Instead of arguing back and forth, why don't we find a definate definition of "random", with a cited source, so we can discuss that?
I agree.
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Ultimately 'random' is simply a term to denote ignorance. This assumes, of course, a material perspective.
There is either determinism, indeterminism, or some combination; or the universe is ruled by Mind. When we speak of 'evolution' we work at a level of abstraction in which determinism rules (if true indeterminism arises only from quantum levels). So 'random' refers only to our inability to predict an outcome based on our limited knowledge. We simply do not know how mutations are likely to arise -- there are many mechanisms and we lack the knowledge to predict them. We have a very good idea of how selection will work and can pretend at least that we know how it will work to prune variability (or possibly even promote it), so we speak of it as non-random. But, this does not refer to some integral aspect of the world -- it refers to our level of knowledge about the world.
Ultimately this is a fluff debate. It concerns an abstraction of our ignorance and pretends that abstraction describes some integral aspect of reality. Like the free will debate that must be viewed ultimately in terms of determinism and/or true freedom (an aspect of some sense of Mind), this debate really turns on the same fudging of terms. Compatibilism in the free will debate is used to gloss over the fact that there is nothing really compatible about free will and determinism ultimately. It solves a different problem -- an ethical issue. It works at a higher level of abstraction than the base deterministic world (which may have a deeper base of indeterminism); so does the word 'random'.
If we really want to get down to brass tacks we should abandon these higher level abstractions that fire debate (because they don't describe the ultimate issue but gloss over it) and talk about what the real issue is. Is the world ultimately material or mind? ID proponents manipulate the definitions to 'prove' that material processes cannot account for our world, though they will in the next breath often invoke the Cosmological Argument, which critically depends on determinism and cause-effect. 'Evolutionists' contend that material forces are sufficient.
I know these issues were brought up earlier in the thread. I resurrected them because they really are central to the debate. Arguments about philosophy of mind, free will, and this are really just arguments about the nature of reality. They go on for pages and pages because both sides pretend that the higher level abstractions ('random', 'mind', 'free will') describe something about the world when they don't. They are just abstractions. Mutations don't just happen out of the clear blue. They occur on a matrix -- DNA that follows certain rules -- and they have a cause. They are determined by prior forces. While they can assume many forms, only certain forms provide survival value and the selection process culls the unsuccessful and promotes the successful. 'Random', in this debate, is not 'disordered'; it is 'unpredictable' (not in theory, but in practice). It is an epistemic term. We know that such unpredictable processes produce order, as many (particularly Schniebster and Myriad) have demonstrated throughout this thread.
Since we treat 'information' as 'not disordered', it should be clear that the process of evolution, whatever 'random' (unpredictable because of our limited knowledge) inputs, is clearly 'not disordered' since it creates 'information'. The ev model, and all the recent work on genetic change and selection, demonstrate this fact clearly. Every IDer who admits the reality of 'microevolution' has already lost this debate because they admit that this supposedly 'random' process creates 'information'.
I don't really care if we call it 'random' or not. If we want to call 'evolution' 'random', then fine. The consequence is that 'random' processes create information and account for life, just as they account for organized storms, the process of osmosis, etc. If we replace 'random' with unpredictable it might help, but then someone will object that mutations are not unpredictable in theory but only in practice because of our limited knowledge. So, whatever.
[/soapbox]
Sorry. Just had to get that off my chest.