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02-28-2003, 10:29 AM | #211 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:33 AM | #212 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:46 AM | #213 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:47 AM | #214 | |
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Mutations are random Natural Selection is not random So, yes, evolution involves a huge amount of randomness, and I don't think anyone is denying that. |
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02-28-2003, 10:50 AM | #215 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:52 AM | #216 |
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Living things are here, and show a tendency to reproduce, because they would not be here otherwise. The first thing that replicated didn't need a purpose to exist, or a purpose to replicate. It just needed to happen to have features that caused it to reproduce.
When you get lots of these replicators and the replication isn't always perfect, some of them accumulate random mutations. If those random mutations happen to help it replicate more efficiently, or prevent the individual replicator from being destroyed, this is an advantage to the replicator, and all its descendents will have this advantage too. This can apply to any system of replication, even in non-living things like computer code. We just happen to apply it to cells and organisms here, but people have carried out experiments like this with electronic circuits. By simply destroying replicators that fail to replicate or fail to gather materials essential for their survival, you allow a change in the next generation, where the individuals that survive will be better equipped for survival and replication. The human mind has developed substantial pleasurable incentives to reproduce and survive, because those that did not wish to reproduce as strongly simply did not pass on those genes. So it's not an unusual opinion to think that evolution has a purpose, because our minds are just wired to see benefits in reproduction and survival. But that doesn't mean nature has a purpose. Destruction of the less fit replicators creates a pressure to replicate and more effectively, that's it. As soon as you get a situation with imperfect replicators where the environment kills the lest fit individuals, you get evolution. No miracles required. |
02-28-2003, 10:54 AM | #217 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:57 AM | #218 | |
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02-28-2003, 10:57 AM | #219 | |
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02-28-2003, 11:15 AM | #220 |
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Keith, just because you cannot understand how mutations work does not mean they ae miraculous. If I were going to jump to conclusions I would guess it is because you received a sub-standard science education, have never read National Geographic or watched a biology show on PBS, much less read Nature or Science, and/or you have been lied to from the pulpit.
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