I'll point a couple of things out.
First, a very respected and senior evolutionary biologist, and a teacher of evolutionary biology at the University of California,You described the course of evolution, in a source articulett quoted, as "haphazard." I posted the quote and a link to the article. The purpose of the article was specifically to refute cretinist claims that "evilution is random." Yet, there's that word, "haphazard," right in the middle of it. Even in an article specifically intended to deal with precisely this issue, a true and proper scientist cannot avoid, in good conscience, describing the overall course of evolution as "haphazard." Here is the quote:
"The fossil record shows that life has evolved in a haphazard fashion."
Here is the link. You will find the quote at the beginning of the summation, the end of the article. Note that it is one of a series of colloquium papers on evolution, presented in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. This is an authoritative source.
Second, I'd like to point out a couple of things I have said over the course of this conversation:
1. While saying that "evolution is not random" is probably a good idea from a political point of view, when speaking to the general public, it's not such a good idea when dealing with people who have specific training in the physical sciences. It is, in fact, technically incorrect, in a number of ways. And you can expect that people with technical training in the physical sciences will spot all of those ways very quickly, and be very skeptical when they encounter it.
2. I would not describe evolution as either random or non-random. It is complex, it is chaotic, it is emergent. These are characteristics that we are finding increasingly in many large physical systems. Evolution deserves recognition as one of these types of systems; and being recognized as one, it will receive the support of being "one of those types of things," immediately recognized by anyone with knowledge of these types of systems as a member of this class. It also deserves the support of the physical sciences, and to the extent that it conforms to these sorts of paradigms, it becomes much more easily comprehensible to those who pursue them, and therefore more likely to be so supported.
I think that the objections made in this thread are not scientific, but political. As has been repeatedly said,
The political forum is that way ->