There is, however, a purpose behind the multitude of changes made to technologies during their development, contrasting starkly with the distinct lack of purpose behind the the changes that occur during biological evolution. The point that I was trying to with the question about Dembski is that Dembski is supporting the analogy between technological development and biological evolution because he sees purpose behind both.
Mijo - have you even
read the multiple posts I've made that explain why technological development
could progress without purpose if was allowed to and generate essentially the same 'result', and that forethought and intent, as I believe jimbob has now come to realize, are simply
tools that are used for convenience? If so, why do you not understand what I'm saying? What part of my explanation do you disagree with?
The best way to combat such an interpretation is to emphasize the lack of purpose in biological evolution by avoiding analogies of biological evolution to processes with purpose.
I disagree. As I've written earlier, I think this plays into the ID proponents' hands because it seeks directly to invalidate their comparison and becomes immediately and easily objectionable. By demonstrating that biological evolution and technological development can, in fact, be closely likened,
but at the same time demonstrating why complex human (intelligent) designs use only and exactly the same basic ingredients and
do not necessarily have to rely on forethought and intent in order to achieve their purpose (in other words complex human design is absolutely nothing to write home about!), affords a much stronger case. The entire ID analogy then, in an instant, essentially falls apart.
This can to a certain extent be done, as it was done by Dawkins in The Blind Watchmaker, by blinding or somehow handicapping the agent of technological development.
I've just finished reading that book, again, with this thread in mind. I don't recall Dawkins making any such emphasis, or even contrasting the two processes. Which part of the book are you referring to?
However, there is no longer a perfect analogy to technological development because agents of technological development do make purposeful decisions based on a logical framework both of which are utterly absent in biological evolution.
Here we go again. See my first response above. Please answer the question.
There is a thing called a conversation, you say a little, I think on it, I say a little, you think on it and see if I understand you, then you say a little if I understand that point or not and say some more, then I come back on that.
Paul
Then there is the soapbox where one goes on and on and on and on and on and.............
I agree Paul. The problem here is that the likes of ID and mijo omit to 'think on it', or are incapable of doing so. The extracts above amply demonstrate this. I, articulett and cyborg have sought many alternative ways to make our points, but all come up against the same stubborn, thoughtless and close-minded refutation. If mijo fails to answer the question above by resorting to the broken record or otherwise, then I too, will cease to debate with him further. There will simply be no point.
That is the heart of the problem with trying to make an analogy between tech development and biological evolution. It is also just another back door for ID. Biological evolution has no end product no purpose, it just is.
Paul
And you're falling into the same trap Paul, but, given what you've posted here I doubt that you've read even close to every post on this thread (which, incidentally, I would recommend in future, if you want to keep up with the debate and contextualize the seemingly meaningful contribution you feel you have to make), so I'll allow you the benefit of any doubt. My advice - don't become an ID/mijo.
You miss the point, yet again. Once you remove the intelligent purpose from technological development, it becomes technological evolution. In other words, you change the essence of the the process and are no longer analogizing technological development with biological evolution, as you were trying to do in your OP. You are analogizing technological evolution with biological evolution and have thus returned to the same useless tautology that technological development is like biological evolution when technological development is like biological evolution.
This is actually an interesting comment you make mijo. What,
exactly, do you mean by 'technological evolution', and what do you see as the difference between it and 'technological development'? A real life example of 'technological evolution' might be helpful to fix any point you might have to make.
articulett-
Everyone understands and agrees that both technological development and biological evolution are examples of "change over time with retention of 'what works'"; however, we disagree that that possession of this trait is sufficient to make a useful analogy between the two, especially because ImaginalDisc's list of things that can happen in technological development (emphasis added) but not in biological evolution are direct result of the involvement of an intelligence in the former process.
How long are you going to hang on to this erroneous list mijo? Yes, ID's list is indeed valid, but it doesn't apply
universally, and, indeed,
not at all to many examples of complex human design. It
does not, therefore, invalidate the analogy. If you can't understand this, and seek to continue to rely on this oh-so-powerful 'list', then you will
never be capable of seeing the efficacy in the analogy, and there will be no purpose in debating further. If I can identify to you just one example of complex human design that is
completely divorced from ID's list will you then accept that the list can be dispensed with for the purpose of the analogy? If not, why not?