Supernatural...?
1) You insist that there is a realm of Reality that does not conform to Cause and Effect and violates the Natural Laws.
2) Is that part of ID doctrine?
3) So, Genesis for you does not need make rational and factual sense, because the events could have happened the way the churches still insist Genesis explains things, even though science criticizes those teachings?
Essentially, "God said it, end of discussion?"
4) Why is ID doctrines necessary then?
I'm used to talking to atheists and should have defined supernatural. From their point of view nature and God are two completely separate things. Thanks to VSC I realized I was being confused by the definition of nature. I understand now and
completely agree with you CD. There is only one reality which conforms to the laws of cause and effect and of course intelligence does not violate the laws of nature. I didn't mean to imply intelligence can violate the laws, just meant to
add it to the possible causes that exist in nature. But in doing so I see what Barbarian means about ID doesn't help explain anything to since basically everything is by design, or sounds like "God said it, end of discussion" to you. What I think ID is trying to accomplish is state adifference between:
a) God's normal works
in nature are Natural causes (gravity, thermodynamics, wind, rain, lightning, etc)
b) God's special works
in nature are Supernatural causes (miracles, God giving humans freewill, even animals doing something intentionally?)
An illustration of ID theory: When anarchaeologist digs up a rock and a fossil, ID in theory states he can tell which is the normal works (a rock) and which is the special works (a fossil of a life). I know it is painfully obvious, but in a world that believes atheistic evolution and nature (without God) is all there is, a theory of common sense is needed to show even nature is the product of God. Don't misunderstand, I'm not saying everything
is a miracle so why try explaining it, I just think ID theory kinda states what's obvious to a theist but isn't to an atheist. ID theory is not mutually exclusive to evolution either. It just says (the obvious) that we can distinguish between:
a) natural cause –evolution within a species such as peppered moths, rat snakes, resistant bactium.
b) intelligent cause – dog breeding, fruit fly experiments.theistic evolution?
I hope that clears it up and apologize if I mislead anyone.