If you are discussing the process, then how the process works is important, indeed is the point of the discussion.
Yes, but simply saying, "the process is intelligent because an intelligent agent instigated it," says NOTHING about the process itself!
If I define the fitness criteria, then I am acting almost exactly as "The Intelligent Designer Who Works Through Evolution, His Wonders To Perform".
Yes, you are. But then words are just words and how you choose to describe something has no impact on what it is. People who want to describe things in terms of gods are going to do so anyway.
I believe that you live in England, so have you come across (the more reasonable) CofE people who state this as how they reconcile evolution and God?
If they are going to insist on doing so the very least one should expect is that they are at least correct about what it is they are talking about.
You see, it's perfectly correct to say this if you insist axiomatically that a god was involved. Of course justifying the introduction of that axiom when it is impotent in producing any extra behaviour is another matter altogether.
For an analogy it's like saying defining the + operator and the natural numbers is sufficient to describe addition but I really like the idea of 4 + 6 = 10 because it's so beautiful so I will add that as a special axiom.
Does bugger all of course but it's perfectly legal logically.
Are you saying that the PC evolved because we evolved, so it is ultimately the product of evolution?
No. I'm saying that's a
valid interpretation. It's not, perhaps, a helpful one in certain contexts.
Hell, it took long enough for supposedly intelligent people to simply
recognise the enormous potential of computers after Babbage had already prototyped one. Sure, it was amazing to those he demonstrated it to but there was absolutely no connect in their minds between it and what it represented in what has unfolded in the information age we live in.
For the purpose of my points I am saying that whether it is an illusion or not, self-aware beings think they have intent, and they can think they intend to attempt to solve design problems with a deliberate solution, as opposed to a pseudorandom evolutionary approach.
Yes. And it's a lie. A useful one, but still a lie all the same.
(If you want absolute truth you'll need an Oracle I'm afraid: mathematics can't give it and these abstractions we are discussing, ultimately, are mathematical and can be described identically in two seemingly diametric ways).
It is not the identification of the goal, but the setting of the goal.
But jimbob, all I did instead of having a simple, easy to identify selection function is that I extended it into something
we'd recognise as a simulation. But the simulation, ultimately, is still just a function in the computer.
At the end of the day all the evolutionary algorithm knows is that it gets some inputs and it has some outputs. The processing that occurs outside this it is totally unaware of.
you need imperfect self-replication, and then it would happen automatically.
Self-replication is
IRRELEVANT. If you want to insist that copying done by a machine that is not entangled with the machine being copied is not equivalent then, ultimately, you will have to come to the ludicrous conclusion that because atoms don't split cells don't really 'self' reproduce either. What happens in a cell is lots of tiny machines work on the
inside to produce a new copy. If you want to insist that doing it from the outside makes the process fundamentally different then go ahead. It's silly but whatever.
The cell, is, after all just an abstraction for a collection of smaller machines working together.
Abstractions lie.