Can you have it both ways? If mutations are random, then process is random.
Really now?
Let's evaluate that claim, shall we?
Let's look at a coin sorting device. This can be somehting really simple. For example, all coins (1c, 2c, 5c, 10c, 20c, 50c, 1€ and 2€) have different sizes/dimensions. You could fabricate a simple thing out of wood or plastic, where coins "roll" through, with holes on the bottom in the various shapes of the coins, the small ones in the beginning and progressively bigger to the end.
So the 10c coin will roll over the holes for 1c, 2c and 5c to finally "drop through" the 10c hole.
In the input bag, they are all mixed together. So the
input is random - you don't know what the next coin will be. It can be any of those coins.
Yet the end result of this process will be anything but "random". You'll end up with 8 bags of neatly sorted coins. You won't find €1 coins in the bag of 10c coins.
So the lesson here is quite simple...
If the
processing of the
random input isn't a
random process, then the output will
not be
random either.
And that's exactly what evolution is.
Natural Selection, much like the coin sorting device, acts like a
filter upon the
random input coming from mutations. Which
random mutations ends up surviving, being past on to off spring and eventually achieving fixation in the genome is
not random at all.
There is an easy to understand logic that regulates this process. Natural Selection.
The
input is random.
The
process is not.
Therefore, neither is the
outcome.
What you call "evolution" is not end state, it's a process. Process cannot be random and not random at the same time.
A process typically consists of, at minimum, three things:
- input
- processing logic
- output
In evolution, this translates to:
- mutation during reproduction
- natural selection
- survival & go back to step 1
The input is random.
The process itself is not.
It's one of the two. If it is random, then you have orders (upon orders) of magnitude more failed tests, and however you choose to explain their distinction, there should be evidence of it.
And there is. Lots and lots of it.