Southwind17
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,154
There is still intellignece directing the selection in this case.
"Sales fall, so the alteration is dropped and they go back to making the previous model and try a different randomly generated alteration."
What constitutes a fall in sales, is it weekly, monthly, quarterly, yearly? What if the model still makes a profit? What if the price is altered?
For example.
OK - I have somewhat of a second wind; let's see how long it keeps me going
I thought the 'intelligence' you guys have a problem with is in the creative design process, and not the selection! Is there absolutely no 'intelligence' involved in natural selection? Is a cheetah acting completely unintelligently when 'determining' what prey to pursue, exactly how and for how long? Does a dolphin not apply some degree of intelligence when selecting and pursuing its prey? Have the prey of such creatures not evolved defence mechanisms that serve to counter such intelligence? I suppose you might argue that it's all based on instinct. Have you not ever made a decision in life based purely on instinct (like doing a bungee jump, for example, without having the rope and supporting structure scientifically tested for safety)? Many people make purchasing decision based largely, and sometimes wholly, on instinct.
Your specific questions are irrelevant, and you are, again, losing sight of what, exactly, the purpose of an analogy is. Do you honestly believe that these questions alone are going to prevent somebody from seeing the analogy and disputing that human design is completely incomparible with natural evolution?
But let me answer your questions, to demonstrate their irrelevance:
Why does the time period matter? Does nature infer a specific time period for testing the benefit or otherwise of a mutation? Of course not. The success or otherwise will be self-evident in the long term through its retention or elimination. The motor car is no different, whether the 'engineers' were to specify one month, six months or two years doesn't really matter. Long term survival derives from sustainable or increaing production levels driven by market (environmental) forces leading to profitability, otherwise losses ensue leading to reduced or abandoned production and ultimately extinction. One car maker might sustain losses for, say, six months; another for, say, two years, depending on many associated factors. And price is simply just another 'characteristic' of the motor car that influences it's likely rate of survival, no different in principle from whether it has a chrome plated or stainless steel exhaust pipe. Everything's a trade-off. Remember jimbob - ITS AN ANALOGY. THERE HAS TO BE SOME DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE TWO PROCESSES FOR AN ANALOGY EVEN TO EXIST. Are you claiming that there's no such thing as a good analogy in life? Perhaps you'd care to identify one so that we can compare and maybe see where you're struggling with mine.