R
rdean
Guest
Possibly we could start with you defining ID correctly, so that you know what it is you're trying to test.
Intelligent Design posits that the complexity of life is such that it could only have been developed by an intelligent outside being, not a random process.
So far, experiments have shown that amino acids and nucleotides can spontaneously be formed by random activities that occur on earth all the time (lightning). The first of these experiments was the Miller-Urey experiment, which is why I referenced it.
If you are not willing to submit your Intelligent Designer to the tests of the scientific method, then keep your Intelligent Design at Sunday School.
Wrong on all counts.
Intelligent design theory says that certain features of the universe and living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, rather than an undirected, chance-based process. "Certain features". Not "the complexity of life", or life itself.
Therefore, that means that your amino acid remark is irrelevant and unrelated, particularly since Intelligent Design, so far as I know, doesn't make any claims as to the method an intelligent designer would have used for creating amino acids. Awww, shucks.
If you are not willing to research what you're talking about, then keep your remarks to yourself.
So you agree. Gawd did it!