It looks like you are mistakenly applying characteristics of a large number of independent trials to a process which has heredity as one of its major components.
Sure species may peak at millions or billions of numbers. Consider that humans are above 6 billion now, but are thought to have number less than 10 thousand less than 100 thousand years ago. We suspect this because of how little genetic variation we have. What happened to that small population is inherited by us.
10^5 at minimum is still many times larger than the individual, but the argument was just supposed to be demonstrative. Scientists use orders of magnitude
to determine which level of explanation is significant and to help make general arguments about where to look. The argument doesn't exclude heredity, in fact it subsumes all lowerer levels of explanation. It just says changes in the species happen with much larger numbers and on much longer time scales than the individual, so insisting that we have to constantly consider the individual is being, at best, incorrigibly reductionist.
The
article that Jimbob linked to actually gave us a nice example of randomness. When lines of bacteria were allowed to adapt to cold temperatures, two-thirds of them did worse when returned to high temperature. And one third did as well or better. In a competitive environment, the strains would have different advantages should the environment change again.
The mechanisms for short term randomness are there, and heredity will cause such changes to leave an imprint on future generations.
Walt
Short term randomness, what, huh? The article completely makes my point.
Lets start with the title:
"Fast-Reproducing Microbes Provide a Window on Natural Selection"
Thats right, to see natural selection on the human scale we had to watch microbes for 40,000 generations(a strong argument that change might be on the order of 10^5) and run the experiment for
18 years!
The specific example you talk about wasn't natural and it wasn't random. It was the equivalent of taking the microbes from one ecological niche to another. In nature there would be nothing random about going from 68 degrees to 102 degrees(sadly it doesn't say if we're talking F or C here...real scientific). On the other hand if you contend that this sort of temperature change is the result of weather variation, then it would happen seasonally. Also,
non random
Also you could even make the argument in individualistic terms. You talked using the language of the level of explanation we've been advocating. You were talking about external pressures causing predictable changes on different proportions of a large population.
Not to mention the fact that the article doesn't mention the word "random" once.
In fact...(emphasis added)
the new york times article said:
scientists can now zero in on the precise genetic changes that unfold during evolution
the new york times article said:
Microbes can reproduce several times a day, and a billion of them can fit comfortably in a flask.
the new york times article said:
One striking lesson of the experiment is that evolution often follows the same path. “We’ve found a lot of parallel changes,” Dr. Lenski said.
Billions of individuals, thousands of generations, precise changes, parallel paths.
The example you gave with the hot and cold is the example of an advantageous trait being linked to a disadvantageous, and you are conflating the fact that the result was unexpected and previous not understood with random. It is absolutely not random, if scientists were to study the specific gene and protein that conferred resistance I'm sure they would find that there is no way it could confer an advantage to one without a disadvantage to the other. This sort of thing is what they're talking about when these say precise changes and parallel paths and it is exactly the crux of the position we are defending.
Were you just hoping I wouldn't read the article? It seems like every time a random evolution advocate links a supposed piece of evidence for their case, it involves a very selective reading of an article that as a whole completely rebuts their point.