DDHv wrote:The creationist assumption is that the creator has not been silent, and is to be trusted.
No, the creationist assumption is that a creator entity exists.
The intelligent design assumption is that entropy applies to information, so low entropy information requires an adequate source. Currently, the only source we know for high level information is intelligence.
Thereby showing that they misunderstand the terms "information" and "entropy".
One advantage to corresponding with someone who has different basic assumptions is that sometimes there is more insight into your own thinking. As a result of these posts, I've realized that in addition to the observation>hypothesis>theory axis, and webs of assumptions and logics involved, I evaluate ideas on the basis of their information levels and how much they depend on other theories, ie how direct is the link to observation.
You do know that this criterion is fundamentally flawed, in that no scientific idea is formed without soem form of observation first, right.
Being Right is a scholastic flaw. It is not limited to one group of theories. The intelligent design theories do not require a young earth creation - assuming long ages and processes simply moves the design features from recent to the patterns of action of the eighteen currently accepted nuclear particles and their results. If the existing universe necessarily produces life, the information content is in the basic laws. They don't even require a creator, although that fits Occams razor.
Yes, they do. If, as you said in the beginning, ID is based around the assumption that intelligence is the only known source for low-entropy information, then a creator entity is required. If no creator entity, and thus no intelligence, is involved in the genesis and evolution of life, "Intelligent Design" loses its meaning as a moniker.
Seriously, this is basic logical thinking.
Example: the E mentioned a source on the great oxidation event. I looked over the bibliography to the extent possible on the web. Some excellent research is being done there. However, they assume uniformitarian geology, and I've not yet found a way for for extensive strata, conformed to their neighbors, to commonly occur without evidence of: gullies and valleys if above water, depositing evidence if below water, and above all, without truly large movements of water producing them. Most of the strata show evidence of very large scale sheet erosion and depositing.
The question is, are you competent to evaluate these sources in depth?
The first paper seems mostly solid research (although I hasten to add that I am not competent to evaluate what is written on its merits, only in terms of its formal aspects), but stumbles in the final paragraph:
However, as specified by the prophet Ezekiel, the anointed cherub was covered with every precious stone in the garden of God at the dawn of time (Ezekiel 28:13–14). According to Revelation 21:19, the foundations of the wall of the eternal city are decorated with all manner of precious stones. Hence, diamonds truly are for ever!
This is nonscientific nonsense that should have no place in what, to a first reading, is a pretty straightforward geology paper.
The second paper starts off with the bullshit right away:
It assumes that the biblical flood happened (strike 1) and that the evidence of long-half-life isotopes in those radiohalos (indicating an age of several million years) shows that, during the end of that event, these diamonds were artificially aged by the creator (strike 2 and 3).
This is unscientific nonsense. Without citing adequate sources, the existence of the flood is assumed, and without showing a possible mechanism, artificially accelerated aging is presumed.
This is actually a marvellous example of creationists ignoring everything proper science tells them or twisting real observations into a pretzel until they fit in with their presumptions. I cannot take this approach seriously, and I wonder why you do, DDHv.
My objection is not to people making assumptions and doing research based on them. It is to the scholasticism which ignores observations that don't fit currently accepted theories. Even someone with a poor theory can produce good observations. Someone who disagrees with accepted theory is more likely to look at things most wouldn't think about.
On the other hand, someone working off of assumptions that cannot be tested or even challenged (see the existence of a creator entity as an example) may make valid observations, but arrive at bogus results when it comes to interpreting those observations.
(I also find it interesting that Dr Andrew Snelling, credited as coauthor on both of the articles you linked,
apparently maintains a dual identity as both a young earth creationist and a mainstream geologist. This, to me, does not make him seem credible in either capacity.)
How many times an accident has produced new, totally unexpected results. Jenner's cowpox vaccine came from good observation, but the ability to produce many vaccines came from the accident of Pasteur Institute researchers letting their bacterial material dry when they went on vacation. The whole field of radioactivity started when Becqueral, investigating florescence, left film, some keys, and a uranium mineral in a drawer for a time. There have been near misses also,. I read of a student doing Vitamin C shortage studies who found one subject who didn't get symptoms. He hypothesized a gut bacteria producing vitamin C, but instead of working to discover it, he
used an antibiotic to prove his hypothesis. The object, as you correctly point out, is not to prove ourselves Right, but to find out things we don't yet know.
It would be nice to have all research adequately funded. However, even better would be a solid cultural pattern of posting
all raw observations in the net, as is now possible.
Of course, this might result in some theories being upset
Repeat after me: Eyewitness reports are not reliable. Raw observations, at the levels where they can actually change our understanding of things, require expensive apparatuses and years of education to make these days. We are long past the point where random observations by laypeople can disprove theories.
I would change "proven" to "not yet been disproved" due to my assumption that there is always a possibility that one or more explanation(s) closer to reality is either not conceived, or not well tested
And you would be wrong to do so. Any given theory is nothing more (and nothing less) than our best approximation to reality. Everyone who has had a class in the Philosophy of Science understands this. There is no need to try to "clarify" scientific language in the way you suggest.
The replication crisis is a very real thing and needs to be addressed, but addressing it would mean that politicians would have to keep their hands off of relevant budgets.