Meadmaker
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- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
I'm not saying the argument is correct. I'm saying that selection doesn't get you out of the random problem. If a guy comes to you saying that you can't be assembled by chance, you aren't going to win by telling him that you can be assembled by chance, but only if you add an additional constraint. That's what you are doing by trying to convince him that selection makes the process non-random. You are avoiding his problem, which is a mental block on the idea of random assembly, and you are substituting an even harder problem, which is random assembly with constraints.
If you want to counter the argument that we are too complex to have come about by chance, there's no way around dealing with the argument. There's no point in denying it. We can, and did, come about by chance. Selection doesn't negate the chance aspect, because the creation process is still pure, 100% random mutation. Selection just adds an additional layer of difficulty on top of a problem that the creationist already thinks is unsolvable.
If you want to counter the argument that we are too complex to have come about by chance, there's no way around dealing with the argument. There's no point in denying it. We can, and did, come about by chance. Selection doesn't negate the chance aspect, because the creation process is still pure, 100% random mutation. Selection just adds an additional layer of difficulty on top of a problem that the creationist already thinks is unsolvable.
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