the scientific attitude implies what I call the postulate of objectivity—that is to say, the fundamental postulate that there is no plan, that there is no intention in the universe. Now, this is basically incompatible with virtually all the religious or metaphysical systems whatever, all of which try to show that there is some sort of harmony between man and the universe and that man is a product—predictable if not indispensable—of the evolution of the universe.
I am not generally averse to your point of view, MoS! And i thought your first post above was well-stated. — Wayfarer
It has also been expressed that Darwin, although presented natural selection as one of the means of evolution, did not reject the idea of Lamarck - acquired characteristics — charleton
Suppose that someone wanted to prove, through empirical evidence, something like chance, or the randomness of random genetic mutations, how would one proceed? — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose that someone wanted to prove, through empirical evidence, something like chance, or the randomness of random genetic mutations, how would one proceed? — Metaphysician Undercover
what is the reason that science gives why we're here? Science tells us how things happen, science tells us nothing about why there was the big bang. Why there is a transition from inanimate matter to living matter. Science is silent on we could solve most of the questions in science and it would leave all the problems of life almost completely untouched. …
Why we exist, you're playing with the word “why” there. Science is working on the problem of the antecedent factors that lead to our existence. Now, “why” in any further sense than that, why in the sense of purpose is, in my opinion, not a meaningful question. You cannot ask a question like “Why down mountains exist?” as though mountains have some kind of purpose. What you can say is what are the causal factors that lead to the existence of mountains and the same with life and the same with the universe. — Richard Dawkins
It is evident that chance, is understood by many to be play an important part in the evolutionary process, especially in relation to genetic mutations. But chance is not necessarily integral to evolutionary theory. If we consider the evolutionary theory of Darwin's predecessor, Lamarck, we find a theory in which behavioural habits are the cause of physical variations. Due to the close relationship between behaviour and genetic disposition, speculations such as Lamarck's would be extremely difficult to falsify, or verify. Darwin opted for a scientific, objective theory, which stated the facts of variation, without speculating as to the cause of variation. Modern proponents of Darwinian evolution posit random (chance) mutations as the cause of variation, and this is directly opposed to Lamarck's position of habituation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe that the art of husbandry demonstrates to us that physical variations are most likely not the effect of chance. Domesticated plants and animals evolve in ways which are desirable to us, not in ways dictated by chance. If we had to wait for random mutations to produce the desirable changes which have resulted in the many varied domestic species, we would still be waiting. No, these changes were actually caused by human manipulation rather than random mutations which were selected for by those who were practising husbandry. — Metaphysician Undercover
We find this in human evolution as well. Philosophers, religious leaders, moralists, have long ago produced ethical principles, which were followed religiously by human societies. Consistently adhering to such moral principles, over centuries of time, has produced the disposition of well-mannered human beings which we take ourselves to be. The substance of the issue is not that we cause ourselves to be a certain way, by trying to be that way, but that we are trained to select for desirable individuals in our breeding practises. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now the principle of natural selection is where Darwinian evolutionary theory is really deficient. Survival is defined in relation to a species, or variation of a species, not in relation to the individual. This places survival as a function of reproductive capacity rather than as a function of an individual's capacity for subsistence. The conclusion which should be drawn from this, is that the behaviours, and physical traits, which are selected for, are the ones which are conducive to reproduction, not the behaviours and traits which are conducive to survival. Reproduction is more substantive as an element of evolution than survival of the individual is. This means that the substance of evolutionary change is to be found in those physical traits and behaviours which prove to be desirable to a reproductive partner, or in the case of asexual reproduction, desirable for reproduction in general. Instead, Darwinian evolutionary theory concludes with natural selection, or survival of the fittest, which states that the substance of evolution is survival, rather than reproduction. This is an invalid conclusion. Continued existence of a variation or species is dependent on its capacity to reproduce. Nature does not select which variations will carry on with the act of living, by selecting the fittest, through natural selection, the reproducing organisms make this selection themselves, in the act of reproduction. — Metaphysician Undercover
The notion of "chance" within evolutionary theory is simply a myth. It is a myth propagated by the scientific community in its refusal to face the difficult subject which we know as the facts of life. Rather than accept the facts of life as real brute facts, the scientific community would rather hide behind the myth of "chance". — Metaphysician Undercover
The notion of chance within Darwinian evolutionary theory is as much a myth as the notion of gravity is in Einstein's general theory of relativity. And the attempt to deny its essential role is honestly not worthy of serious discussion. What is worth debating for a variety of reasons is the extent chance plays in evolution. — Baden
Apart from the fact that there is no force of gravity in GR. Instead objects follow geodesics in space-time in the *absence* of a force. — tom
Also, if you invoke "chance", though I'm sure you only have a vague idea what you might mean by the word, you are proposing that Evolution and General Relativity are incompatible theories. — tom
Evolution does not require "chance", rather it demands no systematic mechanism for variation exists, which by the way, maintains the theory's compatibility with GR. — tom
Under neo-Darwinism, the requirement is that there is no systematic mechanism of variation. That is all "chance" and "randomness" mean in this case. — tom
I'll explain why the existing evidence doesn't satisfy me. Any so-called random occurrence only happens within very specific parameters. This is necessarily the case, or else any form of randomness would be absolute randomness A coin toss is constrained to two possibilities. A toss of a die is constrained to six. A draw in a lottery is constrained to the number of possible combinations.The question is why the existing empirical evidence doesn't satisfy you. — jamalrob
But neo-Darwinism does not require "randomness" or "chance", but simply that there is no mechanism for systematically feeding back to the genome. It is essentially a mechanism of trial and error. — tom
Lamarck was wrong about the basics of evolution. Darwin was right. Epigenetics is an interesting addition to modern evolutionary theory that demonstrates that Lamarck's approach was not entirely misdirected — Baden
It's not clear to me why you think that random mutations accreted over time through human selection are not enough to produce the changes we see in husbandry. — Baden
Huh, jamalrob said the opposite, that it represented a fair understanding of the mechanisms of sexual selection. Why the adversity?As has been pointed out already, this represents a serious misunderstanding. Suffice to say that the mechanisms of sexual selection are well understood and covered in modern evolutionary theory. — Baden
The notion of chance within Darwinian evolutionary theory is as much a myth as the notion of gravity is in Einstein's general theory of relativity. And the attempt to deny its essential role is honestly not worthy of serious discussion (unless you want to completely ignore the science). What is worth debating for a variety of reasons is the extent chance plays in evolution. — Baden
'External chance' is what happens when an environment changes. — StreetlightX
If there are mechanisms of mutability at work here, which are assumed to act in a way to minimize randomness, why assume that these came about through some random process? It doesn't make sense to assume that a non-random process evolved from a random process.Modern evolutionary theory today however recognizes that these changes aren't all entirely random; that in fact, there are mechanisms of mutability that in certain circumstances, force or otherwise increase the chances for variation. Another way to put this is that evolution has evolved mechanisms to increase evolvability; it's the ability of evolution to feedback upon itself that accounts for the relative 'rapiditiy' of evolution. — StreetlightX
When the two possibilities are heads and tails, the third option is to not flip the coin, or not read the results. Your so-called inability to make heads nor tails of the op is an expression of that third option, refusal.I confess I can't made heads nor tails of the OP — StreetlightX
Why would you call this "chance", something which has deterministic causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you say that changes to an organism's environment are chance events? — MU
Modern proponents of Darwinian evolution posit random (chance) mutations as the cause of variation, and this is directly opposed to Lamarck's position of habituation. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe that the art of husbandry demonstrates to us that physical variations are most likely not the effect of chance. — Metaphysician Undercover
StreetlightX appears to desire confusing the issue through equivocation, first using "chance" in my way, in one post, then using it in the other way in the following post. Failing to properly distinguish these two uses of "chance" only propagates the myth of chance, through the apparent contradiction that something with an "absence of design or discoverable cause", is also caused. This allows those who support "chance" to argue that there is no design or discoverable cause behind things such as some specific mutations, yet these things are still caused. Does this indicate that there is a belief within the scientific community that there are causes which are undiscoverable? What type of causes would these be, final causes? — Metaphysician Undercover
Desire just has no reason to control events beyond the limits of having its desires generally serviced……biology learns………biology is then deeply teleological in attempting to suppress noise….biology knows…..As much as it can afford to, life is about setting the levels of chance that can be either welcomed or tolerated — Apokrisis
It may be metaphorically said that Natural Selection is daily and hourly scrutinizing, throughout the world, the slightest variations; rejecting those that are bad, and adding up all that are good; silently and insensibly working whenever and wherever opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being.
Absence of design <> discoverable cause. You're working with an incoherent notion of chance. — StreetlightX
What would you mean by "systematically affected"? Doesn't consistency in the world fulfill the conditions of "systematic"? So if the world behaves in a consistent way, as it appears to according to the laws of physics, and the way that the world behaves affects the evolutionary process, wouldn't this constitute "systematically affected"?According to neo-Darwinism, whatever physical process brings about variation, there is no mechanism by which that physical process can be systematically affected by the environment. — tom
To say that genetic mutations are random could mean .... that they are not directed by anything. There is no telos. The genetic mutations may still, on this view, be either causally determined, or not. However the condition that there is no telos operating requires that there be no causal determination beyond merely efficient causation. There must be no direction, of either formal or final cause, in nature, on this view — John
What would you mean by "systematically affected"? Doesn't consistency in the world fulfill the conditions of "systematic"? So if the world behaves in a consistent way, as it appears to according to the laws of physics, and the way that the world behaves affects the evolutionary process, wouldn't this constitute "systematically affected"? — Metaphysician Undercover
One way to think about this is to make the distinction between teleology and teleonomy. The difference is between a telos which is in some way 'pre-existant' and 'external' to the system, and a telos which is generated internally by the system itself. A difference between transcendent and immanent telos. Evolutionary processes, to the degree that there is 'directedness' involved, involves teleonomy, and not teleology — StreetlightX
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