Francis Beckwith wrote:
An explanation doesn't have to be a theory. For example, if I were to claim
that "undefined designer operating at some point in the past had to
intervene in order for event X to occur since the event X exhibits the
characteristics of a designed entity," I am offeri
That things tend toward disorder does not mean that order cannot and does not arise. Order arises in all physical systems without violating the laws of thermodynamics. The "laws" relating to chemistry and biology also matter as do such laws of physics like quantum dynamics.
The specious entropy a
Alan Leigh Armstrong wrote:
There are many holes in the "theory of evolution." Evolution appears
to violate the laws of thermodynamics. There are also many things that
have been presented as evidence of evolution that have been proven false.
No, evolution does not violate the laws of thermodynami
y <http://www.baylor.edu/>http://www.baylor.edu ph:
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-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sanford Levinson
Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 2004 4:16 PM
Alan Leigh Armstrong wrote:
Evolution appears to violate the law of entropy. That is things tend
to disorder. (examples: a deck of cards, any teenagers bedroom.)
Evolution assumes that things become more ordered.
Oi vey. Alan, seriously, this is utter nonsense. The law of entropy does
not say th
I'm not sure that the following intervention will be productive, but:
My sense is that this discussion has reached beyond the limits of
list-relevance in its discussions of the substance of ID, evolutionary
theory, etc. (I remember enough about physics from college to know that
"the law of en
Evolution appears to violate the law of entropy. That is things tend to
disorder. (examples: a deck of cards, any teenagers bedroom.) Evolution
assumes that things become more ordered.
Physicists in industry are not going to spend the time on it because it
will not help produce a product.
Physi
Hi Frank, good to "see" you again. I'll be curious to see how the DI
handles this if it goes to trial. They are certainly right that the
actual policy adopted is incoherent, as I argued in great detail on the
Panda's Thumb a couple weeks ago. But if it goes to trial and they are
asked to testif
Sandy, I agree that there is value in multiplicity in the three examples you mention, including critiques of evolution. But there is a difference between evolution (an established fact) and disagreements about the mechanism by which it works. Requiring teaching that evolution is false is not an a
On 12/14/04 7:03 PM, "Ed Brayton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alan Leigh Armstrong wrote:
>
>> There are many holes in the "theory of evolution." Evolution appears
>> to violate the laws of thermodynamics. There are also many things that
>> have been presented as evidence of evolution that have
How does evolution appear to violate the laws of thermodynamics? And if
it does, why haven't physicists figured it out?
Michael R. Masinter Visiting Professor of Law
On Leave From University of Miami Law School
Nova Southeastern University
My training in physics was that a theory is an explanation that fits
the facts. For example, the theoretical physicist comes up with a
theory. The experimentalist runs the experiment and gives the results
to the theoretical physicist who then modifies the theory.
There are many holes in the "th
Title: Message
Francis J. Beckwith wrote:
I think Sandy's right in this
regard: the positions that get labeled "science" are "knowledge" and
religion merely "opinion." In one of the ironies of political
liberalism (of the Rawlsian sort), these distinctions turn out to be
argument-st
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Sanford LevinsonSent: Tuesday, December 14,
2004 4:16 PMTo: Law & Religion issues for Law
AcademicsSubject: RE: Wait, there's more: "Leading ID think tank
calls Dover evolution po
I just listened to an NPR segment quoting one of the
supporters of ID saying that it is important that students be presented with
alternatives to Darwinism. That is, this is an appeal to the importance of
a multiplicity of points of view. Is there a principled way of deciding
when that is
Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the pre-biotic soup:
For Immediate Release Dec. 14, 2004
Press Contact: Rob Crowther
Discovery Institute
(206) 292-0401 x.107
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leading intelligent design think tank calls Dover evolution policy
"misguided," calls for it to be w
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