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Randomness in Evolution: Valid and Invalid Usage

I will never bathe in that muck again.

I only peek in for entertainment purposes now.

Ugh... they were saying the same nonsense at exactly this same time last year. Tons dropped in to try different ways of answering Mijo's OP and explaining what was nonrandom about evolution-- but still not a clue amongst them.
 
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I will never bathe in that muck again.

I only peek in for entertainment purposes now.

You seem to have been doing an excellent job of wallowing here, seeing as how you are the sixth most frequent post in this thread with 63 posts or ~14% of the total posts. Interestingly enough, that is about a post a day (some of them fairly extensive and content-laden).

Are you really claiming that you are remaining above the fray?
 
I will never bathe in that muck again.

I only peek in for entertainment purposes now.

Ugh... they were saying the same nonsense at exactly this same time last year. Tons dropped in to try different ways of answering Mijo's OP and explaining what was nonrandom about evolution-- but still not a clue amongst them.

And you blatantly ignored the people who disagreed with you, especially Schneibster who did some really thorough line-by-line refutations of your claims.
 
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...

Which incidentally, you still haven't bothered to provide. Is that ever going to happen? In absence of an alternative to compare it to, my definition is still the best one available.

...
See post #853 (though pardon my grammatical mistake).

Edited to add: and as for your insistence on uniformity, look up poisson distributed random variables, gaussian distributed random variables, binomially distributed random variables ...
 
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See post #853 (though pardon my grammatical mistake).

"Random: having a state or value depends on chance."

So then you're saying that everything is random? In legal terminology this has a fatal flaw known as no bright line. From this definition there is no way to tell what it doesn't apply to. In other words, to define a term that applies to everything doesn't communicate any information because you know just as much about whatever you are talking about before or after it was said.

Just to go through some examples:

An ideal die roll: random.
An ideal die is rolled, but unrevealed to me. Its result: random.
66% chance that after switching doors, that I win in Monty hall: random.
99.999% chance that I won't be struck by lighting: random
99.9999999999999999999999999999% chance that I won't teleport across the room: random
physics,chemistry, biology: random

[sarcasm]
Gee, I'll be surprised if this post even makes it up on the forum, who knows the electrons in my computer might tunnel. I mean whether it gets posted or not is completely random. [/sarcasm]

I figure'd you would provide something better than that....care to defend this silliness? Or could you explain why you don't just post "this is random" in every thread, and insist on duking it out in the evolution thread?

Edited to add: and as for your insistence on uniformity, look up poisson distributed random variables, gaussian distributed random variables, binomially distributed random variables ...

Note that these distributions are statistics that can result from many samples of processes. If the process is truly random any individual sample is #1 uncorrelated, #2 uniform.

Here's an old response about conflating the method of investigation with the topic of investigation(originally to mijo):

zosima said:
So thanks for finally getting around to answering my question. Let me summarize your argument. Evolution is modeled using random variables. The term 'random variable' has the word random in its name. Thus evolutionary biologist are wrong to call evolution non-random. I think its pretty easy to see the flaw in this argument. The technique of using random variables to model our imperfect knowledge of a process doesn't say anything about the process itself. For example in the Monty Hall problem we use random variables to describe the probability of winning, but the actual process is predetermined. Nothing changes because of the way we model it. It seems obvious to me that there is a difference between a random variable and a random process. Evolution as a science uses the former, evolution is not the latter. We're done.
 
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Edited to add: and as for your insistence on uniformity, look up poisson distributed random variables, gaussian distributed random variables, binomially distributed random variables ...

I asked articulett the same question many times before in the first thread devoted to this topic. She simply never answered the question, claimed I was obfuscating, and hemmed and hawed about how algebra contained random variables (a tactic which she has repeated throughout the duration of these threads):

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2727501#post2727501
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2731372#post2731372
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=3357723#post3357723
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=3576893#post3576893

Basically the idea that random variable don't have to be uniformly distributed to be labeled "random" is something that seems to confound those who argue that evolution is non-random.
 
zosima-

The Monty Hall problem is trivial from the perspective from the person set the prize4s behind the doors, but that is not the perspective from which the problem is analyzed, namely that of the person who is playing the game.

Are you claiming that there is an entity that has predetermined the fates of all living thing on earth like that person who set the prizes perdetermines their location?
 
Basically the idea that random variable don't have to be uniformly distributed to be labeled "random" is something that seems to confound those who argue that evolution is non-random.
I think the problem, basically, is that this fact is not relevant when calling Evolution random or not. Evolution may have random elements in its models, and those elements may not have uniformly distributed variables; but that does not mean the whole thing is random! Only those parts, in those models.
And, that applies to other sciences, as well.
 
I asked articulett the same question many times before in the first thread devoted to this topic. She simply never answered the question, claimed I was obfuscating, and hemmed and hawed about how algebra contained random variables (a tactic which she has repeated throughout the duration of these threads):

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2727501#post2727501
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=2731372#post2731372
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=3357723#post3357723
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=3576893#post3576893

Basically the idea that random variable don't have to be uniformly distributed to be labeled "random" is something that seems to confound those who argue that evolution is non-random.

Mijo why don't you respond to the points I've made and the questions I've asked you? This is a discussion that I'm having with Walter. He's clearly much more intelligent, knowledgeable, and reasonable. So, If he makes a coherent response, which I'm quite sure he will, I'll respond to his objections. I'm even open to the possibility that a the statistics of a random process could have a different distribution than I've suggested, if I'm persuaded. I'm not open to the possibility that a random process can have any distribution. Until you fix your record player, I'm not open to anything you have to say.

Your failure to maintain topic continuity, has denied you the right to an on topic response. So please go back to the kiddy table to play with the other children, or alternatively demonstrate a little insight.
 
I think the problem, basically, is that this fact is not relevant when calling Evolution random or not. Evolution may have random elements in its models, and those elements may not have uniformly distributed variables; but that does not mean the whole thing is random! Only those parts, in those models.
And, that applies to other sciences, as well.

OK, I realize that there is a valid distinction between the process itself and the mathematical models that describe it and I agree that "random" and "non-random" may only meaningfully describe the mathematical models. However, if you are going to describe a mathematical model with random portions, then mathematically speaking to whole system is random. This is a non-negotiable point as we are describing a mathematical process and mathematically speaking any Borel-measurable function (which includes all elementary functions learned from primary school to elementary vector calculus) of a random variable is itself a random variable and the mathematical definition of a random process is a family of random variable defined of the same probability space. This is also why I am often frustrated with articulett when she insist that definition of random I am using makes algebra random, because the variables in the kind of algebra she is talking are not the random variables of probability and statistics, because they are merely values that you plug into a function and not functions in their own right as random variables are.
 
OK, I realize that there is a valid distinction between the process itself and the mathematical models that describe it and I agree that "random" and "non-random" may only meaningfully describe the mathematical models. However, if you are going to describe a mathematical model with random portions, then mathematically speaking to whole system is random. This is a non-negotiable point as we are describing a mathematical process and mathematically speaking any Borel-measurable function (which includes all elementary functions learned from primary school to elementary vector calculus) of a random variable is itself a random variable and the mathematical definition of a random process is a family of random variable defined of the same probability space. This is also why I am often frustrated with articulett when she insist that definition of random I am using makes algebra random, because the variables in the kind of algebra she is talking are not the random variables of probability and statistics, because they are merely values that you plug into a function and not functions in their own right as random variables are.

Wrong, but please do try again.

f(x) = 0*x+c
 
Mijo why don't you respond to the points I've made and the questions I've asked you? This is a discussion that I'm having with Walter. He's clearly much more intelligent, knowledgeable, and reasonable. So, If he makes a coherent response, which I'm quite sure he will, I'll respond to his objections. I'm even open to the possibility that a the statistics of a random process could have a different distribution than I've suggested, if I'm persuaded. I'm not open to the possibility that a random process can have any distribution. Until you fix your record player, I'm not open to anything you have to say.

Your failure to maintain topic continuity, has denied you the right to an on topic response. So please go back to the kiddy table to play with the other children, or alternatively demonstrate a little insight.

My, my, aren't you imperious and petulant?

I can talk to whomever I want on this thread about what ever I want as long it is on topic, and, since one of the subtopics is a meaningful definition of "random", articulett equivocation and misapplication of the definition of "random" I provided is right on track.

Anyway, if we stick to describing mathematical models of evolution, your insistence that random processes be uniformly distributed and uncorrelated is unnecessarily restrictive. For instance, Gaussian processes can involve any random variables as long as any finite linear combinations is also Gaussian, autoregressive moving average processes show correlation between time intervals, and mixing processes show statistical dependence.
 
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Obviously, you don't know what a trivial case is.

Sure I do, it is a counter-example to a bad definition, that takes no effort. Now if I had to think about it my counter-example would be pathological, but still acceptable. Just a post ago this was 'non-negotiable' , but now you make exceptions for what you term trivial examples. This is just another way of saying, "you're wrong".



As to my petulance. I can't have you just making up mathematics as you go along, and then try to trick people into believing it by trying to sound authoritative. As to all the other silliness you chose to make up, I'm not worrying about it. You've given up on trying to have a discussion, and I wouldn't want to be overdressed to the party.

But just as a friendly warning I would recommend you avoid straying towards mathematics. You do remember that business with 'almost surely' where you demonstrated you didn't understand the cardinality of a set don't you?
 
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Edited to add: and as for your insistence on uniformity, look up poisson distributed random variables, gaussian distributed random variables, binomially distributed random variables ...

To better clarify my point. If there are going to constitute examples of non-uniform random systems, you need to explain why they should be considered random. I don't think the fact that they use of the term 'random variable' is persuasive either.

#1 Random variable is used with distributions that are clearly not random. For example, I could have a dirac delta random variable. Ie a function with a dirac delta that is centered upon 0. It is a distribution over a random variable, but it is also only has one possible outcome. We could do the same thing over a discrete distribution as well.(In case you want to pick some nits)
Still, we would be talking about a random variable, yet a non-random system. Is the dirac delta function also random? Where do you draw the line?

#2 Probability distributions represent statistics of systems, but the systems they describe may or may not be random. For example, I can generate a binomial distribution by rolling a die many times over a number of trials and counting the numbers as they come up. Alternatively, I could write a computer program that will either return 1-6 with exactly the same frequency as the die returned the values, but in some sorted order. Both could generate a statistical fit that might be described by the binomial distribution. The computer would be deterministic and clearly so, the die would not.

#3 The Distributions themselves are not random at all. For example, if I want to generate a normal distribution, all I have to do is evaluate the probability density function for the normal distribution.(I'm not going to write it out here) This is a simple and deterministic mathematical operation. If you think that the particular distributions that you've mentioned happen to describe random processes, you're going to have to explain why, 'cause I don't see any reason why it should be assumed.

We can deduce from these examples, that the fact that these distributions involve random variables, does not imply that the system is random or deterministic. This means any definition of random is going to be one that either ignores these distributions entirely, or defines specific characteristics of the distribution that indicate that it is describing a system that is random or not.


From a perspective that jives more closely with human intuitions. I think the term random is not so binary as just 'random or not'. It would be more accurate to talk about how random a system is. A system with a uniformly distributed and uncorrelated output is as ideal a random system as you can get. A system that always outputs the same value or same sequence of values is as deterministic as you can get. A system somewhere in between will be mixed in character. If a die is .00001% more likely to roll a 6 than the other numbers, it is still mostly random, and if a system that always has the same output changes it with .00001% it is still mostly deterministic.

If you don't agree with this, please tell me, why does the use of probability distributions to describe systems make them random? Or alternatively what probability distributions describe random systems?
 
Alternatively, I could write a computer program that will either return 1-6 with exactly the same frequency as the die returned the values, but in some sorted order. Both could generate a statistical fit that might be described by the binomial distribution. The computer would be deterministic and clearly so, the die would not.

Despite my best efforts nothing has managed to persuade anyone of the issue of making an authouritive a posteriori statement about the definitive randomness of a source.

The fact that any finite arbitrary sequence one could care to choose can be produced by an entirely deterministic mechanism doesn't seem to have slotted any cog into a new positions as far as the consequence of that fact when it comes to making bold statements about the mechanism of a system that isn't fully interrogatable.
 
Yes... the possibility for dual meaning could make for interesting conversation. Cyborg and I tried to pin them down with Poker before... but you know how it is... whenever you make a point, they ignore you, move the goal post, state an irrelevancy, and fling an ad hom.

No one would describe poker as a game of randomness even thought randomeness plays a role. No one would describe the Brazil Nuts on top "plot" as random... if they actually wanted to convey information as to why the nuts are on top.

Nutty nuts nutters.

You just have to be able to appreciate irony, the woo tactic of repetition without saying anything, and the potential fodder for parody. I have to put them on ignore, because they've been saying the same nothing for over a year. I just pop in to read the responses--... okay, and to enjoy cyborg's zingers and occasionally try to illuminate in case someone is confused and actually wants to understand what is and isn't random about evolution --and why scientists say the most important part is "natural selection" which some scientists refer to as "nonrandom", "the opposite of random", "biased" or even "determined".

You mean like this post?

This is a digression, I suggest that if you want to pursue it further it should go in the "intelligent evolution" thread.

No.

However I can't see any useful system where the selection criteria have been chosen randomly.

Non-answer.

They might not have been chosen directly by an intelligent agency, but by other system that hadf been intellignetly designed. For example maybe the key performance parameters had been decided upon by a neural net, or maybe an evolutionary algorithm. Although I doubt this has actually happened in any real engineering.

You're making things up about the system I've never even implied.


If you want to meet the performance specification, then you need to define what the goal of the evolutionary algorithm is.

There is no performance specification. You're making things up.

If there was a self-replicating system, one wouldn't need to do this, better self-replicators would evolve.

You've never been able to come to terms with the concept that "self-replication" is simply a different abstract representation in a computer system that has no extrinsic meaning making any attempt to explain why this is completely irrelevant to the behaviour of the system as a whole a waste of my time.

I can't think of a way that evoultionary algorithms a could be used without intelligently set goals in technological development to produce something useful, and I think that this is because they can't.

Your lack of imagination is your problem.

Can you give a realistic example as to how they could?

No - because any system I describe you would invent parts never described for it that would in your mind make it invalid in some legalistic sense.

The first part you'll never come to accept is that a describing a "useful" product is a matter of who is arbitrating "useful" and will be different under different contexts.

The OP was where it was appropriate to use "randomness" when discussing evolution. You now seem to be implicitly accepting that probabilistic treatments are used implicitly by evolutionary biologists, are you now claiming that this treatment is wrong because it is "only a model"?

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

Are you claiming that chance deoes not influence which cod-fry survives and reproduces. That this reproductive is already predetermined at spawning?

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

If you state that chance does have a role, then the probabilistic treatment is valid because chance has a role. If chance does not play a role, then the probabilistic treatment is only a demonstration of our imperfect knowledge.

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

My position is the scientifically conventional one, which is accepted by most bioplogists, yours seems to be obsolete, and based on the 19th Century knowledge and assumptions (Laplacian determinism).

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

I say that which individual cod-fry reproduces is heavily influenced by chance.

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

1-million spawn, stable (or falling) population, so fewer than one repoducing adult from each parent. Two parents, so less than a 1:500,000 chance of reproducing.

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

Most of these cod spawn will be very similar to each other and their parents, yet on average two survive and reproduce.

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

Remember this post earlier in the thread, which does confirm my view that over the timescales of life, there are chance events influincing natural selection:

I've explained the concept several times and you don't get it. Repeating myself would be a waste of time.

I have wasted my time. What a fun ten minutes.



As far as I can see Cyborg has failed to answer my points.

I had two main points:

Firstly I said that without self-replication, you need to define some selection criteria. If you want to achieve anything useful, then these criteria have to be ultimately the result of an intelligent agency.

With self-replication, then natural selection follows; without self-replication, you need artificial selection. A single valid counterexample would invalidate my assertion, but Cyborg hasn't provided one, nor has he(?) even alluded to one.

Secondly The OP asked when it was valid to use "randomness" in discussingf evolution. I pointed out that "selective advantage" is a probabilistic ttreatment of natural selection. Cyborg's answer wasn't that it isn't a probabilisic treatment, but that it is only a "treatment" of natural selection. I disagree that it is "only" a treatment of natural selection, for the reasons given earlier in the post, but even if it were only a "treatment", it is still the approach used in evolutionary biology. If this is the case, why is it invalid when discussing evolution, when biologists use it?

Articulett, why is a discussion of a "selective advantage of as little as 1 in 1000" not a probabilistic approach?
 
Firstly I said that without self-replication, you need to define some selection criteria.

Impossible to discuss with you for aforementioned reasons of your inability to cognate the nature of "self-replication".

If you want to achieve anything useful, then these criteria have to be ultimately the result of an intelligent agency.

Impossible to discuss with you for aforementioned reasons of your inability to cognate the nature of "useful".

A single valid counterexample would invalidate my assertion, but Cyborg hasn't provided one, nor has he(?) even alluded to one.

You won't and haven't read so there's no point.

Secondly The OP asked when it was valid to use "randomness" in discussingf evolution. I pointed out that "selective advantage" is a probabilistic ttreatment of natural selection. Cyborg's answer wasn't that it isn't a probabilisic treatment, but that it is only a "treatment" of natural selection. I disagree that it is "only" a treatment of natural selection, for the reasons given earlier in the post, but even if it were only a "treatment", it is still the approach used in evolutionary biology. If this is the case, why is it invalid when discussing evolution, when biologists use it?

Inpenitrable.
 
I like the nut example-- It's a good analogy... though Jimbob and Mijo suck at analogies as evidenced by this and other threads.

The "Brazil Nut plot theorists" i.e.(creationists) have a vested interest in people believing that the Brazil nuts on top are part of a plot to make it look like there are more nuts than they are.

Their technique is to laugh off the scientists and say, "they think those nuts just got there randomly-- ha what are the odds of that... they don't understand how statistically improbable that is!"

People hearing this will say, "how is it the Brazil nuts could just randomly end up on top every time?? Those scientists are full of crap".

But no scientist is saying the nuts got there randomly. There may be randomness involved... but the Brazil nuts don't end up on top randomly. We understand the principals and once anyone else did, they'd see how laughable the "Brazil nut plot" is.

And they'd see what Behe, Jim-Bob, Mijo, and Walter Wayne are doing as well. They need evolution to be random so that the "Brazil nut plot" looks more plausible. At least that's what I see. What else could it be? Isn't their goal obfuscation and a need to tie everything to random and "get the last word"-- even if they don't "know" that is what they are doing? What else do they imagine they are accomplishing? How are they not being like the "Brazil Nut Plot" theorists of my analogy?

And so they aim to deride those who are clear on the simple facts because the simple facts not only make people aware of how there is no Brazil nut plot... but also just how dishonest obfuscatory the Brazil Nut conspirators are.

The Brazil Nut conspirators must obfuscate the real understanding of the "Brazil nuts on top" for themselves and everyone else... lest people comprehend what's really going on, and just how full of BS those who speak on behalf of the nut conspiracy are. In the process they spread a bigotry against those who would do and can explain and would explain the concept to anyone who was actually interested in the truth.
 
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Random: having a state or value depends on chance.
So you can predict the sum of two die rolls? That isn't uniform. You can predict the position of someone on a snakes and later board on the second turn, after seeing the result of their first turn? That is correlated with the result of the first term.

You can predict the sum of two die rolls with better than an accuracy better than random chance. If you provide a confidence interval, you can provide an exact prediction.

I'm sorry I don't understand the 'snakes and later board' example.
I think Walter Wayne was saying that it is like a drunkard's walk, the whole trajectory is random, but depends on the past history.

jimbob said:
Indeed, and the biggest difference is that an ionisation smoke detector is not a chaotic system. A slight difference in the decay rate leads to a slight difference in the ionisation current, which leads to a slight difference in teh "apparent" smoke density ant the output signal. A slight difference in the gain (transconductance) in the amplifying transistor similarly leads to a slight difference in the sensitivity of the detector, so this is compensated for during factory testing.

With the smoke detector slight differences in inputs lead to slight differences in outputs.

Agreed. With the qualification that the output isn't a slight difference in measured signal, it is strictly 'smoke or no'.
<nitpick>some smoke detectors do produce an oputput that is a "level of smoke" which is returned to the controller, wheich then assesses whether the whol system is indicitive of a dangerous fire or a false alarm. For example ambient pollution, or cigarette smoke. In the industry, these are termed smoke "sensors" rather than "detctors" which do only have an alarm/non-alarm output, I have previously worked in (in the fire "detector" and "sensor" development area). </nitpick>
I've got a couple of points here.

#1 Just to be clear I understand this to be from the perspective of the 'history of evolution' or 'path of evolution'. If we're talking about evolution in the sense of how a species change in response to changes in its environment(which may or may not be chaotic or random) this point is inapplicable. (Ie doesn't apply to the argument made from Baysian logic some pages back)
True, and this is where I think a lot of the differences lie.

I have said that in a stable environment, and over a long enough time, then you don't need to invoke randomness. This does cover a lot of examples used when discussing how evolution works, for example the advantage of sight.

I would still argue that the particular adaptations could still be random, e.g. compound eye vs simple eye, position of the retina etc... but the adaptation to the environment would be there.


However this stable environment is only a subset of the situations where evoution occurs, even if it is the simplest to understand.
#2 The 'consensus' I got from the 'chaotic' thread was that the jury was still out with respect to whether weather was chaotic. Moreover the 'consensus' I got was that we couldn't tell if a system was chaotic unless we are talking about a mathematical model and are in agreement about its quality of fit to the evidence.
There is quite a bit of evidence that it is chaotic, but that is why I started the other thread...

#3 I appreciate your intuition on these issues, but is there any reason you believe these systems are chaotic?

#4 How do you know that these systems are not just complex?
Positive feedback loops tend to produce unstable systems, indeed they are often used to produce oscillators. Ecosystems have lots of positive feedback loops, which would predispose the system to chaotic behaviour.

#5 How do you know that, if these systems are chaotic, that they are sensitive to random inputs?
Because that is how the maths works out. If they depend on position or momentum, they will eventually depend on quantum effects.

#6 What do you contend these inputs are?
Anything that affects the reproductive success of an organism, so including: the weather, asteroid strikes (rarely), competition, availability of mates, fertility, predation, parasites, food supply, territory, water supply, volcanoes (rarely), lightning strikes, etc...

There are many positive feedback loops, one has been hypothesised for the non-recovery of the grand bannks cod fishery. The simple analysis being that the reduced adult cod population has reduced the predation of smaller fish. These smaller fish, in turn prey on the young cod fry. The reduced predation of the smaller fish has increased the predation of the cod-fry, which in turn acts to keep the cod population down.

#7 How do you know that these systems are not constrained by negative feedback in the form of energy limitations and physical landscape for ecosystems, in terms of intertia,viscosity, and energy for weather.

#8 What are the relative scales of the development rate of 'disruptive mutations' vs 'positive feedback' in speciation. How do we know the scales are comparable?
There are obviously negative feedback loops involved in ecosystems as well as positive ones, however looking at the history of evoution

I don't get your question here. "Disruptive" mutations are rare, but they can be significant. If you are talking about geological timescales, then random events become more important in affecting how the developmetnal course of the ecosystem.

If the ecosystem starts to change, then (almost by definition) the organisms in that environment will be less well adapted to the altering environment than they would have been to the previous, stable environment. This would mean that variations are more likely to be eneficial than when the organisms were well-adapted.

Some of the positive feedbaclk loops would be those that frive the evolution of symbiotic relationships, where particular flowers and insects co-evolve.

Earlier on, I described the course of evolution as similar in some respects to a river system, these are often chaotic, and the course can seem stable for long times, but they can also change suddenly. If the topography is steep the change is less likely, if the gradients are shallow, then change is more likely. Similarly, in locally flat regions of the fitness landscape, or minor "saddles", slight changes could tip the evolution of the organism's descendents down different routes.

#9 How do we know that this 'positive feedback' doesn't just affect the speed at which the solution is generated and not the substantive result of the solution.

Your assertions are all well and good, but they're just as hand-wavy as your assertions about chaos theory which were quite vigorously shot down. Unless you can answer these questions with evidence and reason, really all you are saying is that despite the testament of people in the field, you have the strong personal conviction, a feeling, that the results of evolution involve significant chaotic effects. Which, IMO, is terribly unpersuasive.


There is plenty of evidence for discussion of chaotic behaviour in population dynamics and in other areas relevant to evolution.

I would also disagree that the assertions were "vigorously" shot down. I still contend that most physicists think that the timescales for quantum uncertainty to affect the weather is quite short. When I studied physics, the consensus seemed to be about 6-weeks. My very naive treatment of the numbers came to a conclusion that was not vastly different. Life has existed for over 3-billion years, so that is the sort of timescale that would be needed if random events didn't affect natural selection affecting the weather.
 

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