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Leahn
Of course, there is. DNA has grammar and information, and there are no known sources of such on the Universe that are not designed.
flyingfish
reply to post by PhotonEffect
Is it designed, is it ordered, fashioned, executed, or construct according to a plan, does it have too much specified complexity to have appeared by known laws of chemistry and physics?
But! the appearance of design should also be differentiated from actual design.
Our brains pick up on patterns and intentions, sometimes when they aren't even there. Seeing unicorns in clouds, faces on mars, or baby jeebus on toast for example.
All these things are the result of chance and our minds tendency to recognize patterns. This is the case of appearance of design, as opposed to actual design.
I also have a problem with the definition of nature, or what we deem to be natural.
I smell what you're cooking, natural and artificial can be brain fu#ked to be a bit self-contradictory seeing how nature, itself, created humans and their capability to transform the objects and the matter of their surroundings. Therefore one could say everything that humans create or produce is within the potential of nature. But do we really need the semantics?
Right, everything other than humans that is. Since we're the ones observing then we must be separate from the natural process, right?
flyingfish
Wrong.
Astyanax
reply to post by PhotonEffect
A good post, especially since its arguments cut both ways. If observational evidence for design is ambiguous, it could equally well mean that everything is designed or that nothing is. We cannot tell from looking at the evidence.
However, when you add that all things are natural in their origin, including mobile phones — a position I have always held — does that follow that the designer of the mobile phone was designed, or that the phone can be called a product of evolution?
de·sign [dih-zahyn] verb (used with object)
- to prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for (a work to be executed), especially to plan the form and structure of: to design a new bridge.
- to plan and fashion artistically or skillfully.
- to intend for a definite purpose: a scholarship designed for foreign students.
- to form or conceive in the mind; contrive; plan: The prisoner designed an intricate escape.
- to assign in thought or intention; purpose: He designed to be a doctor.
Everything is by design. Even dirt. To suggest otherwise doesn't make much sense, at least by our terms.
*
As always, ask an evolutionist to show evidence for their statements, and they run away. That's why there can be no discussion on the topic of Evolution, despite evolutionist's oftenly made claims that they would like to have one.
None of what you said is actually any available scientific fact because you didn't say anything. You simply avoided all questions.
Originally posted by Astyanax
- Archaeology makes no comments about evolution whatsoever.
- Evolution is not a wholly random process.
- The 'tree of life' is not a concept recognised by modern evolutionary biology.
- The overwhelming majority of biologists are also evolutionists.
- Given sufficient time, the most unlikely, yet still possible event is bound to occur.
Show me a single example of an undisputed instance of a mutation that led to a new trait rather than adapted and improved an existing trait. Since you are saying that there are thousands of examples, show me one.
You're just gonna make a fool of yourself.
Yes, that's the usual answer given by evolutionists to any challenge to their pet theory; "So evolution can do that, too? Wow!" Nothing can disprove Evolution because Evolution can do anything. If something contradicts a prediction of Evolution, it only means that evolutionists were wrong about that prediction, and Evolution could actually do that too.
Moving goalposts so soon?
If you read the actual (much longer) study, you will see that the research was about discovering how domesticated chicken diferentiated from their wild cousins. This is an example of an organism that adapted entirely by non-Darwinian ways, .
as the difference between domesticated chicken and wild ones lies entirely on methylation rather than mutations.
Astyanax
reply to post by PhotonEffect
The disagreement you have with flyingfish is really about the meaning of the word 'design'. And I am afraid he is right and you are wrong, at least according to the dictionary.
Clearly, all these definitions imply will and intent, and hence a conscious designer.
Now, if you're saying that RNA or DNA has will and intent, I must disagree with you.
And if you are proposing a conscious genitive principle behind the natural world I must ask you to show me direct unambiguous evidence of it.
But there is a softer usage of the word 'design', inaccurate according to the strict meaning of the term but widely used anyway. In this usage, 'designed' simply means 'evidently formed or adopted to fulfil a particular function.' I believe this is the meaning you have placed on the word. Correct me if I am wrong.
The curiosity-cabinet of nature contains all kinds of bizarre 'designs', each highly specialised for the purpose of preserving and passing on genes. None of these exhibits implies a designer.
So, when you write that
Everything is by design. Even dirt. To suggest otherwise doesn't make much sense, at least by our terms.
You really mean, I hope, that everything has a function to which it is adapted. In this sense it certainly is 'designed', but not by conscious design.
As I said before, by definition humans are considered separate from nature, thus the things we create are classified as artificial. We have completely separated ourselves from the natural process, and as a result it's had a profound effect on our psychology of the matter and how we view ourselves within this world.
Given this latest announcement , I'd say the chances are pretty damn good [that intelligent life exists all over the Galaxy]. So then, I must ask, how does life proliferate on other planets? From DNA/RNA type molecules?
If so, does this imply an universal blueprint for the birth and evolution of life?
There are ingredients. There's a recipe. What's the source?
Do you consider humans to be a part of the natural process for which we classify everything else in this universe? ...Then I think an argument can be made for conscious design by nature.
Astyanax
we are a part of nature, so nothing we do can be anything but natural.
[If evidence of design in nature] does not imply a designer, what does it imply?
If we landed on mars and discovered a perfectly symmetrical pyramid there, but no sign of its executor, what are we to deduce?
In crossing a beach, suppose I hit my foot against a stone. Suppose I were asked how the stone came to be there. I might possibly answer that, for anything I knew to the contrary, it had lain there forever. It would be difficult to show that this answer is absurd.
But suppose I had found a watch upon the ground, and it should be asked how the watch happened to be in that place. I should hardly think of the answer which I had before given--that for anything I knew the watch might have always been there--would be an acceptable answer.
Yet why should not this answer serve for the watch as well as for the stone? Why is it not as admissible in the second case as in the first? For this reason, and for no other: namely, that when we come to inspect the watch, we perceive -- what we could not discover in the stone -- that its several parts are framed and put together for a purpose. The parts are so formed and adjusted as to produce motion, and that motion so regulated as to point out the hour of the day. If the different parts had been differently shaped from what they are, of a different size from what they are, or placed after any other manner or in any other order than that in which they are placed, either no motion at all would have been carried on in the machine, or none which would have answered the use that is now served by it.
— William Paley, 'The Watch & the Watchmaker, Natural Theology (1800)