Yes. In my opinion the way in which the ID argument is set up means that
the burden of proof is on the ID proponent. Dembski's filter cannot
allow any false positive. IC has to be shown absolutely.
Don
Randy Isaac wrote:
> I guess it's a matter of who has the burden of proof: show evidence of
> exactly how natural processes met each criterion step by step, or show
> evidence that natural processes could not have met those criteria.
> Take the inverse of that: what are the implications of not being able
> to show how natural processes met each criterion. What are the
> implications of not being able to show that natural processes could
> not have met those criteria?
>
> It seems to me that unless you can clearly show that natural processes
> could not possibly have met those criteria, there's no case.
>
> Too many double or triple negatives in all that, but I hope the idea
> comes through.
> Randy
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* David Opderbeck <mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com>
> *To:* Randy Isaac <mailto:randyisaac@adelphia.net>
> *Cc:* asa@calvin.edu <mailto:asa@calvin.edu>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, November 08, 2006 8:44 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [asa] Innate design detector?
>
> /The flagellum exists. Therefore the criteria have been met./
>
> Right, I'm not summarizing this correctly. I think he's getting
> at that there's no evidence that any known natural process,
> including cooption, can meet those criteria. The literature cited
> by Miller et al. purporting to show how components of the
> flagellum could have existed elsewhere and been coopted doesn't
> meet these criteria. The question of probabilities then remains
> open. (Again, just summarizing his argument here).
>
> On 11/8/06, *Randy Isaac* <randyisaac@adelphia.net
> <mailto:randyisaac@adelphia.net>> wrote:
>
> I don't understand how he can argue that "there is no evidence
> that they have been met." That seems the easiest. The
> flagellum exists. Therefore the criteria have been met. He
> might argue that there's no clear evidence of exactly how they
> were met and by what causal factors. It just seems to me that
> if the criteria can be met in principle and there's no clear
> argument from low probabilities, then the lack of definitive
> knowledge of exactly how and when each step occurred is of
> little significance. At least for this argument.
>
> I admit I'm still searching for the pony in the IC argument.
> Surely it must be there somewhere.
>
> Randy
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* David Opderbeck <mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com>
> *To:* Randy Isaac <mailto:randyisaac@adelphia.net>
> *Cc:* asa@calvin.edu <mailto:asa@calvin.edu>
> *Sent:* Sunday, November 05, 2006 10:12 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [asa] Innate design detector?
>
>
> As I understand Angus' argument, it's not that they can't
> be met in principle, but in certain systems, particularly
> the bacterial flagellum, there is no evidence that they
> have been met. He is in particular responding to
> arguments by Ken Miller and others purporting to show how
> the flagellum could have arisen through cooption. He
> isn't offering any probabilities. I think this is more a
> defensive argument, responding to arguments against IC in
> general and relating to the flagellum in particular, than
> a positive argument for design.
>
> On 11/5/06, *Randy Isaac* <randyisaac@adelphia.net
> <mailto:randyisaac@adelphia.net>> wrote:
>
> Dave,
> Ever since you posted Angus' criteria, I've been a
> little baffled by the significance. Certainly the
> criteria cited seem to be reasonable conditions that
> need to occur in the development of complex systems.
> But are there any indications that they cannot, in
> principle, be met? Or is it simply an argument of low
> probability for each of these criteria to be met?
> We're a long way from determining any probabilities
> quantitatively so is this one of the arguments from
> incredulity? that surely these conditions couldn't
> possibly be met so something else must have happened?
>
> Randy
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
>
> *From:* David Opderbeck <mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com>
> *....*
>
> What I'm asking is specifically whether those
> availability, synchronization, localization,
> coordination, and interface compability criteria
> are reasonable. Perhaps they are reasonable
> criteria and chance and regularity can meet them.
> I'm just curious whether the criteria make sense,
> and if not, specifically why not.
>
> //
>
>
>
To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Wed Nov 8 21:40:53 2006
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Wed Nov 08 2006 - 21:40:53 EST