Creationist argument about DNA and information

…is it worth pointing out that it is you folks who never stop equivocating between “the laws of physics exist” ("we discover them"..."everything follows them")...and “…nope, they don’t”.

Do they…or do they not…exist?

These are the same thing. The description, the discovery, and the fact that the universe appears to follow set laws.

I have in front of me a cup of coffee. Everything that there is to know about it is embodied in that cup of coffee. How I then describe these things that can be known about it adds me and my ability to grasp the essence of it. But I also know the cup exists in a context, a particular position in time and space, in a gravitational field and with a certain temperature governed by how fast it is cooling in this environment.

In fact, I know that the category, "cup of coffee" is also something I have constructed as a subset of the entirety of existence. Those attributes I find useful to describe, including any regularities I denote as natural laws, are not the full description - only the thing itself is entitled to hold that honor. Yet, they are not made false for being less than the complete truth. I would expect any intelligent and sufficiently inquisitive investigator to discover the same facts about my cup of coffee I so proudly write up in my paper.

There is no shortage of truth here to discover. Rather, there is a bounty. And at no point am I required to say I have captured the cup of coffee entire, only that I have accurately described some properties I find interesting or useful.
 
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I find it interesting that while Daniel is quite happy to allude to his creationist beliefs, he is afraid to outright state them. I wonder why that is?
 
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I find it interesting that while Daniel is quite happy to allude to his creationist beliefs, he is afraid to outright state them. I wonder why that is?

Whilst this is is not a straight rule 8 breach, unless the poster is happy to confirm that he is indeed the same person as the poster at another site, it is a possible breach of rule 12 to 'out' them. Please address their arguments as they present them here.
Replying to this modbox in thread will be off topic  Posted By: Agatha
 
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......I wonder why that is?

He knows they'll get shredded. He knows that if his own arguments against science were turned onto his pet beliefs that he wouldn't be able to defend himself against himself. Even Daniel understands that such beliefs are irrational.
 
He knows they'll get shredded. He knows that if his own arguments against science were turned onto his pet beliefs that he wouldn't be able to defend himself against himself. Even Daniel understands that such beliefs are irrational.
I think you are correct.

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As I see it, what is being objected to in your arguments is it seems you are saying because we don't know, we can't know.


I have no idea where you got that from.

And no, I do not think we create the laws of nature. That is tantamount to saying Columbus created the New World. It was always there, he just found it.* We discover them. I will admit that what we think are the fundamental laws of nature might not be fundamental, there might be something else a layer below them, but how do we know if we don't look. And why can't we explore and use the laws that we have now, and refine them as new information arises? Why do we have to accept some intelligence, when there is no evidence for intelligence.


First you argue that we discover the laws of physics…then you argue that this does not constitute evidence of intelligence.

Tell me something…have you ever taken a moment and reviewed even the smallest fraction of what is known as ‘the laws of physics’. Go here to get some idea how vast they are.

After looking at all that…answer this simple question:

Could a rock have created those? Could an molecule? How about a wombat? An elephant? An asteroid? A wasp? Maybe an orangutan? How about a dolphin?

None of the above?...that’s the one. They were all generated by human beings. One of the words that define human beings is the word ‘intelligence’. It is quite obvious that only something with some significant intelligence could generate / comprehend all those various laws.

Now…since we don’t actually create them, we merely discover them (as you insisted), something else must create them. If (as you have argued) they do, in fact, exist (if they did not, we would not discover them)…how is it not reasonable to conclude that whatever did create them is some variety of intelligence?

Science is about facts. Testable and verifiable facts.


…and one of the most indisputable facts currently on the books…is that no one has a clue how any scientist anywhere anyhow creates science.

It’s ….all….faith! Sure it works. Yay for that. But no one has a clue where it comes from, how it’s created, what it is, or why it works.

That’s just one of those ‘gaps’ that you’re so determined to dismiss as inconsequential. You want a few more…we have no idea what the true reality of anything actually is. We have no idea how your brain creates ‘you’. We have no idea what a ‘you’ even is (or if it is a ‘thing’).

…I know…trivial stuff.

You can see this is why I find this sort of superficial philosophising pointless. You really think that it is an indisputable fact that we create the laws of physics and then it looks like everything follows them.


We create them. We generate them. They emerge from the activity of our minds. Is there something in any way controversial about this…or the elementary observation that everything seems to follow them?

The obvious and trivial response is to ask what does everything do until we create the laws.


…probably what everything has always done before we created the laws?

But I'm not going to be that cheap because I know that's not what you really meant


I think your paranoia is getting the better of you.

So that’s not what I really meant? Perhaps you could enlighten me about whatever it is that I really meant…cause, prior to this, I was pretty sure I had actually written what I really meant.

That this species of philosophising is at all useful or illuminating is an open question, but what is clear is that engaging in this discussion without defining and sticking to the agreed definitions of critical terms (eg, information, laws of physics, creation, intelligence, consciousness) is not useful in the slightest, and leads to the sort of internal inconsistencies that are so starkly on display here, not just across different pronouncements based on your thesis, but even within this single post.


Maybe so…but part of the problem is that we are dealing with conditions and concepts that are not clearly understood…and sometimes not understood at all. Pretending otherwise simply creates more problems.

It is not reasonable to conclude any such thing - you have not demonstrated that the premises are true, and even if you had done so, the conclusion doesn't follow.


Why…just cause you say so?

What is not accurate about any of it? Consciousness and intelligence are inextricably linked (not necessarily exclusively…but only a blind fool would argue otherwise). Information processing is, basically, what consciousness is..or does. The laws of physics are an explicit product of the specific information processing practiced by the intelligence that occurs as or is a result of consciousness.

So what…about any of that…is in the least bit controversial, let alone fraudulent or inconclusive?

Just about the only thing we don’t have are empirically quantified relationships.

None of these terms are defined in an unambiguous way - all I see is a lot of impressive words, arranged in some sort of sensible syntax, bearing very little clear and unambiguous meaning.


Really??? Nobody is going to dispute that a conscious human being uses information and intelligence to create the laws of physics. It is about as self-evident as any self-evident assertion can be. There are other ways to say the same and / or similar things…but there is nothing about that statement that is in the least bit disingenuous, controversial, fraudulent, or ambiguous.

…but you are claiming the opposite. Perhaps you might make the effort to make an argument then.

The universe demonstrates its mathematical nature to the same degree as it demonstrates the existence of e.g.: protons. Protons exist -- all our observational and experimental evidence confirms it. The universe is mathematical -- all our observational and experimental evidence confirms it.
Unless contrary evidence is discovered, that is the way it is.


…and yet when I suggest a similar issue (do the laws of physics actually exist) it is suddenly the subject of ridicule.

These are the same thing. The description, the discovery, and the fact that the universe appears to follow set laws.


How is it not incoherent to claim that a thing and its opposite are the same?

The question is very simple: Are there actually some manner of ‘laws of physics’ that govern the activity of reality?

IOW…is it just a coincidence that everything seems to follow the laws of physics?

I have in front of me a cup of coffee. Everything that there is to know about it is embodied in that cup of coffee. How I then describe these things that can be known about it adds me and my ability to grasp the essence of it. But I also know the cup exists in a context, a particular position in time and space, in a gravitational field and with a certain temperature governed by how fast it is cooling in this environment.

In fact, I know that the category, "cup of coffee" is also something I have constructed as a subset of the entirety of existence. Those attributes I find useful to describe, including any regularities I denote as natural laws, are not the full description - only the thing itself is entitled to hold that honor. Yet, they are not made false for being less than the complete truth. I would expect any intelligent and sufficiently inquisitive investigator to discover the same facts about my cup of coffee I so proudly write up in my paper.

There is no shortage of truth here to discover. Rather, there is a bounty. And at no point am I required to say I have captured the cup of coffee entire, only that I have accurately described some properties I find interesting or useful.


It’s not a matter of true…or false. It’s a matter of what is the relationship between the laws we create to describe everything…and the everything they describe? So far no one knows…at all. Which is plainly stupid…given the issues and implications.

There are only two descriptions. Your description of the thing…and whatever the thing is itself. Your description could be anything…from ‘cup of coffee’ to a thousand pages of mathematical formulae. It would all amount to ‘your description.’ The question is, what is the thing-in-itself?
 
It’s not a matter of true…or false. It’s a matter of what is the relationship between the laws we create to describe everything…and the everything they describe? So far no one knows…at all. Which is plainly stupid…given the issues and implications.

There are only two descriptions. Your description of the thing…and whatever the thing is itself. Your description could be anything…from ‘cup of coffee’ to a thousand pages of mathematical formulae. It would all amount to ‘your description.’ The question is, what is the thing-in-itself?

There is only one description of the thing - it requires me, a describer. Since I can describe imaginary things, existence of the "thing being described" isn't even needed.

And the answer to the question, "What is the thing-in-itself?" is "the thing in itself." That is the only answer which captures all that can be captured and all that cannot.

There is no sin in this, nor any mystery. To do otherwise would be to require omnicience - since all things are connected to all other things, and the state of all these interactions evolves through time. The process of conceptualization is handy because it cuts off and limits the extension (the "what is touched") by the thing-in-itself. It's a limiting process of the type we see in model-making, an attempt to gather from the too-large-to-handle picture some elements of interest. When those elements are reliable patterns we then call them laws or rules.

If you like, you can think of the laws as merely a way I communicate my expectations to others about what will happen under certain conditions. There is no stricture imposed on the universe to obey the laws and although we hold some rules as laudable, it's the same thing as when I tell you a coworker is lazy. I am communicating my belief that the coworker, if given the chance, will follow a pattern I call "lazy." The fact that I have identified this pattern doesn't impose the property on the coworker. I might be wrong. They may have changed their work habits. I might be back-stabbing the coworker to gain status for myself. Of course, you are free to form your own opinion on the matter, to examine whatever evidences I submit, and to reevaluate the situation as time marches on. Should my judgement pass your peer review, you may, in turn, start to proclaim the coworker is lazy too. (Which she is.)
 
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…and one of the most indisputable facts currently on the books…is that no one has a clue how any scientist anywhere anyhow creates science..........

Currently on whose books?

Indisputable? Go on, I dispute it, on the grounds that not only are you wrong, but that you have no testable hypothesis, there is nothing repeatable about your claims, just vague hand-waving. I watch science being done every day. It is a very clear and simple process, and I know exactly how one tiny little bit of it works. Just because science, many centuries into its existence, came up with evidence that the planet was ancient and that species evolve, it doesn't mean that you bible-bashers can dismiss it. After all, you're always troubled by the concept of evidence. You may not like it, but it is entirely your right to be wrong.
 
We create them. We generate them. They emerge from the activity of our minds. Is there something in any way controversial about this…or the elementary observation that everything seems to follow them?
You really think it is INDISPUTABLE (a word that you regularly use for some eminently disputable bald assertion that you are about to make) that we create the laws of physics that everything follows? The word create means to bring into existence. So according to you, it is indisputable that we bring into existence the laws of physics which everything follows. But we don't dictate to nature how to behave and so the idea that we create laws which nature follows is an incoherent and unsupportable proposition.

Perhaps you'd like to give us one clear example of a law of physics that everything follows?

annnoid said:
hecd2 said:
The obvious and trivial response is to ask what does everything do until we create the laws
.…probably what everything has always done before we created the laws?
Then we don't create the laws which everything follows, do we?

I think your paranoia is getting the better of you.

So that’s not what I really meant? Perhaps you could enlighten me about whatever it is that I really meant…cause, prior to this, I was pretty sure I had actually written what I really meant.
Well did you write what you really meant when you wrote " B)…this ‘information’ proceeds according to ‘the laws of physics’ that C)…are somehow discovered [NOT created] by something we call intelligence...."? If you make mutually exclusive claims within the same post ("We create them (the laws)" versus "(the laws) are somehow discovered [NOT created]") then it is reasonable to conclude that you didn't mean what you wrote in one or other case through a slip of the mind or a slip of the keyboard. The alternative is to conclude that you are in such a fug of confusion that you don't actually know what you mean at all. At least I gave you the benefit of the doubt.
Maybe so…but part of the problem is that we are dealing with conditions and concepts that are not clearly understood…and sometimes not understood at all. Pretending otherwise simply creates more problems.
Well then, perhaps it would help to define your terms as clearly as possible, and strive to stick to those definitions - that might make an impossible task merely a very difficult one. And one is tempted to say that if we are dealing with concepts that are not at all understood then one would be advised to pass silently on and grapple with something that we do understand.

Why…just cause you say so?

What is not accurate about any of it? Consciousness and intelligence are inextricably linked (not necessarily exclusively…but only a blind fool would argue otherwise). Information processing is, basically, what consciousness is..or does. The laws of physics are an explicit product of the specific information processing practiced by the intelligence that occurs as or is a result of consciousness.
You see, there you go again. On the one hand you say we're dealing with concepts that are not clearly undertood or understood at all, and on the other hand these relationships are so obvious that even a "blind fool" would fail to accede to them. "Information processing is, basically, what consciousness is..or does" So is information processing what concsiousness is? Or is it what it does? Do you genuinely think the distinction is unimportant? Am I supposed to agree to this incoherent babbling on pain of being a "blind fool"?
So what…about any of that…is in the least bit controversial, let alone fraudulent or inconclusive?
It's all controversial and inconclusive. I leave fraudulent for you to decide.
Just about the only thing we don’t have are empirically quantified relationships.
Yep, it's all incredibly mysterious and beyond the wit of man to comprehend, except when you build it into a fractured self-serving syllogism using undefined terms and then it becomes so obvious that all we lack is quantification.
Really??? Nobody is going to dispute that a conscious human being uses information and intelligence to create the laws of physics.
I will. If by "create" you mean "bring into existence" and by the "laws of physics" you mean the rules which nature obeys, then I strongly dispute that statement. So that's not "nobody" is it?
It is about as self-evident as any self-evident assertion can be. There are other ways to say the same and / or similar things…but there is nothing about that statement that is in the least bit disingenuous, controversial, fraudulent, or ambiguous.
You don't have very high standards for what is self-evident, do you? In establishing the truth or otherwise of your "self evident" assertion, you might begin by defining the following terms unambiguously: conscious, information, intelligence, create, the laws of physics.
 
Perhaps you'd like to give us one clear example of a law of physics that everything follows?


Perhaps you could point out where I ever claimed that 'everything' follows 'A' law of physics?????

...the rest of your post is equally ridiculous...but I'm busy now so I'll get to it later.
 
Just a couple of general observations...

People really should not use the word "indisputable" together with the phrase "we don't have a freakin' clue!"- unless irony is the aim. Just sayin'...

"Complexity" and "information" seem like good metrics by which to conclude "Intelligent Agency" (or goddidit!)- until you realize that the one (information) is being so narrowly and rigidly defined that the conclusion is a circle, and the other (complexity) is so loose a metric that it amounts to "you know it when you see it." In either case, you have the DanielscienceTM methodology where, instead of testing and adjusting the theory of goddidit against an empirical metric, you're testing and adjusting your metric against the theory. This sort of made-to-fit metrics might make good science on Bizarro-World; here in reality...well. I was just sitting on my front porch watching a couple of squirrels chasing each other round and round the trunk of a big oak tree in the yard. Round and round they went; then one squirrel went up the trunk a bit, and turned to watch as the other, unaware, continued round and round...the watcher's tail just twitching away, sort of a squirrel-twerk, I guess.

Just sayin'...
 
Please endeavour to stick to the topic, and to remain civil and polite. I have a pocketful of yellow cards and will not hesitate to use them should the thread not get back on track.
Replying to this modbox in thread will be off topic  Posted By: Agatha
 
barehl said:
Most are aware that the Answers In Genesis website gives arguments about creationism. One of their arguments is:

Christian: “DNA has information in it—the instructions to form a living being. And information never comes about by chance; it always comes from a mind. So DNA proves that God created the first creatures.”
Every one of those phrases is an unproven or ill-defined assertion.
1) "DNA has information in it" - says who? What definition of "information" makes this true?

2) "the instructions to form a living being" - "instructions" assumes too much, it sneaks in the conclusion they are trying to reach. Does space contain the "instructions" (by way of gravity) to form planets? (Also, "living being" is a bogus category, since nothing DNA makes is living - which is a bogus category in the discussion meant to add an element of mystery.)

3) " information never comes about by chance; it always comes from a mind." Again, assuming the thing we want to prove. It supposes there is a purpose, a goal that is achieved by following a recipe. Evolution tells us this isn't the case at all.

4) "DNA proves that God created the first creatures" - how did they jump from "intelligence" to God? Aliens would do as well. Aliens that don't have DNA would fit all the conditions.

I think the best they could do would be to lay the "magic of life" at the feet of natural laws and then propose those laws were "invented" by God. DNA can't be the whole story, simply because environment plays such a strong role - we aren't simply the result of our DNA, context matters at least as much. If God's going to get credit for the context, evolution gets you life anyhow, so there's no particular reason to see the Hand of God at the creation of animals level.

The idea presented simultaneously asks for too many assumptions and too few.
This is from one of the first posts in this thread, on page 1 (I could have chosen any one of several others, in the first page or two).

Here we are, nearly three months', and 30 pages, later. Since the first ~couple of pages, other than the posts by Daniel (and responses to them), has there been anything new? Other than quote mining and Danielscience, what contributions to rational, science-based discussion have Daniel's (and annnnoid's) posts made?

Myself, I have learned to be especially skeptical of quotes which seem, to me, to be inconsistent with either the (stated) author or the science the quote seems to be about. I have also learned that information theory, and thermodynamics, have been applied to biochemistry, with some interesting results.

And I have seen abundant confirmation of the central necessity of reaching agreement on the definitions of key terms before trying to engage in a discussion on a topic like this.

I would have liked to learn what the Danielscience explanations of cancer are (ditto how the internet and computers work), and what Daniel (and annnnoid) thinks about the 'god of the gaps' logical fallacy.

What about you?
 
This is from one of the first posts in this thread, on page 1 (I could have chosen any one of several others, in the first page or two).

Here we are, nearly three months', and 30 pages, later. Since the first ~couple of pages, other than the posts by Daniel (and responses to them), has there been anything new? Other than quote mining and Danielscience, what contributions to rational, science-based discussion have Daniel's (and annnnoid's) posts made?

A few have extended the topic, which is actually quite interesting in its own right. Daniel's posts are just low-hanging fruit.

I would like to find some method by which I could reliably determine authorship/intelligence/design, but haven't yet figured out if one is possible.
 
<snip>

I would like to find some method by which I could reliably determine authorship/intelligence/design, but haven't yet figured out if one is possible.

Me too.

I'd extend "reliably" to include "objective" and "independently verifiable", in case those attributes are not already included.
 
I would have liked to learn what the Danielscience explanations of cancer are (ditto how the internet and computers work), and what Daniel (and annnnoid) thinks about the 'god of the gaps' logical fallacy.


What is the 'god of the gaps' logical fallacy?
 
There is only one description of the thing - it requires me, a describer. Since I can describe imaginary things, existence of the "thing being described" isn't even needed.

And the answer to the question, "What is the thing-in-itself?" is "the thing in itself." That is the only answer which captures all that can be captured and all that cannot.

There is no sin in this, nor any mystery. To do otherwise would be to require omnicience - since all things are connected to all other things, and the state of all these interactions evolves through time. The process of conceptualization is handy because it cuts off and limits the extension (the "what is touched") by the thing-in-itself. It's a limiting process of the type we see in model-making, an attempt to gather from the too-large-to-handle picture some elements of interest. When those elements are reliable patterns we then call them laws or rules.

If you like, you can think of the laws as merely a way I communicate my expectations to others about what will happen under certain conditions. There is no stricture imposed on the universe to obey the laws and although we hold some rules as laudable, it's the same thing as when I tell you a coworker is lazy. I am communicating my belief that the coworker, if given the chance, will follow a pattern I call "lazy." The fact that I have identified this pattern doesn't impose the property on the coworker. I might be wrong. They may have changed their work habits. I might be back-stabbing the coworker to gain status for myself. Of course, you are free to form your own opinion on the matter, to examine whatever evidences I submit, and to reevaluate the situation as time marches on. Should my judgement pass your peer review, you may, in turn, start to proclaim the coworker is lazy too. (Which she is.)


I think I was not all that clear. There are only two instances of a thing. What it is, and that which is created by a describer. According to the QM thread, the first instance may be in some question but, I suppose for the sake of sanity, we’ll just assume that the-thing-in-itself does, in fact, possess some manner of reality distinct from the describer of the thing.

In the case of imaginary things the question is, of course, academic. But in the case of everything else, there is a ‘thing-being-described’ (for now). And since we’re in the process of adjudicating the essence of the process of description, the ‘truth’ (which may, in this singular case, actually be the appropriate term) of both the process and the ‘thing’ may have finally become relevant. Also relevant since it at the very least appears as if there is more than a metaphorical relationship between our scientific models and that which is modeled. So far ‘appears’ is as far as anyone has got with that question.

Thus…it is reasonable to generate a phenomenology to describe that which our models occur as. We use the word ‘information’ to represent this phenomenology. It is also reasonable to generate a phenomenology to describe the process by which ‘information’ is processed to achieve these models. We use the word ‘intelligence’ to represent that particular phenomenology.

Neither of these terms has any explicit empirical representation. But…just because they cannot be explicitly defined does not mean that that which they represent has no legitimacy. The word ‘intelligence’ is almost synonymous with ‘human being’, despite the fact that neither has any explicit definition. And the word ‘information’ is also synonymous with ‘thought’…again despite the fact that neither can be explicitly adjudicated. In each case, something of enormous and sufficiently differentiated qualities exists to support the existence of a term to represent it.

This is the meaning of ‘normative’. It occurs across vast swathes of the human landscape. Quite legitimately as well. Thus…the conditions that occur as ‘normative’ cannot be simply dismissed because they lack explicit empirical representation.

I suppose that, even if the truth of reality were somehow resolved it would not necessarily alter the life of any one of us…at least it wouldn’t have to. The limits of our understanding would still be the limits of our understanding. Unfortunately, most folks do not possess the skills of a Wittgenstein in knowing when there are things that ‘must be passed over in silence’. Like all incomprehensible realities, it would inevitably be misunderstood and misrepresented. IOW…if there is a God (of whatever qualities)…it must almost inevitably be intelligent enough to understand how stupid human beings are (or…perhaps more charitably…be intelligent enough to understand the limits of understanding and why they exist).

Currently on whose books?

Indisputable? Go on, I dispute it, on the grounds that not only are you wrong, but that you have no testable hypothesis, there is nothing repeatable about your claims, just vague hand-waving. I watch science being done every day. It is a very clear and simple process, and I know exactly how one tiny little bit of it works. Just because science, many centuries into its existence, came up with evidence that the planet was ancient and that species evolve, it doesn't mean that you bible-bashers can dismiss it. After all, you're always troubled by the concept of evidence. You may not like it, but it is entirely your right to be wrong.


That’s all very nice, but I think you’re talking about someone else. As for what is known about how the brain creates ‘you’ (and therefore…how ‘you’ create science [or anything else])…here is the current consensus position in neuroscience:

“We have no idea how consciousness emerges from the physical activity of the brain.”

I would suggest that…like Lukraak_Sisser…your ideological zeal is getting the better of you. But if you want to dispute it, go right ahead. Produce this thing you call ‘evidence’. Find me someone who can explain how this happens. I unconditionally guarantee that you will not be able to find anyone anywhere anyhow who can even begin to definitively explain how your brain produces a single letter of a single word of a single sentence of a single paragraph of a single post you or anyone else has ever deposited on these threads.

Since you will not be able to accomplish this… your claim that I am ‘hand-waving’ is itself…hand waving.

Which means….just like I said…science has no idea how science happens. It’s all….faith.



Boggles the mind…it truly does. Why don’t you take a moment and look through the various threads at ISP and count the number of times skeptics describe reality as ‘following the laws of physics’ (…often in direct response to theists who constantly like to claim that science cannot explain everything).

I have no issue with it. Like I said…it’s hardly a controversial statement. Perhaps it will come as something of a surprise to your fellow skeptics that you find it so questionable. It’s quite obviously meant metaphorically (cause it’s backwards…and there was a thread where this very issue was quite explicitly clarified…let me know if you’d like an education and I’ll find it for you)…but it is represented that way because, according to every normative instinct that human beings have…that is how it looks, even to a scientist deeply steeped in rational discourse.

So why don’t we find out where hecd2 stands on all this, since you seem to take issue with so many of your fellow skeptics. We’ll just use a very familiar piece of science as our reference:

E=mc2

Here’s the list of questions you can answer:

1 Was this created / discovered by an intelligent entity? If you want a good definition of the word ‘intelligent’…I will just point to Einstein and say…’that’.

2 We could also take this equation and ask: Would it be reasonable to conclude that a ‘thing’ with the capacity to create / discover / generate / comprehend / apply (any one, any combination, or all of the preceding) this equation would be described by the word ‘intelligent’?

3 If neither ‘created’ or ‘discovered’ is the word you would use (when describing Einstein and this equation)…what word would you use to describe how Einstein arrived at this conclusion?

4 If an astrophysicist / cosmologist / mathematician / physicist is studying experiments from the LHC…does this equation still apply?

5 If an astrophysicist / cosmologist / mathematician / physicist is working on data related to galaxies at the farthest edges of the known universe…does this equation still apply?

6 Is there anywhere in the known universe where it is known or assumed that this equation becomes invalid?

7 Presumably you will agree that the word ‘intelligence’ does some have some manner of normative application. Could you find anyone who would dispute that the author of that equation is a prime…arguably indisputable… example of it (to whatever degree ‘it’ exists as a thing)?

8 Is it, or is it not, generally (normatively) agreed that ‘information’ is what your intelligence (mind) processes? If it is some other variety of ‘thing’ perhaps you could enlighten us as to what that is.

9 Do we actually know what variety of ‘thing’ it is…or if it is a ‘thing’ at all?

10 If you want a definition of ‘information’…I would point to your head and say ‘the pieces that constitute what you are thinking’. If you (again) want a definition of intelligence I would again point to your head and say…’the process that is going on there’. Basically… moving all those pieces (information) around to generate new pieces.

11 Is it, or is it not, generally agreed that ‘consciousness’ and ‘mind’ are essentially equivalent. If you want a definition of ‘consciousness’ I would point to your head and say…’what is there that is generated by the physical activity of the brain but which is not the physical activity of the brain’. ‘You’…in other words. If you look earlier in my post you will notice a statement by a group of neuroscientists in which they differentiate between the physical brain and that which it generates (consciousness / ‘you’). That is the extent of normative understanding at the moment.

Eleven simple questions. Shouldn’t be all that hard. Once we’ve got all that out of the way, we can find out what any of this is all about.

As for my own position…it is simply that we create / discover the laws of physics and that they do describe everything from here to the edge of the universe and back. We (who are the only example of consciousness that we know of) use our intelligence to process information to generate these laws of physics.

I can almost guarantee that you won’t find a credible scientist on the planet who will find anything remotely controversial about a single word in that statement.

I sometimes substitute the word ‘discover’ but the difference is trivial since it is simply a matter of faith. We have no idea either where they come from or how it happens. Even if I use the word create…ultimately your definition is useless because I don’t create the process of creation itself…therefore I am always somehow in the process of discovery, not creation. What matters is…what is it that is generated.. and what is the relationship between what is generated and where it comes from / how it is generated?

It may be true that we do not have explicit empirical definitions for these terms (consciousness, information, intelligence, etc.)…but we still have functional / normative definitions which just about everyone recognizes and uses every moment of every day (including innumerable scientists).

Thus…normatively speaking…a human being is an intelligent entity, by definition.
Normatively speaking…a human mind processes information, by definition (because that is simply the convention we’ve established to describe the ‘stuff-of-thought’).
Normatively speaking…consciousness is what a ‘you’ is…by definition.
Normatively speaking…the phrase “a conscious human being uses information and intelligence to create the laws of physics”…is not in the least bit controversial. It is a normative statement using mutually agreeable meanings to describe an activity.

A few have extended the topic, which is actually quite interesting in its own right. Daniel's posts are just low-hanging fruit.

I would like to find some method by which I could reliably determine authorship/intelligence/design, but haven't yet figured out if one is possible.


…and what if that ‘method’ is some manner of subjective undertaking? There is, in fact, a great deal of evidence to suggest that this is exactly the case. Meaning…you will discover that one is possible when you discover it. It’s not a matter of putting the right words together in the right order…it’s a matter of putting the right words together in the right order…and understanding what they mean (which might depend on something other than words entirely).

…as the old saying goes: “I can explain it to you, but I can’t understand it for you.”

What is amazing is the degree to which this aphorism is accurate…but also the degree to which there does not exist a science on the planet that can explicitly confirm this fact.

So much for science!

This is hardly a revelation though. In virtually every corner of the planet and every moment of history can be found examples of human wisdom that point to these conclusions. They’re not science…but I still prefer what Wittgenstein had to say about science:

“Man has to awaken to wonder - and so perhaps do peoples. Science is a way of sending him to sleep again.”

I wonder if there will ever occur a ‘science’ that has the capacity to explain conclusions like that?

"Science cannot explain X, therefore goddidit".


Really…that’s it!

As things currently stand, science cannot explain what anything actually is, where everything actually comes from, what you are, or how you (or science) can explain anything at all!

In fact…all we do have are models…and we don’t even know what the explicit relationship is between the models and whatever-it-is that all the models describe / represent. They work real well of course…all these models. But nobody has a clue why that is. ‘Coincidence’ just doesn’t seem to cut it.

So basically…we’re ultimately left with one giant question mark…about everything (…yup…everything!). And ‘everything’ is in the process of being reduced to something called ‘information’. Thus…what you, me, and everything somehow is…is one vast case of information processing. Which…just by coincidence…is how most computer scientists like to define consciousness. You. Who knows what that all means. Not me, that’s for sure. But if it looks like a duck, sounds like a duck, and acts like a duck…maybe it is a duck…just maybe.

…and I guess we can also dispense with the corollary of the g.o.t.g. fallacy…just so we don’t waste time.

“If God (or ‘whatever’) created / creates everything…what created God?”

I would simply respond: “Assuming that this thing ‘God’ is whatever-it-is that created / creates 15 billion light years of everything…time, space, maybe even additional dimensions, absolutely insane levels of every kind of mathematical complexity comprehensible and incomprehensible, consciousness, reason, logic, emotions, intelligence…even science itself…etc. etc. etc….

…what evidence is there that you or anyone could even begin to comprehend the answer to ‘what created God’? Especially ….ESPECIALLY…when it can easily be conclusively demonstrated that neither you nor any science on the planet come anywhere close to knowing what you yourself even are!

…so, given that you have yet to comprehend the existence of an entity that has the limited qualities of a few decades of existence in a small corner of galactic real-estate that does not come close to even comprehending itself (aka: you) …what even remote reason is there to believe that this thing (you) could even begin to comprehend the origins of that which not only creates you but which creates something of the dimensions just described?

Plainly…none!
 
<snip>
JeanTate said:
"Science cannot explain X, therefore goddidit".
Really…that’s it!

At the simple sentence level, yes.

As things currently stand, science cannot explain what anything actually is, where everything actually comes from, what you are, or how you (or science) can explain anything at all!

In fact…all we do have are models…and we don’t even know what the explicit relationship is between the models and whatever-it-is that all the models describe / represent. They work real well of course…all these models. But nobody has a clue why that is. <snip>

It seems to me that you and I are "talking past each other". I'll try to establish some common ground, from which we may start to have a meaningful discussion.

Allow me, please, to start here:

Observations are made, and data from them recorded. The process is carefully documented. The data are published. Openly. With this, anyone can repeat the observations, check the data, etc. This is called - by me, in the discussion that you (annnnoid) and me are having, objective and independently verifiable.

Models are developed. They are tested against the objective, independently verifiable observations. They match. The models predict some things. New observations are made. They also match the models. The models are scrutinized for internal consistency. They are shown to be internally consistent. With one important caveat (which I'll get to later), this is called - by me, in the discussion that you (annnnoid) and me are having, the models are consistent with all relevant observations within their domains. And this consistency is objective and independently verifiable.

This is what "science explains" means.

If you are OK with this, then we can continue; if not, please say, as clearly as you can, what parts you do not agree with.
 

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