutation (chance) or design. This is akin, I spose, to any coin tossing example. It wouldn't be enuff to just look at the probability of each of the componensts in the sequence to turn up the way they do and find them highly improbable. This sequence has to have something called "low specificational complexity" (confusing terminology). Here Dembski gets into his MDL-Kolmogorov complexity. The gist I get out of it is that the pattern must be simple. That probbly is too simplistic. How does one ahead of time choose where a DNA sequence must evolve to? That makes zero sense. Given the fact that there are millions of species and billions of individual organisms in each species it would seem that biology is not specified.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 9:17:29 AM
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ferdgoodfellow
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Hello hello, quote:
ORIGINAL: hellohellohi hello ferd, Do you see, tho, how I am arguing that being able to "specify" a complex pattern, i.e.: describe it in terms shorter than a parallel representation of the pattern or array itself, seems to contradict the notion of it being complex, per Kolmogorov's definition? Yes. I am mightily confused by this. But apparently Dembski's specified complexity requires low "specificational complexity" (low Kolmogorov complexity). IOW, the lower the descriptive compexity, the better. HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH ("X H's in a row) is simpler than HHTTTTHHHHHHHHHHTTTTTTTHTHTTTTTTTHH which is a more random (complex) sequence and takes more resources to describe ("2 heads, then 3 tails, etc.)
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 9:22:22 AM
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ferdgoodfellow
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Method, Re human genetic engineering, if you were going to mimic nature's tinkering, how would you go about it so as to avoid detection? Possible?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:04:03 AM
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ferdgoodfellow
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quote:
How does one ahead of time choose where a DNA sequence must evolve to? That makes zero sense. Given the fact that there are millions of species and billions of individual organisms in each species it would seem that biology is not specified. We inevitably are looking at a sequence after the fact, after it has become what it is. No matter how improbable, it is there and a fact. How then does Dembski overcome the charge that he is "drawing the target around the arrow after it hit the wall?" By demonstrating its low "specificational complexity," apparently. But I don't get it. I suspect the answer is in his discussion on Fisherian statistics where one has to specify in advance probability levels for rejection of the hypothesis.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:05:59 AM
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ferdgoodfellow
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Re Behe, I will have to get back you. gotta go chase a buck.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:23:01 AM
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Jhud
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quote:
They are not pretend mechanisms. They are mechanisms that are being researched. Only an IDist would prefer a miracle over research. You know, I have to admit I am getting a bit tired of your regular dishionesty about ID. If you have logic to apply, great, but ID never proffers 'a miracle' as a mechnism, nor does it suppose this is requirement. If you have the intellectual capacity to criticize the theory, great; if all you have is strawmen gleaned from parroting skeptic sites, then save your what little mental energy you have to expend because it isn't worth anyone's time. quote:
Given the finite history of our Universe there had to be a mind that came about without help from another intelligence. Why couldn't Earth be that place? And what is there about the earth that causes you to think it is especially capable of producing minds?
_____________________________
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:52:41 AM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud You know, I have to admit I am getting a bit tired of your regular dishionesty about ID. If you have logic to apply, great, but ID never proffers 'a miracle' as a mechnism, nor does it suppose this is requirement. A supernatural deity poofing an organism into being is a what? Miracle? Which side is criticizing the other for not including supernatural mechanisms? Which sides is criticizing the other for focusing on "material" and "natural" mechanisms? Would this mean that ID focuses on immaterial and supernatural mechanisms? Sure would seem that way. If you have the intellectual capacity to criticize the theory, great; if all you have is strawmen gleaned from parroting skeptic sites, then save your what little mental energy you have to expend because it isn't worth anyone's time. quote:
And what is there about the earth that causes you to think it is especially capable of producing minds? The fossil record which shows an incremental increase in brain size among hominids.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:54:12 AM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ferdgoodfellow Method, Re human genetic engineering, if you were going to mimic nature's tinkering, how would you go about it so as to avoid detection? Possible? The best way would be to let nature take it's own course.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 10:58:31 AM
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drj11
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud You know, I have to admit I am getting a bit tired of your regular dishionesty about ID. If you have logic to apply, great, but ID never proffers 'a miracle' as a mechnism, nor does it suppose this is requirement. If you have the intellectual capacity to criticize the theory, great; if all you have is strawmen gleaned from parroting skeptic sites, then save your what little mental energy you have to expend because it isn't worth anyone's time. You know I was going to write a post very similar to this directed at you in regards to evolution and abiogenesis research, but decided not to bother. Descriptions like "Fairy tales" and "grasping at straws" treat abiogenesis with complete intellectual dishonesty (even poverty), especially given the advancements the field has seen over the years.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 11:42:02 AM
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Jhud
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quote:
A supernatural deity poofing an organism into being is a what? Miracle? Which side is criticizing the other for not including supernatural mechanisms? Which sides is criticizing the other for focusing on "material" and "natural" mechanisms? Would this mean that ID focuses on immaterial and supernatural mechanisms? Sure would seem that way. If you have the intellectual capacity to criticize the theory, great; if all you have is strawmen gleaned from parroting skeptic sites, then save your what little mental energy you have to expend because it isn't worth anyone's time. Try again – one citation of a noted IDist (Behe, Meyers, Gonzales, Dembski) invoking a miracle as a means of life’s development. Put up, or shut up. quote:
The fossil record which shows an incremental increase in brain size among hominids. And how did ‘the earth’ invoke this change?
_____________________________
Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 11:44:24 AM
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Jhud
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quote:
You know I was going to write a post very similar to this directed at you in regards to evolution and abiogenesis research, but decided not to bother. Descriptions like "Fairy tales" and "grasping at straws" treat abiogenesis with complete intellectual dishonesty (even poverty), especially given the advancements the field has seen over the years. There is no 'advancement', only wild suggestions, which proliferate exactly at the rate of certain scientists to imagine them. Unlike Method or yourself, I actually cited specifically how wide and varied these undemonstrated speculations are.
_____________________________
Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 1:25:50 PM
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hellohellohi
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ferdgoodfellow Hello hello, quote:
ORIGINAL: hellohellohi hello ferd, Do you see, tho, how I am arguing that being able to "specify" a complex pattern, i.e.: describe it in terms shorter than a parallel representation of the pattern or array itself, seems to contradict the notion of it being complex, per Kolmogorov's definition? Yes. I am mightily confused by this. But apparently Dembski's specified complexity requires low "specificational complexity" (low Kolmogorov complexity). IOW, the lower the descriptive compexity, the better. HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH ("X H's in a row) is simpler than HHTTTTHHHHHHHHHHTTTTTTTHTHTTTTTTTHH which is a more random (complex) sequence and takes more resources to describe ("2 heads, then 3 tails, etc.) Yes, that much is clear. But Kolmogorov complexity is a technical term: when something has a low K complexity it is generally said to not be "complex" in the colloquial sense. (My source is wikipedia. I had not heard of Chaitin and co. until Dembski referenced them.) Is there something arbitrary in this? Sounds like it. Is Dembski staking out a new arbitrary territory between "very low K complexity" and "not as low"? I don't know. Also, I don't see the point. What short descriptions of life does he have in mind, anyways? Like, ATGCTAGGCTATCGTAGCTAGCTGTAGCTAGCTTACTACTTACTACTACACTTACACTTATTCTACTATTATCTAT...GCTA means "squirrel"? "Squirrel" is no algorithm; it is merely a synonym, of sorts.
< Message edited by hellohellohi -- 8/6/2008 1:38:01 PM >
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 1:31:25 PM
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hellohellohi
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quote:
I suspect the answer is in his discussion on Fisherian statistics where one has to specify in advance probability levels for rejection of the hypothesis. One somewhat useful question to ask about Dembski's article from which you are drawing is, "Who is its intended audience?" I am not sure it is meant for a technical audience. I will get back to you on evidence for that though. On cursory observation is that he explains rather elementary concepts of statistic within it, suggesting it is not intended for experts: it does not read like a scholarly math article, for instance. Regarding more specifics about Fisher, etc. I will hopefully get back to you.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 1:36:26 PM
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hellohellohi
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quote:
Try again – one citation of a noted IDist (Behe, Meyers, Gonzales, Dembski) invoking a miracle as a means of life’s development. Put up, or shut up. Inevitably, we will have to approach a "theory of mind" of the designer if we are to continue to pursue inquiry as informed by ID thought. What kinds of questions will we ask? For instance, might we ask, Does the designer display attributes of complexity, as well, suggesting that it too was designed? Or might the designer exhibit attributes that ID grants may have spontaneously generated? Wouldn't the latter imply a contradiction and the former imply an infinite regression? What do the philosophers say about this?
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 3:35:17 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud Try again – one citation of a noted IDist (Behe, Meyers, Gonzales, Dembski) invoking a miracle as a means of life’s development. Put up, or shut up. You try. Give me one citation of a noted IDist discussing the specific mechanisms of ID. Show me how they rule out miracles. We all know what the real mechanisms are. Magic. Why else would you decry the lack of magic in science? Why else would you complain that supernatural miracles are excluded from science? Why else would you complain that the supernatural is not allowed to be invoked in science? Your complaints against science have only proved me right. quote:
And how did ‘the earth’ invoke this change? By providing a place where hominids could produce slightly altered offspring.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 3:38:37 PM
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Method
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud There is no 'advancement', only wild suggestions, which proliferate exactly at the rate of certain scientists to imagine them. Unlike Method or yourself, I actually cited specifically how wide and varied these undemonstrated speculations are. Undemonstrated speculations? Sure, I'll go along with that. The point is this. They are doing research. IDers are not. ID does not produce questions, it only pretends to have the answers. This leads to a position where they can only bad mouth the work of real scientists in hopes that no one will notice the absence of research in ID. Again, this thread is about ID and whether or not it is science. When IDers are backed into a corner their only response is "evolution can't do it". That is not how a scientific theory works.
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 3:50:51 PM
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Jhud
Posts: 7787
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quote:
You try. Give me one citation of a noted IDist discussing the specific mechanisms of ID. Show me how they rule out miracles. We all know what the real mechanisms are. Magic. Why else would you decry the lack of magic in science? Why else would you complain that supernatural miracles are excluded from science? Why else would you complain that the supernatural is not allowed to be invoked in science? Your complaints against science have only proved me right. I didn't claim that IDists cited a particular mechanism - you did. Now prove it or admit you are simply spouting off. Assertions (particularly your flailing, disingenous strawmen) aren't proof of anything.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 3:53:22 PM
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Jhud
Posts: 7787
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quote:
Undemonstrated speculations? Sure, I'll go along with that. The point is this. They are doing research. IDers are not. ID does not produce questions, it only pretends to have the answers. This leads to a position where they can only bad mouth the work of real scientists in hopes that no one will notice the absence of research in ID. Again, this thread is about ID and whether or not it is science. When IDers are backed into a corner their only response is "evolution can't do it". That is not how a scientific theory works. No, they aren't doing research, they are simply publicizing untestable and unfalsifiable, speculations. If you want to pretend that is 'research' then be my guest - but don't try to tell us this is 'real science' because it has nothing to do with science.
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Jack It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.. - Ronald Reagan
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RE: ID is not science - 8/6/2008 4:19:00 PM
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drj11
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
Undemonstrated speculations? Sure, I'll go along with that. The point is this. They are doing research. IDers are not. ID does not produce questions, it only pretends to have the answers. This leads to a position where they can only bad mouth the work of real scientists in hopes that no one will notice the absence of research in ID. Again, this thread is about ID and whether or not it is science. When IDers are backed into a corner their only response is "evolution can't do it". That is not how a scientific theory works. No, they aren't doing research, they are simply publicizing untestable and unfalsifiable, speculations. Are you talking about ID here? Finally we agree! quote:
If you want to pretend that is 'research' then be my guest - but don't try to tell us this is 'real science' because it has nothing to do with science. I know your smart enough to know this isnt true, which is why I say its intellectually dishonest. If abiogenesis research has nothing to do with science, whats it about then? More evil scientists wanting to explain away God so they can do whatever they want? I know your smart enough not to buy into that old canard either. Hypothesis get posited, researched and if they are falsified, they are discarded. That is science. That is what abiogenesis research is: science. What gives you the impression no one is doing research?
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