bob b said:
Nonsense. Biologists are quite clear that they rule out an intelligent designer in their work. They wish to explain things using natural phenomena only because that is all science can work with (observe and experiment on).
Being a "Science Lover" you should know better. You should know well that Methodological Naturalism is the only method by which science can work and yield accurate, testable and raliable results. The alternative that you are proposing, namely, Methodological Supernaturalism yeilds no results, it is superfluos (gives us nothing that MetaNat does not gives us), it propsoes no predictions/confirmations, it is untestable and and not bound to any logical restrictions. Under MS, anything and everything is possible, there is no constrain to what can or cannot happen, there is not way of knowing what we should or should not see.
MetaNat is the only method by which genuine science is possible. This is not some Naturalist bias or anything similar (personally I believe that the fact that MetaNat is so reliable is a strong evidence for God, but that is another subject). Rather, MetaNat is prefered because it has a long track record of amazing results in all branches of natural science.
The question then is: is the bacterial flagellum irreducibly complex? Maybe, maybe not, but so far nobody has been able to show that it isn't. Perhaps the reason is that nobody seems to be trying to do an experiment which would remove one of the proteins which comprise this system and find out if it still functions. They are doing many other things and saying many other things, but nobody seems to be paying any attention to the definition Behe gave for an irreducibly complex system.
bob b, the whole argument for IC rests on a fallacy(reverse evolution), see what the paper on TalkReason says...
"The protein parts of biochemical systems also evolve, so the flytrap is a good model for them and the mousetrap isn't. The flytrap and hemoglobin show in different ways that removing a part is often not the same as evolution in reverse. The flytrap has already lost a part (the glue that Drosera use to trap insects). With hemoglobin, taking away either the alpha or the beta chain would be a disaster unless the whole animal could be 'evolved back' to a much earlier stage.
Both hemoglobin and the recent evolution of a way to metabolize PCP show that what we have called 'deployment of parts' is important in evolution. Biologists usually call this regulation of gene expression, or just gene regulation. From another point of view, it is called co-option or recruitment of a protein to a new function. If a protein takes on two roles, any subsequent duplication of the corresponding gene will be subject to selection for both its regulation and the separate functions. Hence this duplication will be more likely to persist and spread in the population.
Here's another interesting thing about the PCP example: it amounts to 'adding a part to a previously non-functional system', which is exactly what Behe thinks cannot happen, because he thinks the organism couldn't have lived without that part. It turns out that a single mutation can create a new function and mechanism, allowing the organism to live better or in a new environment. This is indirect evolution in Behe's terms, but to DNA it is just another mutation."
http://www.talkreason.org/articles/dunk.cfm
Evolution does not needs to show that a part of the flagellum can be removed without it losing it's function, it only needs to show that the flagellum could have evolved, that is what has been done, and that is precisely what refutes IC. By asking just for the removal of parts, you are only presenting hafl of the argument that Behe is making, the conclusion Behe makes is that because this or that system is IC, then it cannot have evolved, but since it has been shown that it could have evolved, then IC (wether it exists) is simply irrelevant to Evolution because Evolution can also produce IC(if such a thing actually exists) systems.
Valz