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My scientific specialty is chronobiology (circadian rhythms and photoperiodism), with additional interests in comparative physiology, animal behavior and evolution. I am not an MD so I cannot diagnose and treat your sleep problems. As well as writing this blog, I am also the Online Discussion Expert for PLoS. This is a personal blog and opinions within it in no way reflect the policies of PLoS. You can contact me at: Coturnix@gmail.com


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« Have you nominated a post for the 2007 Science Blogging Anthology yet? | Main | Pediatric Blogging of the Month »

Intelligent Timekeepingism

Category: CreationismHumorTime
Posted on: March 26, 2007 7:09 PM, by Coturnix

This is, after all, A Blog Around The Clock, so, I guess I should be a strong and vocal proponent of the Clock Theory aka Specified clockplexity. After all, nobody's ever seen a clock move! So, I should start fighting against vile, rabid, Atheistic Blindtimekeepingism:

Atheists often level a strawman at Intelligent Timekeepingist (hereafter referred to as IT) views. They force you to stare at a clock for 5 minutes or so and claim vindication when the big hand of the clock moves. But DTists all agree that the big hand moves! This is simply microtimekeeping, and it does not go against ITist views. The problem is that these movements of the big hand are just as likely to give an incorrect movement as they are to give a correct movement. There is no new information about the current time added by these microticks! *Nobody* has ever seen the little hand of a clock move. This is what we refer to when we say macrotimekeeping. It does not really matter if the current minute is 13, 14, or 15, but it *does* matter what the current hour is. Are we to believe that billions of people show up to work on time every day due to chance?

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Comments

1
*Nobody* has ever seen the little hand of a clock move.

Heh, a simple 30x optical microscope puts paid to that claim.

Posted by: Warren | March 26, 2007 7:24 PM

2

Ingenious. And of course we all know that time progresses forward, which is another sign of design. The seeming reversibility of microphysics is exactly what the microtics illustrates, of course. :-)

Posted by: Torbjörn Larsson | March 26, 2007 10:34 PM

3

BIG JOKE

The Flagellum is still too complex: http://www.designinference.com/documents/2003.02.Miller_Response.htm

"Miller doesn't like my number 10^(-1170), which is one improbability that I calculate for the flagellum. Fine. But in pointing out that a third of the proteins in the flagellum are closely related to components of the TTSS, Miller tacitly admits that two-thirds of the proteins in the flagellum are unique. In fact they are (indeed, if they weren't, Miller would be sure to point us to where the homologues could be found). Applied to those remaining two-third of flagellar proteins, my calculation yields something like 10^(-780), which also falls well below my universal probability bound." by William Dembski

Posted by: Adrian Clement | March 27, 2007 12:45 AM

4

That is incredibly stupid even for Dembski!

Posted by: coturnix | March 27, 2007 12:50 AM

5

It's not religion, you must realize. The clocks we see today may have been set and put into motion by alien clocks from outer space, or time-traveling clocks from the future.

Posted by: mark | March 27, 2007 10:22 AM

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