Jumi
Well-Known Member
See this is what I meant by people not understanding probabilities. If you had been playing poker for billions of years many hands a second with trillions of stars holding trillions of "players" would you say that it would never happen?And I've heard that argument before too- But you can see the problem with it, if the poker player plays 4 royal flushes in a row winning a million bucks, and as the 'anti fraud' guy at the casino- you tell your boss not to worry; it happened so it has a probability of 1! let him keep playing- no need to suspect cheating!
A casino wouldn't let him play if he had two royal flushes in a row anyway even if was an antropomorphic God creating him the hand. I've played royal flush back in the day and it was of course just as likely as getting any other hand combination that exists four in a deck. Of course the mind said that this royal flush is an anomaly, but like luck would have it I didn't win the million dollars, because no one else had cards to play to the end and the bets were casual to begin with.
I still see the point being that this is how you feel like, because you prefer the option that everything was just magically put together and hasn't changed since then. That kind of thing sounds incredible doesn't it?Point being- of course chance is always possible, that does not mean it's least improbable explanation.
To make it clear, you're talking about abiogenesis or just evolution here.Call it neo-Darwinism if you prefer, it still posits pure blind chance as the originator of new biological features/ information- that's the mathematically problematic part, and learning more about how DNA functions is not helping the case
Computers don't share any reasoning, subjective or objective. Neither does DNA. Which computer lab sims are you refering to?Right: computers don't share our subjective reasoning. That's why Darwinian evolution does not work as well in computer sims or lab experiments as it does in our imaginations.
That's a common creationist argument, still waiting on the proof of that.Personally I believe this is ultimately (ironically? ) a case of anthropomorphism: everything we do and think and say, is in anticipation of a future consequence, just like optical illusions- it is utterly impossible for us to completely remove the bias of our fundamental brain-wiring from our thought experiments, but a computer can. And without the benefit of anticipation of future consequences, the ability to retain potentially advantageous design changing 'errors' is practically eliminated. The overwhelmingly greater number of deleterious mutations would reign- in a word: Entropy