sganesh88 said:
Even that decision regarding when it should migrate would have had a random start right? Then by the copy-paste method(inheritance) of evolution, the organism follows the same decision pattern. Evolution doesn't postulate a sit-and-think model of life.
For example, the development of horns in a bull several thousand(or million) years ago and the way the bull began to use it was random. Copy-pasting over successive generations resulted in bulls having non-random horns and using them in a particular non-random way.
So i think evolution is all about random mutations which get inherited. Inheritance is the one that makes the process seem non-random. But the origin of changes is random.
'Randomness' is *one* of the forces at work. Eg, if weeks prior to some catastrophe the food supply for the birds at their summer place was destroyed by 'legislative action', (voting is not a random thing, i think you'll agree!), the result might be two groups of birds: those who died for lack of food, and those who decided to migrate early , eg..
Such a migration could be 'species saving' or even lethal, if the time of year were such that food existed at the endpoint of the migration.
We must not carry the idea of randomness to inappropriate degrees.
And why do you say that 'thought/thinking' isn't part of the story of evolutionary forces influencing survival? A smart Hutu (during the time of tribal massacres) who sensed the advisability of escaping early on certainly would be more likely to survive the mass killings.
You might think that evolution is singularly based upon randomness but that is incorrect and is an idea not shared by science.
Natural selection is the *opposite* of chance. The most significant forces at work in natural selection are three , and the first two (mutation and gene recombination) are quite random. 'Necessity' is the 3rd element. Natural selection happens in a milieu of the history of what adaptations have been successful in the past: and that by definition shows that it therefore can not be random.
If you (a clever mathematician) and (not one) attend a casino, your history of knowledge of math makes your betting choices not random, or certainly not as random as mine might be. I.e., your history has modified what is possible for you to do .
Likewise, for an organism to evolve, it had by logical necessity to have been able to survive to the point of time in question: this means that what follows can not possibly be entirely random. The 'possibilities' that the organism has to further evolve have been changed to be different from those of his 'siblings', as it were.
The 'genetic background' of any evolving life form restrains as well as promotes future possibilities. Again, this, therefore can not be seen as 'randomness'. Even your computer as you sit there reading/typing away is incapable of any random act. It's physical construction , etc, requires it not to be able to do random things.