Rick Reuben wrote:Mark Van Deel wrote: I'm saying it doesn't matter, in this case, if the pool is truly random, or just looks like it is. The important part is the selection process.
Nope. The explanation for the existence of the matter is more valuable than any assumptions made about their behavior afterwards.
I never mentioned matter or how it appeared. I'm talking about evolution - living things reproducing, changes in populations over time etc. Maybe I should be clearer. I'm saying that if, for example, half the kids in a generation have slightly longer fingers than their parents had, and half have slightly shorter fingers, it doesn't matter to natural selection whether this was God's doing or not. It'll still tend to pick the long fingered kids, if long fingers help them live longer and get laid more.
If God is only controlling the apparently random part, i.e. mutation, in a way that mimics actual randomness, it doesn't make him an 'intelligent designer'. The 'design' is achieved by a completely natural, unconscious, un-god, but still non-random, selection process. So if you're arguing that the results of evolution show signs of intelligent design, can you explain what part God plays in non-random natural selection?