You must have a lot of fun at the Craps tables.
But beyond your quite possibly unrealized income as a dice player, one should note that DNA sequnces are not dice.
A single die has only 6 possible numbers per roll.
Each roll ends with a random number between 1 and 6.
Did everyone catch that…each roll generates a **random **number between 1 and 6.
So how does this apply to a genome with many hundreds of thousands (perhaps millions or even billions) of possible combinations?
Your numbers and probability game falls apart.
Face up to it…evolution is driven by random events.
The above shows a great deal of misunderstanding. Just because a SINGLE EVENT is random, does not mean that a collection of random single events is also random.
This is known in probability theory, and in fact has a name - the law of large numbers. It is, in fact, what allows insurance carriers to operate and to provide insurance protection and be profitable.
In addition, CHAOS theory also shows that for chaotic events, the order of appearance of a mapping (for example, the points in a graph) may be random - even though the shape of the graph may not be. That is, the order of appearance of the dots could very every time, but the graph would be the same every time.
So no, your above statements don’t hold.
That exercise showed that there are many unwilling to see an intelligent design no matter how blatently obvious the design and the intelligence behind it are.
Brains (human and other animal brains) are wired to find patterns. This is such a drive for the brain, that it will find patterns even where no pattern exists. Furthermore, natural selection does drive efficiency, and so to some extent causes outcomes that have the appearance of pre-planned design.
So it is easily shown that the idea that design is “blatantly obvious” is in fact a trap for the foolhardy. It is impossible to show that there is a pre-planned design.
More to the point, I find delicious irony in someone that wants to claim no randomness in a gene mutation that cannot be predicted but also wishes to claim stones arranged on a beach that spell out SOS could be a random event.
Read “Personal Knowledge”
An INDIVIDUAL gene mutation is random. A collection of gene mutations, a rate of gene mutation, is not a random event.
Another statement against a point I have not proposed.
Your reading from a script again.
Please assemble your straw men elsewhere.
Again, its obvious from the above that you don’t grasp several of the key concepts - for example, railing against ideas that insurance companies have used daily for well over 100 years.