Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
Folks, we're beating a dead definition.
~~ Paul
~~ Paul
In the interests of keeping the thread on track, I'll retract my statement.
Actually, I kinda liked the seatbelt analogy, it's very "put your money where your mouth is".
Sorry if I got off topic a bit, but Articulett really rubs me the wrong way. I'm not a creationist, yet I believe that it is accurate to describe evolution as random. I expect to be able to say this and not have my view framed as a cannard of some group that I am not a part of. .
Folks, we're beating a dead definition.
~~ Paul
Dawkins has conveyed an understanding of evolution to nobody if he claims that there is no element of randomness to evolution.
Teaching the truth to people may be hard, but I don't think teaching them half truths is the answer.
Way back when I started this snowball this was basically what I was getting at as well. Dawkins went on at length about "chance" and evolution in "The God Delusion", and I thought his criticism was rather misplaced. Moreover, I thought that his explanation had very little to do with accuracy in science or mathematics, but much more about "towing the party line". It seemed very much like "they say this so we can't".
Folks, we're beating a dead definition.
~~ Paul
Before I go on with the thoughts in my last post:
Mijo,
If I could, I would like to ask a question. If we go back to the OP, everyone in this thread who understands what a probability distribution is understands what you meant by "random". Based on that definition, there's no doubt that evolution is random. The whole of it is random, and every part is random.
There's an awful lot of doubt about whether that's very significant, but there really isn't any doubt about whether or not evolution is random. Based on that definition, and that definition only, it is.
My question to you is:
What do you infer from that? Anything? Anything of significance? What makes it a worthwhile question? Is there anything that you are curious about that is related to evolution and randomness? is there any point you would like to make about evolution and randomness?
I have my own answers to those questions, but I'm curious if your questions have been answered or your points have been made.
A cautionary note: Not everyone will agree with my answer. We know that. So, I understand that if you want to convince other people that it's the right answer, you have an uphill battle. However, that isn't what I'm asking for. I know you're right. You know you're right. A lot of people on this thread know that you are right. Now what? Given that you are right, is there anything that remains unclear in your mind, or anything specific you think is worth discussing about the random nature of the evolutionary process?
and remember...mijo is using stochastic as an exact synonym for random--
What process is not random by the randomite definition? And why not? Can't we find randomness in any process? And if all processes that contain randomness can be called random (and remember...mijo is using stochastic as an exact synonym for random--), then of what value is it--and how does that answer mijo's question--or the creationist question #4 for talk origins?
Nice misstatement. I am only using "stochastic" as a a synonym for "random" in so far as both refer to situations involving probability, not in other senses that "random" has, which is generally how creationists use "random". Furthermore, many systems can be described by deterministic models. For instance, weather is a deterministic system. What makes it so hard to predict is its sensitivity to initial conditions (i.e., it is a chaotic system) and the fact that there is repeated round off error is calculating long-term weather conditions. In other words, there is a set of equations that will predict the weather after a certain time step given meteorological variables (e.g., temperature, pressure, humidity, etc.). However, when the numbers are fed back into the equation to predict the weather after the next time step the values are rounded off usually because they are often irrational and the computer cannot store a infinite string of digits which introduces error into the calculations because the exact value is not used.
Evolution, on the other hand, is based in the probability that an individual of a given phenotype will pass on its genes to the next generation. While the relative fitness of the individual does bias its survival, not every fitter individual passes on its genes and not ever less fit individual doesn't. Thus since there are different outcomes for identical individuals, evolution is a by definition a stochastic process.
I was interested as to why people were so vehement in their denial of the "randomness" of evolution.
Meadmaker: The reason that the creationists are 'winning" is that they appeal to the emotional architecture of the brain, it is an american phenomena, the herd appeal over the rational thought,
I'm waiting for an example of a non-random process and a random process that is not evolution...
If you can't give such examples, then isn't all the rest meaningless. Otherwise aren't you just saying evolution is more like gas flow then some undefined non-random process?