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The Science of Design
TheRealityCheck.Org ^ | 4/10/05 | Mark Hartwig

Posted on 04/11/2005 10:25:55 AM PDT by Michael_Michaelangelo

"Intelligent design." It's been in the news a lot lately. Lawsuits over textbook stickers, the presentation of evolution and the legality of presenting alternatives, have thrust the term into public awareness.

But just what is intelligent design? To hear some folks talk, you'd think it's a scam to sneak Genesis into science classrooms. Yet intelligent design has nothing to do with the six days of creation and everything to do with hard evidence and logic.

Intelligent design (ID) is grounded on the ancient observation that the world looks very much as if it had an intelligent source. Indeed, as early as the fifth century BC, the Greek philosopher and astronomer Anaxagoras concluded, "Mind set in order … all that ever was … and all that is now or ever will be."

After 2400 years, the appearance of design is as powerful as ever. That is especially true of the living world. Advances in biology have revealed that world to be one staggering complexity.

For example, consider the cell. Even the simplest cells bristle with high-tech machinery. On the outside, their surfaces are studded with sensors, gates, pumps and identification markers. Some bacteria even sport rotary outboard motors that they use to navigate their environment.

Inside, cells are jam-packed with power plants, assembly lines, recycling units and more. Miniature monorails whisk materials from one part of the cell to another.

Such sophistication has led even the most hard-bitten atheists to remark on the apparent design in living organisms. The late Nobel laureate Francis Crick, co-discoverer of DNA's structure and an outspoken critic of religion, has nonetheless remarked, "Biologists must constantly keep in mind that what they see was not designed but rather evolved."

Clearly, Crick (and others like him) considers the appearance of design to be strictly an illusion, created by naturalistic evolution. Yet it's also clear that this impression is so compelling that an atheistic biologist must warn his colleagues against it.

In contrast, ID theorists contend that living organisms appear designed because they are designed. And unlike the design thinkers whom Darwin deposed, they've developed rigorous new concepts to test their idea.

In the past, detecting design was hampered by vague and subjective criteria, such as discerning an object's purpose. Moreover, design was entangled with natural theology--which seeks, in part, to infer God's character by studying nature rather than revelation. Natural theologians often painted such a rosy view of nature that they became an easy mark for Darwin when he proposed his theory of evolution. Where they saw a finely-balanced world attesting to a kind and just God, Darwin pointed to nature’s imperfections and brutishness.

Since the 1980s, however, developments in several fields have made it possible to rigorously distinguish between things that "just happen" and those that happen "on purpose." This has helped design theory emerge as a distinct enterprise, aimed at detecting intelligence rather than speculating about God's character.

Dubbed "intelligent design" to distinguish it from old-school thinking, this new view is detailed in The Design Inference (Cambridge University Press, 1998), a peer-reviewed work by mathematician and philosopher William Dembski.

In contrast to what is called creation science, which parallels Biblical theology, ID rests on two basic assumptions: namely, that intelligent agents exist and that their effects are empirically detectable.

Its chief tool is specified complexity. That's a mouthful, and the math behind it is forbidding, but the basic idea is simple: An object displays specified complexity when it has lots of parts (is complex) arranged in a recognizable, delimited pattern (is specified).

For example, the article you're now reading has thousands of characters, which could have been arranged in zillions of ways. Yet it fits a recognizable pattern: It's not just a jumble of letters (which is also complex), but a magazine article written in English. Any rational person would conclude that it was designed.

The effectiveness of such thinking is confirmed by massive experience. As Dembski points out, "In every instance where we find specified complexity, and where [its] history is known, it turns out that design actually is present."

Thus, if we could trace the creation of a book, our investigation would lead us to the author. You could say, then, that specified complexity is a signature of design.

To see how this applies to biology, consider the little consider the outboard motor that bacteria such as E. coli use to navigate their environment. This water-cooled contraption, called a flagellum, comes equipped with a reversible engine, drive shaft, U-joint and a long whip-like propeller. It hums along at a cool 17,000 rpm.

Decades of research indicate that its complexity is enormous. It takes about 50 genes to create a working flagellum. Each of those genes is as complex as a sentence with hundreds of letters.

Moreover, the pattern--a working flagellum--is highly specified. Deviate from that pattern, knock out a single gene, and our bug is dead in the water (or whatever).

Such highly specified complexity, which demands the presence of every part, indicates an intelligent origin. It's also defies any explanation, such as contemporary Darwinism, that relies on the stepwise accumulation of random genetic change.

In fact, if you want to run the numbers, as Dembski does in his book No Free Lunch, it boils down to the following: If every elementary particle in the observed universe (about 1080) were cranking out mutation events at the cosmic speed limit (about 1045 times per second) for a billion times the estimated age of the universe, they still could not produce the genes for a working flagellum.

And that's just one system within multiple layers of systems. Thus the flagellum is integrated into a sensory/guidance system that maneuvers the bacterium toward nutrients and away from noxious chemicals--a system so complex that computer simulation is required to understand it in its entirety. That system is meshed with other systems. And so on.

Of course, what's important here is not what we conclude about the flagellum or the cell, but how we study it. Design theorists don't derive their conclusions from revelation, but by looking for reliable, rigorously defined indicators of design and by ruling out alternative explanations, such as Darwinism.

Calling their work religious is just a cheap way to dodge the issues. The public--and our students--deserve better than that.

Mark Hartwig has a Ph.D. in educational psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara, specializing in statistics and research design.


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crevolist; crick; dembski; intelligentdesign; sorrycharlie; wrongforum
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The public--and our students--deserve better than that.

Indeed.

Bill Would Allow Intelligent Design Teaching Requirement

1 posted on 04/11/2005 10:25:56 AM PDT by Michael_Michaelangelo
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To: Elsie; LiteKeeper; AndrewC; Havoc; bondserv; Right in Wisconsin; ohioWfan; Alamo-Girl; ...

ID Ping


2 posted on 04/11/2005 10:26:33 AM PDT by Michael_Michaelangelo (The best theory is not ipso facto a good theory. Lots of links on my homepage...)
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To: PatrickHenry
...intelligent design has nothing to do with the six days of creation...

dissembler ping!

3 posted on 04/11/2005 10:29:08 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

> Yet intelligent design has nothing to do with the six days of creation and everything to do with hard evidence and logic.


BWAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA!!!

Yeah, and I'm the Pope.


4 posted on 04/11/2005 10:29:57 AM PDT by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

I don't see any scientific evidence that would contradict the idea of a designer - assuming that that designer has been working for some 1 billion plus years, making lots of mistakes and false starts along the way.


5 posted on 04/11/2005 10:32:25 AM PDT by Uncle Fud
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

I don't see any scientific evidence that would contradict the idea of a designer - assuming that that designer has been working for some 1 billion plus years, making lots of mistakes and false starts along the way.


6 posted on 04/11/2005 10:33:16 AM PDT by Uncle Fud
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

Enterprise. Captain Kirk here. Ship's log.

"Location of crewmembers Spock and Kirk is Earth, 2004. I believe they called it the Democratic National Convention.

There appears to be no sign of intelligent design down here, Scotty. Beam us up. Over and out".


7 posted on 04/11/2005 10:34:39 AM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: AntiGuv

Look, it's obvious that God created the laws that flung everything into motion, how he created gravity as it reacts to heat, matter, energy, light, etc, and his creation of certain particles that were created when everything cooled. All of these laws were created from the beginning, and they are now realized from the consious human being. The consiousness that we hold today had to have been imagined as well, for everything in existence is understood by God.

The bible speaks for itself. It says God is the 'eternal one', not one as in the number one, but one as in 'everything'.

God is everything. God made us in his image, because we are the expression, the 'idea' of God.

To push away this argument in the support of 'evolution' itself, is indeed premature, and ignorant to say the least.



8 posted on 04/11/2005 10:35:02 AM PDT by blakep
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

ID has "everything to do with hard evidence and logic"? Logic includes the fallacy of the excluded middle. Hard evidence means, well ..umm.., hard evidence - as in directly observable evidence. By example, hard evidence of murder is a body with a knife in its back, not a missing person and a trail of blood.


9 posted on 04/11/2005 10:37:20 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo
OK, let me save the Darwinists some time here and ape (pun intended the usual sneering attack: The author violates the First Law of Truly Scientific Thinking: "Never explain things in simple terms that common people can understand. Always use technical terms of art to obfuscute the fact we haven't got a clue about our own biases, much less the holes in the nebulous we keep on life support." There's not enough Latin-derived words in here, so it's obviously the work of an uniformed idiot/religious zealot. As such, it must be ignored by us enlightened intellectuals. An "educational psychologist"? are you kidding me? Hundreds of real scientists believe in macroevolution. See link, www.ourevidenceisweakbutdon'taccuseusoffaith.edu.
10 posted on 04/11/2005 10:38:51 AM PDT by mikeus_maximus
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

Why was this article published 9 days late?


11 posted on 04/11/2005 10:39:30 AM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Inquiring minds want to know)
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

"If every elementary particle in the observed universe (about 1080) were cranking out mutation events at the cosmic speed limit (about 1045 times per second) for a billion times the estimated age of the universe, they still could not produce the genes for a working flagellum."

Now that's an interesting statement.


12 posted on 04/11/2005 10:39:43 AM PDT by Sabatier
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo
To hear some folks talk, you'd think it's a scam to sneak Genesis into science classrooms. Yet intelligent design has nothing to do with the six days of creation

The fact that most of the people promoting "intelligent design" seem to be hellfire-belching snakehandlers is just a statitical fluctuation.

13 posted on 04/11/2005 10:40:53 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: blakep

Ping


14 posted on 04/11/2005 10:41:12 AM PDT by GarySpFc (Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
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To: blakep

I don't "push away" the argument that God exists in order to support 'evolution' itself; I haven't the slightest problem conceptually reconciling evolution with the existence of gods. I "push away" the arguments that God exists because I find them either irrational or irrelevant of their own accord.


15 posted on 04/11/2005 10:41:22 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: orionblamblam
"Yeah, and I'm the Pope."

You certainly pontificate enough!

16 posted on 04/11/2005 10:42:59 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: Physicist
The fact that most of the people promoting "intelligent design" seem to be hellfire-belching snakehandlers is just a statitical fluctuation. Oh, you must mean like the physicist Denton (an atheist), Michael Behe and William Dembski (published scientists and Catholics whose theology allows to embrace evolution, which they formerly did)....
17 posted on 04/11/2005 10:45:17 AM PDT by mikeus_maximus
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To: AntiGuv

Then what is 'rational' to you Anti-Guv? That there is no 'God'? If anything, that's irrational, because the universe didn't create itself. A creator of design itself is at play here.

God is the beginning and the end. He is the motion of existence itself. That's not irrational.


18 posted on 04/11/2005 10:45:17 AM PDT by blakep
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To: Michael_Michaelangelo

I've heard it alleged that Evolution stands up to the test of being falsifiable while ID does not. Anything to that?


19 posted on 04/11/2005 10:45:20 AM PDT by FormerLib (Kosova: "land stolen from Serbs and given to terrorist killers in a futile attempt to appease them.")
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To: Sabatier
It's supposed to be 1080 and 1045. It's a completely spurious and embarrassingly wrong argument, of course, and especially suspicious since it's supposed to be coming from an expert on statistics.
20 posted on 04/11/2005 10:47:03 AM PDT by Physicist
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