Well, then if you want to answer why evolution happened, I can do that very easily, as I did above.
The physical properties of this reality caused it to happen. Either through exogenous factors like radiation, or through the life's own inability to maintain itself.
That's a blanket statement just as bad as intelligent design...you are just assuming there exist physical factors to make evolution occur, and even if we haven't identified all of them yet they obviously must exist...philosophically speaking, that isn't any better of an argument than intelligent design, which just assumes God aided evolution even though we have yet to prove that assertion...
Certainly science has a better track record and so there's nothing wrong with saying science is more likely to supply the correct answer than intelligent design...but you are assuming an absolute position...
In science, a physical reason is inherently assumed even if we don't know about it...the proper criticism of intelligent design from a scientific perspective is not that it is wrong and "real" science is right, but that intelligent design cannot be tested while physical theories can...
In philosophy, intelligent design cannot be ruled out unless a competing theory explains evolution just as well as intelligent design...obviously pulling the "God" card is hard to argue against (since you can't directly prove it's wrong) unless you have a complete physical theory...
Intelligent design is not a theory of abiogenesis. You are best to do background research on the sources of information that cause you to make such statements.
Any theory regarding abiogenesis must explain not only how life arises, but what drives that process...intelligent design argues that God was needed to drive that particular processes as opposed to science showing physical reasons (such as entropy, for example) why that process would occur on its own...intelligent design is not an alternative to evolution as much as it is a theory regarding why evolution would occur...intelligent design may be completely bogus and proved wrong, but a wrong theory is still a theory...
There is no one single complete theory regarding abiogensis that has the consensus of the scientific community, pointing even more to the fact that the driving force behind evolution and the creation of life has yet to be solidly determined by science...doesn't automatically make intelligent design right, but your dismissal of it seems more based on a distaste for religion than anything else, and that attitude is about as far from scientific as one can get...
It is the same. Which part of Genesis do you not understand? Allegory or not various religions interpret that it implies a creator that created everything including life as we know it.
Creationism in its broadest sense argues that God created the world...but with the advent of the phrase "Intelligent Design" (as it relates to biology), Creationism usually refers to a literal interpretation of Genesis while Intelligent Design accepts the mechanism of evolution with the caveat that evolutionary forces are "inspired" by God...
Creationist museums will have people walking in the same "exhibit" as dinosaurs, adhering to the strict literal interpretation that all life was created at once simply by the word of God...so for all intents and purposes, contexts and connotation make Creationism and Intelligent Design different things...
Unfortunately there are people on school boards who don't see the importance of this, however fortunately many judges still do.
Like Texas? Not as bad as blanket state legislation (which is on the floor in Missouri)...
The scientific community has made and proven their case to the satisfaction of all but the religious folk
The scientific community is still in the process of forming a single, cohesive theory regarding abiogenesis...intelligent design, while definitely a theory, does not qualify as a scientific theory (since it cannot tested) and as such really is not relevant to the scientific community...independent of intelligent design though, to say evolution is complete is simply wrong...there is still a lot of work that needs to be done (especially regarding abiogenesis) and one does not need religion to see that...
How many scientific concepts do you think were gained through ‘popular opinion’?
Scientific theories do depend heavily on popular opinion...their "popularity" has no bearing on their correctness (the truth is the truth) but it does have bearing on their ability to be funded, supported, and incorporated into education...right or wrong, the science we accept today was proliferated by popular opinion...in fact, "correct" theories like gravitational lensing were popularized or vindicated by experiments rift with error...to think the history of science is a logical, unbiased pursuit of pure knowledge even in recent times is simply naive...the system may not be how science should work, but that's how the world is...
There are good reasons to dismiss Intelligent Design, but you should not be criticizing the theory because its advocates are loony "religious folk"...if you really are going to play the "unbiased, logical scientist", then Intelligent Design's association with religion should be entirely irrelevant...there are logical reasons for dismissing Intelligent Design, such as Popper's test or the argument of economy...so stick to those instead of critiquing the theory because of its advocates or associations....
Abiogenesis is an area of research that is seeking to find answers to hypothesis that life can come into being from nonliving materials and I don’t think this has anything to do with ID???
As I noted above, Intelligent Design argues that science has failed to adequately explain why abiogenesis occurred and suggests that instead of a physical reason necessitating evolution to occur, God "weighted the dice" to create the world we live in....is it scientific? Well, since it's not testable, technically no...but the creation of life is both scientific and philosophical, so a theory need not be scientific in order to be a contributing theory to the beginnings of life...and since intelligent design utilizes the scientific mechanism of evolution, a complete theory certainly could include intelligent design...