Re: Blood clotting and IC'ness?

From: FMAJ1019@aol.com
Date: Sat Sep 16 2000 - 01:01:22 EDT

  • Next message: Chris Cogan: "Re: Life as a manifestation of the second law of thermodynamics"

    In a message dated 9/15/2000 9:42:07 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
    nalonso@megatribe.com writes:

    << << Nelson:
    Well we can make stators , rotors, propellers etc. It doesn't take a
    "higher" intelligence to make them, and there is nothing preventing us from
    doing so, just advances in technology.We can make irreducibly complex
    systems. In the Conference of Molecular Nanotechnology held in 1998 they
    were actually able to make a motor much like the flagellum. There is also a
    patent on such a motor: >>

    FMA:
    Cool, so we can use nature's examples to design things.

    Nelson:
    Actually motors have been around for quite some time before we even
    discovered molecular motors. This was found in Behe's journal:

    David DeRosier's in the journal Cell: "More so than other motors, the
    flagellum resembles a machine designed by a human.".
    >>

    ROTFL, but the flagellum was around before the real motors. But no molecular
    motors were around now where they? We used an example of a natural motor to
    design our own. Such forms of intelligent design happen all the time but
    that's not the kind that interests the ID movement. That there is a
    resemblance is irrelevant, the design inference has to show rather than
    assert that it was designed and that the designer was not natural forces.



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