The test is designed. But the creatures that pass it are not. They may look designed, but then again, how they work may be utterly unintelligible to their creator. If the test is behavioural, then you can have thousands of creatures, all physically very different, passing it - thus I contend that there is no design in the organism itself.
Proponents of ID are generally arguing that living things show evidence of being directly designed. Every piece needing to be specially put together sort of thing.
And yes, I would say that the wavelet itself wasn't designed. Not that that's too relevant - the wavelet's an extremely simple thing, and (though I don't know the details), I expect many slightly different wavelets would work nearly as well.
ID proponents generally argue that lifeforms are 'fine-tuned' and that small changes would break them. Of course, they typically only think of changes that involve removal, and ignore additions, when in fact previous versions of an evolved system often have additional 'scaffolding' parts that are no longer seen.
Indeed, the presence of biological systems that can have no part removed is expected of evolution, since if a system CAN have a part removed without impairing its function, then the organism with the part removed will require less energy to build the system, giving it a competitive advantage.
Proponents of ID are generally arguing that living things show evidence of being directly designed. Every piece needing to be specially put together sort of thing.
And yes, I would say that the wavelet itself wasn't designed. Not that that's too relevant - the wavelet's an extremely simple thing, and (though I don't know the details), I expect many slightly different wavelets would work nearly as well.
ID proponents generally argue that lifeforms are 'fine-tuned' and that small changes would break them. Of course, they typically only think of changes that involve removal, and ignore additions, when in fact previous versions of an evolved system often have additional 'scaffolding' parts that are no longer seen.
Indeed, the presence of biological systems that can have no part removed is expected of evolution, since if a system CAN have a part removed without impairing its function, then the organism with the part removed will require less energy to build the system, giving it a competitive advantage.





