Specified after the fact, then.
I don’t know what you mean, but if I were to bet, I’ll say that you are putting words in my mouth
If I were going to put words in your mouth, they would not be so confused.
You wrote:
"Something can be specified but not designed."
If something is not designed, then it is not 'pre'-specified, that is, not designed. But how do you know an object of interest (i.e., already made in some way) is "specified"? You have to simply declare it to be, or you have to assess it somehow.
That is, you determine whether or not something was 'specified' after the fact; i.e., you do not actually know if it was specified until you claim that it is.
So, not putting words in your mouth, rather, following your words to their logical conclusion.
In the same way you would measure the probabilistic resources in any other circumstance. You just have to answer to this question “how many chances/tries” do you have? Someone who play the lottery 1 time has less probabilistic resources than someone who plays 100 times.
And yet there are people who have won the lottery on their first try, while people who spend a large percentage of their disposable income on lottery tickets every week have never won and will never win, so yeah, great argument.
Of course, that really doesn't answer my question. Or in a way, I guess it does.
We observe a gene in an extant creature. it is 1500 bases long.
Creationists want to make it seem that it had to have been designed... how to do this? The tired old argument from awe is passe... got to find something new...
I know! Most of the population is math-averse... so lets use numbers! Hmmmm.... So this gene is 1500 bases long... there are 4 bases to pick from... So lets say the odds of this gene coming together all at once is 4^1500 - WOW! that is a HUGE number! We will then declare that therefore, no natural process could have put those 1500 bases in that order to make a gene all at once by chance!
Impresses the pew warmers, to be sure. Heck - you even come up with some 'new' technobabble.
Then someone that understands both evolution and genetics points out...
'Wait - that is not how evolution works. Nobody said that a whole genes comes into existence all at once by chance. In fact, we do know that most genes are parts of gene families, i.e., their sequences are just slight variations on a theme, and are thus not bound by these silly claims about 'probabilistic resources' and such.'
Golly - what is a desperate creationist to do now?
'Oh, uh, well, you are misrepresenting the argument.. yeah, thats it... You're... um... putting words in my mouth! You... um.. are forgetting the big numbers! The specification! The CSI! The probabilistic resources! Doodly!'