What you see as laws of nature I see as design. When you see a tall building do you see a structure or a designed building ? It is a designed structure created by a designer. And when I see nature, all species of animals, the stars, the planets, human beings...I see designed structure that , to me, is logical to presume a designer also. And if natural law is the designer , I still see a designer who designed the natural laws to operate as such. It is perfectly reasonable and logical for natural law and an ID to both exist.
But if you look at a crystal, which has structure, we do not think that structure was designed. It happened because of the action of physical laws that serve to direct how the crystal grows. No intelligent intervention is required for this to happen. When you look at a star forming from gravitational compression from a cloud of gas and dust, no intelligent intervention is required for the formation of that star: only the application of the physical laws (primarily gravity). This happens naturally and spontaneously without any intervention at all. In other words, it is not designed.
The vast majority of the universe is like this: operating under physical laws with things happening spontaneously to form structure without any intervention of any kind. The question is whether there are cases where there *is* intelligent intervention and how to detect such. Clearly, in the building, there is intelligent intervention and we know this not only because we have the blueprints. We also know that the natural laws do not spontaneously form structures like buildings. But they do form structures like crystals, stars, and planets.
Whether it makes sense to talk about the design of physical laws is a different question. But it is clear that the *most* fundamental laws cannot be designed: a design implies a more fundamental lset of laws to actuate the design. To put it another way, even if there is an ID, by what laws was the ID able to carry out its design?
And again, I don't claim to know what I believe to be an absolute truth since we are hypothesizing. You , however, seem to think what you believe in are absolute truths and other perspectives are illogical or unreasonable. It is in this aspect that I disagree with you. We might as well discontinue the discussion. I appreciate all of your well thought out views and research but I think there is more to this than just what scientific evidence and human knowledge , logic , and reasoning can lead us in this particular topic of discussion. I know you require evidence for everything but I also don't believe there has to be physical , material evidence to explain everything. I believe innate feelings and intuition are also forms of evidence in human nature and these our things you can't necessarily prove to others. But they are valid to me and I don't require everything to be proven in order to be valid.
Well, to see if they are valid, we only need to ask if they ever or often lead us astray or into contradiction. And it is clearly the case that intuition and innate feelings do, often, even usually, lead us astray. That alone means they are fundamentally unreliable and an invalid way to seek out truth unless supplemented by something else. And that something else is also evident: testing of all ideas against observation and a requirement that all ideas can be tested.
Some things are real to people regardless of having to prove it to someone else. You may require proof for everything to be reasonable, or logical, or real, or true...but I really do not. I don't think all of life's experiences and conclusions require proof. Some things are just innately understood without the need for proof.
And that is what I fundamentally disagree with. We *know* that deepness of feeling or strength of conviction isn't correlated with the truth of the belief. All you have to do is look around and see how many people have strongly held, but contradictory beliefs.
And, truthfully, this is precisely where you leave the path of reason. Reason does, in fact, require that you have evidence to back up your beliefs and that you not rely on just 'innate feeling' as a support for them.
Of course, I require proof in regards to math and science and other academic subjects, But there many other aspects of life where I don't need proof, I just trust my feelings and intuitions.
We all have such. But those beliefs are not, then, based upon reason. They are based upon emotion. To claim them to be reasonable is the problem.
And even science can only explain so much, not everything. There is more to life's experiences and drawn conclusions than just facts and proofs. These are my beliefs based on my 45 years of experience and observation of the many facets of this so called life.
Of course. Science, for example, doesn't deal with aesthetics. It doesn't deal with morality. it doesn't deal with beauty. And those are all vitally important aspects of human existence. But thtat doesn't relate to questions of existence, which *are* scientific questions.
Just to add one more thought from a previous statement I made. I suggested that an ID may both exist and not exist at the same time. That may have seemed a little absurd. But doesn't quantum mechanics and particle theory suggest that a particle may exist in teo different places at the same time ? I don't know if this science can be proven yet or not but it is something that may turn out to be fact when once we would never have thought that.
It is a very common misreading of what quantum mechanics says. Quantum mechanics is a probabilistic description of the universe, not a deterministic or a causal one. The 'wave function' for a particle tells the probability of detecting a particle at a point (among other things). That probability can be non-zero at two different points at the same time.
So my statement , according to science, if true, that a possible ID may exist and not exist at the same time may not be so absurd after all. This is what I am trying to express when I speak of the possibilities of an ID an science actually leading to some of these ideas and possibilities. If we were alive in say 500 years perhaps our discussion on this topic would be completely different in light of new discoveries ,one way or the other. This is why I take somewhat offense when you or others dismiss certain views as unreasonable and illogical when things aren't always so certain. It seems a lot of ideas are considered absurd when first proposed but later come to be accepted and viewed differently. So I personally don't accept some things as being so certain and definitive just because they are currently popular or appear to be the common opinion of the masses. And I'm not speaking of hard scientific facts but in areas of science, philosophies, and other subjects that are subjective and have room for alternative interpretations.
But not all absurd ideas need to be considered seriously. Some really are absurd. And we can make progress in our understanding by at least eliminating the truly absurd ones.