thedoc wrote:
This argument has taken the form of 'Irreducible Complexity' and so far the examples that have been proposed have been demonstrated to have evolved from less complex structures. This is the particular case I am familiar with, but I understand that there have been others,
http://www.millerandlevine.com/km/evol/ ... ticle.html
Usually it is only a matter of time till science disproves this claim.
A few messages back, you were arguing that ID is not falsifiable. Now you appear to be arguing that it has been falsified. It can't be both.
There are two different questions here. One is whether irreducible complexity (IC), if it exists, is scientific evidence for ID. The other is whether IC is actually found in nature. If the answer to the first question is yes, then ID is a scientific theory.
I don't want to turn this into a discussion of whether the bacterial flagellum is IC, since I'm not qualified to have any very strong opinion on that. I'll say this much, however. Because this is a hotly contested issue, with a strong ideological component, I don't take the opinions of scientists as beyond question. I'm familiar with Ken Miller's work. I've read his book and seen him in debate with Michael Behe. If you only listen to Miller, and not to Behe's responses, you might well get the impression that Behe's argument is demolished. If you listen to both, with an open mind, it's not so clear.
Miller repeatedly (13 times, in fact) refers to ID as "anti-evolution", but what does this mean? If it means that ID proponents reject the common ancestry thesis, then he's engaging in demagoguery. Behe, for example, doesn't reject it. The referenced web article, "The Flagellum Unspun", is a bit of a shotgun critique of various points, some more directly related to ID than others. But what is the specific refutation of the claim that the bacterial flagellum is IC? It comes down to a point about the Type Three Secretory System (TTSS) and the following claim:
The existence of the TTSS in a wide variety of bacteria demonstrates that a small portion of the "irreducibly complex" flagellum can indeed carry out an important biological function. Since such a function is clearly favored by natural selection, the contention that the flagellum must be fully-assembled before any of its component parts can be useful is obviously incorrect. What this means is that the argument for intelligent design of the flagellum has failed.
What's the argument, then? Since a small portion of the flagellum can be shown to serve a different function, and therefore to be subject to selection pressure, the flagellum isn't IC. On the face of it, that argument is invalid and doesn't even address the point about IC. To show that a structure isn't IC, you have to do more than show that a piece of it has another function. Behe has made this point, as have others writing in support of his position, such as...
http://www.detectingdesign.com/kennethmiller.html#TTSS
As I say, this subject gets very technical, so I'm not going to claim that Behe and his supporters have decisively refuted Miller, any more than I can claim that Miller and company have decisively refuted Behe. I am, however, convinced that this is a genuine scientific dispute, like many other scientific disputes. If there turn out to be no plausible examples of IC, it won't follow that ID isn't a scientific theory.