Evolution is not solely dependent on mutations.
Ok, I agree with you. Now how does this help your argument that evolution is non-random?
Evolution is not solely dependent on mutations.
Yes. I also made the graph.See the word probability on the graph?
Really. Were you right in any way?I addressed this in the other thread.
In the same way you could ask for proof that gravity isn't random "... and things falling only proves that their altitude is decreasing over time and that can occur randomly."organisms adapting to their environment in no way proves that evolution is non-random; the mean fitness of a population increasing over time only tells us that the frequency of less fit individuals is increasing and that can occur randomly.
No-one to my knowledge has either explained how a process that operates on probability is non-random or directed me toward a resource that does.
Ok, I agree with you. Now how does this help your argument that evolution is non-random?
If selection is chaotic - unpredictable - and evolution is random, how can you correctly predict that from a gene pool of exclusively blue eyed people, you will get blue eyed children?
I see that most of this thread has degenerated into a bickering about the meaning of the word "random". Well, it is clear that if you told someone that "evolution is random", you'd be giving them an entirely false impression.
I don't understand what your argument is meant to be at all.What is it you don't understand?
In the same way you could ask for proof that gravity isn't random "... and things falling only proves that their altitude is decreasing over time and that can occur randomly."
But they all fall in the same direction, don't they?
I see that most of this thread has degenerated into a bickering about the meaning of the word "random". Well, it is clear that if you told someone that "evolution is random", you'd be giving them an entirely false impression.
The line of reasoning leading to the claim that "evolution is random" would seem susceptible to a reductio ad absurdum. If evolution is "random" because the mutations on which selection acts are "random", then we must regard evolution by artificial selection as being "random" too, on the same basis. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the fundie propaganda.
In the same way you could ask for proof that gravity isn't random "... and things falling only proves that their altitude is decreasing over time and that can occur randomly."
But they all fall in the same direction, don't they?
Are you saying that gravity is random? What?I tried it with some Post-it notes from head height. In general yes, as to specific final locations on the floor - there seemed to a random element.
Why would the "big funnel" be a better analogy for artificial selection than for natural selection?Of course, if I built a big funnel to drop my Post-it notes into I'm sure I could get them to land pretty much on top of each other.
Granted. But that's a reason to say that some evolution is random, namely changes in neutral allele frequencies caused by genetic drift, not to say "evolution is random".But they don't have to with evolution, look at the article you wrote.
We have two neutral alleles present in the same ratio in the gene pool, competing for dominance.
I don't understand what your argument is meant to be at all.
I describe random fluctuations at the lower levels and explain how this can cause variation at the higher levels.
You say evolution doesn't just depend on mutation.
1) My example doesn't need the idea of mutation to work.
2) Even if it did your argument wouldn't invalidate it.
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The answer is the same in all cases: The statistical characteristics of a large number of individually random events are not random.
Respectfully,
Myriad
A question for the "non-randomites". Do you think that the rise of humanity was inevitable, given the conditions when life first crawled onto land?
So, those who hold that evolution is non-random: What say ye?
That depends on how deterministic the universe is. But if we take mutations to be "random", then in such a model the outcome is not totally determined by the preconditions.This was posted by Walter Wayne in a similar thread some time ago, and it never got a satisfactory response:
A question for the "non-randomites". Do you think that the rise of humanity was inevitable, given the conditions when life first crawled onto land?
So, those who hold that evolution is non-random: What say ye?
Granted. But that's a reason to say that some evolution is random, namely changes in neutral allele frequencies caused by genetic drift, not to say "evolution is random".
My analogy was between gravity and adaptation. And no, I am not claiming that every adaptive mutation will achieve fixation.
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NB: I agree with Myriad's post, above.
I just think that which local optima it tends to is up for grabs, and highly dependent upon which mutations happen first, the happenstance of which genes turn up mixed together first, arbitrary environmental interactions and genetic drift.