Yes but isn't your prediction simply stating that "if an organism's descendants survive until (it is certain that) a trait evolves, then it is certain that the trait will evolve"?But that is not what the paper is saying, the authors are saying that this experiment is support for the idea that if one could "rerun the tape of evolution" one would get (significantly) different outcomes. How is this "predictable"?
I explained precisely how, and gave an example of an experiment that verifies that prediction.
There was the other caveat which you missed out, which was if another incompatible trait hadn't evolved beforehand. For example, a herbivore's descendants might eat the leaves from the top of a tree by becoming smaller, and better able to climb on small twigs, or by becoming larger and reaching these twigs. One reduces the possibility of the other.
I am interested in the discussion that is occurring in evolutionary biology which is between the school of thought that states evolution is broadly repeatable (many paths but few destinations") and the opposing school of thought which states that it is not broadly repeatable, (many paths many destinations).
Fair enough, we were cross-posting.You are missing out the fact that *eventually* this trait would evolve, if the population hadn't been wiped out in the meantime, or the environment hadn't changed, or if another incompatible trait hadn't evolved first.
I didn't miss that - I already commented on it, in fact.
This is also a very simple ecosystem. With more different types of interactions, and with longer time, there would be more scope for more random events to alter the course of evolution.
So what? Every scientific theory in the history of human thought is subject to exactly the same criticism. They are all simplifications, models for reality that do not take every possible event into account. They tell us what will happen under certain limited and controlled conditions, not simply what will happen.
There are simplifications and simplifications. The experimental setup was designed to minimise the effect of random factors, to investigate whether the same results would occur if you "reran the tape" of evolution. In other words whether evolution is broadly repeatable or not. The authors' conclusion is that it is not even in the simplest of environments.
In any more complex environment, random interactions would be even more important.
Your prediction doesn't work if the descendants become extinct, which is the usual fate.But these are nontrivial qualifying statements. Only a tiny minority of any organisms successfully reproduce. Most organisms that have lived have no living descendants. Most species that have existed have no living descendants.
And?
As I have said before, if the environment is stable then over short-enough times the randomness is unimportant. Over tens of thousands of generations, random factors significantly alter the course of evolution so that entire ecosystems and their niches work completely differently.