mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
Southwind17-
I think you're missing the point: the analogy overemphasizies one, single aspect of evolution. No-one here has denied that both biological evolution and technological development are examples of "change over time with retention of 'what works'". However, that is not the only relevant relevant attribute when trying to describe evolution to someone who already thinks that God intervened in evolution much in the same way that engineers intervene in technological development, which, as jimbob has shown, is the belief of at least one prominent intelligent design proponent. Just as saying that engines are all the same because they "provide power to drive other processes" doesn't explain why gasoline engines need an ignition source while diesel engines don't, so too does saying that biological evolution and technological development are the same because they are both examples of "change over time with retention of 'what works'" not explain how biological evolution and intelligent design are different, which ironically was your purpose in your OP. You actually need to address the differences between biological evolution and technological development in order to distinguish biological evolution from intelligent design.
I think you're missing the point: the analogy overemphasizies one, single aspect of evolution. No-one here has denied that both biological evolution and technological development are examples of "change over time with retention of 'what works'". However, that is not the only relevant relevant attribute when trying to describe evolution to someone who already thinks that God intervened in evolution much in the same way that engineers intervene in technological development, which, as jimbob has shown, is the belief of at least one prominent intelligent design proponent. Just as saying that engines are all the same because they "provide power to drive other processes" doesn't explain why gasoline engines need an ignition source while diesel engines don't, so too does saying that biological evolution and technological development are the same because they are both examples of "change over time with retention of 'what works'" not explain how biological evolution and intelligent design are different, which ironically was your purpose in your OP. You actually need to address the differences between biological evolution and technological development in order to distinguish biological evolution from intelligent design.