The assumption of ID and irreducible complexity i — Siti
All we can do is try to do science to it or not, and if we do try, see if that’s making any progress yet[/] or not. — Pfhorrest
Why don't you take those seriously? — RogueAI
Then the rest of what you said is of no relavence — StreetlightX
I don't think they answer anything - there is absolutely zero evidence for intelligent aliens interfering in biological evolution
and how does it help anyway?
If it were true then the big question becomes not where did we come from but where did they come from?
Ditto, simulation 'theory'...who or what is the simulator?
And in any case, even if we are in a simulation, evolution would appear to be helping us to understand how the simulation unfolds - which, if that's what it is, is what we need to know. Whether it truly is a physical reality or a simulation, our goal is to find out how it unfolds and where we fit into the greater scheme. I don't find either of these ideas particularly useful in terms of elucidating how evolution unfolds, even if they were true.
IC has no commitment to teleology. IC is essentially the thesis that shit happens; nothing more. — StreetlightX
By irreducibly complex I mean a single system which is composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, and where the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning. — Behe
An irreducibly complex evolutionary pathway is one that contains one or more unselected steps (that is, one or more necessary-but-unselected mutations). The degree of irreducible complexity is the number of unselected steps in the pathway. — Behe
If the improbability of the pathway exceeds the available probabilistic resources (roughly the number of organisms over the relevant time in the relevant phylogenetic branch) then Darwinism is deemed an unlikely explanation and intelligent design a likely one. — Behe
Again, just because a hypothesis begs a question does not mean that that hypothesis isn't true. — RogueAI
OK - but can I use my own words that I already used...or do I need to reduce the complexity of the language?how is any of that a commitment to teleology? Like really, explain it in your own words. — StreetlightX
The assumption of ID and irreducible complexity is that there exists a teleological relationship between biological structure and functionality (i.e. it is 'made' like that to serve that 'purpose' — Siti
True, but if it leads to infinite causal regress why not just admit that we have no clue what caused it and focus on attempting to understand what we know exists?
As far as we can possibly tell, the universe has been doing what the universe does for about 14bn years or so - what is the basis for assuming that at some entirely arbitrary point something very extraordinary happened when as far as we can possibly tell, most things are reasonably adequately explained by nothing extraordinary happening (Copernican prinicple)?
Oh I see, IC is committed to teleology because you said so. Cool. — StreetlightX
Key phrase: "as far as we can possibly tell". — RogueAI
Well "as far as we can possibly tell" there are giant silver teapots orbiting all planets beyond our own solar system and entirely invisible moncupators in the back right hand corners of all our fridges. Just because we can't rule something out doesn't mean we have to rule them in.
IC is committed to teleology because (as Behe defines IC) it makes the assumption that all the parts of an "irreducibly complex" system 'arose' (either by design or by evolution) to fulfill a particular function as part of a particular system. — Siti
you're equating the possibility of alien life existing with the possibility of a tea cup orbiting Jupiter. — RogueAI
But this is just crude adaptationism; the sting in the tail of IC is the second part, in which evolution could not have given rise to something because there was no available evolutionary pathway. But that's just the null hypothesis: that there is no way to get from A to B. That's what's 'irreducible'. — StreetlightX
The argument is that evolution could not 'select' in favour of a pathway leading to or including "parts" with no advantageous functionality — Siti
But then you are left with a null hypothesis (which is not really a null hypothesis anyway) that simply states that "you can't get from A to B" when the process has clearly (somehow) done exactly that! Obviously something is wrong there!I think it's quite possible to decouple, or isolate, as it were, the negative thesis - you can't get from A to B - from the positive one - that each part must have a functional role. I'm perfectly happy to discard the argument for IC - which is irrelavent for a null hypothesis in any case - and simply hew to the conclusion it wants to derive. — StreetlightX
But then you are left with a null hypothesis (which is not really a null hypothesis anyway) that simply states that "you can't get from A to B" when the process has clearly (somehow) done exactly that! — Siti
Ugh, "...via an evolutionary process" obviously, I'd have thought that obvious enough. — StreetlightX
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