articulett
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- Jan 18, 2005
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I believe that by far the most likely probability is that the theory of evolution is correct, given the probability of minor errors in timing or some steps. The general outline though I believe is as true as gravity. There is a very small possibility that our existence and the apparent age of our perceivable universe is artificial, created by one or more beings with the power to do so.
Assuming that our estimate age of our perceivable universe is roughly correct and that it was not created out of nothingness a mere 10,000 years ago by some superpower, then the probability of the theory of evolution becomes even more probable.
Then there comes another question. Assuming evolution is correct, is it random or is it by design?
I think most people agree here that evolution was unplanned and not designed from on high. But natural selection gives the appearance of design, and in a sense it's "designed from the bottom up" like the internet or cities or natural landscapes. When you call it random, creationists abuse that word and say that it's like saying a tornado went through a junkyard and built a 747-- this sounds so implausible, that a "designer" must be necessary.
So most biolgists try to head of this canard and obfuscation technique by describing evolution as "random mutation coupled with natural selection". The former is random in that things are always happening on the DNA level regardless of weather they benefit the possessor-- the latter is not in that it multiplies the successes exponentially and culls the worst stuff at the get go.
The rest of the DNA competes in "genome teams" that build organisms that compete to be the best replicator in whatever environment they find themselves in. That really isn't random at all and you can see that the word random would confuse the issues.
For example, the mutation in this article is random for all intents and purposes-- but the way it exponentially spread through the genome is not.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19733274
If you were a male butterfly, and you did not have this mutation, you didn't survive to be born. I think you can see how simple and comprehensible this is and why creationists would like to play semantic games to obfuscate understanding.
And welcome to JREF.
(And Meadmaker... would you call the rapid spread of the mutation in the above article, "random"?--because if so, you wouldn't be conveying how it appears that the butterflies got lucky on purpose or whatever it is that creationists think...but only a single lucky butterfly out of an untold number of experiments came up with a resistance to the parasite...and he fathered the next generation of sons who all had the mutation and so on...butterfly males without the protective mutation failed--they never got to be born--we have no idea how many failures there were before the mutation arose. And this will, no doubt, drive the evolution of the parasite species too...
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