My explanation of evolution through natural selection as "random" may not be simpler or easier to understand, articulett, but it is correct. Calling it "random" doesn't mean that I don't think it can happen. In fact, many apparently ordered natural process are at their most basic stochastic process. For instance, the van der Waals Gas Law describes the orderly and predictable macroscopic behavior of gases, while on a microscopic level, the movement of individual gas particles is described by a probability distribution. Similarly, a nuclear fission chain reaction can be predicted when the mean free path of the unbound neutrons in the material (i.e., the mean distance a neutron has to travel before it strikes another nucleus) falls below a certain value, but the free paths of all neutrons a described by a probability distribution. Diffusion is also dependent on the mean free path of solute molecules.
The mistake in the "747 in a tornado" straw man is the assumption that order cannot arise from random processes, which is what evolutionary biologists seem to be responding to when they say that evolution is non-random. As I have said before, even though evolution function through probabilities on the individual short duration level, it is the mean of the probabilistic selection processes over many individuals and many generations that causes evolution to take on its deterministic appearance, just like gases, nuclear fission and diffusion.
No not really...you are using a lot of words to say nothing much at all. This is not an explanation about how evolution is non-random that will help your hypothetical creationist protege understand anything. Gas molecules don't live and die, nor do they alter much in fitness--yes, environment factors in, but it doesn't weed out. What evolutionary biologists are saying when they say evolution is non-random is that it is directed by that which preceded and the environment with which it finds itself in. You seem so vague on this. You do understand the basics about how phenotypes compete and are refined through time? How you can get a horse, a zebra, and a donkey from the same ancestor...because the ancestors of these 3 found themselves diverging in environment and "what worked" through time? As I said--you have the random down fine--but you are really vague, shaky, clueless, confused, and obfuscating when it comes to selection. It's much less random than mate selection--and it's on a huge scale in a game of average where the failures don't stick around. You miss this vital last part to repeatedly draw the vague conclusion that you want "evolution is random" when the fact is, it is not. Random components do not a random process make. It is confusing and non-informative for the same reason "mate selection is random" is non informative... Even "rivers spring up randomly" is more accurate because they are not alive the "selection" is totally environmental. The way you are describing random means that any process could be described randomly because it has random components--taxes are configured randomly because you just randomly choose the program you are going to use to figure your taxes. Birth is a random process; we don't have much control over it and can't predict our own though we have some degree of prediction success with our offspring but not completely...etc. You muddle with your explanations.
And what you say does nothing to address the Deepak Chopra very common mistaken notion "To say the DNA happened randomly is like saying that a hurricane could blow through a junk yard and produce a jet plane." You've done nothing to address this thought snafu and meadmaker can't seem to accept that it exist though you are demonstrating it in spades and meadmaker is to flattered by your acceptance of his explanation that he can't see how neither of you are really saying anything at all.
Why don't you guys just answer this (simply--avoid the obfuscating words...the ones ripe for semantic games): How is Deepak wrong? (No peaking at Pharyngula's answer.) Truly, this is important...people have trouble with evolution because of this "complexity from randomness" idea--the only way to clear it up is by emphasize how selection is not-"random" even though it has relatively tiny random components. When you make a choice about what to eat or what to write it is not "random"--and saying it is doesn't convey meaning. Random elements may come into play...you have random spin on the electrons in your body--BUT...your choice is "the opposite of random" in that the choice narrows the randomness down to a probability of one. The choice is the "anti-randoming" process.
So boys, once again, let's stay on topic: Why is Deepak wrong when he says this:
"To say the DNA happened randomly is like saying that a hurricane could blow through a junk yard and produce a jet plane."
(keep it simple, you are trying to convey understanding to creationists, remember...)
Really, mijo, if you want to continue in academics in regards to biology, you have to be a lot clearer. You have to actually say something with your words. You and meadmaker should quit digressing-- just explain why the above is wrong. (Maybe it will even clue you into why saying "evolution is random" is ridiculously uninformative, obfuscating, and ripe for abuse.)