For me your modified argument still hits home, because I think of the evolutionary argument as one for plausibility without saying much about likelihood beyond more than epsilon. That the causal mechanism for the discontinuity may be different than originally thought, it doesn’t make the discontinuity go away, nor the possibility that a discontinuity might still arise.
For me your modified argument still hits home, because I think of the evolutionary argument as one for plausibility without saying much about likelihood beyond more than epsilon. That the causal mechanism for the discontinuity may be different than originally thought, it doesn’t make the discontinuity go away, nor the possibility that a discontinuity might still arise.