Guy Threepwood
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- Oct 16, 2019
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"To which it is constrained"
Care to be specific, like what "non random" law and how it affects the topic at hand?
If not it has the look of vaguest of generalizations
It varies case by case but I will give you two contrasting examples:
Dawkin's 'Weasel' program, uses randomly generated characters to create the sentence 'me thinks it looks like a weasel'
This is possible because the entire sentence is provided as a 'fitness function' to select the closest match at each new generation
i.e. the 'laws' in this case constrain the result to one single specific outcome which is guaranteed.
Without this constraint the program would never create such informational content in any practical period of time
Natural selection on the other hand has very little constraint- it in no way constrains a single celled bacteria to one day develop into a human being- a means by which the universe may contemplate it's own existence!
Within this weak constraint, there are an infinite number of potential outcomes which utterly fail to achieve this result- including an infinite number of complete extinction-of-all-life scenarios.
And so more laws would be required to constrain 'random mutations' into a specific result with such volumes of functional informational content. (in DNA)
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