These following statements by Dr A are inconsistent.
(1) I have cited as an example of a non-concious process which produces order "the action of the sea grading and sorting the pebbles on the beach".
(2) The sea is not intelligent.
(3) Statement (2) does not depend in any way upon some imaginary non-claim which I have not made to the effect that the sea, water, or the laws of hydrodynamics cannot be a consequence of intelligent design.
(4) Duh.
&
Dr A
No. We know of lots of things in nature which create order without consciousness. Hence, order is not prima facie indicative of conscious understanding
We don't need to talk about the sea sorting out pebbles and yet not being intelligent. Instead we can change it to:
1) An example of a non-conscious process which produces order is the action of my arms and hands in sorting the pebbles on the beach and putting them into pretty patterns.
2) My arms and hands are not conscious.
3) Nevertheless the sorting is a direct consequence of intelligent design.
So I absolutely agree with these set of statements. But they are inconsistent with:
Dr A
No. We know of lots of things in nature which create order without consciousness. Hence, order is not prima facie indicative of conscious understanding.
But of course we know nothing of the sort. We can consider the entirety of physical reality to be in an appropriate sense God's "body". In this case the sea is analogous to my arms and hands, and of course the sea sorting out pebbles would indeed be indicative of conscious understanding.
So let us look at the situation again. There is order created by human agency i.e consciousness directed towards an end. And there is order created by physical laws. But as I've already pointed out, saying the order is created by physical laws
is not an explanation of that order since physical laws simply
describe reality.
The order then is:
a) simply a brute fact about the world without further explanation. Thus for example the reason why all electrons have precisely the same electric charge is for absolutely no reason at all. It is just a gratuitous brute fact about the Universe that order exists without absolutely any reason whatsoever.
or
b) it is a result of something else. If we're talking about the fundamental physical laws eg the electric charge of an electron, then this cannot be explained by yet further physical laws. Thus it is for some reason going beyond explanation in terms of physical laws -- thus it is for some
metaphysical reason.
This metaphysical reason can be non-conscious or conscious. But as I have already argued, saying this metaphysical reason is non-conscious takes us into an infinite regress. Saying it is consciousness however certainly doesn't since conscious intent, coupled with the power to act, fulfils a complete explanation.
So we have 2 types of order in the world. One of which we know is brought about by causal agency, the other (all the physical laws creating order) we have no idea how it is brought about. But we know it can only either be by some sort of consciousness with the power to act, or the order is simply a brute fact about the world.
But given that we know that one type of order is brought about by conscious agency, then by induction it might seem reasonable to suppose that the other type of order is brought about by conscious agency too. The alternative is to suppose that all the "natural" order in the Universe has no reason whatsoever.
So I have not proved that an appropriate "God" exists (interpreted as a universal consciousness where physical laws describe its behaviour). Nevertheless I have certainly provided a reason to suppose why such a "God" might exist. Nothing you have said addresses my argument in the remotest.