Lord Zentai wrote:It is implausible as long as you have no supporting evidence. It is not IMPOSSIBLE that there is an invisible dragon in Carl Sagan's garage either, mind you.
I have no supporting evidence for the assertion that there is a dog in Carl Sagan's garage (presumably some Carl Sagan who is still alive and so would have a garage), but that assertion is not implausible.
What makes the difference here?
We know that dogs exist; dragons, if they existed on Earth, would probably have consequences we do not observe. Furthermore, dogs are known to frequent the abodes of people, while Dragons... well... is the dragon actually smaller than the garage in question?
How is ID doing on this score? We know that intelligences exist, and they can have the ability to manipulate genes. If other intelligences existed, they would not necessarily have consequences we do not observe.
Darth Wong wrote:No one ever said that you should STOP after saying "I don't know"
Great. It seemed that in the event of evolution's utter failure, you were ready to go off and still not suspect any intelligent intervention, which would seem to me be (aside from resuscitation of evolution) the prime avenue for inquiry.
Darth Wong wrote:We're only saying that you shouldn't pretend you have a scientific theory when you don't. Basically, ID theory has one postulate: "not evolution". That is not a theory. That's no more of a theory of biology than "not relativity" would be a physics theory.
ID has one postulate: some intelligent actor influenced our development. That basically
boils down to 'not evolution' only because we can't think of any alternative. Aside from "I don't know", if you count the lack of a theory as a theory.
Darth Wong wrote:I think 'no predictive power' is a suboptimal strategy because on the one hand, people don't get the importance to science; and on the other, it's a conglomerate of individual theories, which muddies the water.
And you think that telling people they have no evidence will work better, when they can invent "evidence" out of thin air at will and then tell people you and your ilk are living in denial? That's a LOSING strategy if I ever saw one.
"They said evolution couldn't make X. It can. They said evolution could make Y. It can. They said evolution could make Z. It can. How many times do they get away with this shit?"
Of course sitting on the defense is a losing strategy in a debate.
Darth Wong wrote:I think 'Failure of Imagination Fallacy' is a good strategy, and it is closely related.
Yes it is, but if you don't at least
try to explain to people what's philosophically wrong with ID rather than humouring their asinine belief that "anything but evolution" is a meaningful scientific theory, then you are ceding crucial territory for no fucking reason.
There are plenty of philosophical problems with ID without having to resort to the very specific problems that are the least relevant -- that it provides no way of determining the mechanism (which is shared by many accepted theories, including ALL fundamental theories) or that it is vague (which is a great argument against using it as a basis of inquiry, but not against its veracity).
What other philosophical problems does it have? Let's take it from the most useful.
1) theologically, forcing yourself into belief in god by process of elimination doesn't have that ring of devotion to it.
2) just because we can't figure out how evolution might do these things, doesn't mean it can't (there's the argument from ignorance fallacy)
3) why would an omnipotent intelligent designer make things look
so much like it had been produced by evolution? (note, only works on the case of omnipotent intelligent designers who did not extensively use evolution as a tool)
4) Irreducible complexity arguments rely on probability being an absolute barrier. In a really really huge or especially in an infinite universe, really really unlikely things can happen; and only once is needed.
5) If you believe in Irreducible Complexity, then you had better NOT believe that genomes are capable of having parts deleted... oops, that's all that many creationists think genomes CAN do.
Darth Wong wrote:It is not necessarily a WRONG one. It is definitely a BAD one.
And so Drachefly brings out the
exact same logic typically used by religionists to support belief in God: the fact that you can't technically prove an idea wrong just by showing that it makes no sense and has no value.
In case you didn't catch it, I said the idea was a bad one (emphasis not added because it was in the original). If we could get religionists and Id-ers to say that belief in God and ID were bad ideas, we'd be in such great shape, wouldn't we?