Quote from jem:
why don't you show me why the quote is out of context.
Quote from jem:
and then why dont we discuss this quote that came from Stu. He though it was proving his point but it proved mine.
Susskind:
"I cannot put it better than Steven Weinberg did in a recent paper:"
Steven Weinberg
" I have heard the objection that, in trying to explain why the laws of nature are so well suited for the appearance and evolution of life, anthropic arguments take on some of the flavor of religion. I think that just the opposite is the case. Just as Darwin and Wallace explained how the wonderful adaptations of living forms could arise without supernatural intervention, so the string landscape may explain how the constants of nature that we observe can take values suitable for life without being fine-tuned by a benevolent creator.
If you are unfamiliar with the subject I will condense it for you.
Lately the fine tunings of the universe have been admitted by top physicists to be evidence of design. We could not have been this fine tuned by chance.
However string theory has allowed some physicists to speculate there are at least 10 to the 500 universes. And it takes almost that many universes to make our fine tunings not look designed but a chance happening.
Quote from D2.0:
Here's a little challenge for Iders to put the usefulness of ID in perspective:
SHOW a few USEFUL and TESTABLE predictions using ID theory that CANNOT be made by NON-ID sciences such as Physics, biology, evolutionary biology, chemistry, etc.
Then perhaps we will all see the point of ID better.
Quote from D2.0:
Don't want this challenge to get lost. So I hope posters won't mind if I repsrt it periodically.
Quote from ZZZzzzzzzz:
Already done.
Evolutionary theory predicts necessarily a new species to evolve from human beings, but they are unable to prove the prediction, give any time table, project what that new species will be, blah, blah, blah...
Human beings have had various mutations from time to time, but none have advanced into anything resembling the beginnings of a new species...
Quote from D2.0:
It doesn't prove your point at all. Think about it. There is catagorical denial of design by both Susskind and Weinberg. In simple terms they're saying, "what may appear to be designed happens to just be natural and has a natural explanation." But the best denial of design comes from Darwin and Wallace - things evolve without supernatural intervention - i.e. randomly.
But let's say that something looks designed. Where do we go from there? Are we done? Wouldn't we by necessity need to take it a step further? Like, how was it designed. Nevermind who or what designed it. That may be beyond our ability. And frankly may not be testable. But how should be testable at least, right?
Hey, try this on for size - coevolution. How would you rationally work design theory into it other than to blanketly say that things are designed to co-evolve? 'Cause not all things co-evolve. And you gotta see some of the things that co-evolved and some of the tricks one of the co-evolved use. For example Orchids that has long nectar tubes but have no nectar yet attract long tongued insects for the purpose of pollenating. Kinda makes you wonder about the designer. What, with all that deceit going on.
Quote from jem:
well now you are wrong because you are not aware of susskinds other quotes.
Quote from D2.0:
It doesn't prove your point at all. Think about it. There is catagorical denial of design by both Susskind and Weinberg. In simple terms they're saying, "what may appear to be designed happens to just be natural and has a natural explanation." But the best denial of design comes from Darwin and Wallace - things evolve without supernatural intervention - i.e. randomly.
But let's say that something looks designed. Where do we go from there? Are we done? Wouldn't we by necessity need to take it a step further? Like, how was it designed. Nevermind who or what designed it. That may be beyond our ability. And frankly may not be testable. But how should be testable at least, right?
Hey, try this on for size - coevolution. How would you rationally work design theory into it other than to blanketly say that things are designed to co-evolve? 'Cause not all things co-evolve. And you gotta see some of the things that co-evolved and some of the tricks one of the co-evolved use. For example Orchids that has long nectar tubes but have no nectar yet attract long tongued insects for the purpose of pollenating. Kinda makes you wonder about the designer. What, with all that deceit going on.