Over in the "annoying creationists" thread, though, kleinman sounds a lot like you. He absolutely refuses to discuss the randomness of the selection process, because he believes he has proven that multiple selection pressures cause evolution to get stuck at local optima.
You can easily get out of those local optima by introducing a bit of random noise, but kleinman wants no part of that. It's deterministic for sure, and it proves that evolution is "mathematically impossible", according to kleinman.
Perhaps it's your social skills. I'm not against discussing randomness in the selection process. But the question was about non-randomness, remember? I think the Biologists and biology sources have given the consensus that your way of describing evolution is uninformative and possibly misleading. You and Mijo and other engineers seem to want to discuss the "exceptions to the rule" when mijo hasn't even got the basics down. When teaching about gravity, you teach the basics, before you teach about air friction. By the most common scientific explanation, mutatins aren't truly random even.
But the principle of evolution rests on natural selection--those stretches of DNA that give an organism a "survival/reproductive advantage" over its competors drive evolution, speciation, and sexual dimporphm. It's not deterministic in any Lamarkian way--it's just that some stretches of DNA are more frequent in those with the greatest reproductive success usually because they confer benefits to the possesser or lie close to genes that do.
That's it. Learn the basics, then fill in the details. It's amazing that the nonbiologiss think they have a more comprehensive way of communicating about evolution, though no evidence seems to suggest that is the case. Moreover, the original question was about the non-random aspects of evolution that drive change. And despite all denials by the ignorant, this very issue is the most common error in undestanding evolution as both Dawkins and the Berkeley site and all experts in the field will attest too. But once people grasp it, the rest is easy.
I am well aware on chance factors that affect selection; and I've often discussed it with fellow biologists. But I am aware of their definition and understanding of the word. I know of no-one that describes it in terms of diminishing probabilities or whatever it is mijo is saying. Most would role their eyes to hear you sum up evolution in it's entirety as random. But still some people love to cling to certain words no matter how poorly they communicate whatever it is they are trying to say...no matter how much feedback they get that nobody really seems to hear them conveying any useful information.
You need to learn the basic rules and priciples before you learn the exceptions. Of course, we know that mijo is not really interested in learning anything new or specific--his interests lie in defining evolution as random with whatever that meaning has to him. I find it utterly bizarre that you are such a poor communicator and yet you have cast off the communications of people who are successful in teaching this concept to the masses--including Dawkins and The Berkely Site and Talk Origins! I don't think you've managed to educate a single person on the topic from what I can tell. You can't even answer the question as to what aspects of evolution are "non-random"--the original question asked!
And that makes you the person who is the most like Kleinman, not me. I don't have problems engaging in dialogue nor communicating biological concepts. You do. Mijo does. You are the one insisting on using a word that at least 10 people have told you is a poor word choice due to the ambiguity of the term. And why are you so damn curious about the components of natural selection that are "random" and not equally curious as to how mutation is not truly random in the strictest sense of the word. You are interested in one particular "exception to the rule", and not the other equally valid exception?
In the world of biology--the opposite of random is not "determined"--but directed--not having equal probabilities--not defined by a series or pattern.
Our lives most certainly were not inevitible, but evolution sure was once the mechanisms of imperfect inheritance and natural selection were in place. I wouldn't describe the fact that our blood is red as random either. It doesn't confer a selective advantage, but there are known reasons for it's coloration and they involve the physical world blood filled organisms evolved in. What process is not random by your definition, btw--and if no process that has random components can be describes as non-random--then what the hell do you think is being communicated by your use of the word? If you mean purposeless--or not inevitible and you want people to actually understånd you-- I suggest you use those (or other more specific) words.
Other than that, I don't care what you think or how fabulously you think you know and/or describe evolution. I prefer to spend my time with those who actually want to understand it and/or to be able to pass on that knowledge to others. I prefer to discuss the finer details with those who speak the same language and use terms the same way--not those who think they are clear and know all about creationist snafus, despite all evidence to the contrary.
I also think you are a lot like Kleinman in that you never cede a point and you don't apologize when you are mistaken, unclear, or arrogant--