Ivor the Engineer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 10,641
Uh...you obviously haven't been reading the thread. There are plenty of constrained, time-dependent process based on non-uniformly distributed probabilities that all lead to orderly results. The problem with Dawkins and his intellectual compatriots (e.g., aritculett, Imaginal Disk, Ivor the Engineer, etc.) is that they use a very specific definition of "random" which is not universally recognized in any academic field, especially biology, as being the "correct" definition. This allows them ignore the fact that when people describe evolution as a "stochastic process" they are using a completely rigorous definition based in the principles of probability theory that allows for constraint, time-dependence, and non-uniformly distributed probabilities. It is also interesting that no matter how many times they are told that those who are arguing that evolution is better described as "random" n so far as "random" means "[o]f or relating to to a type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution", they still come up with posts like this:
articulett is clearly using "random" is the sense in which I have been exclusively using it in the first instance (red) and in a clearly more colloquial sense (e.g., the second, fifth and sixth definitions at the Online Dictionary of Online Computing or any of the definitions in the Urban Dictionary) in the second instance. It is almost as if she is trying to obfuscate the definition and usage of "random".
To be fair and completely truthful, most other general use English dictionaries, including my personal favorite, The Oxford English Dictionary, one of the most complete compendia of the English language, define the statistical sense of "random" to be the uniformly distributed probability case. However, I'm really not interested in what the plurality of dictionaries say what "random" means as I have been nothing but explicit that I am using "random" in so far as it describes entities that are similar if not identical to "stochastic processes", which themselves have a rigorous mathematical definition.
The problem I see with "random" is that even in science and engineering, it covers a huge range of random processes. Some random processes have memory, some do not. Some have constraints on the randomness, some do not. How is the naive (with respect to evolution) scientist supposed to know that evolution requires a random process with memory from the statement "Evolution is random"? Or about the relative (and type of) randomness in the mutation and selection aspects of evolution? Or how selection does not have to be random at all for evolution to still work?
Surely you admit that significant additional explanation would be required to narrow down the range of possible processes that would describe evolution?
So why is it wrong (or less correct) to use a 1000 words that most people (including scientists) can understand and visualize opposed to a few hundred words that only a few can interpret meaningfully?
Or perhaps you would prefer a similar approach to that which Euler took to the debate over Gods existence. I.e. scribble some mathematical equation on a blackboard and declare "therefore evolution is random!"?