articulett
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2005
- Messages
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I commend you on yet another mischaracterization of my argument. Identical objects fall identically whether they are in a vacuum or not. When an object is in a vacuum, its relative motion in the direction of the gravitational field is only determined by the gravitational constant and its initial velocity. To determine its final position (and therefore its absolute motion), you also need to know its initial position. In a fluid (and air is a fluid), you need to know additional quantities such as the viscosity of the fluid and the shape and mass of the object. The point is if you know and they are identical for two different objects, those two object will behave identically, making the system deterministic.
With the identical individuals that we have been discussing with respect to evolution, however, there are two possibilities of how they can "behave"; they can:
The fact that individuals with advantageous genes don't always pass their advantageous genes on to the next generation and the individuals with don't always not pass their disadvantageous genes to the next generation means that natural selection is inherently based on probability and therefore stochastic.
- pass on their genes to the next generation
- not pass on their genes to the next generation
No, identical objects do not fall identically. A piece of paper may blow up before falling down on a windy day while it would fall at the rate of gravity in a vacuum. Because identically fit papers can fall differently in differing environments, it's stochastic per your argument.
Advantageous to whom? Advantageous in what way? Forget it. I'm tired of the semantic games.
I understand your point completely. There is no evidence for evolution being non-random that mijo will compute. You asked for the evidence knowing that there was no evidence that you would accept. I got it. Evolution is stochastic because you say it is and you feel that it's informative and that somehow that is even more informative and useful than saying "selection is the opposite of random." You feel you are giving a rigorous definition. I say your definition is identical to creationist conundrum #4 and Behe's blatherings on "random". You feel like if you repeat it enough it will make it true and useful and that scientists can't argue your fantastic explanation just like you concluded that scientists can't explain the discontinuity in the fossil record.
Look at the penny example I gave. It's much better than your tortured definition. I am not mischaracterizing you. You are mischaracterizing the scientific understanding of evolution. And you are doing it on purpose. You are not capable of understanding how evolution is non-random nor what the non-random aspects of evolution are nor why Dawkins et. al. would say that selection is the opposite of random. You cannot understand my penny example. You insult those who would help you understand. You presume you know the answer when your definition is as tortured and uninformative as Behe's. And your definitions are semantic twistings designed to fit the conclusion you reached long ago: "evolution is random". It's also a 4 syllable world. Neither statement means much in regards to understanding natural selection and how it builds complexity through time the way my penny example would build wealth through time.