Golf,
The white tiles are the real tiles in your analogy, right? If so, then were dealing with imaginary tiles, one is and one is not. These tiles do not really represent tiles at least not the black ones.
The nature of the tiles really doesn't matter. The point was that the there are some places on the floor where cards can live and some where they cannot. Whether the black tiles are liquid hot magma or ferocious card-eating gremlins doesn't really matter.
You are assuming that as you 'hurl' these cards across the room that half will fall on the white and the other half on the black tiles, right? That's an assumption, correct?
No, it's not an assumption. It is a simple fact that some of the cards will land on black squares and some on white.
Can I assume that the person who 'hurled' the cards was once upon a card that landed on the white tile? If so, how, where and when does this person enter the picture?
That is not necessarily a valid assumption. I'll leave it to you to think about why. And you may be asking about the question of origins, which evolution does not address. (See my discussion with Bas earlier this thread.)
About this environment thing, am I to assume that if 'you' grew up in a warm environment you wouldn't be able to adjust to a cold climate? Am I to underatnd that an Eskimo wouldn't be able to survive in Jamaica and a Jamaican can't survive in the Arctic?
No, that would be totally misunderstanding how evolution works. Evolution is based on hereditary change. Evolution never occurs - ever - inside a single individual. Evolution is based on reproducton and heredity.
So, mankind was 'randomly' thrown into an environment and 'if' he so happens to land on the black tile, he's unfit? This person is not given a chance to adjust to the environment, that explains evolution?
If an organism can adjust to an environment, it means it is fit to survive. It may not be as fit as one that does not have to adjust, so in the end, it may lose out because the naturually fit ones survive better.
Here's an example of how natural selection could change humans. Right now HIV is ravaging Africa. In some countries, up to one third of people are infected. Barring any scientific breakthroughs, this could decimate the population. However, a very small percentage of humans can carry HIV with no ill effects whatsoever. They weren't designed to be immune to HIV (unless God has one hell of a sick sense of humor). They just are, because of random mutations in their DNA.
If HIV is not brought under control, those naturally-immune people will survive much, much better than the non-immune ones. The environment will have "selected" them. They will then pass on the immunity genes to their children, who will in turn survive better than the non-immune ones, and so on. Soon (over generations), the percentage of immune humans will be much higher than it is now. Since these people carry HIV but show no effects, HIV could become even more prevalent in human populations, further ravaging non-immune humans. This could in turn eventually result in the feature of being immune to HIV becoming a prerequisite for human life.
Of course, this may not happen because of human intervention and other factors, but it is one possibility, and it should illustrate how natural selection would choose some humans and kill off (or severely disadvantage) those that don't have the feature.
Personally, I can't 'imagine' liking people to a deck of cards in this scenario. I'm trying to follow your reasoning and that's why I'm asking questions.
The card example was meant to illustrate that something that appears well-designed and perfectly suited to the environment can occur via the sister mechanisms of chance and selection. Chance distributed the cards, environmental selection chose the fit ones. The end result appears to be designed, but it was not.
SNG, as an ironworker since 1962, I can't imagine having a unified structure assembled together without a 'blueprint.
No offense, Golf, but I notice that you really like to play the ironworker card. Buildings are so incredibly different from biological organisms that I hope you'll put your experience aside and consider the evidence I have been presenting.
SNG