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What evidence is there for evolution being non-random?

cyborg-

Quit playing semantic games. There are two very large fields in the applied mathematics that use the definition of "random" that the randomites have been using: applied probability and statistics. When a scientist chooses to model/describe a physical/chemical/biological process as as "stochastic process", they are implicitly using the definition of "random" as broad-sense "relating to probability". If you don't like that, you should take it up with them, but you are going to have a hard convincing them otherwise.
 
Beautiful Cyborg. Simple. Easy to understand. I bet even a non-math person could follow.

The term random is ambiguous. In terms of "randomness", changes on the genome level are far more random than selection of the best replicators from the organisms such randomness produces.
 
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The title of the thread says it all. I understand that evolution is a process directed through natural selection, but, as I understand it, natural selection is based on the probability, not certainty, of an organism with a specific "fitness complement" (i.e., the set of genes that contribute to its survival and reproduction relative to others of the same species). An individual whose fitness complement confers a greater chance of survival and reproduction is only more likely to survive and reproduce that one with a fitness complement that a lesser chance, but the survival and reproduction is not determined to such an extent that all the individuals with a specific fitness complement don not survive and reproduce. Thus, it is possible for one individual with a certain fitness complement to survive while another individual with the same fitness complement doesn't.

I only ask this, because I am thoroughly disappointed in the evidence that I have received from the posters in this thread. No-one to my knowledge has either explained how a process that operates on probability is non-random or directed me toward a resource that does. They all seem to be more interested, as is most of the literature on the internet that doesn't specifically deal with non-random genetic processes such as mutation and unequal cross over, in refuting the creationist straw man that holds that organisms in their current state are far too complex to have arisen by chance.

I would appreciate it if someone could point me toward some literature (especially of the peer-reviewed kind)that explain clearly and concisely why evolution is non-random.

If you refer to conjecture and religious speculation as fact, then evolution has tons of it. Just ask the evolutionist. They are masters as conjecture.

The problem is that the concept of evolution is manifold. There are legitimate claims of evolution that natural selection is a fact. They use this one because it is obvious whether the origin of the creatures had all of the intelligence preexisting or not. This is the "sheeps" clothings these wolves get into the pasture of truth with. No one denies there is change and if the weaker are thinned out, that too is reasonable. At that point evolution begins to take on a nefarious nature.

The the conjecture-a-thon begins and slithers in under the guise of Natural Selection having legitimacy. The problem is that Natural Selection has nothing to do with the theory of Evolution concerning the origin of the species. What most evolutionists are trying to do is give a conceptual path for creation without having to explain anything.

If you doubt their far fetched and wild unseen theories conjectured from fantasy like it was a Sci-Fi movie, they use sophistry and say "So you don't believe in Natural Selection then?". It is a con game to make disciples because there is strength in numbers and they need all the strength they can get to cover their "drawings" of evidence.

Don't assign Natural Selection to evolution and don't give evolution false credence because Natural Selection is observable.

Evolution means change. Things do change. To debate the real theories of evolution they will challenge you saying we have evidence of change. But that means nothing, nothing whatsoever.

It is what "enables" change that is what is important. This is the battle. This is where the atheists evolution mindset is torn to pieces. It moves from a "blind faith" to a "faith that contradicts observable science".

But let's look at a few of the facts. Evolution (change) goes on today. But the evolutionist must get the pen out and draw some intermediate species for you like progression of the monkey to man. They draw up a convoluted and twisted organization of genuses, orders, species, etc. From this you are to "take their word" that this is how we arrived at species.

The lack of these intermediates (from Primate to Man, from Primate to Ape, or even evidence that a mythical creature called Primate ever existed) proves the fallacy of this wild conjecture. If this order were factual you would see the entire spectrum in existence linking man to Primate and monkey to Primate. Many evolutionists have tried to create hoaxes. For instance Nebraska Man was taught as one phase of this intermediate for 20 years. The evolutionists came up with his life style, his mating style and his look and hunting habits all from a single "tooth"! Years later it was shown to be the tooth of an extinct pig but as long as at least one generation was deluded the evolutionists were happy and removed the tooth and reference to Nebraska Man. Then there is Peking Man. Another fraud. Look up these terms so you can realize what kind of "scientist" you are dealing with when you talk to an evolutionist.

To cover this blatant missing evidence of intermediate forms, the evolutionists made up a term "Missing Link". Actually it should be called the "Entirely Missing Chain". There is no demonstrated relationship whatsoever between these mythical creatures anymore than a unicorn can be demonstrated to have existed. But to the evolutionist, "because I said so" is considered unchallengeable evidence.

Now why is evolution in so much turmoil these days? Well, there are some relatively new areas of science and technology that are exposing the complexity of lifeforms that leave one speechless and screams evidence of preexisting intelligence guiding such unspeakably complex mechanisms. DNA and microbiology. Here are the areas of science that really expose the foolish conjectures of evolutionists.

DNA, in short, is the information that guides the extremely precise development and sequence of amino acids in the formation of proteins, the proteins into the formation of cells, cells into the formation of the complex lifeform. This DNA is the code that governs the selection of enzymes via RNA that generate the amino acids that form the protein. This code is made up of three sequence organizations called codons. These codons have all the information for the precise sequences including when for the RNA to start or stop reading the sequence.

So what creates these elaborate complex sequences of amino acid sequences? How could anything have started such a complex program without intelligent guidance that had a priori knowledge of the entire system? This is where they evolutionist moves from the illogical to the irrational. "It just happens" is not an acceptable explanation to rational people.

In the middle ages, there was a belief called "Spontaneous Creation". In this they believed things like slime created frogs, meat created flies, etc. Evolution is just a modern day spin on this very same idea. They just use a new material called the mythical "primordial soup" from which things were "spontaneously created". Same theory, different day. So with evolution, science has been impeded in certain areas by rehashed medieval ideas and in my personal opinion has block breakthroughs that science would already had today if these conjecturers had not impeded its progress with this flawed concepts and irrational thinking.

Now, lets go one further in case you don't think some (certainly not all) scientists can hold this mindset. Until recent times when Transmission Electron Microscopes have been developed that give you resolution down to 1/20th of a nanometer, the limits of what man could see was limited to the wavelength of light. Too low of a resolution to see in a cell, so scientists then considered the inside of a cell to be filled with "goop" (perhaps a variation of primordial soup?).

And since the concepts of evolution are so utterly simple-minded, this was easily plausible by such scientists. But, now, in microbiology we have discovered that the inside of a cell is a complex world of machines, motors, transport systems, self-reproductive systems, repair systems, exhaust systems, respiration systems, electrical control systems, defense systems, etc. that just blow the human mind. All of the DNA must hold, not only this cellular construction sequences but also the design of the entire system on a macro scale. For instance your blood pressure is regulated chemically by the heart and the kidneys, and can be electrically stimilated by the brain, three organs that are "completely unaware" of the others. They do this in a miraculous chemical balance that if it gets out of balance begins to destroy the machine.

The levels of complexity for even the smallest organism are unfathomable. We are only now beginning to understand them, no thanks to evolution that insists "It just happened, there is no understanding to seek". They want to recruit you and all others they can anesthetize with their BS as they believe it is harder to laugh at a "crowd of fools" than just "individual fools". But the fact is that history shows its most famous laughs turn out to be on the "crowd of fools" as hubris like evolution begs to be humiliated.

You are dead on to observe their lack of evidence. Don't let them sell you a wooden nickel of their science contradicting religion. Guard your mind. The bloodsuckers would love to recruit you. Your mind is all you got so guard it with all diligence.
 
cyborg-

Quit playing semantic games. There are two very large fields in the applied mathematics that use the definition of "random" that the randomites have been using: applied probability and statistics. When a scientist chooses to model/describe a physical/chemical/biological process as as "stochastic process", they are implicitly using the definition of "random" as broad-sense "relating to probability". If you don't like that, you should take it up with them, but you are going to have a hard convincing them otherwise.

No silly. Nobody with credibility who desires to inform rather than obfuscate says that natural selection IS random. To the rest of the planet including any and every peer reviewed scientist--what Cyborg is saying is much more clear than what you are saying. If you can't understand that, then it truly is you. You are the one playing a semantic game by calling every process that contains any randomness a "random process". An equally convincing argument could be made to say that nothing about evolution is random since, as far as we know, every physical event has a cause (causal = not random), even though we don't know all the inputs that produced the effect.
 
Great, Mijo, now you have a blatant and very stupid creationist (rttjc) showing you exactly why no-one who wants to convey understanding of evolution talks like you (and Behe). You may want to PM him to tell him he's blowing your cover.

Will the non-creationist randomites notice this? The few blowhards left? The one who owes me an apology? Somehow, I doubt it. They are too busy building a semantic case for calling evolution random. People cannot know what it is they do not know it seems. tsk.

If you can't describe how order comes from the randomness, you don't understand natural selection in the exact same way as creationists who say, "scientists think this all came about by chance." (rttjc...ahem...Behe...ahem...mijo...ahem)
 
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And if you can't understand how superior Cyborg's explanation is as opposed to Mijo's in regards to the use of the word random--ask someone credible-- and then consider flogging your science/math/computer teacher for encouraging you to pedantically embarrass yourself on a public forum.

Having random components does not a random process make. When it comes to evolution, it's the part that brings exponential growth of "order" that matters.
 
I kept looking for the smiley after this sentence, but I couldn't find it.

Because you should have been looking at the words after the colon, instead of looking for the smiley.

There is no such thing as a "non-randomite". There are only people who are telling you that it is hopelessly uninformative and misleading to sum up evolution as random. The point of this OP was supposedly about discovering the non-random aspects of evolution that Dawkins et. al. are referring to--and the majority are explaining it's that which brings order to the relative randomness of mutant appearance!

Why you need to make up semantic points about how everything is really random if you use the word in whatever vague way you are using it is beyond me. What is your damn point? That, per your definition of random, there is "no evidence" that evolution has anything nonrandom about it...and therefore Dawkins, Ayala, Berkeley, et. al are wrong? Sure they are...but no one of any credibility is using your definition of random in any peer reviewed paper in describing NATURAL SELECTION. Some have even gone so far to say that "natural selection is NOT random" in peer reviewed papers. No peer reviewed paper is describing random as vaguely as you are. The Ayala paper defines it, and it ain't mijo's vague definition of random he uses either. .
 
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It was a well thought out post, so it deserves some sort of more thoughtful response, but really, the idea the one point is "the most important", is pretty silly.

Then we agree that the mere pretence of randomness does not entail that it would be helpful to label some process as random.

Assuming I understand the question, yes.


Right... but you do know that computers cannot be random right?

I'm not sure it matters, but just in case it does, you're wrong. In general, random computers wouldn't be all that useful for most of the things that computer scientists use them for, but if you wanted to make a random computer, I know how to do it. Some truly hard core mathematicians who studied automata theory might argue whether or not it was "really" a computer when you were done, but if I were so inclined I could make an electronic device that simulates processes, performs calculations, and all that sort of stuff that computers do, and where the results of certain calculations were totally unpredictable. So, if this is an important point, I disagree. I understand where you are coming from, though, I think. The "random" number generators used by computers that affect the calculations are not random at all. However, I don't know the relevance.


Any input to your genetic algorithm would be pseudo-random.
Again, in case it's important, I could create a truly random event if I wanted to. I'll use a measurement of radioactive decay to an external device to generate my random numbers, and it will be truly random, but pseudo-random is good enough in almost all cases.

Yet you told me that evolution couldn't work without randomness... well there's no randomness in what a computer does because everything is causal - deterministic.

What I said was that you couldn't model evolution accurately without modelling it as a random process (or words to that effect). In other words, if you want to answer the question, "Will this gene still be present in the gene pool after X generations?" An accurate answer will always be based on a probability. You will never be able to say, with certainty, that it will be present or will not be present.

So we need an infinite machine to predict a random event; but then the problem is that if we are trying to figure out whether or not something else is truly random, as in acausal, or just an infinite machine, as in causal, and we don't already know the internal mechanism then we can't ever decide whether or not there is a causal mechanism from examining the output of the box.

I'm not sure why you included parts of your explanation, but the bottom line, in the last sentence, is correct. You can't decide whether it's truly random or not from the outside.

So basically, if you wanted to, you could argue that everything is totally and utterly determined if you were happy with the idea that it is possible to build infinite machines.

I'm not sure how an infinite machine relates to radioactive decay.

As I said earlier - but no-one picked up on at all - something could be truly random or it could be simply unpredictable/hard to predict.

Actually, Schneibster and I both picked up on, and addressed this point. It is impossible to tell, and not just because we lack the technology to tell.


1) BOTH ways of describing something, acausal and causal CAN COMPLETELY DESCRIBE THE SAME THING.

Yes. Does anyone disagree?

2) You can therefore make a choice of which one to use when describing the mechanism of some process you are trying to figure out by experiment. (Uhh, which would be everything in this case: science is empirical remember?)

Good. Great. With you so far.

3) As such one should NOT be thinking random/non-random is the definition of the process but rather all processes are predictable/unpredictable with a spectrum inbetween and we simply decide to label things either random or non-random based on their relative predictabilities.

Cool. Good.

So is it really important that some process in evolution is truly random or does it only matter that it is unpredictable?

Only that it's unpredictable. I don't care why the snake ate one egg, and not the other, because I couldn't predict it regardless of the underlying cause.


See the above. Do you still think you know what randomness is?

Yes.

So in other words I am right but you aren't seeing it; it's a matter of choosing the best label.

Agreed.

As such I refer to my earlier definition of evolution for a far more accurate and unambiguous answer to the question:

Mutations are non-deterministic with respect to the genotype.

Selection of genotype is deterministic with respect to the phenotype.


Oops. You lost me here.

Let me try and illustrate. Give me one prediction about the future course of evolution that you can make that doesn't use a probability function. No arm waving here, I want one prediction about the future state of the world, predicted by evolution, and not involving probability. One experimental result that actually works.

You could say, "the most fit genes will survive", but when asked to provide a definition of fitness, you would have to say "the ones that survived".

Nevertheless, it may still be useful to discuss evolution in non-random terms, because the randomness really only shows up when trying to make specific predictions. When trying to describe what happened in the past, such as why a particular species survived or not, it's rarely useful to say, "It was random", even though there were random events. So, the best description will depend on exactly what you are trying to describe.

So you are familiar with it right?

Yes.

It is important for the reason I outlined in my argument above.

If nature used random number generators based on algorithms that computers use, I could see how autocorrelation would be relevant to evolution, but I'm having a hard time applying it to the real world.

Fine institutions but I doubt they would have covered the metaphysical implications computational analysis has for mathematics as I outlined above in most mathematical courses that weren't directly to do with computing.

You never met Professor Uribe, but in general, you are right.

But, suppose I don't give a hoot about the metaphysical implications. And, like a lot of metaphysical implications, it might be strongly influenced by philosophy, but not very useful to science. (Hey, didn't Schneibster just say that...again.)

So again; they don't adequately define randomness. See my earlier randomness test - each sequence is probabilistically describable but each one of them could be completely and utterly determined.

The problem here is that you are applying randomness to sequences of events, as if the test that matters is a random number generator. I fail to see the relevance of random number generators here. I'm about to flip a coin. It's a fair coin. All I care about is whether or not this flip will be heads or tails. I don't care about the next flip. I don't care about the last flip. This flip matters. How does autocorrelation apply?

A bird just laid an egg. I want to know whether the bird embryo in that egg will pass it's genes to the next generation. Do you know the answer, and how would you apply the concept of autocorrelation to this question?

I know how to apply probability density functions to those questions. I'm not seeing the relevance of autocorrelations.


Ah. I see you wish to get lost examining the forest missing the fact I'm talking about the trees.

You gave two possibilities. I think you left at least one possibility out.

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To summarize, there are two main points.

First, your issues are worthwhile, but they aren't the only worthwhile issues to discuss. Your points are not really the most important points. What is "most important" is a subjective judgement that varies from person to person.

Second, the common description of mutation as random and natural selection as nonrandom can be useful depending on the circumstances, but there are other times, especially when creating mathematical models to predict future events, when that description is not useful.
 
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I'll note that either articulett or cyborg could choose at any time to agree to stop playing semantic games, stop lying, and stop dealing with politics on the science forum, and acknowledge that they have done so in the past, and continue their discussion with me, by asking any third party to post said acknowledgment and agreement for them. I would then check it out for myself. At this time, however, all I see is misuse of this forum to discuss the politics of cretinism, not the science of evolution. As such, I consider being on my ignore list appropriate unless the behavior ceases and acknowledgment is made.
 
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If you refer to conjecture and religious speculation as fact, then evolution has tons of it. Just ask the evolutionist. They are masters as conjecture....
You are dead on to observe their lack of evidence. Don't let them sell you a wooden nickel of their science contradicting religion. Guard your mind. The bloodsuckers would love to recruit you. Your mind is all you got so guard it with all diligence.

Hmmm, I think the bloodsuckers have gotten to mijo already, but regardless, welcome to the thread. We don't get many opportunities to get the creationist perspective on JREF, so I want to ask you a question.

This thread deals with evolution and randomness. I notice you didn't use the words "random" or "chance" or anything related to it in your post. Is there a reason? What do you think of this whole discussion of "chance" as it relates to evolution?
 
Great, Mijo, now you have a blatant and very stupid creationist (rttjc) showing you exactly why no-one who wants to convey understanding of evolution talks like you (and Behe). You may want to PM him to tell him he's blowing your cover.

Will the non-creationist randomites notice this? The few blowhards left? The one who owes me an apology? Somehow, I doubt it. They are too busy building a semantic case for calling evolution random. People cannot know what it is they do not know it seems. tsk.

If you can't describe how order comes from the randomness, you don't understand natural selection in the exact same way as creationists who say, "scientists think this all came about by chance." (rttjc...ahem...Behe...ahem...mijo...ahem)

If all I get for evidence to refute my expose is ad hominem attacks from a peanut gallery evolutionist, then I feel I have done a pretty good job of putting a torpedo below the waterline of the evolutionists ship. Not like it didn't leak profusely all along. But the explosion is fun to watch.
 
I'll note that either articulett or cyborg could choose at any time to agree to stop playing semantic games, stop lying, and stop dealing with politics on the science forum, and acknowledge that they have done so in the past, and continue their discussion with me, by asking any third party to post said acknowledgment and agreement for them. I would then check it out for myself. At this time, however, all I see is misuse of this forum to discuss the politics of cretinism, not the science of evolution. As such, I consider being on my ignore list appropriate unless the behavior ceases and acknowledgment is made.

The "science of evolution" is an oxymoron. Stick to alchemy and blood letting. The rest of the world is waking up and beginning to move on. People are simply not interested in being told what to think. This is where you evolutionists have it all wrong. You think people are too stupid to make up their minds so you self-acclaimed "brilliant" people are going to do their thinking for them. Such hubris cannot survive without proper punishment in due time and I think that time rapidly approaches. Your panic to prevent your naive fantasy from being challenged by real science is so transparent that even the less educated are starting to wonder who filled them with this evolution horse dung in schools. There is a separation of Atheism and State. Time to start enforcing it.

As I told the other fella, there is nothing more telling than the conspicuous lack of objective evidence returned to these challenges and that is replaced by smart remarks like yours, hoping to mask it. You are not viewed as intelligent, you are viewed as an immature children and who wants to hear the opinion of an immature child?
 
You know what, rittjc?

I can ask people about evolution and actually get answers about it, and those answers do make sense. When I try and ask people who state, for instance, that Intelligent Design is a theory and ask how it qualifies as one, I get NOTHING. I get none of my questions answered.

Now, what do you want me to think? Eh, what do you want me to consider here? I'm just a layman, I don't understand these complex equations and certain key concepts as well as people like cyborg, but at least they answer my questions.
 
Because you should have been looking at the words after the colon, instead of looking for the smiley.

There is no such thing as a "non-randomite". There are only people who are telling you that it is hopelessly uninformative and misleading to sum up evolution as random. The point of this OP was supposedly about discovering the non-random aspects of evolution that Dawkins et. al. are referring to--and the majority are explaining it's that which brings order to the relative randomness of mutant appearance!

Why you need to make up semantic points about how everything is really random if you use the word in whatever vague way you are using it is beyond me. What is your damn point? That, per your definition of random, there is "no evidence" that evolution has anything nonrandom about it...and therefore Dawkins, Ayala, Berkeley, et. al are wrong? Sure they are...but no one of any credibility is using your definition of random in any peer reviewed paper in describing NATURAL SELECTION. Some have even gone so far to say that "natural selection is NOT random" in peer reviewed papers. No peer reviewed paper is describing random as vaguely as you are. The Ayala paper defines it, and it ain't mijo's vague definition of random he uses either. .

Mutations are rarely and arguably beneficial. The order of codons is so precise that simply changing one would result in the destruction of a new protein. You are not talking about changing a single protein, you are talking about gene changes themselves. Even the occasional mutation that is subjectively said to be beneficial is highly destructive to the creature itself.

Even with a mutation, the number of genes are still the same as in the original sources. In addition the genes in the offspring hold less variation. So BOTH, in the state of normal gene transfer and the mutation, are information destructive. The information is always higher in the parents. This is why if you don't have kennel clubs to reintroduce the genes by flying unrelated dogs around the country (or world) restore genetic information. Once bred out, genetic information cannot be recovered without artificial reintroduction.

This is why even the most fundamental concept of evolution breaks down. Basing the creation of information on the destruction of that information is about as logical as believing a tree turns into a car if given enough destruction of the trees genetic code.

Those are the hard realities. You can't screw with information at random and not wipe out the entire experiment. You have some kind of idea that there has always been comparatively trillions of simultaneous lifeforms exist together and one gets through and there is another trillion that got through for the next tiny incremental experiment. This alone, creates a mathematical quandary. 3 ^ 200,000th power is a heck of a large number to have to have for each infinitesimally simple change of DNA that would not be destructive. The number of permutations would be even higher that that to make sure that you reached the differences between one order to another.

That's just to have faith in existing lifeforms. There is no explanation of the initial generation of one that has enough features to exist and reproduce for experiment #2. You can't stop at the success of the primordial chemicals to produce life (abiogenesis), that life has to have the ability to survive, reproduce in order to go for another round of inexpressible improbability.

That is a heck of a lot of faith to put into a far fetched idea and then have the nerve to turn around and sell it as provable fact. It might be something your imagination accepts. Some people can dismiss the impossible easier than others, but if I say, "to each his own", then that's fair. But to say it was a provable and factual process, that's selling insane garbage and a whole different beast all together.

In this wild imaginative conjecture you call "proven science", you violate the very concept of entropy, mathematics, the understanding that genetic transfer is information destructive, and plethora of paradoxes in abiogenesis that you take for granted.

You know there are all kinds of religions out there, some that worship rats, some that think cows are their ancestors, some that believe that eating humans give one the power of the human they eat. But, at least these religions don't make the kinds of claims you make to be related to a science rather than a vivid imagination. But evolution, is a religion that goes far beyond blind faith. It flies right into the face of science and math of all kinds of disciplines and has a hubris of hubris to think it is logical to people who are still in control of their minds.

It is a shameful exhibition. Like all great pseudosciences throughout time, it is on its way out too. Like Abraham Lincoln said, you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
 
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Hmmm, I think the bloodsuckers have gotten to mijo already, but regardless, welcome to the thread. We don't get many opportunities to get the creationist perspective on JREF, so I want to ask you a question.

This thread deals with evolution and randomness. I notice you didn't use the words "random" or "chance" or anything related to it in your post. Is there a reason? What do you think of this whole discussion of "chance" as it relates to evolution?

There is a perfect reason. Randomness is a ridiculous explanation of complexity. I didn't want to be ridiculous. Complexity and design are asymptotic.

It is a shame you don't get more of a creationist perspective. It really limits your range and it shows. Perhaps too many atheists here have torched creationists with ad hominem responses and they simply got tired of it and left people to their self-deluding ignorance. That would be my guess.
 
You know what, rittjc?

I can ask people about evolution and actually get answers about it, and those answers do make sense. When I try and ask people who state, for instance, that Intelligent Design is a theory and ask how it qualifies as one, I get NOTHING. I get none of my questions answered.

Now, what do you want me to think? Eh, what do you want me to consider here? I'm just a layman, I don't understand these complex equations and certain key concepts as well as people like cyborg, but at least they answer my questions.

I haven't seen an evolutionist answer a single thing since I have been posting here. If evolutionists are preaching to the choir, then I would expect everything they say, no matter how ridiculous or scientifically contradicting, to get an "Amen" out you. Of course you think they have evidence, you have lost your objectivity. You don't want to lose your faith and refuse to look at both sides of the argument with objectivity. You look at creation as something that caused you to be abandoned as a child and you have an unquenchable bitterness toward it.

As far as not understanding complex equations, therein lies your problem in faith in evolution. It was always simple. The high minded who love your praises of them want you to think logic is in the eccentricities of science and why you simply need to take their word for it.

That should be a red flag but to you it carries the mail. You eat it up hook line and sinker. You merely need to understand that concepts of extreme complexity that we see in life has a terrible explanation in their responses of "Stuff just happens". Black boxes and magic fairy dust that they claim to have the understanding of does not get beyond what common sense tells you.

If you and I walked upon 10 pieces of similar sized flint all in the shape of arrowheads and all lined up in the same direction, you would never in your right mind accept my explanation that they had a random occurrence. But you take things which are by comparison, infinitely more complex and accept that as absolute facts just because people claim they understand why this happened. You are getting reamed. It doesn't take a complex knowledge of some area of pseudoscience to understand this. It just takes you bowing your knee and surrendering to common sense contradicting concepts.

The very thing you are convinced IDers and creationists are trying to do to you, you are having done by the overeducated ideologues.
 

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