The [swiki]Appearance of Evolution[/swiki].
It's funny 'cos it's true.
Hi,
The first paragraph of the discussion ends abruptly.
I realise this piece is more light-hearted than some of the others, but what the hell, you've bunged it on here for comment...
"...in sharp distinction
to the dolphin..."
"Hence, the most economical explanation of why a dolphin looks like something that evolved is therefore that it is something that evolved. "
One of "Hence" and "therefore" is superfluous.
"When we look at the deeper anatomy of a dolphin, we find that its body plan is plainly an adaptation of the basic mammalian body-plan, which is just what we would expect on evolutionary principles."
Our expectation based on evolution is that the dolphin's body plan should be an adaptation of a pre-existing body plan, and importantly, only on one of the contemporaneous body plans. It's not until we've looked at the anatomy that we can conclusively assign it to the mammalian one.
"This is exactly what we would expect on the theory that the dolphin is a product of evolution: it is not a prediction of unscientific alternative hypotheses..."
You're contrasting a "theory" with "alternative hypotheses" which seems to confuse the two concepts.
"...unscientific alternative hypotheses, such as that the dolphin was intelligently designed. "
There is a distinction between "Intelligently Designed" and "intelligently designed".
If it's scientific to hypothesise that submarines are intelligently designed, then presumably the same is true of the hypothesis that dolphins are.
"By contrast, when we look at the submarine we do not find that its basic design is an adaptation of an automobile. "
The point here is that submarine shows evidence of memetic evolution - it combine good ideas drawn from a number of independent pre-existing plans - some from boats, some from planes, Gutenberg's periscope etc. Most of its features are adaptations of previous good ideas, but they are drawn from disparate sources.