In "The last five years: Darwin's failures are positive sources of information for ID," I noted
Failures of Darwinism are not merely a negative. They are a positive. The growing number of stress points at which Darwinism fails can, taken together, form a picture, one that points to general laws that govern how high levels of information are produced in life forms. Obviously, as with dpi, the more such points, the clearer the picture. We can't have too many of them, though eventually, there will be enough to work productively with.
Throwing out assorted Darwinisms is like renovating a badly treated century home. The first thing we do is rent a dumpster. Because we must clear away the rubbish to rescue the core value.
One outcome is that 99% of the initial work is, unavoidably, teardown.
In the case of evolution, as Mike Behe realizes, we must compute the edge of natural selection's ability to create new information: Just beyond that edge may lie the principal sources of new information.
Of course, computing the edge involves a number of questions: Is it the same for all life forms? If not, which ones differ and what characteristics might they have in common?
Of course, sidelining the usual, tiresome, untethered "Darwin dunit" accounts would be a plus, but it is certainly not the motive for the project.
See also: How far has ID come in the last five years
Denyse O'Leary is co-author of The Spiritual Brain.
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