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prodigalson2011
Guest
With the understanding that I’m not advocating a particular view either way here, only trying to present the Darwinian perspective as accurately as possible, the point is that those random mutations do not continually tend towards betterment. Those that do survive and reproduce more successfully; those that don’t don’t survive as long and gradually die out.There is an assumed “tendency” towards survival, in fact, a tendency towards continued improvement, which is why life has flourished and increased greatly in complexity over the past 3-4 billion years. Without the “presumed” tendency towards survival (I agree that it is unstated) why would random mutations continually tend towards betterment?
The changes take place within individuals, not species.Random changes mean that even species that show some improvement could just as likely show deleterious changes and become, in your words, “phased out.”
Not exactly. The gains will remain while any previous or future losses will die out. The gains would stick around because the efficiency of DNA replication is such that mutations are rare, so the “status quo” of a species is preserved for long periods of time.Shouldn’t the life record of random mutations be a continual hit and miss, with some gains and just as many losses with a zero net gain? Why a continued series of gain upon gain, compexity added to complexity?
Of course, that the laws of chemistry and biology and, ultimately, physics that would make this the case are so fortuitously conducive to such order, cohesion and progress remains unexplained.
I would agree, to the extent of my last comment. Assuming the truth of the Darwinian theory as well as monotheism, it remains the fact that an omniscient creator would have known from all eternity each and every twist and turn of the seemingly “random” process of evolution that would result from the universe he set in motion, so it seems to me the only disconnect between the theist and the atheist when it comes to Darwinism lies in their metaphysical premises. I suppose you could call it “theistic determinism”: humans are the result of evolution is the result of chemistry is the result of physics is the result of the creative act of God, which accounted for each step in the process from the beginning. What appears as “chance” within the framework of natural determinism is not so from the perspective of “theistic determinism.”It seems to me that a tendency “towards survival” is presumed as a kind of hidden premise in order to make the non-design “theory” credible. The onus is on the proponents to show random change could lead to inexorable improvement when they have really not supplied a reason for thinking that it would, except that things are rendered “more fit” to survive. It is not clear that random change would continue in that direction without some form of “guidance.”
Being only a scientific hobbyist, I maintain a healthy agnosticism about it all, but I don’t see where it poses any problem in the strictly physical sense. I am, though, in full agreement with Blessed John Paul II that, when it comes to man, we face an “ontological leap” in terms of the intellectual soul.