Storch,
I say science is science. Guns are guns. Guns don't kill people any more than science is religion.
It's not like I don't know what ID is supposed to be going through. I almost went for a biochemistry career, to research anti-senescence. A good part (if not the majority) of that research's field is up in arms, calling it pseudoscience and counter productive to the cause by giving people false hope. I also read this other forum, where a lot of richly fed brains go on and on about various theories.. One of em is Electrical Universe theory of cosmology, and that too gets more than just a cold shoulder.
The problem with ID is that it's a Deus Ex. That's not science. Not the least of its flaws is that, in practice, it's a dead end for progress: It runs into the Deus Ex wall, and then what? Nothing. There's nothing to gain from a black box phenomena that you can't open and peek inside, you can't shake it to hear if the insides rattle, you can't even feed it input to see what it outputs directly, you can't even reach out and touch the edge of the black box. You can't read the mind of God, it's not science to pretend you can or do; ID and creationism aren't science.
While Senescence engineering and Electrical Universe theory follow scientific method, and fall short of support either because one's trying to bite off more than people think it can chew and other because it just doesn't match enough practical data to give it credence, ID and Creationism are both flawed by principle. They don't even satisfy the criteria of science.
Which only leaves me and a lot of others to wonder just what the intent is, in people pushing ID and Creationism as a science. Are they out to asphyxiate science? Are they merely misguided and want to see their religious ideas find a reflection in science? Are they just mistakenly out to plant a flag in what they perceive as the necessarily atheist territory of science? Are they actualy so confused as to expect science to detect something Godly out in our natural and finite world? How dispassionate is that?
I'll admit that some people's agendas seem suspiciously passionate, like say Dawkins. My problem with Dawkins is that he's too rabbidly activist. I'll agree to that. But being so far out beyond properness doesn't void any truth he might hit on in his atheist stride.
I was going to say more, but I need to think about it first.
In the mean time I don't mean to be an amazinhunk, but unless you've got a reason to say that the popular notion of 'order' isn't an anthropomorphism of physics, your assertion that the universe as we see it is too orderly to have come from an explosion is wrong.