Those who understand evolution on this forum aim to nip the creationist strawman in the bud when it appears-- but there's mijo assuring us (along with Tai) that Behe is correct and evolution is all about randomness...
I don't remember mijo saying the Behe was right about anything. Can someone point to where he said anything like that?
I do remember plenty of cases where Tai did that. But, not mijo for some reason.
It seems to me that mijo's questions regarding randomness are rooted in a different source than Behe. For example: Behe would be prone to bring up the "747" argument as valid. As near as I can tell, mijo would not.
I took some time to read a few posts in the "Fossil and Evolution" thread, to see if I can spot any creationist behavior from mijo, there. Although I did not read every single thing he placed in there, I conclude that he is expressing the sort of standard concern one might have, if their knowledge of biology was very basic. In other words, it is a legitimate question, not necessarily one that only a creationist would bring up.
Here is a sample, from early in the thread:
The basic conceptual problem I have with evolution and the fossil record can probably be subsumed under the bigger question of how we perceive reality to be continuous even though we know that we receive information from our senses in discrete increments.
My point with the day-scaling analogy is that intermediate forms don't seem to appear close enough together even trick our senses into believing that the change is continuous (much as projecting film at ~48 frames a second tricks us into believing the motion on a movie screen is continuous). In fact for us to believe that the day-long movie of evolution is one of continuous change intermediate forms would have to occur every 1085 years (i.e., 1/48th of a second in the day-scaled world) and be morphologically close enough to one another to make the "morph" seem smooth.
I am not saying this as a refutation of evolution as I believe that there are other strong independent pieces of evidence that demonstrate evolution. Rather, I am simply asking whether the evidence we claim is provided by fossils is really as strong as we would like to think it is.
A lot of people, including Dr. A and others, gave some very helpful answers to this issue. But, perhaps in the profusion of confusion that followed, things got lost and murky.
Maybe my own responses would help:
First Paragraph: Remember: The goal of science is not necessarily to find ultimate truth, but to build provisional models. Our models tend to use discrete values, because we humans can only perceive the world in discrete values. But, it would be an arrogant fallacy to assume that reality works the way humans perceive. We have measured various aspects of the Universe to such a fine degree, that the safest bet is to assume that pretty much everything in nature is continuous.
Historically, those who have assumed there must be discrete behavior in nature, have found themselves at a severe disadvantage, whenever someone finds gray-areas, they did not take into consideration. There are always new gray areas yet to be discovered!
Second Paragraph: The fossil record is not as complete as we would like it to be. That is the biggest reason for its jumping. The conditions to preserve parts of the life form have to be right.
However, evolution tends to "progress" in a saw-blade like manner: There are small ups and downs, but still an overall trend can be seen in the bigger picture. And, sometimes (though rarely) there are almost-saltation-like, large jumps in the changes in a species, anyway.
Third Paragraph: Okay, nice to see you are NOT refuting evolution, you simply want answers to something that puzzles you.
On one hand, the fossil record, alone, is not enough to demonstrate evolution is a fact. Evolution is considered a fact because of a convergence of evidence that includes, but is not limited to, the fossil record.
On the other hand, the ordering of morphology in the fossil record could not be explained better, by any other theory. You would NOT predict such an "order" from ID, (although you could post-dict and call it "God's R&D Lab" or something). However, you would predict such an order from evolution.
Yes, but some people start a thread asking about the non random aspects of evolution and then ignore every single answer to conclude as they always have that the scientists are really saying that "evolution is random". Even after pages and pages of apologetics and careful explanations such as yours.
This could be a valid point. Mijo
might have a problem accepting our arguments. Though, I still doubt he is doing so with Creationist intentions. But, let's see if he is starting to catch on...
Mijo, have you learned anything from this thread yet?