Fundamental Theorems of Intelligent Design
[Advanced Creation Science]
There are two theorems that I consider fundamental to Intelligent Design. The first was derived by the renowned physicists John Barrow a Frank Tipler from Schrodinger’s equation of quantum mechanics:

The second fundamental theorem of ID was derived by William Dembski, it can be found on page 25 of this document: Searching Large Spaces.
The exploration of these fundamental theorems will take a year’s worth of blogging. They make feasible the theory of ID, and a theory of ID leads to the possiblity of theories of special creation, which make possible theories of a young cosmos.
But regarding the first fundamental theorem of ID, Frank Tipler writes:
A recent poll of the members of the National Academy of Sciences, published in Scientific American, indicated that more than ninety percent are atheists. These men and women have built their entire worldview on atheism. They would be exceedingly reluctant to admit that any result of science could be valid if it even suggested that God could exist.
I discovered this the hard way when I published my book The Physics of Immortality. The entire book is devoted to describing what the known laws of physics predict the far future of the universe will be like. Not once in the entire book do I use anything but the known physical laws, the laws of physics that are in all the textbooks, and which agree with all experiments conducted to date. Unfortunately, in the book I gave reasons for believing that the final state of the universe — a state outside of space and time, and not material — should be identified with the Judeo-Christian God. (It would take a book to explain why!) My scientific colleagues, atheists to a man, were outraged. Even though the theory of the final state of the universe involved only known physics, my fellow physicists refused even to discuss the theory. If the known laws of physics imply that God exists, then in their opinion, this can only mean that the laws of physics have to be wrong.
