articulett
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- Jan 18, 2005
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I'm not contending that probability theory can't model evolution--in fact much of what we've come to understand about the evolution of "morality" is based on game theory which involved maximizing probabilities for "the group". But let's not pretend that is what you are doing, Mijo. Your goal is to define evolution as "random" not define it in regards to probabilities...and your definition of random as fitting a certain pattern on a probability curve doesn't change the fact. When a probability chart shows "random distribution" it's not this "diminishing probabilities thing as you see to define it as. I can't tell what the hell you're trying to explain or understand. You use words so imprecisely that you just aren't saying anything at all. It's like the seat belt example. Every one agrees--there are times when a seat belt costs a person their life--however, if you asked a question regarding what evidence there was for seat beats saving lives-- none of the examples about the exceptions would be of issue until you clarified the basics. You are just so off on the very basics and use such confusing words that I don't think you've managed to convey a single useful fact about evolution to anyone nor do I think you could communicate anything useful about it to anyone. Using big words and valid studies doesn't make you right if you don't understand what the hell you are saying. Multiple times you have quoted sources as authorities who went out of their way to describe evolution and natural selection in ways far different than the word "random" suggest, implies, or the meaningless way you've defined it. By your definition, all processes that contain random elements, are themselves random. This would include food processing, artificial selection, and word processing. That makes it a useless definition unless your goal is to be able to think of evolution as "random" (with whatever connotation you want to give it.) That's fine. But you are only fooling yourself. You can say that when it comes to saving lives --it's random as to whether wearing seat belts helps or not--because by your silly inexact definition it is. However, I would hope you'd never be in charge of safety instruction with that limited understanding.
In fact, I would say your understandingregarding evolution is on par with most adults who think they understand evolution http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bloom07/bloom07_index.html
Your understanding is different...but equally "off". You just aren't conveying any useful information nor have you actually sought to have your question answered--which many people and many sources did very well. Nobody can answer your question because you insist on using a word that you seem to be very vague on the definition of. Even if you say, natural selection isn't always deterministic--what the hell does that convey? How is that useful information? And how does that answer your question or lead you to the inane conclusion that "we don't know enough to say whether evolution is or is not random". We do. It's not. Unless you want to play semantic games which render all processes "random". Random coponents do not a random process make--unless you have a need to believe it does and want to play fast and loose with definitions.
Before you ask for peer reviewed evidence saying evolution is non-random (which peer reviewed scientists have definitely stated and you've been provided the links)--why don't you do us the favor of showing us one scientifically peer reviewed paper that actually uses that word ("random") in describing the entire process of evolution. Until then, the question is just another creationist loaded question in my book--it's not designed to elicit understanding, but to claim nobody "understands" because you can't. There is no definition of random that you or anyone has provided that involves diminishing probabilities. It only refers to fitting a certain probability distribution--that is, one that looks "random". Even the articles you quote are not supporting any notion of "randomness" that you or anyone else defined. In fact, the latter shows how even mutations are not random.
In fact, I would say your understandingregarding evolution is on par with most adults who think they understand evolution http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bloom07/bloom07_index.html
This is the case for most scientific beliefs. Consider, for example, that most adults who claim to believe that natural selection can explain the evolution of species are confused about what natural selection actually is—when pressed, they often describe it as a Lamarckian process in which animals somehow give birth to offspring that are better adapted to their environments. Their belief in natural selection, then, is not rooted in an appreciation of the evidence and arguments.
Your understanding is different...but equally "off". You just aren't conveying any useful information nor have you actually sought to have your question answered--which many people and many sources did very well. Nobody can answer your question because you insist on using a word that you seem to be very vague on the definition of. Even if you say, natural selection isn't always deterministic--what the hell does that convey? How is that useful information? And how does that answer your question or lead you to the inane conclusion that "we don't know enough to say whether evolution is or is not random". We do. It's not. Unless you want to play semantic games which render all processes "random". Random coponents do not a random process make--unless you have a need to believe it does and want to play fast and loose with definitions.
Before you ask for peer reviewed evidence saying evolution is non-random (which peer reviewed scientists have definitely stated and you've been provided the links)--why don't you do us the favor of showing us one scientifically peer reviewed paper that actually uses that word ("random") in describing the entire process of evolution. Until then, the question is just another creationist loaded question in my book--it's not designed to elicit understanding, but to claim nobody "understands" because you can't. There is no definition of random that you or anyone has provided that involves diminishing probabilities. It only refers to fitting a certain probability distribution--that is, one that looks "random". Even the articles you quote are not supporting any notion of "randomness" that you or anyone else defined. In fact, the latter shows how even mutations are not random.
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