Thought people might find this interesting for discussion. I've posted the page over at Skepticfourm a while ago for discussion too and got some good comments.
I basically got tired of reading a lot of popular books that saying evolution is random is beyond wrong. Now, I do believe it is incorrect to say that natural selection is random. But evolution is more than natural selection from what I understand.
I reason that if Evolution can be mathematically conceived as
Evolution = NS(RM, OS)
where NS is Natural Selection, RM is Random Mutation, and OS is Other Stuff,
(That is, NS is a function acting on things, some of which are random. Or put another way, evolution is the non-random selection of random variation and some other things)
the going by this conception, doesn't that make Evolution random (ie. unable to be predicted with certaintly beforehand), and therefore saying evolution is random is not wrong, but in fact a true and reasonable statement?
For example, say I have fair coin, with Heads or Tails which I code as 0 or 1. Then I calculate some function, I choose 2^outcome+10. The output is still random, either 11 or 12.
Take any non-trivial function f, and calculate f(something random). Won't the output f be random?
I write about this here http://www.statisticool.com/evolution.htm
I basically got tired of reading a lot of popular books that saying evolution is random is beyond wrong. Now, I do believe it is incorrect to say that natural selection is random. But evolution is more than natural selection from what I understand.
I reason that if Evolution can be mathematically conceived as
Evolution = NS(RM, OS)
where NS is Natural Selection, RM is Random Mutation, and OS is Other Stuff,
(That is, NS is a function acting on things, some of which are random. Or put another way, evolution is the non-random selection of random variation and some other things)
the going by this conception, doesn't that make Evolution random (ie. unable to be predicted with certaintly beforehand), and therefore saying evolution is random is not wrong, but in fact a true and reasonable statement?
For example, say I have fair coin, with Heads or Tails which I code as 0 or 1. Then I calculate some function, I choose 2^outcome+10. The output is still random, either 11 or 12.
Take any non-trivial function f, and calculate f(something random). Won't the output f be random?
I write about this here http://www.statisticool.com/evolution.htm
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