Why does it matter if we actually sound like Behe?
A dyed-in-the-wool non-randomite like you, articulett, will continue to claim that we do no matter how cogent our arguments are.
Well, do let me know if one of you gets a cogent one.
Or try these:
1. Is there any evidence that would lead you to conclude that defining natural selection in terms of the random components that affect it is misleading.
2. Is there any peer reviewed recent scientific research that says any of the following (and not per your interpretations...I can read Behe's twisted interpretations too--we have peer review to cull such blowhards):
a. The definition for random is (insert the definition you are using).
b. The definition for a stochastic process is (insert the definition you are using.
c. "Evolution is random", "natural selection is random", Natural selection is a stochastic process", "random components in a process make the process itself random", "Dawkins et. al. are wrong to call natural selection non-random". "The word random has a singular definition that all rigorous scientists use" or "It is misleading to call natural selection 'deterministic'". Or a similar quote--but nothing twisted like your report Mijo which clearly differentiated between mutation (which it referred to as stochastic) and selection (something separate and
deterministic-- their words, not mine.
d. Addresses Behe's mistaken notion and the majority of peoples misunderstandings about natural selection (including yours, I suspect) while referring to mutation and selection using the
same adjective (random, stochastic, determined, biased, etc.). Is there any peer reviewed paper that doesn't distinguish between the relative randomness of mutation and the random components that are part of the environment that selects?
Until then, I guess you will sound like Behe to me. What's the difference. He uses lots of words to say nothing at all and is impervious to the notion that he's obfuscating and missing some pretty important details in order to sum up evolution as random. What else am I to expect when the most vocal and least able to engage in dialogue on this thread are the same ones defending creationist tour guides lying to kids on another? It would also help if you all had the SAME argument or definition--or anything that didn't make me feel the way Dawkins feels about Behe.
Mijo...the facts are the same for everybody. The explanation will evolve according to what works best for the most people and best for curtailing creationist obfuscations. There isn't anybody describing evolution the way you are--and the reason is, is because you aren't clear...you sound like a creationist...you sound like you haven't the slightest clue about natural selection...you sound like you have a need to call it "random" just like Behe has a need. And yet, you were supposedly interested in the non-random aspects. I just think Scientists will respond to you the way Dawkins responds to Behe...you just seem sad and deluded and missing the cool stuff you could be learning all just to prove you're right. Right about what? The "true" definition? The definition that is so vague that it describes anything? The definiton that is so useless that the peer reviewed articles you think are supported your claim, are doing the OPPOSITE. Didn't that give you a clue that you are looking for the answer you want instead of just assessing the evidence and letting it lead you? How is that different than Behe?