Design can overhaul, evolution cannot.
No - it is merely a matter of distance to another point in the design landscape. There is NOTHING that prevents a purely random change of design achieving this mathematically.
Show otherwise.
Design can plan for long-term development, evolution cannot.
Elaborate.
Design can lift elements from one type of thing and apply them to another, evolution cannot.
Really?
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20070901/fob1.asp
There is no physical mechanism preventing such a thing it is therefore possible for it to evolve: and it has. It's probably responsible for the evolution of multicellular organisms in the first place.
Design can retain the plans of a form indefinately, evolution cannot.
Elaborate.
Living things are produced by autonumous reproduction, machines are not.
UGH. AGAIN, IT IS IRRELEVANT. Autonomous replication doesn't confer any ability to replicate anything non-autonomous replication cannot achieve.
And I note that you did not say, "design cannot produce machines with autonomous replication," because that would obviously invalidate your point.
Living things have heritable traits, machines do not.
Again, quite, quite irrelevant. Where the specifications for the traits are does not confer any special abilities at all.
And again I note you speak not of design: you merely assert something about living things.
Living things mutate, and those mutations are passed on. Machines neither mutate, nor pass on mutations.
Living things DO NOT mutate - unless you are going to call DNA a living thing. articullett has already talked about this fallacy earlier.
INDIVIDUALS DO NOT EVOLVE.
And what, I ask, is to prevent a machine from achieving such a thing by design? Would you like to insert such a design is impossible? No? I wonder why not...
I could go on for some time.
I'm sure you could. But you would be missing the point at each and every stage.
At each point, you have dismissed these differences as irrelevant,
Because they are for the abstraction. You clearly do not understand what an abstraction is.
whereas the peculiar contraints of living things,
...which are irrelevant when considering the wider abstraction. (Something you are having a singular inability to grasp).
Things struggle to survive do they? That sounds dangerously anthropomorphic. Better check yourself otherwise you'll give ammo to the IDers
and the pressures of impersonal, unguided selection are the very essence of Evolution.
Guided/unguided is irrelevant - unless you would care to explain to me exactly how an impersonal process could comprehend such a difference?
Without these elements, living things would not exist,
No - without appreciating how evolution works one cannot understand how living things
can exist without appeals to 'design has a designer' - the fallacy you are continually engaging in. One simply goes around saying, "but without a priori knowledge of how the universe works nothing could be made!"
whereas machines do not need any of these traits.
Which is, again, irrelevant.
Unfortunately living things and the proccess of Evolution are not at all absract.
I didn't realise Evolution was a concept written in stone. Did you get it from a mountain after conversing with a deity?
Here was me thinking it was a human invention used to describe the world. Now I know it simply 'exists'.
Again I do not think you know what an abstraction is otherwise you would not say such silly things.
Living things are not patterns and ideas scribbled onto blueprints and patterns to be fabricated by intelligent actors with an understanding of the intended results; living things are breathing, eating, killing entities continuously reproducing themselves and giving rise to new forms entirely without any abstraction.
You do not get it.
The Theory of Evolution is a description
Earlier you said it wasn't abstract. Descriptions are abstract. Make up your mind.
As machines lack all the elements Evolution seeks to explain, I fail to see any reason for using machines an analogy to teach it.
1)
I didn't say anything about teaching it.
2) Until you understand how machines are designed you can't understand why the Intelligent Design movement is so fundamentally
wrong.
3) There are more fundamental concepts at play here. Your refusal to discuss them is irrational.