EAllusion wrote:Imagine Behe arguing that the flagellum is irreducibly complex without bothering to argue that we can conclude things that are irreducibly complex are designed.
I don't think they need to push the idea that if the ToE 'falls', then creatures must have been designed by 'something'.
...I think they have realised that - as you rightfully say - pushing the ID-er part of their arguments is blocking the legitimacy of their movement. They also realise that they don't need to push the ID-er part of their arguments. Vast amounts of people would automatically go for the 'designer' explanation if the ToE was sufficiently toppled. (Or at least people believed it had been...).
They don't need to force the conclusion as a 'scientific conclusion'. That conclusion will happen regardless.
So why hold themselves back with this 'IDer' concept, when it isn't even necessary to push it? The concept of an IDer would push itself in the end - whether in a scientifically viable way, or not...
In the end, do they care about the means? Surely it's the ends they care about...?
I think even Behe would see the wisdom in that...