JOHN PAUL
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
Let me address several points made by Helen and
others:
(1) Neither I nor Zimmer misunderstand ID. I realize
the small differences between ID and young earth
creationism and have written about them at
http://www.indstate.edu/gga/pmag/id.htm. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
As you have been told before, YEC is a subset of ID.
No one said they were the same, ever.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
ID, as formulated by Behe and others at DI should be
anathema to young earth creationism, but it is not.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Why should ID be anathema to YEC? As you have just
been told (again), YEC is a subset of ID. They are not
the same. Do you understand what a subset is?
I happen to agree with Behe in that the only way
common descent would be possible is if the original
population(s) of organisms were ‘front-end’ loaded.
That is, they already had the genetic information
necessary to get past the IC road blocks. However
there is no evidence to substantiate such a claim.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
Helen and others embrace it simply because it argues
against evolution and
we all know who the 'intelligent designer' really is. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
ID argues against evolution? It would be more correct
to state that ID argues against the Darwinian
mechanism accounting for life’s diversity owing its
common ancestry to some unknown population of
single-celled organisms that just happened to have the
ability to self-replicate. ID also postulates the
origins of life, which evolutionists try to distance
themselves from. Methinks you are confused as to what
ID is and what ID isn’t.
If something looks designed, functions as if it were
designed and has no substantiating evidence that it
wasn’t designed, why is ‘wrong’ to infer design?
Also please keep your assertion that ‘we all
know who the intelligent designer’ is to yourself. I
see you can accuse others of doing that but here you are…
Again- Wm. Dembski states,
:“Even if a theory of
intelligent design should ultimately prove successful
and supersede Darwinism, it would not follow that the
designer posited by this theory would have to be the
Christian God or for that matter be real in some
ontological sense. One can be an anti-realist about
science and simply regard the designer as a regulative
principle--a conceptually useful device for making
sense out of certain facts of biology--without
assigning the designer any weight in reality.”
In an article found here:
http://www.discovery.org/viewDB/index.php3?program=CRSC%20Responses&command=view&id=584
Who should we believe? Someone who is very much
involved with ID or someone who is dead set against
ID?
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
Masquerading behind a cloud of 'it could be anything
or anyone' is nothing
more than wishful thinking. ID won't mention the G-D
word because then it
would be exposed for the religious movement it is. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
ID is no more religious than is materialistic
naturalism, which is the prevailing worldview in
science these days. Science should be the pursuit of
truth, regardless where it leads us.
What’s the difference if we attribute something to
God, and Intelligent Designer or Mother Nature acting
with Father Time on some unknown natural process?
Please answer that question.
None one in the ID or Creation camp suggests shrugging
our shoulders and saying God/ Intelligent Designer
must have done it that way and leave it at that. This
appears to be the evolutionists’ view of IDists and
Creationists, which would be, and is, a blatant
misrepresentation of reality.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
(2) ID is simply an old argument wrapped in new
clothing. Zimmer's point,
and mine as well, is that ID has produced NO useful
science. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Did you even read the links I provided in my earlier
post?
Please tell us what useful science materialistic
naturalism has produced? What have we gained by
postulating a purely natural origin for life? What
have we gained by postulating that the original
life-form could evolve into the diversity we observe
today? What have we gained by postulating only purely
natural processes have led to all we observe?
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>
Joe Meert:
ID is not being used in everyday research and ID's
scientific champion (Michael Behe)
is an evolutionist who thinks that the ID is a God of
the gaps and nothing more. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Reference please (on Behe thinking that ID is a God of
the gaps and nothing more) or else it is a baseless
assertion.
Modern ID is relatively new. Give it some time. What’s
the hurry? Also how would you know what molecular
biologists use in their research? Did you ever think
that what they use and what they publish are not one
in the same?
I am sure you won’t like this article but here it is
anyway:
The Biologist
http://www.creationequation.com/Archives/TheBiologist.htm
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>
Joe Meert:
Behe (other than his book) has not published a single
peer-reviewed
article using ID. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
According to Behe, he has been censored. Has anyone
published a single peer-reviewed paper that shows that
life is the product of purely natural processes? Is
there a peer-reviewed paper(s) that show what Behe
calls irreducible complexity can arise by the standard
Darwinian step-by-step processes?
Did you know there is now an International Society for
Complexity, Design and Information, that has been set
up for an ID peer-reviewed process?
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Joe Meert:
No one else has either. This, more than any rhetoric
from either side, speaks to the overall bankruptcy of
ID as science. It
doesn't work and it doesn't contribute anything useful
to science. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Until you can tell us what believing that the origins
of life are due to purely natural processes has added
to science it is clear you are applying the typical
double-standards that evolutionists always fall back
on.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>
Joe Meert:
To say that ID is not about doing research (as Helen
did) also speaks volumes about
the scientific bankruptcy of the idea. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Perhaps Helen can clarify that for us. I understand
that it is virtually no way to predict what a designer
will design, but I feel (as does at least one other
person- Mike Gene of IDThink.net) that ID can be a
valuable tool for doing biological research. It’s
there on his website. All you have to do is go there
and read it.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>
Joe Meert:
(3)The notion that scientific journals are biased
against new ideas is
patently false, but this claim is made by Helen and
other creationists on a
nearly constant basis. So far, there is no proof of
this bias. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Actually there is evidence and it has been presented.
Both Behe and Humphreys have provided that evidence.
That was why Creationists now have their own
peer-review process and IDists are doing the same.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>
Joe Meert:
You made this claim about Setterfield (turns out to be
false). Others have made
similar claims, but there is no supporting
documentation. Papers get
rejected all the time. As an editor, I can tell you
that in the top
journals, very few papers submitted are ever
published. It's not about
censorship. It's about quality science and writing
convincing data-laden
papers supporting your position. I am getting tired of
this baseless
accusation. I know how things work and there is no
bias against good
science. I can give you a good example of a
creationist writing about
biblical geology. Steve Austin wrote an article
(accepted by Intl Geology
Review) about the earthquake of Amos. It was biblical
history supported by
good data. The journal did not censor the article
because it was about the
bible or written by a creationist. It was accepted on
the face value of the
data. The sooner creationists realize this is all that
science asks, the
sooner they will stop making baseless claims. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
John Paul:
Just so we get this straight- No one said ALL
Creationists’ or IDists’ submissions get rejected
outright. Unless you are calling Behe and Humphreys
liars, I don’t see the evidence to support your
position.
So if you would, please tell us what the alternatives,
IYO, if life’s origins could not have arisen via
purely natural processes?
God Bless,
John Paul