articulett
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Do you consider my explanation misleading?
I thought it was great... but I predict it would move Jim's understanding one iota forward.
Do you consider my explanation misleading?
I thought it was great... but I predict it would move Jim's understanding one iota forward.
I thought it was great... but I predict it would move Jim's understanding one iota forward.
Changes to the blueprint in technological development are not random with respect to function (i.e., they are usually made with the express purpose of fixing a perceived problem).
damn... I just re-read this and now it's typographically incorrect forever... I meant that I predict it will NOT move Jimbob's understanding one iota forward... or anyone else's who is sure the analogy is bad. They'd rather be right than learn something cool, you know?
Now, equating biological evolution, and technical development in general is misleading because the two processes differ in almost every way except that both are iterative processes and thus tend to show optimisation over time.
What I'm still waiting for is a single piece of evidence that ET needs your tripe to explain how life is such as it is. Without evidence, not only are you pissing in the wind, but by now you must have a bladder the size of a small developing nation. Serbia?.
You just don't get it, do you?
I am not challenging the Theory of Evolution; I am challenging the appropriateness of its analogy to technological development. Until you understand the difference between the two positions, you will fail to grasp the fundamentals of my argument.
Unfortunately for you and Southwind17, jimbob is the one with the correct understanding. Mutations in biological evolution are random with respect to function (i.e., they do not occur for the benefit or detriment of the organism). Changes to the blueprint in technological development are not random with respect to function (i.e., they are usually made with the express purpose of fixing a perceived problem).
You're such an intellectual sissy boy Mijo. Forget about the analogy and answer the question.
Unless you can, you lose.
It goes like this silly boy: ID as a concept has no relevance in the world unless someone can show that ET fails to explain life as it is. They are contradictory. One is evidentially supportably and the other is Disney.
Until you or someone smarter than you can accomplish the task of debunking ET no one really needs to hear ID gibberish and thus, you are babbling on about nothing. I and others here have been patient and put significant time into constructing means to convey some pretty basic ideas, without success.
The other, nicer people may continue to do so, but not me.
Show me the goods or **** off. Explain how ET fails in describing life as it is.
Or squirm around arguing about semantics and analogies like a tadpole.
As I have said before, the Sam and Ollie story is a demonstration of an evolutiouary approach, and as such is of some, limited use. The fundamental difference from biological evolution is that it still requires a set of intelligently-defined set of selection criteria, because the variants do not self-replicate, so there is no natural selection.
Firstly in "letting the market choose" you are actually letting "individual customers" choose which ones they want, and this means that every one that is sold is actually chosen by an intelligent agency.
Secondly, to make the system work, you would need to specify some form of time limit fo how long you need to keep any variant "in the market" before considering it a failure. If not, and you have finite showroom resources, unviable variants will eventually occupy every slot in the showroom: If the variant sells, fine, if not, it remains there and no other variant can use that slot, eventualy random chance will mean that the offspring of a viable parent will not sell and that will stop that "sales slot".
The Sam and Ollie analogy needs an artificaially imposed "death" at the minimum.
Any evolutionary approach that doesn't use self-replication will need thie. Biological evolution doesn't because natural selection is a consequence of self-replication. Evolution is a consequence of imperfect self-replication. Imortal, non-breeding "biological units" might use up resources, but if a different, breeding, "variant" outcompetes them for resources, then this variant's offspring will continue to evolve.
Now, equating biological evolution, and technical development in general is misleading because the two processes differ in almost every way except that both are iterative processes and thus tend to show optimisation over time.
This is a thread about intelligent design. I don't need straw, or hemp, or anything else, you silly rabbit. Until you can show evidence that ET fails to explain life as it is, you are sucking on a signet's nipple.
I'm not arguing with you Mijo, I'm negating anything you have to say on the subject of the OP. You can babble on about analogies if you want but they are irrelevant.
I am challenging the appropriateness of its analogy to technological development. Until you understand the difference between the two positions, you will fail to grasp the fundamentals of my argument.
I see no guiding intelligence behind biological evolution (which I accept as a superbly robust scientific theory) and that is why I object to it being likened to a process that does have a guiding intelligence behind it such as technological development.
Southwind17-
How is changing a ladder to make it longer so that it can reach the branches of a fruit tree "random" in any sense of the word?
OK, let's turn this on it's head slightly. You're a fruit picker, not a ladder maker. You don't know the first thing about carpentry. I, however, am a ladder maker, but not a fruit picker. I know nothing about fruit nor the trees they grow on, including the height. I just go about my business making ladders; ladders of varying lengths. You call me up one day and tell me that your ladder is the wrong length for your needs. I hang up and deliver another ladder right away. It could be longer, shorter or the same length than that you're currently using, but I'm not a fruit picker. I know nothing about fruit nor the trees they grow on, including the height, so I just throw a random ladder on the back of the truck and deliver it to you.
In some users, the intend to carefully read somebody else's post in order to understand its message and to give meaningful replies to it is absent to an amazing degree. Strong language doesn't compensate this deficiency, it only makes ignorance worse.It is obvious (even to mijo?) that there are several contributors to this thread who do "understand the difference between the two positions" AND realise that, as far as the analogy is concerned, the differences are irrelevant
Therefore, the assertion that "Until you understand the difference between the two positions, you will fail to grasp the fundamentals of [mijos] argument" is complete and utter nonsense