um.....now are you guys going to stick to you guns and say all mutations are random?
The fact is, If the environment is shown to cause a mutation to happen then it would infer direction. Toe, however insists that life is not directed. That was the whole point of
Origin of Species, and that's the point of neo-darwinism in general -- to get around direction. However, look at this quote: (I bought the book tonight.)
When E. coli is grown on glucose or other sources of carbon, very little beta-galactosidse is present and the enzyme is made at a slow, almost undetectable drip. E. coli doesn't waste its energy making enzymes it doesn't need or can't use. But when lactose is added to a bacterial culture and glucose is absent, the rate of enzyme production is cranked up a thousand-fold and its presence can be detected in just three minutes. Somehow the bacterium senses the presence of lactose and is induced to make the right enzyme when it is needed. How can such a simple cell "know" what enzymes to make? (my emphasis) Sean Carrol -- Endless Forms Most Beautiful pg.56
http://www.iscid.org/boards/ubb-get_...00345-p-4.html
this is a description of what randomness means from a well-informed neodarwin evolutionist:
Mutation is random in two senses. First, although we may be able to predict the probability that a certain mutation will occur, we cannot predict which of a large number of gene copies will undergo the mutation. The spontaneous process of mutation is stochastic rather than deterministic. Second, and more importantly, mutation is random in the sense that the chance that a particular mutation will occur is not influenced by whether or not the organism is in an environment in which that mutation would be advantageous
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Well I'd say it's about time to pack this thing in and go home. If you are calling that E. coli mutation a random mutation INDEPENDENT of the environment, then I cannot help you. The fact is, no one in their right mind would call that mutation random -- thus the neodarwin theory, as proclaimed by an evolutionist -- and no doubt atheist -- is officially dead.