Intelligent Design

Welcome to The Fool Says: Exploring Evidence for Intelligent Design

Rob Moritz
Rob Moritz

Welcome

Thank you for visiting The Fool Has Said. This website is dedicated to exploring the evidence for intelligent design and examining creation
science through reason, logic, and careful observation of the natural world.

Our name comes from Psalm 14:1: "The fool has said in his heart, 'There is no God.'" Rather than mock those who deny a Creator, we aim to
present compelling evidence that points to purposeful design in nature—evidence so clear that denying it requires willful blindness.

Whether you're a skeptic, a seeker, or a believer looking to strengthen your understanding, we invite you to explore with an open mind. Let
the evidence speak for itself.

The Bacterial Flagellum: A Microscopic Marvel

To begin our journey, let's examine one of nature's most elegant examples of design: the bacterial flagellum.

Imagine a rotary motor so small that 8,000 of them could fit across the width of a human hair. This motor can spin at up to 100,000
revolutions per minute, reverse direction in a quarter turn, and contains components remarkably similar to human engineering: a rotor, a
stator, a drive shaft, bushings, and a universal joint.

This is the bacterial flagellum—the tail-like propeller that allows bacteria to swim through liquid environments.

The Challenge of Irreducible Complexity

What makes the flagellum particularly fascinating is its irreducible complexity. The motor requires approximately 40 different protein
parts, all precisely arranged and working together. Remove any single component, and the entire system fails—the bacterium cannot swim.

This presents a significant challenge to gradual evolutionary explanations. Natural selection can only preserve changes that provide an
immediate survival advantage. But what advantage does a partial flagellum provide? A rotor without a stator? A drive shaft without a motor?

Biochemist Michael Behe popularized this concept, arguing that such systems must have arisen all at once—exactly what we would expect from
intelligent design, not from random mutations accumulated over time.

Questions Worth Asking

The bacterial flagellum isn't proof that closes all debate, but it's evidence that demands thoughtful consideration:

- How do we explain the origin of such precise, coordinated complexity?
- Can undirected processes truly generate the information required to build molecular machines?
- What does our experience tell us about the source of motors, codes, and systems?

In our everyday lives, when we encounter motors, information systems, or coordinated parts working toward a purpose, we immediately
recognize intelligence at work. Why should we assume differently when we find these same hallmarks in biology?

Join the Conversation

This is just the beginning. In future articles, we'll explore topics like:

- The information content in DNA
- The fine-tuning of physical constants that make life possible
- Fossil evidence and the Cambrian explosion
- Logical flaws in common evolutionary arguments
- Biblical creation accounts and scientific concordance

We encourage respectful dialogue and honest questions. Use the comments section below to share your thoughts, challenge ideas, or suggest
topics you'd like to see explored.

As Proverbs 18:17 reminds us: "The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him." Let's examine these
questions together with intellectual honesty and rigor.

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Welcome to The Fool Has Said. Let the investigation begin.

About the Author

Grateful child of God; enthusiastic husband, father, grandfather, Pickleball addict, golfer, etc.

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