mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
Nope.
Can you explain why only one of the genetically identical colonies evolved the ability to metabolize citrate under oxic conditions when they were all in the same environment?
Nope.
It is interesting that no-one who think evolution is non-random has answered lenny's questions.
Hi lenny:i would really like to understand all the confusion/argument here.
articulett, statisticians would generally not be "smart people" by your definition. random processes (aka stochastic processes) are indeed considered random, you seem to think this is a very restrictive condition, for the most part they do not.
not all random processes are IID (independent, identically distributed) or Gaussian distributed, "most" are subject to "deterministic" influences; they are random processes merely because there is a random term (in discrete or continuous time) onthe right hand side of the equations that define them.
do we all agree that a classical random walk is a random process?
and that so is a random walk on a tilted surface (that is a random process that contains a deterministic drift?)
if you agree the second is random, i do not see why you reject the idea that evolution is random, (given the typical alternatives: random and deterministic, would you want to say evoluiton is deterministic?)
articulett, you just seem to allergic to the use of the word "random" in connection with evoluiton, would you consider it OK to call a radiation induced mutation random?
cyborg could you tell me which post you explained things in, there are over a thousand on this thread!
thanks.
do we all agree that a classical random walk is a random process?
and that so is a random walk on a tilted surface (that is a random process that contains a deterministic drift?)
That's called a "directed random walk". It is not called "random". See the difference?
No, and I surprised that you don't see the equivocation (or the internal logical contradiction if you are not equivocating) in your statement.
Back to this again... how wonderful.
So, mijo, tell me - are smoke detectors random? Yes or no?
Until you say one or the other with no caveats I'm not going to respond to anything else you post.![]()
The confusion comes because certain posters are trying to apply their interpretation of the word random (which seems to be "non-deterministic") to the entire theory of evolution.
I would say that evolution is not random but it is also not deterministic.
this may be an issue in public presentation of natural selection, but it is not an issue in statistics or in physics (or amongst researchers in natural selection speaking in private).
nevertheless mathematically (and philosophically) a process is either determinsitic or not determinisitic (sets of measure zero excluded), and eventually i expect biologists will have to declare.
but i have no desire to add fuel to the confusionist argument.
Essentially, everything is random according to your definition of what "random" is.
In principle, yes.
And by the way, this is not "my" definition. This is the standard definition.
You've basically made the term "random" meaningless.
Not at all. Just because everything is in principle "random" does not in any way mean that the term is without meaning. Many, many processes can be predicted using deterministic models with far, far more accuracy than we can possibly measure. It makes sense in these cases to speak of these processes as "deterministic", since it is beyond our ability to tell otherwise.
So, in practice, there is a kind of subjective "degree of randomness" that a process must have in order for it to be utilitarian to refer to it as "random", even if all processes are random according to the technical definition of the word. In other words, we can make a conceptual distinction between the two concepts which is very useful in practice, in much the same way that we can make a distinction between "circles" and "squares", even though no absolutely perfect circles or squares may exist in real life.
As for your drive to work, I think it does make sense to refer to it as random. Take car accidents, for example. There are good statistics available on the incidence of such accidents per car per trip. We can measure the probabilities involved, and they are not negligibly small. Assuming you have the same probability as anyone else of getting into an accident, then your successful arrival at work is indeed the result of random chance.
I can think of 2 or 3 times in the last year when I started driving to work and for whatever reason ended up not getting there that day. So - if we stipulate that the factors that kept me from getting there are random - then my probability of not getting to work each day is on the order of 1 in 100. To me, this is non-negligible.
And as for evolution, It seems clear to me that it is significantly more random than whether or not you get to work safely. Walter Wayne made a good point in the other thread:
A question for the "non-randomites". Do you think that the rise of humanity was inevitable, given the conditions when life first crawled onto land?
Again, to re-re-re-iterate: Saying that "evolution is random" is in no way a criticism of evolutionary theory.
So then is complexity a genetic insurance policy against genetic coding errors? If the answer becomes yes, then is correct to say that life is activily attempting to lessen acummulated randomness?
mathematically, one usually just speaks of random processes (or equivalently stochastic processes), "pure randomness" being a special case.Just a quick question from the sideline, is there a scientific or mathematical name for the type of biased randomness we find in nature?
In the third year, all Mathematics and Statistics students take the
compulsory Applied Statistics course, and at least one of Statistical
Inference and Stochastic Modelling