Another one!
I've already dealt with random incidents. Your now the fourth person to raise something I've already addressed.
Try reading the posts.
It seems that people are so incensed about this that they enter to kill the heretic without reading what's been written.
The 'random event' issue was raised pages ago. Someone asked me what would happen if I were killed by a truck.
My posts #47 and #56 have discussed a meteor strike.
Around and around we go.
In theory I could be wrong in my addressing these circumstances, but at least I've addressed them. For people to simply enter the thread and come up with a random event without addressing what I've written on this very matter is rather silly.
Wooo, drop the persecution complex. I was busy between my first post on this thread (#16) and my most recent one (#70), and I didn't have time to follow up on where the thread was going. I'm sorry for missing your posts #47 and #56 on this issue. I would argue that it is entirely understandable that your #61, taken by itself, elicited the terse response that it did from me. Now that I have a bit more time, though, I see that you said this in your #56:
At best you have a situation where 'natural selection' co-exists with these random acts and therefore what is not 'fit' survives because natural selection didn't take any action which in no way negates that natural selection is about that which survives survives.
Can you see that you are making nonsense of your own ideas?
If "survival of the fittest" is tautological then
it is always true.
"It will rain tomorrow or it will not rain tomorrow" is tautological. It is also always true. There is no possible world in which the statement "It will rain tomorrow or it will not rain tomorrow" is not true.
You have claimed that "the fittest survive" is similarly a tautological statement. But that can only be true if there is no possible world in which the fittest do not survive. But, you have claimed precisely that it
is possible for the fittest to not survive, namely when "natural selection" does not take action.
And again, are you reading what you yourself write? If natural selection is tautological, then it
must always be applicable. The law of the unmarriedness of bachelors (i.e. "All bachelors are unmarried") is tautological: a definitional tautology, to be precise. Precisely
because it is tautological, it
never fails to apply. If natural selection were similarly tautological, then it would never fail to apply, and you would never be able to show a case in which it is false. But you yourself have said that sometimes "natural selection" does not take action.
I do not begrudge your naivete in biology; I have never taken biology classes past high school level myself. But if you want to call something tautological, I expect you to understand basic logic, and I find that understanding lacking in you.