cyborg said:
Adam Smith's "invisible hand" was non-supernatural, and a demonstration of structure arising without a central plan.
And yet the prhase "invisible hand" invokes imagery of a anthropomorphic force... much like a god.
Well, that's an argument for the ID crowd if you ask me - and I'm feeling facetious so it is
Yes it does, which is why I did not say it was a good analogy for evolution, but a better example than evolution to explain the development of technology. It is not any type of demonstration of evolution.
cyborg said:
Or that it is very difficult to tell when you are trying to score a cheap shot and when you actually have something to say.
Isn't this Humpty Dumpty's argument in Alice?
Yes. Which is why it is important to know what the words mean. Since you guys are more interested in ensuring that the words are ringfenced into domains you feel safe about rather than discussing the meaning you are going to continue to tak past us.
Words might be physically patterns on surfaces or vibrations in air. But these convey meaning, and in attempts at communication, it is good to use the same agreed on terms for words, and not to use eccentric defintions.
The only eccentric definitions here are yours because they are all over the place.
Why is it eccentric, when talking about the theory of evolution to point out that this does not apply to engineered producte which
off the top of my head :
a) Do not imperfectly self-replicate.
b) Used experimnets to determine and model the behaviour of the systems and subsystems
c) Were designed with intelligent application of theories derived from observations and experiments, including observing evolved systems (e.g. birds).
d) Were altered in the light of failures and not just successes.
e) Were altered in the light of what people thought ther people were doing or designing
Evolution is not design because if we relate it in anyway the ID crowd get an argument but talking about "invisible hands" is fine because we all know that's not a "real" invisible hand so that's not something the ID crow could use.
Perhaps if you could stop worrying for a few seconds about how you could be misinterpreted in order to satisfy a political agenda we could make some progression and you could start being more consistent yes?
Political agendas care about words. Scientific ones do not.
No, Design is not Evolution, as described in the theory of evolution for the reasons above.
Perhaps if you could stop worrying for a few seconds about how you could be misinterpreted in order to satisfy a political agenda
Why should I promote misunderstanding? It is not being
misinterpereted, it is promoting a superficially attractive, incorrect concept.
cyborg said:
If one states that evolution could involve intelligent direction, then how is that different from accepting "microevolution" and directed "macroevolution" (terms which are meaningless).
Nothing jimbob if the meanings are equivalent. A rational person would accept that rather than get uppity about the words.
But why imply that there is a difference if there is not?
As far as I understand it, these terms are only used by advocates of intelligent design.
"Microevolution" means any evolution that even they can't deny.
"Macroevolution" means any evolution with a "big change" that invokes "irreducible complexity". Obviously, as more fossils come to light, the IDers have to reassign more cases to "microevolution".
The point is, and always has been, that the burden of proving that an extra entity is a contingent necessity to explain a phenomena which is already adequately explained without that entity is upon the shoulders of those positing it.
This is why the "painting needs a painter" argument is so horrbily flawed: there are so many silent presumptions already placed in it. It presumes the a priori meaning of a painting without a painter, it ignores the difference between the extraction of meaning by an observer and the imposition of meaning by one and so on...
Why make it easier for them?
I have said that if the OP talked about technologies developing, then that would make a point against "perfect creation" as there obviously has been change.
By pretending that there is absolutely no possibility of cross-over YOU WILL sound like a faith-head because the pure logic doesn't allow that. Again the epistemology of science DEMANDS that the explanation is smallest but pure LOGIC does not - it just demands that it is consistent in whatever framework you construct.
It is as consistent to claim that every single change in the heritage of the universe was by a force that wanted it that way as it is to claim it is by a force that did not care. You need to accept this is the case.
But the signatures are
different for the reasons above.
Evolution couldn't have produced aircraft (except breeding ones).
Evolutionary
algorithms could produce aircraft.
Evolutionary algorithms alone would have produced a different "history" of developments, as there would be no assessment for why failures occur, and as well as improvements there would be more "neutral" feature changes between iterations.
(Of course given an infinite number of times this would happen, but we are not talking about an infinite timescale).
Competent designers with the current level of human knowledge
couldn't have designed a mouse.
Competent designers with the current level of human knowledge
wouldn't have designed a mamalian eye; or if they did, they would have corrected the design flaws. Ditto for many other evolved features.