Intelligent arguments?
The construction of certain automobiles exhibits the qualities of intelligent design, but I’m not confident that all do. That, of course, is my personal opinion. It is not a presentation of facts based on observable, reproducible science.
It’s a chuckle to observe the many religious and anti-religious arguments being presented in support of, or opposed to, the theory of evolution. The problem is, that opinions are like noses. Everyone has one, and they generally prefer their own!
On-the-other-hand, this column presents a logical examination of scientifically provable, repeatable, demonstrable facts…regardless of whether it supports or discredits someone’s personal religious or anti-religious opinion.
Many would like to divert our attention away from these recently-discovered facts of physics by having us to spin our wheels in the mud of religious and anti-religious opinion. For example, there was recently presented an argument against intelligent design, claiming that the human vagina was not located in the best place to reduce birth trauma, as if this made some kind of useful anti-design difference. After all, one could equally argue that its current location has proven to be quite satisfactory for humankind. But again, frivolous arguments specifically avoid the main issue.
The Resonant Field Theory cannot be successfully attacked with either religious or anti-religious opinion, because it proceeds from the facts of demonstrable science. Therefore, one must examine it scientifically, not emotionally.
Our examination of genetic complexity is not just some quaint little idea of so called “perfect wonders” that “must” have been produced by God. No such opinionated argument is ever presented here!
Atomic structure physically prevents hydrogen and oxygen from producing uranium. This fact of physics can be demonstrated in the laboratory, and results from the organization of resonant fields within the atomic structure of both atoms.
Likewise, the computer-program-like organization of every working gene presents a series of molecular “codes,” designated by the letters A, T, C, or G, (three letters at a time,) to the location within each cell where it combines with the RNA to manufacture the specific amino acid for each code. Code combinations follow in their coded sequence that constructs each process of life as needed in its sequential order. These are laboratory demonstrated facts. One proof is that gene splicing works. Another is that scientists have been able to actually construct a working gene, one atom at a time, to demonstrate how it works.
The “record in the rocks” establishes that there existed a time when this planet was devoid of life, just like the Moon, Mars, and Jupiter. Thus, genetic-manufactured life came into existence at one point with all of its complex computer-like properties working simultaneously. Otherwise life wouldn’t be here today.
There is zero evidence that the laws of physics were any different back then than they are today. Thus, all of the non-organic molecules that were in existence then, like all atomic systems, had a demonstrable, deterministic nature to their internal flowing force fields that has forcefully prevented the natural production of the machinery of life throughout history. These built-in limits on organizational complexity result from the facts of subatomic physics, not emotional opinions.
Evolutionists have failed to provide laboratory-demonstrable machinery for initiating the observed organizational complexity based on the documented activities of resonant field systems. Thus, evolution has now been rendered obsolete!
If one is unfamiliar with resonant fields, it is an easy and exciting science to learn. Read the exhilarating e-book Resonant Fields, the Fundamental Mechanism of Physics, Made Easy To Understand, available online at www.coolscience.info. It’s good to do your homework.
© 2005 by CoolScience
(To email us, catch up on previous lessons, and get further information, go to www.coolscience.info on the Internet, or you can email us at coolscientist@rmrc.org.)