Meadmaker
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- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
It all comes down to time-scales. Viewing a selection pressure over all-time, it appears random. Viewing it over the time period organisms live for it can be considered constant or a simple function of time.
Or, to put it differently, whether or not we call evolution "random" may depend on exactly what phenomenon we are trying to describe. (Not to mention the definition of "random" we happen to be using at the time.) Some aspects of evolution can be best understood through stochastic models, which is why all those folks wrote those papers mijo has been referencing. Other aspects of evolution are best understood by saying that certain trends are predictable, and there is nothing random about them.
What interests me is the phenomenon where any reference to randomness draws a knee-jerk hostility. It has become a separator. If you say "random", you are one of THEM. It says so right there on talkorigins.com.
We've seen it on this thread. Mijo has been asked repeatedly if he's a creationist or ID supporter. I've been asked it as well, on this thread and the precursor to it. The other "randomites" have been told that there is good reason to believe that they are creationists, too. None of us has ever even hinted that we might be creationists or ID supporters, but using the R word is enough cast a cloud of suspicion.