Valz said:
You did not point out to any particular details of the paper.
I didn't feel it was necessary. It should be up to those who believe that this is revelant to biology to show this, instead of asking skeptics to prove that it isn't. This stance is similar to asking that a computer simulation of some physical process correlates to it. For example, the results of a global warming simulation should agree with temperature measurements.
You seem to be arguing about abiogenesis and the origin of the universe, both things are irrelevant to Evolution and to the paper I linked to. You are also claiming that there is some conspiracy or intantionally deception behind it, why?
Any theory should have a logical starting point. Evolution wishes to rule out multiple starting points (Genesis) without talking about why.
I thought it relevant to point out that one of authors listed was a philosophy professor and writer of anti-creationist books.
Behe's reply amounts to nothing more than goal shifting. When he is shown that the flagellum is not IC and that it could have evolved he turns around to some other detail, when that is explained too, he moves to something else.
It was wishful thinking to think that the flagellum is not an example of IC. To refute IC one must demonstrate that removing
one component of a flagellum does not destroy the function. What Miller and others claim is that a
different system, which has some proteins that are
similar to the more complex system (which has a different function) disproves IC because it
suggests that the TTSS system
might have evolved into the flagellar system
The TTSS argument is similar to eye evolution rationales. The fact that some eyes are more primitive than others is not compelling evidence that one type morphed into another. IC argues that removing a
single component from an IC system destroys the function, which it does.
Does anyone familiar with biology still believe that an individual protein is a freestanding entity that has a biological (as opposed to a chemical) function in isolation, instead of being a component along with other components which
together constitute a biological function?
If so then perhaps this is the key to the ease in which they are deceived by the claims of slow evolution via random mutations plus natural selection.
A nail has no useful isolated function until it is used as a component along with other components to provide a useful function. So it is with all
systems. Excuse me if I sound patronizing here, but this is an absolutely basic and key point in the argument against macroevolution, and it is a favorite subject of mine due to my past training and experience in systems engineering, operations research and work with large scale computer-based systems found in manufacturing and other business enterprises.
Another example: an isolated computer instruction has no useful function until it is combined with other instructions into a minimum grouping that does have a useful function.
People talk about a gene for alcoholism. This is probably a sloppy way of looking at it. What is probably the case here is that there is a flaw (mutation) in a component (protein) which is part of some system which metabolizes alcohol, and for some reason beyond my area of expertise makes a person more likely to end up as an alcoholic.
The bottom line in all this rant of mine is that similar proteins in different systems is to be
expected in a system that is intelligently designed, which is evident because this is essentially what all human designers, engineers, scientists and computer programmers do almost without thinking.
He now demands a step by step testable account of an atom by atom evolution of the flagellum. Just like Dembski he demands and insane level of detail that is simply irrelevant to the fact that Evolution can bring about IC structures.
Since people claim that evolution is a step-by-step process, it seems logical to me to ask that someone demonstrate the relevance of TTSS to the flagellum by giving a step-by-step account of how this might occur. Anything short of that seems to me to be handwaving.
Someone on another forum gave me an analogy to illustrate what Behe and Dembski are doing: "We understand Newtonian mechanics very very well. We know that every hit Derek Jeter gets is completely describable by Newtonian mechanics. Yet suppose someone said "OK, in the 3rd inning last night Jeter hit a single to left field. Unless you can fully account for exactly where that ball landed in the outfield, describing every force that acted on it at each moment from the time the ball left the pitcher's hand until it hit the ground, you have no reason to believe Newtonian mechanics is capable of accounting for the ball's flight." How idiotic is that? Yet that's what the IDiots want. In the immortal word of G. Ludwig Meyer, "Scroom!"
If someone claimed that Jeter
might hit the ball over the Moon I would demand more evidence than someone simply saying that he hit it over the fence once and that
suggests that it might be possible.
But Miller claims more than that. He claims that the existence of the TTSS system
falsifies IC.