Its okay....
Please refer to my post 216.
Let me repost it for you....
And...I am not alone in calling NS a metaphor.....
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12304-021-09405-3
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Charles Darwin (1859) introduced the idea of natural selection (a non-intentional filter) as a metaphorical comparison with artificial (intended) selection. There is no actual selection carried out by natural ‘selection’. Nature – in this case the different rates of survival – is simply a passive filter. Yet it is often presented as the active driver of evolution.
There are active drivers of evolution, to which I will return later, but it is an illusion to think that ‘blind’ natural selection is really ‘selecting’ or could be an ‘active’ driver. It is an illusion with important consequences because it can lead people to think that real selection, by organisms themselves with the power to do so, cannot even exist. ........ That idea is itself an illusion generated by a conceptual mistake, which is to confuse the metaphor of selection with reality. If all evolutionary change is produced by natural (unintended) selection, then no organisms can have the power of real, intended selection. As I have already noted, this move to exclude genuine agency was first made in the nineteenth century by Alfred Russel Wallace, leading him to disagree with Darwin’s distinction between natural and artificial selection.
I think Darwin was right and was brilliantly foresighted to resist Wallace’s attempt to subsume intentional sexual (and by implication other forms of social) selection to natural selection. Brilliant because I think he must have been aware of the importance of the distinction he was making. He did not use the word agency, but I think he would have agreed with biosemioticians that the concept is necessary to understand the meanings organisms give to the signs and communicative paradigms they use (Tønnessen 2015a).
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I've read it. He's not saying what you say he's saying. Yes he's saying that the phrase 'natural selection' is a metaphor.
He's not saying that it's not happening. He's not saying that it doesn't have the exact effects that science suggests it has. He's saying that nature isn't actually making a choice, because nature doesn't have that capacity.
Where he differs from me (and, I'd suggest, from conventional scientific wisdom) is that he's saying the variation upon which natural selection operates is not random, that organisms have some capacity to preordain their variation or... something, it's not very clear exactly what he is suggesting, from this.
Essentially, the natural selection part is a metaphor, it always has been, he's calling that out because - he says - people misinterpret that mean that nature is choosing, and it isn't.
He doesn't think variation is random for... reasons... and conventional scientific wisdom thinks that, at the scale of evolutionary biology, it functionally is random.
O.