Fixed that for ya.Only if you can do so in an example satisfactory to their arbitrary and fluid personal standards.
Fixed that for ya.Only if you can do so in an example satisfactory to their arbitrary and fluid personal standards.
We've done that. So I take it ID has been falsified?
Sure. Show the functioning intermediate stages and the steps between them.
Where that has been done, irreducible complexity has been falsified.
After all, it's a very straightforward claim: natural selection cannot move you from A to B.
It has a straightforward response: here is a path from A to B that is traversible by natural selection.
Of course, if such a pathway is ever found ID as currently practiced still is not a scientific theory since it has zero predictive value, and a theory that cannot be used to predict is no theory at all.
Why is there zero predictive value in ID? Wouldn't ID predict that all organisms will perform a useful function for their ecosystem and be well-suited to their environment (or something like that)?
It seems like ID has as much predictive value as, say, alternate theories about which Pharaoh built the Sphynx.
That might have useful predictive power if another, more powerful theory didn't already predict the same thing, in much more detail.
So, we're not saying that ID has zero predictive power. We're just saying that ID has less predictive power than another theory that, on the basis of the proposed hypothetical, has been proven inadequate.
Which is the theory that has been proven inadequate?
Lukraak_Sisser said:And so far no path from A to B that cannot be traversed by natural selection has been found. Of course that indeed does not say that it never *will* be found, but until then natural selection remains a valid theory.
Of course, if such a pathway is ever found ID as currently practiced still is not a scientific theory since it has zero predictive value, and a theory that cannot be used to predict is no theory at all.
... did you somehow miss the post I was responding to?
As I said, even if ID is correct it isn't very useful compared to the TOE. The TOE obeys rules. an IDer can be whimsical or have a hidden agenda, and thus would be fundamentally unpredictable. To understand biological development and speciation, one would have to understand the IDer well enough to predict its actions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment
A project where during the course of it, by random 'micro' mutations E.coli gained a function it did not have before.
In part of the experiment, indicating that this happened due to pure random chance. Only a small part of the population actually gained the function, which goes against front loading. Of course the ID/creationist argument can always be 'god/invisible super aliens made it that way because it/they wanted to'.
And there are functional intermediate stages all around you. Every single living organism alive today is a functional intermediate stage between what was and what will be.
Livestock and other animals that humans have increased selective pressure on are an even clearer indication of rapid speciation that will eventually lead to different species.
Why is there zero predictive value in ID? Wouldn't ID predict that all organisms will perform a useful function for their ecosystem and be well-suited to their environment (or something like that)?
It seems like ID has as much predictive value as, say, alternate theories about which Pharaoh built the Sphynx.
Not when the vast history of organisms are made up of failed extinctions. This suggests a system of trial and error, and the only reason a God would need trial and error is if the God was trying to learn something the God was ignorant of, or if the God has some poetic meaning and aesthetic that just coincidentally resembles a world that has been forged through mindless trial and error.Why is there zero predictive value in ID? Wouldn't ID predict that all organisms will perform a useful function for their ecosystem and be well-suited to their environment (or something like that)?
It seems like ID has as much predictive value as, say, alternate theories about which Pharaoh built the Sphynx.
Avalon, it has a lot of predictive value in a lot of areas. Most objections are general in nature and show most do not take the time to even understand what ID is and what they are saying.
ID is particularly predictive and helpful in assessing the origin of DNA and ordering of information in general, something Darwinism cannot do, nor explain.
So, far from being something that left evolutionary science totally gobsmacked and scrambling to explain it while IDers and other creationists smugly say "we told you so", what the ENCODE project found was actually anticipated by biologists,
Well, yes. ID brings biology essentially into the same realm as archeology -- trying to predict the behavior of intelligent entities in order to figure out why they did what they did, and what else they might have done. And just like no amount of Achaean excavation will ever allow us to understand their culture perfectly, no amount of information about known designs will ever give perfect predictions as to what other designs may be found.
It's generally going to be easier to predict unintelligent actors than intelligent actors, but that doesn't mean that a theory that an intelligent actor is involved is therefore either completely useless or unscientific.