The long and short of articulett's posts on
Ayala:
"Until you accept my definition or "random", which scientists use only in non-technical, narrative writing in peer-reviewed journals and sound very confused doing so as they cannot avoid discussing the probability and chance of natural selection in the same piece, I'm going to impugn against your intelligence and character. I am also going to ignore that you provided a rigorous mathematical definition of probability so I can continue to call algebra, your argument, or anything that I so choose "random" so that I can declare the definition your are useless and use the definition I deem appropriate because it fits my preconceived notion of what should be."
I don't have a definition of random, you ass. I have, however provided several--one in a peer reviewed journal. I see no evidence that there is a singular scientifically correct definition despite claims to the contrary. I hear you assert that every other scientist is wrong in their definition, but I haven't seen anyone provide a scientific definition from a professional source that leads me to think anyone is using your vague definition. The word is ambiguous until proven otherwise. You have failed to do so.
And I want you to know that I'm impugning your intelligence and character because I
truly think you are stupid and dishonest...not for the vomit of supposed reasons you spewed. Plus, I think I've made a pretty good case for both assertions. And I'm saying your definition is useless because there are no scientists as far as I can tell calling natural selection a random process and there ARE
recent peer reviewed scientists saying that natural selection is
not random. These aren't "my definitions". These are, however, examples that highlight the ambiguity of using words like you do. Moreover, the articles you pretend are saying what you are saying, are simply not doing so. You sound like you don't understand or can't understand or
won't understand natural selection unless you can sum it up as random. I care about conveying the concept...not the semantic games of word usage.
Your arguments style is identical to Behe's. You seem to have one goal, but it was a lie (the OP) and then you change goals and definitions midstream, fling ad homs, non sequitars, poor reasoning, and malapropisms around in a buffoonish fashion while ignoring all answers to the OP question that you were supposedly so curious about and then pretending that it's me who has a special definition for random or me insisting on saying natural selection is not random. And you pretend that you have a chorus of rigorous scholarship in your corner-- as if!
You're like Behe...you use a lot of words to say nothing at all and imply that you are making a point...and then change the subject when anyone tries to nail you down.
What's your goal again?
Basically despite using the rich language of probability to describe evolution and natural selection, Ayala declares natural selection "not random".
And doesn't this clue you in to the notion that having random components or probabilities doesn't really the whole process random? How much more evidence do you need?? Oh that's right, there is no evidence in the world that will allow you to conclude that it's misleading, ambiguous, and/or uninformative to call natural selection "random", right? All I need is a recent peer reviewed paper that says "natural selection is random" or one that defines random in the way you are using it to conclude that maybe you aren't trying to obfuscate.
I don't have a vested interest in the words used, silly. I know the definition will evolve via natural selection (not randomly) for what works best for the most people and avoids creationist obfuscations in the process. It looks like "natural selection is not random" trumps "natural selection is random" by a long shot. And it tickles me that it pisses you off so much. I bet Behe is pissed too.
And I understand why.