Meadmaker
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- Apr 27, 2004
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That's now how I'd interpret what he said:
You need to check every possible biological mechanism, because it is possible that such a mechanism is exactly what evolved into the one under consideration.
It's not my argument that does the harm, but Dembski's. Since it is impossible to enumerate all possible biological mechanisms, it is not possible to perform the last step in his paragraph. Thus, nothing can be shown to be IC.
I just finished Dembski's paper, although I skimmed some of the boring parts.
I think this is a real misrepresentation of what he was saying. The notion of irreducible complexity isn't hard to grasp. My body is irreducibly complex, because if you take out my liver, it stops working. The liver is part of the irreducible core.
However, that is a slight oversimplification, because Dembski threw in a bit of a curve ball into the description by saying that if a simpler system can do the same function, then the original, more complex, system, is not "irreducible".
But notice in his paper that he talked about how it had to do the same function in the same manner. In other words, I can look at all other systems that have liver, kidneys, brains, lungs, etc... and the simplest one would be considered irreducibly complex. However, I don't have to look at fish with their swim bladders, because their swim bladders do not perform the same function as lungs. The fact that the swim bladders evolved into lungs doesn't disqualify terrestrial vertebrate respiration systems as irreducibly complex. The swim bladders don't perform the same function.
As for the paper, I would have no objection if that paper were presented to my son in a biology class as an example of what some people believed about biological systems. I would hope he would be able to critically evaluate it, and spot the same flaws I spotted in it. I spotted two that were extremely important.
First, in critiquing evolution, Dembski correctly notes the lack of emprical evidence. "Darwinists" can't show a specific pathway by which one complex system evolved from another. However, he asserts that using this lack of knowledge is not an "argument from ignorance". It clearly is, in fact, an argument from ignorance.
Second, in analysing "specified complexity", his argument fails, and fails for exactly the same reason he says the Drake equation fails. For those not interested in reading the paper, the Drake equation predicts the probability that extraterrestrial life will be detected, based on the probabilities that necessary precursors to the detection of extraterrestrial life will occur. Dembski has an "origination equality" that purports to do the same thing for computing the probability that an irreducibly complex system will arise via evolution. Dembski's inequality fails, for exactly the same reason. It has a bunch of probabilities in it, and none of them can be computed.
Which leaves us with the fact that Dembski's argument has not disproved evolotion nor has it proven Intelligent Design. So what harm is there in showing it to a group of fourteen year olds and asking them to think about it for themselves? Being challenged by it would be more effective as a teaching tool than being told to ignore it.
What I found most interesting is that Dembski's paper was basically championing the notion of theistic evolution. By accepting the age of the Earth, you have a case where one of today's most prominent anti-evolution author is publicly rejecting biblical literalism. I think that's progress.