Animavore wrote:Seth wrote:
Intelligence exists, this is an observable fact.
Seth wrote:Intelligence will be found to exist where organic data processing and memory structures substantially similar to the human brain are found.
Intelligence will be found to exist wherever data processing capacity, data, and memory storage exists in sufficient quantity, complexity and configuration.
Seth wrote:
Examine all other places in the universe(s) and fail to find intelligence.
Seth wrote:Evidence of intelligence and/or intelligent manipulation of nature. Example: BT corn
So in other words look for alien life similar to our own and find out if they've been GMing their crops, animals, selves?
That's a start.
Seth wrote:
Not my problem, that's for the science wonks to figure out.
Seth wrote:Evasion.
He says after evading.
I'm not the researcher, I'm just the idea guy...
Seth wrote:Tell that to David Coppedge
The David Coppedge who writes this creationist blog?
What does a person's opinions on creationism have to do with being an effective systems analyst for NASA, and therefore what would be the justification for firing him based on his religious beliefs?
Seth wrote:That's not the point. The question is whether the proposition that organisms on this planet could have been intelligently designed is a "scientific" proposition or a "nonscientific" theistic proposition.
Yes. Your right. So why are you still arguing with people who think the same thing?

That's not the question. The question is why are they still arguing with me...
Even Dawkins said that if life was placed here by an intelligent life we should or may find a signature.
Or not.
Do you even know what you're arguing about any more or are you taking the piss?
I know what I'm arguing. Do you know what I'm arguing?
Seth wrote:
I'm not claiming that it's possible to determine at this point whether or not intelligence manipulated DNA in the deep past, I'm simply saying that the issue is NOT inherently theistic or religious in nature, and that it IS a scientific proposition based on current knowledge about the ability of humans to manipulate DNA today, and a rational, logical inference that, because it has been demonstrated to be possible today, it is just as possible in the past, provided that intelligence at least as advanced as our own existed sometime in the 14 billion years preceding our era.
No one is saying otherwise except in your head.
Strange, because I keep seeing words on the screen written by other people dismissing the idea.
Seth wrote:
Because this is an entirely scientific proposition, not a religious one, nothing in the laws of the United States should preclude any public school teacher or school board from pointing out to students that natural evolution may not be the only explanation for the existence of life on earth or it's forms today. Whether it is wise for schools to do so is a matter for the school board, not the courts.
Well we already know natural selection may not be the only explanation for existence of life on Earth. There's also horizontal gene transfer through viruses. And there is some evidence for this.
True, but not particularly germane at this point.
Seth wrote:
I am quite deliberately disconnecting theistic beliefs and dogma from the core question, which is a perfectly rational scientific one, to make a point about the blinders that science, and the courts, wear when it comes to the proposition.
Then why call it "intelligent design", a phrase coined deliberately and transparently by the Discovery Institute as an attempt to muddy the waters as to what they are peddling? Call it "extra-terrestrial intervention" or even "genetic modification" because that's all it amounts to.
Well, actually, I coined "the Origin of Life on Earth" (OLE) as a substitute, but it's a poor one. "Intelligent design" is a perfectly reasonable and legitimate, and accurate description of the claim, and I see no reason why I or anyone else should have to resort to semantic gymnastics merely because it discommodes atheists to have to disconnect their knee from their brain temporarily while engaging in some small measure of reason in understanding that words don't become unusable simply because someone misuses them. I would expect rational people to reject the misappropriation of the term by the Discovery Institute and use something like "Discovery Institute dogma" or suchlike to more specifically describe the particular beliefs involved, if for no other reason than to recover the legitimate use of the term "intelligent design" for reason and science.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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