I did not use QED wrong. Your post demonstrated that, until the randomites abandoned their definition of "random" and stopped disagreeing with those who used it differently (and improperly in a technical setting), you would continue to consider their argument as being like Behe's.
Oh yes you did use it wrong. Polonius. You are just too much of a buffoon to realize it. And I DON"T care whether you abandon your term or not--what do I care if you are vague and sound like Behe? I'm just glad to be able to laugh at you. I was just dropping by and answering the question in the OP...until I realized you didn't want an answer. Now I'm just enjoying the sport.
And I am not a dyed in the wool non-randomite (which is a malapropism). I don't care what words you use. I tend to stick with the experts; they are much more clear than you. But I'm open to evidence that it might be useful to describe natural selection as random, but I'd like to see a respected scientist say so first--you know, the way many have said that it's 'not random". As for myself, there's lots of words I use-- preferential selection is good; so is deterministic, biased, oriented towards order... most anything that distinguishes the order bringer from the pool of randomness. And "non-random" clearly works too.
Again, I am not the one having trouble understanding the "nonrandom" parts of evolution. I didn't start a thread saying, "what is the evidence for evolution being random" so I could keep saying such assertions were wrong. You are projecting your own immutable conclusion about evolution being random onto me in regards to "nonrandom". Being a "nonrandomists" is probably like being in atheist...you just don't believe in using the word random to define evolution. This thread is a testament as to why. (QED

)
And creationists never abandon their arguments...never ever--so don't think I have delusions there. And yes, all those who sum up evolution as random are as clear as Behe is. Clearly, you don't seem to understand natural selection. Why wouldn't any serious person make a concerted effort
not to define evolution like Behe unless they were a creationist? To those of us who do, you just sound stubbornly ignorant. It's all about semantics right? Why wouldn't you go for the clearest terms even if it meant letting go of what you want natural selection to be defined as?
To repeat, I'm not insisting that natural selection is non-random--in fact, mutations aren't even truly random--I, like the vast majority of people on this thread think it's misleading to define it like Behe does...and the way you do... Yes, Dawkins, Ayala, et. al. trump you and your fellow randomites by a longshot. You truly don't seem to understand natural selection any better than Behe. And, of course, you never will, because you are Kleinman II. But Jim Bob and Schneibster might.
In the mean time, I enjoy watching cyborg give a couple of jabs to this dead horse. It can't fix what ails you, but it makes me glad I'm not you.
Real scientists correct their mistakes and refine their understanding--the faithful just appeal to emotionalism and semantics since the facts never seem to be on their side. They believe themselves "infallible" just like the invisible guy they believe in.