Posted on 02/19/2009 3:07:24 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Message Theory is a testable scientific explanation of lifes major patterns.
That claim should intrigue you. If I heard such a claim, I would nearly leap across the room to demand more details; else I couldnt sleep that night. That is because I highly value testability, just as all scientists do, (in physics, chemistry, geology, medicine, engineering, etcetera) and just as evolutionists do in all their court cases.
Message Theory should even intrigue evolutionists, because it offers what they repeatedly demanded from their opponents a testable, scientific alternative to evolution. Yes, that is exactly what they demanded. In reality, the evolutionists response has been exceedingly superficial, falling into two categories: (1) Silence; or (2) They misrepresent Message Theory. (If you are aware of exceptions, let me know.) Therefore, my posts here will not much address the evolutionists response to Message Theory, since a serious response doesnt much exist.
The creationist/ID response has been more varied, and I focus on that here. Many see Message Theory as exciting and promising. For example, Origins Magazine reviewed it saying, I can give no greater accolade than urging that this book should now be the starting point for all of our discussions. Phillip E. Johnson calls it Bold and fascinating a comprehensive theory. Carl Wieland calls it, Masterpiece incredible of immense value. Michael Behe and many others have given glowing reviews, (see this link). To which I say, Thanks! Thats a good start.
However, some creationists/ID-ists are hesitant to investigate Message Theory, and the central reason is its claim of testability its claim to make numerous coherent, risky, predictions about what we should see, and should not see. Unfortunately, many creationists/ID-ists do not value testability, and some aggressively dislike testability. Without knowing any details about Message Theory, we encounter their leading objection testability.
For example, some creationists say, Arent you claiming to test God? To which I answer: No. Message Theory is about lifes data many observations that must be explained and Message Theory explains those observations in a testable (falsifiable, vulnerable, empirically risky) manner. It meets all the criteria for a scientific theory. A theory is tested, not God. The thought process is no different than concerning, say, the Piltdown fossils, which needed an explanation. These fossils were a hoax created by an intelligent designer a testable explanation that no scientist disputes. We need not test the intelligent designer, (indeed, the designer of the Piltdown Hoax remains unidentified), rather we test the theory. In science we test explanations (i.e., theories); not God.
Also, deep down, many creationists want the certainty of faith, and they are not yet comfortable with the inherent riskiness of science they havent learned to balance the two types of thought: risk and certainty.
The classic creationist organizations (ICR, AIG, CRS) often do not value testability, (and sometimes they explicitly oppose testability). Instead, they use a different criterion of science; a different value system. They claim science must be repeatable, and since origins are not repeatable, creation and evolution are equally unscientific. They are deeply mistaken. For example, we frequently execute murderers (which is not a flimsy thing to do) based solely on scientific evidence, even though the murder is not repeatable.
Instead, repeatability is how we identify naturalistic laws (as opposed to the work of intelligent beings); therefore the creationists demand for repeatability is implicitly a demand that science must be purely naturalistic and cannot include an intelligent designer. They are shooting themselves in the foot!
Thankfully the ID organizations dont take that approach. They take a more sophisticated approach, yet they tend to undervalue testability nonetheless, (sometimes through redefining it into obscurity).
In my many discussions with my fellow creationists/ID-ists, the foremost obstacle to Message Theory is their devaluing or misunderstanding of testability. So let me pause to underscore this for my readers: If you do not value testability highly, then leave now, or you will only waste your time, and mine. Let me put it stronger: Anyone (creationist, ID-ist, or evolutionist for that matter) who cheapens testability is a danger to science, and moreover, they miss many opportunities to advance creation/ID as superior science.
Let me put my claim stronger still: Message Theory is testable science, and macro-evolutionary theory (as practiced by its modern proponents) is not. I employ testability the same tool evolutionists use in all their court cases to turn the tables on evolutionists.
After handling some comments, I will next discuss Message Theory proper.
Walter ReMine
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Walter ReMine was born and grew up in Rochester, Minnesota, the third of four sons to an accomplished Mayo Clinic surgeon father, and an artist and fashion-model mother. During these years his interests included music, playing cornet, drums, and guitar; and sports such as football, track, and downhill skiing. He learned magic as a hobby, which later would prove helpful in understanding how key scientific illusions are achieved. In high school he was co-captain of a state ranking swimming team, an Eagle Scout with Order of the Arrow, and member of the National Honor Society for scholarship his junior and senior years.
By the beginning of his junior year at the University of Minnesota (Minneapolis campus) he was inducted into Eta Kappa Nu, the national honorary society for electrical engineers. He received his BSEE and MSEE degrees there in 1974 and 1977, with emphasis on signal processing and pattern recognition. This would later help him in studying life's biological patterns and recognizing their meaning, and the strong math background would prove indispensable in studying the claims of evolutionary genetics.
For his Master's thesis he invented and built a pattern recognition system for automatically recognizing and categorizing epileptic seizures from the electroencephalogram (EEG). After that he worked for three years at the University of Minnesota Hospitals, where he developed systems for monitoring and diagnosing epilepsy. Following that he did research work at an internationally known St. Paul technology company on such projects as: the Cochlear Implant Project (a surgically implanted device to enable the deaf to hear), a combination nerve and muscle stimulator (for physical therapy), and library systems (for securely conducting library transactions). Currently, he holds four patents.
During his college years he also became interested in the creation/evolution controversy. By 1980 he was writing articles for a monthly news-magazine, attending board meetings, as well as organizing and speaking at conferences on the subject. Those were transitional years for all sides of the origins controversy, and time spent hobnobbing with its participants gave a deeper appreciation of the mistakes and merits of the various positions. In 1982 he began eleven years of laborious research, culminating in his treatise, The Biotic Message.
bfltr
bflr me 2
“In 1982 he began eleven years of laborious research, culminating in his treatise, The Biotic Message.”
Self-published, if I’m not mistaken.
What does “bfltr” stand for?
Bump for later, just a bookmark note
You'd be wasting your time looking for them in this article.
Thanks
“I’m never going to get caught in the trap of trying to prove to you that Genesis is true by science. I’m just going to proclaim to you what Genesis says and let science bow its knee to that explanation.” Minister John MacArthur
Actively oppose testability? No kidding?
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