What is Dart's concept of God?

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_antishock8
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _antishock8 »

What is your idea of god?


Dart: I do not have a "concept" of God, nor do I need one to know God exists.

Summary: "I have no idea what I'm talking about, but I'm certain I know what I'm talking about!!"

What is your ontological explanation for this universe?


The Big Bang theory/scientific observations suit me fine.

Dart, do you believe Jesus Christ existed?


Yes, I do.

------------

Dart, do you believe Jesus Christ was in any way shape or form on earth in the role of a savior for mankind?
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_antishock8
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _antishock8 »

Follow-on question:

How does the Big Bang theory include your god (of which you have no identifiable notion of, but is sure it exists...)?
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_Jason Bourne
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _Jason Bourne »

Some Schmo wrote:Quite frankly, it's likely he knows that anything he describes as a god is going to get shot down in bitter flames, and he just does have the balls to put it out there.

Course, that's giving him way more credit than he deserves.




Sure Schmo. I am sure Dart is running in terror of your laser precision argument of "Essentially anyone who believes in God is an irrational idiot or fool." :rolleyes:
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _dartagnan »

Sigh... I knew this would go nowhere. The mob is having a meltdown now that they realize they can't actually address the arguments I laid out. Ignorance appears to be a shared value among atheists here. It brings them together. Does it really feel that good to be included in a group?
If you can't understand that a common ancestor is important in understanding how flight evolved I can't help you.

Nor can you help yourself if you cannot understand what I have actually said. Nobody is questioning common ancestry. Nobody is saying birds didn't evolve from common ancestors. So while you're pretending that you're somehow "explaining" something that I supposedly "don't understand," with these basic Evolution 101 rants, all you're really doing is highlighting why it is so difficult to discuss any topic with you in the room. The real points get lost in the smoke of this meaningless rhetoric.

What I have said, and have repeatedly said, is that flying creatures had to have evolved by a designing influence since intelligence is required before anything can fly. Knowledge of aerodynamics is required. The principles of lift and drag are required. To illustrate how difficult it was to master, it took intelligent humans thousands of years to accomplish flight by learning these principles, and yet we're supposed to believe non intelligent entities managed it, without any help at all, millions of years ago? Next thing you know you'll be telling me the spaghetti monster did it!

This flies right in the face of reason.
Looking at flightless birds shows how environment plays a part on how animals evolve. You think birds are the only thing that fly? Insects predated flying birds by quite a time span, as far as I'm aware.

More straw men.... never said that only birds fly.
You don't understand that I was attempting to explain some simple things, to you.

Because you like to hear yourself sound informed, apparently. I know the standard 101 steps in Evolution. I know what it proposes and what it does. My argument is perhaps more philosophical, which is probably why you're being left in the dust of confusion. So be it.
You told me my reply wasn't in response to your points - yes, it was. A few of them.

No it wasn't. And you're doing it again above with these ridiculous question, illustrating you are gong down the wrong path with me. It should be perfectly clear at this point that you have not understood much of anything that I have said or argued.
I don't want to get into a back and forth with you, personally. I'd rather debate. You don't know what you're arguing.

LOL. Yes Moniker, that has to be it right?
You again and again say that evolution has a goal. It doesn't.

According to Cambridge University Press, that isn't entirely true. (http://www.fathom.com/feature/121813/index.html). Since there is no intellectual source within the organic cells, then of course the logical conclusion is that evolution cannot be guided. That's kinda my point. Since the end (i.e. flight) proves an intelligence was involved, and evolution states that there is no intelligent source within the fundamental properties of evolution, then this intelligent influence must come from elsewhere. So where? That is a question beyond what evolutionary biologists are ale to answer because it is outside their field of expertise. The matter takes a quick philosophical twist, as the end demands an explanation for its apparent intelligent design.

Evolution doesn't have goals in the sense that it contains coded information with a specific plan, but it does have a goal in the sense that it seeks to survive. And if taking to the air helps a species survive, then that is what it will do. You're not dealing with my argument. You're not even coming close to addressing the fact that something that requires an intelligence and understanding, cannot be accomplished without intelligence and understanding. Instead you keep avoiding it like the plague while bringing up all sorts of crazy points that have nothing to do with what I've said.
You repeat simple myths and don't even get that I'm attempting to explain the basics to you

Myths!?! Like what? You're beating up a straw man because you like to appear smarter than you are. You can't deal with the actual argument because you don't find an answer on that evolution website you're reading. So you run to the closest thing, which ends up being a straw man.
that apparently you don't get because you are hostile to evolution and run to sites that attack the theory without you even having a basic understanding of it.

I'm hostile to evolution, you idiot? I'm "hostile"? I agree with it! I simply refuse to believe evolution is unguided. You can't handle that prospect and you're doing everything possible to argue that science has somehow proven that it is unguided. On the materialistic level, yes I would agree. But the intelligence factor cannot be ignored simply because biologists can't find it in the cells.

JohnStuartMill:

As I said, and as you completely ignored, the evidence proves something "intelligent" exists, not just something. "Assbag." You haven't even begun to deal with the evidence, apparently because you can't. You don't even seem to be aware of it because your mind is narrow and already made up. Pretty sad for someone so young. You're still trying to downplay your stupid remark above. You didn't answer the question because to do so would reveal that stupidity, and that s why you're so pissed now. The simple fact is, evidence for an intelligent source doesn't require us to know what the source is before acknowledging its exists. You said it did, which is amazingly stupid. Now that this has been shown to you, you're upset and want vengeance. Sorry to upset your applecart kid, but that's life. Live and learn.

Now you've been reduced to retreating behind the already established Einstein argument. I already pounded this to death on other threads and you know this. Einstein said quite explicitly he is not an atheist and that he believes the laws of the universe were written by a superior reasoning force, a spiritual reasoning power. He said we were like children walking into a giant library knowing someone had to have written those books. You're derailing because you cannot accept the fact that you screwed the pooch, and you absolutely refuse to educate yourself on what ID is and how it is distinguished between other theistic viewpoints such as mine, Collins' and Flew's. Nothing I have presented is uniquely ID. Nothing I have presented is necessarily ID. The article I linked to came from http://www.atheistdelusion.net/, which is not affiliated with ID, beyond providing links to articles that make points that are not uniquely ID points. That same website contains an interview with Collins, and a detailed refutation to Dawkins by Alvin Platinga, neither of whom are ID.

It is clear now you're just diverting and obfuscating trying to hid the fact that you simply don't have a grasp of the subject matter at hand, and cannot explain how something that requires intelligence and understanding, can come about without intelligence and understanding. And you're clearly out of your league on the anthropic principle argument. Go read a few books by Leslie, Davies, Flew and Swinburne, and then maybe you'll have a decent background knowledge to have an intelligent discussion on the topic.

Antishock, why the hell would I respond to your silly interrogations when you keep responding as you do? You can't seem to come to grips with the fact you can't argue the points, you can't accept that I'm not ID, an opentheist, a Christian, or whatever it is you have on your list. I guess some people here aren't prepared to argue against original thoughts that didn't first show up on the secular web articles.

I'm done with this thread because it has clearly devolved into a cesspool. Such is often the case with rabid atheists, so this is hardly surprising.

Oh, and by the way EA, I noticed on the other thread you tried to suggest Roy Varghese was lying and that we should give Oppenheimer the benefit of the doubt? Well, hold on to your nuts, because this one is going to hurt. Why rely on Roy when we can hear it from Flew himself?

Here is what Antony Flew said about these allegations, along with a review of Dawkins:

http://www.bethinking.org/science-chris ... ws-the.htm

"I have rebutted these criticisms in the following statement: “My name is on the book and it represents exactly my opinions. I would not have a book issued in my name that I do not 100 per cent agree with. I needed someone to do the actual writing because I’m 84 and that was Roy Varghese’s role. The idea that someone manipulated me because I’m old is exactly wrong. I may be old but it is hard to manipulate me. That is my book and it represents my thinking.”

Ooooops? So much for all the scandalizing about how Flew was kidnapped by rabid Evangleicals and forced to sign off on views he didn't hold, after they repeatedly drugged him to intensify his demensia. Or something like that...
Professor Flew has recently written his forthright views on Richard Dawkins’ book The God Delusion. His article, reproduced below, shows Professor Flew’s key reasons for his belief in a Divine Intelligence. He also makes it clear in There is a God (page 213) that it is possible for an omnipotent being to choose to reveal himself to human beings, or to act in the world in other ways. Professor Flew’s article is offered here as testimony to the developing thinking of someone who is prepared to consider the evidence and follow its implications wherever it leads.

Professor Antony Flew writes:

The God Delusion by the atheist writer Richard Dawkins, is remarkable in the first place for having achieved some sort of record by selling over a million copies. But what is much more remarkable than that economic achievement is that the contents – or rather lack of contents – of this book show Dawkins himself to have become what he and his fellow secularists typically believe to be an impossibility: namely, a secularist bigot. (Helpfully, my copy of The Oxford Dictionary defines a bigot as ‘an obstinate or intolerant adherent of a point of view’).

The fault of Dawkins as an academic (which he still was during the period in which he composed this book although he has since announced his intention to retire) was his scandalous and apparently deliberate refusal to present the doctrine which he appears to think he has refuted in its strongest form. Thus we find in his index five references to Einstein. They are to the mask of Einstein and Einstein on morality; on a personal God; on the purpose of life (the human situation and on how man is here for the sake of other men and above all for those on whose well-being our own happiness depends); and finally on Einstein’s religious views. But (I find it hard to write with restraint about this obscurantist refusal on the part of Dawkins) he makes no mention of Einstein’s most relevant report: namely, that the integrated complexity of the world of physics has led him to believe that there must be a Divine Intelligence behind it. (I myself think it obvious that if this argument is applicable to the world of physics then it must be hugely more powerful if it is applied to the immeasurably more complicated world of biology.)

Of course many physicists with the highest of reputations do not agree with Einstein in this matter. But an academic attacking some ideological position which s/he believes to be mistaken must of course attack that position in its strongest form. This Dawkins does not do in the case of Einstein and his failure is the crucial index of his insincerity of academic purpose and therefore warrants me in charging him with having become, what he has probably believed to be an impossibility, a secularist bigot.

On page 82 of The God Delusion is a remarkable note. It reads ‘We might be seeing something similar today in the over-publicised tergiversation of the philosopher Antony Flew, who announced in his old age that he had been converted to belief in some sort of deity (triggering a frenzy of eager repetition all around the Internet).’

What is important about this passage is not what Dawkins is saying about Flew but what he is showing here about Dawkins. For if he had had any interest in the truth of the matter of which he was making so much he would surely have brought himself to write me a letter of enquiry. (When I received a torrent of enquiries after an account of my conversion to Deism had been published in the quarterly of the Royal Institute of Philosophy I managed – I believe – eventually to reply to every letter.)

This whole business makes all too clear that Dawkins is not interested in the truth as such but is primarily concerned to discredit an ideological opponent by any available means. That would itself constitute sufficient reason for suspecting that the whole enterprise of The God Delusion was not, as it at least pretended to be, an attempt to discover and spread knowledge of the existence or non-existence of God but rather an attempt – an extremely successful one – to spread the author’s own convictions in this area.

A less important point which needs to be made in this piece is that although the index of The God Delusion notes six references to Deism it provides no definition of the word ‘deism’. This enables Dawkins in his references to Deism to suggest that Deists are a miscellany of believers in this and that. The truth, which Dawkins ought to have learned before this book went to the printers, is that Deists believe in the existence of a God but not the God of any revelation. In fact the first notable public appearance of the notion of Deism was in the American Revolution. The young man who drafted the Declaration of Independence and who later became President Jefferson was a Deist, as were several of the other founding fathers of that abidingly important institution, the United States.
In that monster footnote to what I am inclined to describe as a monster book – The God Delusion – Dawkins reproaches me for what he calls my ignominious decision to accept, in 2006, the Phillip E. Johnson Award for Liberty and Truth. The awarding Institution is Biola, The Bible Institute of Los Angeles. Dawkins does not say outright that his objection to my decision is that Biola is a specifically Christian institution. He obviously assumes (but refrains from actually saying) that this is incompatible with producing first class academic work in every department – not a thesis which would be acceptable in either my own university or Oxford or in Harvard.

In my time at Oxford, in the years immediately succeeding the second world war, Gilbert Ryle (then Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy in the University of Oxford) published a hugely influential book The Concept of Mind. This book revealed by implication, but only by implication, that minds are not entities of a sort which could coherently be said to survive the death of those whose minds they were.

Ryle felt responsible for the smooth pursuit of philosophical teaching and the publication of the findings of philosophical research in the university and knew that, at that time, there would have been uproar if he had published his own conclusion that the very idea of a second life after death was self-contradictory and incoherent. He was content for me to do this at a later time and in another place. I told him that if I were ever invited to give one of the Gifford Lecture series my subject would be The Logic of Mortality. When I was, I did and these Lectures were first published by Blackwell (Oxford) in 1987. They are still in print from Prometheus Books (Amherst, NY).

Finally, as to the suggestion that I have been used by Biola University. If the way I was welcomed by the students and the members of faculty whom I met on my short stay in Biola amounted to being used then I can only express my regret that at the age of 85 I cannot reasonably hope for another visit to this institution.
“All knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it...Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality." - Albert Einstein
_dartagnan
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _dartagnan »

Sure Schmo. I am sure Dart is running in terror of your laser precision argument of "Essentially anyone who believes in God is an irrational idiot or fool."


No, but I am leaving the thread. I mean what's the point? I'm out of town anyway, and EA has left and he was really the only chance a real discussion had to begin with - unless the dude or tarski stepped up to the plate. Antishock decided to take his embarrassment out on me, as if I was the one who made him start a thread about me and make up all sorts of nonsense that proved to be false. JSM is now showing his true colors, that he is just a cocky little punk kid who isn't nearly as smart as he likes to think. And Moniker is moderator edit by harmony: delete stupid personal attack.

Yeah, so much to look forward to in this thread I tell ya!
“All knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it...Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality." - Albert Einstein
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _antishock8 »

Dart, do you believe Jesus Christ was in any way shape or form on earth in the role of a savior for mankind?

How does the Big Bang theory include your god (of which you have no identifiable notion of, but is sure it exists...)?
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _Moniker »

dartagnan wrote:And Moniker is moderator edit by harmony: delete stupid personal attack.

Yeah, so much to look forward to in this thread I tell ya!


Dart, I'm not on my period. Yet, I'm glad you're interested in my menstrual cycle.

Now, I'm going to reply to your previous post.
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _Moniker »

dartagnan wrote:If you can't understand that a common ancestor is important in understanding how flight evolved I can't help you.

Nor can you help yourself if you cannot understand what I have actually said. Nobody is questioning common ancestry. Nobody is saying birds didn't evolve from common ancestors. So while you're pretending that you're somehow "explaining" something that I supposedly "don't understand," with these basic Evolution 101 rants, all you're really doing is highlighting why it is so difficult to discuss any topic with you in the room. The real points get lost in the smoke of this meaningless rhetoric.


I was asking you if you had understood the import of a common ancestor. Just some months ago you were completely lost on the concept of a common ancestor and how environment could play a role on how there were branches from this common ancestor. Yet, with flight we see convergent evolution which is why I mentioned insects, as well. I just really, really sense you don't get evolution 101 which is the only reason I was going into it with you.


What I have said, and have repeatedly said, is that flying creatures had to have evolved by a designing influence since intelligence is required before anything can fly. Knowledge of aerodynamics is required. The principles of lift and drag are required. To illustrate how difficult it was to master, it took intelligent humans thousands of years to accomplish flight by learning these principles, and yet we're supposed to believe non intelligent entities managed it, without any help at all, millions of years ago? Next thing you know you'll be telling me the spaghetti monster did it!


I know that you've repeatedly said that intelligence is needed, which is in fact attacking evolution. You see, you say you're not disagreeing with the theory, yet, in fact, you are.

If you understand that there were forelimbs on some animal that, perhaps, had to leap in the air to get food or avoid predators (or was a tree dwelling animal) we can see how any genetic shuffling or mutation that helped this animal survive would be passed on to the next generation. It is a very, very, very slow process.


Can you look at this with an open mind:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 094135.htm

Now, are you asserting that this animal wasn't intelligent enough to know how to glide so God did it. This is how I would approach it. There were certain environmental factors and genes that contributed to this animal gaining the ability to glide.

This flies right in the face of reason.


I really don't understand why you say that. Do you think if there is an intelligence behind evolution that it would be perfect? Or no?

Looking at flightless birds shows how environment plays a part on how animals evolve. You think birds are the only thing that fly? Insects predated flying birds by quite a time span, as far as I'm aware.

More straw men.... never said that only birds fly.


I didn't say you did. I was attempting to explain that different animals gained the ability to fly by convergent evolution. I posted the link of an ant species because it shows how they are gliding as a way to survive their environment. I thought if you could see how this was happening in a small scale that, perhaps, you could apply that to a broader sense.
You don't understand that I was attempting to explain some simple things, to you.

Because you like to hear yourself sound informed, apparently. I know the standard 101 steps in Evolution. I know what it proposes and what it does. My argument is perhaps more philosophical, which is probably why you're being left in the dust of confusion. So be it.


No, you don't understand the basics of evolution from what I've read from you. I'm not saying that if you understood it that you would necessarily embrace it, yet, that you're saying you do not disagree with evolution and, yet, you're arguing against it certainly points to a bit of confusion.

You told me my reply wasn't in response to your points - yes, it was. A few of them.

No it wasn't. And you're doing it again above with these ridiculous question, illustrating you are gong down the wrong path with me. It should be perfectly clear at this point that you have not understood much of anything that I have said or argued.


Your argument is that intelligence is needed. That there is a goal. That doesn't work, for me.

You again and again say that evolution has a goal. It doesn't.

According to Cambridge University Press, that isn't entirely true. (http://www.fathom.com/feature/121813/index.html). Since there is no intellectual source within the organic cells, then of course the logical conclusion is that evolution cannot be guided. That's kinda my point. Since the end (i.e. flight) proves an intelligence was involved, and evolution states that there is no intelligent source within the fundamental properties of evolution, then this intelligent influence must come from elsewhere. So where? That is a question beyond what evolutionary biologists are ale to answer because it is outside their field of expertise. The matter takes a quick philosophical twist, as the end demands an explanation for its apparent intelligent design.


They were saying that the only aspect of evolution as a "goal" is to survive (which you have repeatedly said is a problem with what I'm saying and you say I'm repeating Dawkins), yet, not an end goal as in a set goal in which any species/animal/whatever is supposed to turn out a certain way.

Evolution doesn't have goals in the sense that it contains coded information with a specific plan, but it does have a goal in the sense that it seeks to survive.


That's not really helping you out, is it? You've repeatedly said there is a problem with the survival aspect of evolution and that an end plan (where something is going to turn out a certain way) is needed.

And if taking to the air helps a species survive, then that is what it will do. You're not dealing with my argument. You're not even coming close to addressing the fact that something that requires an intelligence and understanding, cannot be accomplished without intelligence and understanding. Instead you keep avoiding it like the plague while bringing up all sorts of crazy points that have nothing to do with what I've said.


No, I understand what you're saying, it just seems ludicrous, to me, quite frankly. I don't think evolution requires intelligence and understanding and don't know why you think it does. Intelligence as in guided by a plan? Understanding as in knowing what it is attempting to do?

Explain what you mean by intelligence and understanding.

You repeat simple myths and don't even get that I'm attempting to explain the basics to you

Myths!?! Like what? You're beating up a straw man because you like to appear smarter than you are. You can't deal with the actual argument because you don't find an answer on that evolution website you're reading. So you run to the closest thing, which ends up being a straw man.


Okay, I am taking what you've said previously and just recently in the other thread to say you're repeating myths. I posted an earlier thread (in another thread) where you went on for pages stating things like why the modern ape did not evolve into a man and that evolution has a goal. Now, I always thought you meant goal as in a predetermined outcome which is what you are essentially suggesting with flight. That there was an intelligence that wanted creatures to be able to eventually acquire the ability to fly and without that guiding force there would not be that outcome.

that apparently you don't get because you are hostile to evolution and run to sites that attack the theory without you even having a basic understanding of it.

I'm hostile to evolution, you idiot? I'm "hostile"? I agree with it! I simply refuse to believe evolution is unguided. You can't handle that prospect and you're doing everything possible to argue that science has somehow proven that it is unguided. On the materialistic level, yes I would agree. But the intelligence factor cannot be ignored simply because biologists can't find it in the cells.


Well, I am not comfortable going with the default of God did it. Also, merely understanding how it occurred doesn't seem to point to intelligence, at all, from my point of view.
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _antishock8 »

Dart, do you believe Jesus Christ was in any way shape or form on earth in the role of a savior for mankind?

How does the Big Bang theory include your god (of which you have no identifiable notion of, but is sure it exists...)?
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Re: What is Dart's concept of God?

Post by _EAllusion »

JohnStuartMill wrote:
I don't think this second defense of Divine Command theory is so unsalvageable, at least from the arguments you've given. Most mainstream Christians (I'm guessing) would stop you at "If God were to have a different nature..." and say "If He did, He wouldn't be God, and your rebuttal to DCT breaks down". Which makes kind of a weird sort of sense because, after all, Christians usually hold deity to be perfect, and because they belong to a monotheistic religion, think that there's only one way for it to be so. If one defines "God" as the literal Creator of the entire universe and its properties (which most Christians do), then Divine Command Theory starts to look an awful lot like Natural Religion, and converges with the "morality through reasoning" that you or I would recognize as ideal. Both theories would say that there are moral truths that are discoverable by reason and observation; the only difference between the two that I can see is that require there to be a supernatural agent at the end of the discovery process, while morality by reasoning would not. (I'd add that DCT would be shown to be inferior to its alternative on Occam's Razor grounds, in that case.)


The problem is that if God would cease to be moral if his commands/nature were different, that means that the truth of moral statements exists logically prior to the nature of God. Divine Command Theory is the view that the truth of moral statements is contingent on the wil/nature of God. Ergo, if God would be immoral in another world with a different nature, DCT is by definition false. In short, "both" is not an option. At least not this way.

At this point, you might be arguing for a practical DCT, where knowing what is morally true or not is dependent on knowing the will of God. One might argue this because while the truth of moral statements isn't contingent on the will of God, God is the only sort of being able to figure out the truth of moral statements, and we all must rely on it to know those truths when it tells us them. Mormon theology is extremely unfriendly to DCT, despite many average Mormons either explicitly believing it or implicitly believing it through their arguments (especially against atheists), but this type of DCT is more available to them. The problem with thinking that is Euthyphro rears its ugly head again with its emptiness and arbitrariness problems. This time, it's just epistemic. If you don't have some independent ability to evaluate the moral goodness of God's commands, you still are faced with anything going and there being no basis to judge God perfectly good over anything else.

As far as Kevin being derivative of Behe goes, I don't buy that. Sure, Kevin is quoting intelligent design websites and endorsing ID arguments. Kevin is making classic creationist arguments. Heck, skepticism on on the capacity of evolutionary theory to account for the origin of flight (because afterall what good is half a wing?) leading one to conclude a designer must be involved is probably the most famous creationist argument of all. It dates back over a century. So much for his disavowal of intelligent design. But in order for me to think Kevin is being derivative of Behe, I'd need to see him making an argument that is uniquely dependent on how Behe relayed it. If Kevin started talking about irreducible complexity or something, then we could call derivative of Behe. (I realize he's referencing that type of argument, but that type of argument predates Behe in creationist literature by decades.)
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