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Intelligent Evolution?

In the story #1059, the rule is "take the product to school for x days and try to sell it, if it sellls try to copy it".

This is an externally-applied rule-based system.

There are no rules in natural selection. If an organism fails to reproduce, it doesn't reproduce.
Oh jimbob, even if you were right, please tell me you have more to offer in your defence of not accepting the analogy than this! Even mijo seems to be coming around to the idea now:
The analogy requires intelligence, evolution doesn't. Evolutionary algorithms can show how many common aspects of design are not needed to create "designs", but one still needs to remember that natural selection is missing.

For evolution you need both imperfect copying (mutation) and natural selection.

Without self-replication there is no natural selection. Evooutionary algorithms simply need imperfect copying, and arificial selection. The selection ultimately the result of an intelligent agency. Even, as is plausible, if the rule-based system had itself beendeveloped with an evolutionary algorithm, then the selection criteria for that algorithm would ultimately come from an intelligent agency.

There is no need for an intelligent agency in defining the selection criteria for evooution. Indeed I would argue that, as soon as an intelligent agency starts selection with intent to direct the development of the subsequent generations, then there is artificial selection as well as evolution taking place.

That isn't an externally-applied rule, that is just what happens.

"That is just what happens"! So the dolphin and the cheetah 'just happen' to pursue prey until they land lucky? They don't apply some selective criteria in 'deciding' where to hunt, at what time, which prey to pursue, for how long, what dangers to look out for, etc? It's no different from my boys going to school each day: Get up, get dressed, have breakfast, brush teeth, go to school, have lessons, have lunch, have more lessons, come home, etc. THAT IS JUST WHAT HAPPENS, I'm sure they'd have you believe!
The dolphin and cheetah do not decide to perform selective breeding on their prey; they are part of the myriad selection pressures on the other organisms in their ecosystem, which includes their predators, competitors and prey.


Another difference between evolution and technological development is that the selection pressures are far more varied in evolution. This is only a "typical signature" but is worth thinking about.
Further obvious differences

If a design failse because of a particular failure mechanism, then the design is often altered with the express aim of fixing that fault. Features which are considered "good" even of a failing design, could be kkept.

Talk to the story jimbob. Show me where Sam's designs were altered with the aim of fixing the 'fault'. Show me where Sam consciously considered some of the features 'good' in his initial and subsequently failed designs. No doubt in one of his initial failures he happened to have the battery connected to the switch but not the bulb. Show me where he recognized that and consciously retained that arrangement whilst he messed around with the switch configuratioin only. SHOW ME!

The point is not how an unrealistic model of how technological development can be constrained to almost fit into an analogy of evolution, the point is that technological development can produce products that evolution can not.

This being a prime example:
144944724ee8d6b96f.jpg


A fluorescent mouse could evolve, given the right conditions, it would be more likely (but still unlikely) with selective breeding. However there is no chance that a fluorescent mouse would evolve with the same gene sequence as a jellyfish.

Intelligent agencies can produce artifacts that evolution can't.

This story shows an (ineffective) evolutionary algorithm working. It does not show how technological development works in reality, even when it does use evolutionary algorithms.

Where is Sam's evolutionary algorithm? It does show how technological development works in reality - the story is real - both Ollie and Sam developed their technologies!
Sam tries to sell his goods. Whilst he is waiting he has not yet sold his goods. How does he decide when to give up on a particular design? Even if he rolls dice to determine the time period, he is still following arbitary rules.


The issue isn't with the analogy of random mutation, but with how the selection is performed.

Show me an example of selection which does not require either rules or intelligence, and I will show you an example of self-replication.

I've done exactly that above with the cheetah and dolphin, indeed I believe it shows both rules and intelligence!

The dolphin and cheetah do not decide to perform selective breeding on their prey; they are part of the myriad selection pressures on the other organisms in their ecosystem, which includes their predators, competitors and prey.



"The market decides" The rule is that one chooses to make copies of those variants that sell within a certain period.

And in nature "the environment decides" the rules that apply to make copies of those variants that survive for a minimum period. No difference jimbob - the market is the environment.
No.

There is no "minimum period" in natural selection. Gnats and elephants have completely different generational lengths, this generational length is also a result of evolution. If an organism reproduces, and makes reproducing copies of itself, then it could be considered to be a reproductive success.

There is no way that anything akin to natural selection, with no rules and no intelligence required, can work without self-replication. If the "replication instructions" are not carried within the varient, then destruction of the variant does not destroy the "instructions". The variant could be recopied again.

Without self-replication there is no way for the variant itself to pass on the "instructions for copying", and there is no need for the variant to survive for these "instructions" to be passed on. The success of the variant has to be assessed according to some arbitary criteria. Arbitary selection criteria require intelligent agencies.

Natural selection is not arbitary, that which replicates, replicates.
 
Of course there are,[differences between evolution and development-Jim] particularly if you consider the micro-processes involved. I think such micro-differences have partially obscured the analogy for certain participants in this thread.

One requires intelligence to specify arbitary selection criteria, and one doesn't, as natural selection is not arbitary.

I don't consider that to be a micro-difference.
 
Sorry, Bush... I thought you had got it. I don't really think that those who haven't got it CAN get it. However, Southwind, I recently heard a Dawkins speech from the Atheist Alliance, and he makes a very similar analogy.

Yes... it's identical... in that the information that is best at getting itself copied is the the stuff that ends up in future designs (or genomes).

This is my last time--because I truly believe that some people can never understand this no matter how simple it is.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19733274/
Who made the mutation?
Why was it incorporated in the genomes of future butterflies?
Did the mutation copy itself or did it need to get a replicator to copy it?
How did it get the replicators to copy it?

Lets go back in time to the last common ancestor of horses and zebras. How did it give rise to two offspring, one of which went on to become zebras, and one of which went on to become horses? It just did what it was programmed to do via it's genes and had sex and new creatures with new genomes emerged. These genomes both had something that allowed them to be reproductively successful and they passed it on to their offspring...and each successive genome got copied by virtue of having things or assorted things on par with the butterfly mutation--that is, the information in the genome programmed it's replicator so that it would be more likely to copy it. Do you understand that the mutation in the butterfly (in the article did that?). Do you see how the environment of the horse/zebra ancestors did the same through time. It selected which parts of the genome would be replicated based on the environment they appeared in? Do you understand that some genes and chromosomes and DNA bits got themselves passed on in abundance because of something particular about themselves-- perhaps they increased the sex drive, made the hooves harder, boosted the immune system, etc.
The horse ancestor didn't change species in it's life time... nor did it's offspring... it's genome (information/blueprint) changed over time as the creatures it coded for competed in the environment. Are you following? Do you agree so far?

The first airplane came about when humans were doing what they evolved to do-- assimilate, share, rearrange, imitate, and test information in their environment. They evolved to do these things because those who did such things survived and replicated preferentially. Humans that are good information processors were favored by natural selection--they can learn and teach and better their station in life and mate more frequently with more surviving offspring. Humans also evolved to be niche fillers --some are obsessive in one area, others are more like facilitators of lots of communication and information sharing. The Wright brothers copied and honed the best and flying machine prototypes of the day and watched birds and made a wind tunnel and tweaked assorted designs and finally they made a design which would fly... reliably. And being a design for an airplane that will fly reliably is a good way to get copied in an environment of humans who might like to have some of that power for themselves. The hard work was done-- now the design just needed to be copied... and it got itself copied widely... because humans copy good ideas that further their aims as they evolved to do. And that information was copied and honed and tweaked over time in environments of humans and human desires, and wars, and travel, and airplane disasters until it gave rise to various "species" like the 747, the Stealth, the Concord.... and who knows what else will emerge and what will become obsolete. But the first basic plan is in all subsequent airplanes... it got itself copied into the future by virtue of reliably producing a product that humans wanted. And information that is copied a lot is much more likely to accumulate mutations, tweaks, recombinations, deletions, additions, duplications, etc... it's thus more likely to have a "golden mutation"-- a beneficial mutation on par with what the butterflies had. And the more beneficial the tweak... the more it gets copied and the more chances there are for further refinement.

The first airplane did not evolve... it flew...and that made it's design (genome) get copied widely in the environment of humans it was in. Just like the first butterfly with the resistant mutation did not evolve--it survived to reproduce and THAT made it's mutation get copied widely in the environment.

That's it. Information that can get itself copied drives evolution. It always has. There is no other model. This explains all the design and miracles we see... information that gets itself copied also begets better information processors and replicators... We evolved to be information processors and we've invented computers and the internet which processes information faster and better than us...

Some computer viruses got themselves copied by going into mailboxes and sending copies of themselves to all the addresses in the mailbox supposedly from the mailbox of the recipient... that was clever... but once the virus was let loose... it was up to it to replicate itself or die out... and then other people created defenses...

And all of this is based on the same thing: Information that gets itself copied. The intention of the copiers is irrelevant after some time... The Wright brothers couldn't fathom todays air travel. They were only attending to their immediate aims and the information evolved itself after that... Just like the information in the butterflies and the information that was to become todays Horses and todays Zebras...

Human intent is just part of the environment in regards to INFORMATION. Humans are just information processors and replicators from an information point of view. Butterfly sex drive is just a part of the environment in regards to their genes (information units)--the butterflies are just replicators and recombiners of genes. But the gene or information unit that has a way to be preferentially replicated survives to be a part of evolving information systems or genomes. Their replicators die...but the information goes on.

Don't ask me any more questions. If you don't understand it--you just can't. But Southwind has an analogy that is used and understood by the best. Moreover, it's a fact--information that can get itself copied preferentially survives to evolve and be replicated (perfectly and imperfectly). It doesn't matter if it's bits and pieces of a genome... or bits and pieces of a design... it's about the ability for that particular unit of information to get itself copied.

When someone wrote "shampoo, rinse, repeat" on shampoo bottles... people started assuming you were supposed to wash your hair twice and shampoo sales doubled... this allowed for the production of even more shampoo bottles which said "shampoo, rinse, repeat" The intent of the originator of this phrase is irrelevant to the result in regards to the analogy. What IS relevant is that the information coded for getting ITSELF passed on. THAT is what is meant by "self replication". THAT is one of the several major points that the few naysayers can't seem to fathom. It's not worth having a discussion with someone who misses this very basic point. You are so hung up on "self replication" but you don't even know what it means. It's the information that is coding for it's own copying... just like a computer virus... The information doesn't copy itself-- it needs at least a cell to do it... eggs and sperm DON'T copy themselves... viruses don't, ideas don't, humans don't... they just copy information that codes for making more information like itself. The words "shampoo rinse repeat" don't write themselves on bottles... humans do for human reasons, but the information is copied just the same as if it was the lucky butterfly mutation.

But I have a strong feeling that anyone who doesn't get it at this point is not even going to read this to try and understand it... because they have a vested interest in not getting it or maybe some mental block.

But I am glad to know there are lots of smart humans that do get it... at least partially anyhow... at least enough to understand the analogy and put it to use before the obfuscators confuse people further.
 
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One requires intelligence to specify arbitary selection criteria, and one doesn't, as natural selection is not arbitary.

I don't consider that to be a micro-difference.

No it doesn't require intelligence. Just an imperfect copy. If you add the wrong ingredient and it come up with a better tasting cake... those who taste it will become replicators without thinking anything about any future or evolutionary process. These kinds of tweaks and serendipity chain events are more common than "intelligence" in regards to evolution of information. You don't need to be aware at all that you are doing anything to be part of evolution just like all the animals going on about their lives and processing information (genomes) that evolve over time.
 
I believe cyborg has made it quite clear that with the "analogy" he intends to mathematically convey the two processes (selection/evolution and technological development) to be structurally identical.

They are identical in regards to information being selected by the environment over time. They are identical in that information that has a method for getting itself copied drives evolution. They are the same in that they code for what appears to be the evolution of objects (including animals) via snapshots in time... but they are really information building objects that are selected by the environment which hones the information over time. Information must code for increasing efficiency in the spread of that information or it will die out along with their replicators.
 
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Jimbob, until you get your head out of your butt and understand what "self replication" means, it's like talking to a wall. And until you understand that humans evolved to be information processors and as such all the stuff they do is a part of nature and natural selection-- then you may as well be talking to Behe. You can't have a conversation with someone so muddled as to the basics and so sure that he knows so much. To those who actually know, you sound garbled and confused and all over the place. How do you plan to fix that? And why converse with someone so unaware of his lack? You don't have enough of a grasp on the subject at hand to make a conversation valuable... and you seem to be unable or unwilling to understand some simple but essential parts of the discussion. YOU just sound sooo confused. And it doesn't seem like anything can fix it. And you also sound soooo overly confident-- exactly like Behe... and yet nobody thinks you are clarifying anything... not even your own position, much less your point.
 
Aack... I have to put jimbob back on ignore... he's getting kleimanesque (southwind, don't even delve into Kleinman land; if you see a poster with that name, flee and don't look back)...

Yes, Jimbob, you're right... the analogy can never work (for you). There are too many "microprocesses" and assorted semantics to make it ever work (for mijo)... and I'm sure creationists will be lining up to describe how evolution is all about information selected over time based on what "works". You've convinced the people that matter(yourselves), and I'm sure Southwind etc. has enough input to decide whether to convey his analogy to others, share it, or discard it in favor of your edifying explanations and arguments.

Southwind, I'm sure you can see the sorts of people not to try the analogy on, because they cannot compute. They seem to have some characteristics in common compared to those whom the analogy works for, and you may want to take that into consideration. :)

Remember, some people will NOT be able to understand no matter how carefully explained... It's not the analogy-- it's them. But the incompetents are too incompetent to know they are the incompetents. Dawkins used a very similar analogy recently... and he can and does teach many.
 
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articulett are you saying that you believe technological development is natural selection?


Sorry, Bush... I thought you had got it. I don't really think that those who haven't got it CAN get it. However, Southwind, I recently heard a Dawkins speech from the Atheist Alliance, and he makes a very similar analogy.

Yes... it's identical...


Viewing the "analogy" as an actual deduction - stating as a premise some heretofore unknown universal proposition - we have learned that:

1- Technological development is natural selection.

2- We ought (concerning design) erase the distinction between genius and trial and error.



The payoff for this is the observation:


... the information that is best at getting itself copied is the the stuff that ends up in future designs (or genomes).


Have I missed anything? :)
 
Viewing the "analogy" as an actual deduction - stating as a premise some heretofore unknown universal proposition - we have learned that:

1- Technological development is natural selection.

2- We ought (concerning design) erase the distinction between genius and trial and er


Have I missed anything? :)

Well, you sure aren't saying anything that I would say.

The evolution of technology is the same as biological evolution from an informational standpoint. And I've never mentioned genius or trial and error... selection processes tend not to fall at either extreme. The butterfly mutation was random... but it sure wasn't selected through trial and error or through genius. It was selected because the butterflies who didn't have it didn't copy their genomes and those that did could (including the mutated section).

All seeming complexity, designs, and systems are built from the bottom up from an informational standpoint. DNA that gets itself copied becomes part of evolving genomes.
DNA generally does this by coding for replicators that compete in an environment to see which ones pass on what parts of their genome the most for traveling into the future in other vectors.

Technological information is the same... do you know how open source ware evolves? Information that gets itself copied becomes a part of evolving technology. With a lot of inputs and tweaking, you get the input of many which is better than one genius.

If you want to understand why the tornado/747 strawman is indeed a strawman it's because it focuses on the "randomness" but not the incremental selection processes with the exponential replication of the "successful" bits that really drive evolution. Everyone who doesn't get this analogy seems to have a key misunderstanding or inability to communicate exactly what natural selection is-- much less how it is responsible for the appearance of design. Why does it look like the butterflies somehow knew to evolve the mutation in the article? Or that giraffes knew to grow longer necks? They didn't know... it's just that those with the longer necks preferentially survived and passed on their long necked genes.

When my student want to know how we got from wolves to dogs, technology is a great model-- they understand how we could go from a first computer-like thing-- to the myriad of computers we have today... or from the first reliable flying machine to the methods of air travel we have today. Although there are key players in the evolution of the internet, we are all, in fact designers. Nobody is in charge... bits and pieces came together as humans went about doing what humans do... Some have specific intent but it tends to be in regards to the immediate future...and no one knows what fad or viral video or game etc. will "catch"... but we can say for certain some will.... when people do what they've evolved to do, they are continually processing and replicating and recombining information and occasionally something very "virulent" catches on... but each small step, each purchase, the food we eat, etc. shapes the world we live in and what is evolving in our environment as well.

When animals and plants do what they evolved to do, some get their genomes passed on preferentially. Did you read the MSNBC Butterfly article? There was no intent on the part of the butterflies or the mutation, but the butterflies became the replicators of the mutation and the mutation kept the butterflies alive so it could copy it. Nobody needs to be aware or have intent to be a major player in what evolves. There is no other way... All the matter that makes up all the animals and all the technology that will exist on earth is already here on earth... it's the information that must assemble through time to build that matter into increasingly complex or organized or efficient "machines"--replicators-- information processors.

Top down doesn't explain anything. Nothing is top down design. And randomness only explains the occasional "golden mutation"--but those can be expected when information is being replicated and recombined and tweaked everywhere all the time-- it can't NOT happen.
The true power and shaper is the environment and how it selects and shapes the information by acting on the information replicators (people/life forms/computers) over time. Natural selection can't help but build miracles... seeming design... stuff that seems to fit amazingly well together like biomes and Coral reefs and cities and bodies and airports with airplanes...

You can understand the story of how anything came to be by working backwards like this-- and never by claiming it came from above from something you can't understand out of "randomness" and assorted other "genius" and "intelligence" and stuff beyond us. Nobody plans for the far off future... and yet information--in genes and successful technology and ideas --live on and evolve long past their first replicator. In fact it's our own accumulating understanding of science that allows us (er... me et. al.) to finally understand what I am telling you.

I've tried. And wasted words on people who can't understand. Cyborg used very few words and he was right to the point. Multiple people weighed in. Dawkins and Dennett and experts in the field and multiple links have emphasized this as well. I think it's simple. My students take to the analogy readily. I think the people who don't get it are daft or impervious. I don't even understand much of what they are saying and they don't even seem to be relating well to each other. But I understand Dawkins and Dennett and Darwin and Pinker and Eugenie Scott--lots of people do. They are good speakers. And I understand Southwind and cyborg and the many others who understood the analogy.

But I haven't a clue as to what you are even saying, Bush. You do sound like the President, I guess. And I can understand Jimbob enough to know that he doesn't know what is meant by self-replicate... nor does ID... and both confuse the information with the thing it codes for. Others seem to think that "intent" or that fact that intelligent humans are involved makes it special or different -- I'm sorry if it hurts your ego, but it's only special and different if you are human... yes, humans replicate information that benefits them or manipulates them into replicating it... and they tweak information for accidental and purposeful reasons as well as for reasons in-between or reasons they make up or reasons they aren't aware of and on occasion sometimes something about the information (maybe it was shown on youtube?) gets picked up and passed on virulently (a new fad)... while others aiming for such virulence of an idea, fail. Did you understand the recipe analogy. No genius or intent or foresight is really needed. Just humans doing what humans do. Just as butterflies doing what butterflies evolved to do was exactly what was needed for the "golden mutation" in the article.

Any "unit of information" in code can evolve... not just DNA... but bytes or genes or genomes or music or recipes or language or technological designs or city plans or ecosystems or religions or governments or our monetary system coded for in digital data (it used to be gold)--... etc.

But technology is an easy one for people to see. This is an analogy kids with computers understand easily... everybody has seen technology evolve over their life time. It's one that I don't think some older men may ever be able to understand... just like my dad wants nothing to do with computers.

Nobody can imagine millions of years... or even hundreds of years... but they can see the evolution of airplanes... telephones... recording devices... cars... So this analogy works-- it works way better than anything the naysayers say. I just can't imagine those who don't understand the analogy trying to explain evolution to anyone, because it seems like they are missing a major component. Just as Intelligent Design Proponents planned, they have a block that prevents them from understanding natural selection-- and then it all sounds so muddled and incomprehensible that a designer sounds more likely. Who wants to muddle through that. It really is like trying to muddle through Behe's blather.
And why bother?

I think it's simple. But your rephrasing above makes me think that maybe you are too simple to understand the simple analogy. You guys paraphrase so poorly... and your analogies suck. It's almost like you are purposefully not getting it. Maybe you guys can understand each other, or maybe someone else can understand you-- but I give up. I don't even find most of the naysayers likable enough to waste anymore time on. And I don't understand your point or even if you actually have one.

Plus, you guys are just trolling... you have no interest in understanding... you guys are just trying to win some point in your head in a game each of you is playing with yourselves. I think I'll stick to conversation with those capable of dialogue. Some people are more fun to talk about than to. What you think of the analogy is irrelevant when you don't understand the basics of evolution or the analogy but have convinced yourself you do.
 
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So Articulett,

GM organisms are the result of processes that are identical to evolution, despite the fact that they show characteristics that couldn't have evolved?

Evolution is more than just information change over time. If Goddidit by incrementally altering the Design of organisms in a manner completely analogous to technological development, then by your reasoning that would be evolution.

With technological deveolpment there always needs to be intelligence defining the specifications and thus the selection criteria.

Asserting that "information evolves" doesn't alter the fact that the selection process is dissimilar to natural selection. Because it is artificial selection.
 
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So Articulett,

GM organisms are the result of processes that are identical to evolution, despite the fact that they show characteristics that couldn't have evolved?

Evolution is more than just information change over time. If Goddidit by incrementally altering the Design of organisms in a manner completely analogous to technological development, then by your reasoning that would be evolution.

With technological deveolpment there always needs to be intelligence defining the specifications and thus the selection criteria.

Asserting that "information evolves" doesn't alter the fact that the selection process is dissimilar to natural selection. Because it is artificial selection.

What cyborg said.

And I disagree that GM organisms show characteristics that couldn't have evolved via information honed through time.

But I understand that you find the two so gosh darn different that you will go to your grave shouting about it while you also assert that it makes some sort of sense or is clear to describe evolution as "random mutation and probabilistic selection". I think I'll stick with Dawkins and those who communicate well to me and others. The critique of an analogy from someone who sucks at analogies doesn't carry much weight with me. You're trolling to win an imaginary game in your head that no one else is playing. Your point that the analogy can't work has already been proving false... you can only state the obvious-- it doesn't work for you and people of your ilk. But nobody finds you especially clear when describing evolution as far as I can tell. I sure don't.

As for your goddit analogy... yes, that would be evolution... only, the god wouldn't be necessary. Sure you can stick invisible entities in wherever you want ... but why?... it sure is a wasteful, inefficient, slow, and terribly cruel method of honing genomes. Creationists contend that a god must at least be tweaking the designs along the way, because randomness alone couldn't do it. And evolutionists say... you're right, randomness alone couldn't do it-- you need a selection process incrementally honing the information over time-- which just happens to exist on our planet with many interacting evolving systems. Fancy that!

Such is the power of the system that eventually intelligent people could come about and use their combined knowledge and information and understanding of science and build really cool things and figure the whole story out! THAT is the power of Natural Selection over time. Who needs a god? Or a tornado in a junkyard? With a selection process and time, it turns out you can get entities that fancy themselves intelligent building things they find super cool like airplanes... oh and you can also get spiders that can build intricate webs by shooting silk out of their asses.
 
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Evolution is more than just information change over time. If Goddidit by incrementally altering the Design of organisms in a manner completely analogous to technological development, then by your reasoning that would be evolution.

With technological deveolpment there always needs to be intelligence defining the specifications and thus the selection criteria.

Asserting that "information evolves" doesn't alter the fact that the selection process is dissimilar to natural selection. Because it is artificial selection.

Jimbob - first off I've highlighted a phrase from your last post above, that I'd like to clarify with you. I believe, with the help of Mr President, if not before, we've established that analogies apply at different levels. I like to think of 'close' analogies and 'loose' analogies, similar to close and loose fitting garments, if I may indeed borrow an analogy to help describe the range over which analogies could be argued to work! I would prefer not to try to be any more definitive than that, as if we proceed down a road where the strength of our respective arguments hangs on the precise meaning of a particular word, then from experience, I very much doubt that it's worth continuing the debate any further.

Now, where within that range does a 'complete analogy' lay? Well, the bottom line is that it doesn't, because 'complete' is an absolute; it allows no latitude. So how does that premise fit with an analogy? Well, not at all, is the answer, because an analogy, by any sensible definition, is an imperfect comparison. If it wasn't imperfect, then it would entirely match that which it is seeking to compare, and wouldn't be an analogy at all. There'd be absolutely no need for an analogy.

It's important jimbob that you understand this, because until you do you will continue to proffer erroneous arguments. Why erroneous? Because they fall outside the scope of what the likes of I, articulett and cyborg have been trying to convince you of. I'll risk using another, simple analogy to try to make the point (because that's what analogies are useful for); if you can follow this then we can, hopefully, put the whole concept of analogies behind us and move on: It's a little like me asserting that Jerry Seinfeld has dark coloured hair, and you arguing that I'm wrong, because he's actually only 175cm tall! The basis of your argument is on a completely different premise from mine, and cannot, therefore, form a basis for showing mine to be wrong. In fact, we could both be right, and we could both be wrong, but your argument doesn't help us establish which. Essentially, everything that I, articulett and cyborg have been saying is in the context of the analogy. If you cannot understand or accept an analogy for what it is, then, almost by definition, you will never be able to agree with us.

Now, are we agreed on what an analogy is, and why it can be very helpful to use them? I'll assume so, and move on.

OK, it seems to me jimbob that you're pretty much OK with the analogy so far as incremental change over time goes. In natural evolution it derives from essentially random mutations; in technology it derives from adaptations to existing designs. I think I've clearly shown, particularly through the story of Sam's and Ollie's electronics endeavours, that in technology, for the purpose of the analogy, such design changes could be considered essentially random. Ollie constructed his increasingly complex devices by following instructions for pre-determined 'mutations'; mutations that were derived from intent and forethought. Sam, however, did not, electing to make essentially random changes instead. They both, however, over the long term, ended up creating equally complex and useful devices; moreso, possibly, in the case of some of Sam's 'fortuitous' chance combinations!

So, your biggest problems seem to be with the notion of 'self-replication' and 'natural selection', and, more particularly, how the latter is necesarily dependent upon the former. OK, let's discuss these:

What, exactly, do you mean when you use the term 'self-replication'? I have read and understood articulett's numerous posts when she explains that the key point is that it's simply information that is being copied, and that the entity by which that information is copied is simply a vehicle. What's important to realize is that the ability of such a vehicle to survive its environment is critical to the likelihood of the said information being copied, and I believe you do realize this. Now, this ties in with what I believe is the gist of your emphasis on 'self'. I believe that by 'self'-replication you are alluding to the fact that in nature there is no 'external agent' that performs the replication process. In other words, an organism has to survive long enough to breed (or otherwise multiply) in order for replication to occur, whereas a machine can be replicated at any time by its designer. Assuming this belief is correct, though, what implication, exactly, do you consider it has on the validity of the analogy? Nature causes organisms to produce copies of themselves; Sam and Ollie both cause copies of their electronics devices to be copied (disregard 'selection' pressure for a moment; we'll come on to that soon). There is nothing inherently special about a process that causes something to be copied, especially when it's not a perfect copy, which is the case in both nature and technology. What, exactly, is it about Sam and Ollie being the mechanisms by which their electronics devices are copied that you seem unable to reconcile with an organism being the vehicle by which it gets itself copied? All we end up with is copies of something we had before. Where's the problem with that, and again, what implication, exactly, do you see that it has on the validity of the analogy that you seem so strongly averse to disregarding? Pending your answer to this question, I see no causal link between 'self-'replication and natural selection. In fact, I see no causal link between replication howsoever effected and natural selection. The selection process occurs sequentially to the replication process, and, just like the roulette ball cannot possibly 'know' what the last winning number was, whatever factors are at play during the 'selection' part of the evolutionary process they cannot possibly 'know' anything about the replication process, or that replication even occurs!

OK, let's move on to 'natural selection' specifically. I'll ask a similar question: what, exactly, do you mean when you use the term 'natural selection'? I believe that you use it to encompass the process by which any particular organism is allowed to proliferate through repetitive breeding purely by the application of the 'laws of nature'. Or, put another way, the process by which an organism is allowed to proliferate through repetitive breeding based upon inherent features and characteristics that equip it to survive the environment to which it is exposed better than competing organisms. Assuming this belief is correct, the essence of natural selection, therefore, is a measure of the effectiveness of an entity's ability to resist all of the factors that would otherwise reduce it's frequency of reproduction. Let's try to apply this description to Sam's electronics devices: the pertinent words are 'resist', 'factors', 'frequency' and 'reproduction'. Well, we've already addressed 'reproduction' (replication) above, and 'frequency' is simply a product of the degree of effectiveness of resistance to the environment, so we don't need to compare that directly. So we're left to consider Sam's electronics devices' ability to 'resist factors' that would lead to their demise. So, what do I mean by 'resist' and what are these 'factors'? Well, I've already identified some of the factors that come into play in nature, using the cheetah as an example, in a previous post, and I similarly identified some of the factors that apply with Sam's electronics devices. The problem I think you're having is with 'resistance', namely that natural resistance just seems to 'happen', whereas technological resistance is imposed by humans. Well, when a cheetah is stalking a group of antelope patiently observing and waiting for some tell-tale sign of apparent weakness that inherently informs the cheetah that it might have just identified dinner, how, in principle, does that differ from a school boy at the bring-and-buy fare perusing all of the alternative novelties on offer just waiting for one to catch his eye because of something about it that informs him that he's likely to get the most enjoyment from it? If you don't get this comparison, go along to your local car boot sale just before everybody packs up for the day and check out what's left over. I can guarantee it's likely to be the antelope with the limp, or the salmon that can't jump very high, or the bird with a broken wing. In the example of the cheetah and the school boy both take the path of least resistance, i.e. both 'select' based on what they determine offers the best propects. In the case of the cheetah it's the best prospects for lunch, or, in the case of the school boy, the best prospects for fun, or, in the case of a discerning businessman, the best prospects for improved productivity when he selects an office IT system, or, in the case of an actress, the best prospects for fame and fortune when she selects which parts to accept.

If there are any other aspects of the analogy that you're having trouble with that I've omitted to address I'm sure you'll bring them to my attention!
 
Top down... as from the general to the more specific? Like reasoning deductively?

Couple posts back you were arguing the "analogy" as a deduction. :)

I think articulett is alluding to complex design inevitably deriving from simple design, and not the other way around, but I could be wrong. I'll let her answer for herself in due course.

Either way, I think, Mr President, for whatever reason, you seem intent on getting involved in word games. If so, may I respectfully suggest you invest in a crossword compendium. :rolleyes:
 
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These are quotes from another thread commenting on creationists' mental resistance to seeing sense and logic, in essence. Quoting it here serves two purposes. Watch and learn jimbob, watch and learn:

Actually, I'd say the opposite is true. It's like attacking a wall of feathers with a sledge hammer. Every time you swing, you've got enough force to take the foundation out of any reasonably solid wall. But their wall isn't made of anything solid. Your swings go right through, but have no effect on the overall structure, because it isn't founded on reality or truth, it's based on fuzzy concepts and fluffy, feather-like emotions.

You just get tired from swinging, but you're not really making any progress through the perimeter ...

Besides, that wall isn't built to keep you out, it's built to keep them in. Their own comfortable mental prison.

Now that is the best analogy of the situation I have heard. Nominated!


I can just hear you now jimbob: "This is a flawed analogy, because you don't really attack people with sledgehammers, and walls aren't really made from feathers"!!!
 
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I can just hear you now jimbob: "This is a flawed analogy, because you don't really attack people with sledgehammers, and walls aren't really made from feathers"!!!

So you don't think that, for example, humans set out to create machines that fly whereas flight just happened to birds and bats makes the processes of technological development and biological evolution different in a way that effects you analogy? Why not?
 
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So you don't think that, for example, humans set out to create machines that fly whereas flight just happened to birds and bats makes the processes of technological development and biological evolution different in a way that effects you analogy? Why not?

Absolutely not. Read the story about Sam & Ollie again above. Ollie set out with intent (or instructions, at least); Sam did not. They both ended up creating complex devices, but just on different timescales. Aeroplanes could, in theory (and evolution, too, is still only a theory, remember), have developed in exactly the same way as Sam's electronic devices. The only difference between that notion and reality is that it's possible we might have just made it to the bi-plane by now!
 
Has anybody noticed a pattern as to who's posts are getting longer and who's shorter? I reckon that shows there's more to be said for the analogy than against it, literally! ;)
 
Though sometimes things can get simplified by deleting data...

Do you mean as in less is more, like Bose and Bang & Ollufson, and to a degree Apple, tend to philosophise? If so, I'm not sure it's that data is deleted; more a case of them being better at recognizing the applicable 'environmental factors' and 'mutating' their products to cope better than the competition, and hence survive and proliferate.
 

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