A philosopher reviews "The Design Inference", 2nd edition

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The cliff known to the Lakota people as Six Grandfathers, now
known as Mount Rushmore. From Wikimedia, public domain.

 

Glenn Branch has pointed out that there is now a paper in the philosophy literature reviewing William Dembski and Winston Ewert’s 2nd edition of “The Design Inference”. It is written by Joseph K. Cosgrove, a philosopher of science at Providence College.

It will be found here: Joseph K. Cosgrove. 2024. Order, organization, and randomness: on the mathematical formulation of life. Synthese 204 (6): 1-17 where there is open access.

Let me try to summarize these issues.

Araneus diadematus

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Photograph by Joel Eissenberg.

Photography Contest, Honorable Mention.

Orb spider and web
Araneus diadematus – orb spider, September, 2024. Mr. Eissenberg notes, "This spider spun a web on the outside of our dining tent on our back patio here in Rumford, Rhode Island."

Ark Park Attendance Drops Steadily: Righting America

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The entrance to the Ark Park, with the fake Ark in the background.
Credit: Northern Kentucky Tribune, CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

The fifth anniversary of the Ark Park came up in July, 2021, and the Northern Kentucky Tribune announced in a headline, Ark Encounter marks fifth anniversary with record crowds, announcement of new attractions to come. The claim was not exactly true then – attendance actually began to fall in the fourth year – and William Trollinger, writing this week on the Righting America blog, proclaims in a headline, Sinking Further and Further Below Their Projections: The Facts of Ark Encounter Attendance. Using data provided by the “indefatigable” Dan Phelps, Dr. Trollinger shows that, relative to initial projections, Ark Park attendance has dropped monotonically from 50 % in the first full year of operation to 26 % in the most recent.

As Dr. Trollinger dryly remarks, Williamstown “has not enjoyed the economic benefits that it hoped would come from subsidizing the Ark.”

Sphodros atlanticus

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Photograph by Al Denelsbeck.

Photography Contest, Honorable Mention.

Purseweb spider, showing specialized mouthparts called chelicerae
Sphodros atlanticus – purseweb spider. Mr. Denelsbeck writes, "The business end of a male purseweb spider. While noticeable from above and seeming to take up far more of the spider's body mass than should be necessary, the chelicerae are most impressive from underneath, with very large fangs and serrated edges for gripping prey. Despite that, these are not large spiders – my specimen here is only 10-12 mm in body length. The females are almost never seen, generally remaining inside the lair that provides their name, usually looking like a small twig against a treetrunk (I've searched, but found nothing of the sort so far). Canon 7D, Canon 18-135 STM at 64 mm and 36 mm extension tube, ISO 200, F/13, 1/200 s with custom softbox flash unit."