OK, which? Give me just one.
Douglas D. Axe, Philip Lu, and Stephanie Flatau, “A
Stylus-Generated Artificial Genome with Analogy to Minimal Bacterial Genomes,”
BIO-Complexity, Vol. 2011(3) (2011).
Reason; BIO-Complexity is not a respected peer-review journal. Bio-Complexity is the Discovery Institute's own journal. They're basically citing themselves.
They cited their own journal seven times, btw.
The above listed article, as well as;
2) Joseph A. Kuhn, “Dissecting Darwinism,”
Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings, Vol. 25(1): 41-47 (2012).
This article is written by a medical surgeon, and peer reviewed by medical doctors. They're not biologists. Biology and medicine are related fields, but medical doctors aren't the peers of biologists. Further, on actually reading, you can see it's full of fairly typical ID arguments anyhow. Finally, it's a survey article, not a research article.
3) Øyvind Albert Voie, “Biological function and the genetic code are interdependent,”
Chaos, Solitons and Fractals, Vol. 28:1000–1004 (2006).
This article simply doesn't support ID. It kind of seems to, but it's really just a paper about how something unlikely is improbable... Duh.
4) Ann K. Gauger and Douglas D. Axe, “The Evolutionary Accessibility of New Enzyme Functions: A Case Study from the Biotin Pathway,”
BIO-Complexity, Vol. 2011(1) (2011).
When I read through to find the fourth article I read, I skipped by this one a few times before recognizing it. Then I remembered I didn't actually read it because I saw it was another BIO-Complexity paper and I lacked the patience to try to find a different article to read. So touche, you got me. I only read three of them.
The list I gave is entitled: Peer-Reviewed & Peer-Edited Scientific Publications Supporting the Theory of Intelligent Design
I could create a site titled "Peer-Reviewed & Peer-Edited Scientific Publications
Supporting the First Hand Claims of Alien Abduction". Calling my BS "Peer-reviewed" does not lend it credibility. I'm more concerned with something actually getting reviewed by experts in the relevant field than what it's labelled.
"Bald-faced lies" implies a certain amount of nefariousness to it, which I think in no way you or anyone else commenting here has established. At best all you have is a disagreement between us on what constitutes 'support' of an idea.
There
is a certain amount of nefariousness to it. The ID movement is basically a lie. It's an attempt to get religious ideas taught in high school class rooms through posing as a secular, scientific discipline, just like the Creationism movement before it, and from which it spawned. It is, in fact, a further refinement of "Creation Science", better disguised.
I don't care about mundane "support", I care about "scientific merit", in this case. This is, as the proponents claim, scientific. So prove it.
I never said the scientific community were closed-minded jerks. Nor have I labeled that specific charge at anyone on these forums to my knowledge. Though if the impression is that I have come off as saying you are a closed-minded jerk, I apologize. But I would also just say look in a mirror. You have accused me with at least, if not more, of the same intent.
I sure have, because I believe it's true. You're using the Discovery Institute as your primary source for scientific information in this discussion, here. It's silly. The DI has an unabashed history of supporting creationism and then ID. Just read it's wiki article;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discovery_Institute#History, specifically;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discovery_Institute#Religious_agenda
Yes, the ID movement claims to be a purely secular, scientific movement, but it's simply not;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_intelligent_design