So where does the shape of an eye-lens come from?
...Not from the outside: nature (as in: "natural selection")...
The particular shape if a lens, the fact that a lens "should be" translucent, these facts do not directly derive from the environment; they are not somehow specified in the outside world. (No, also not in the mind of some god.)
...Nor from the inside...
There is no, let's say, a-priory knowledge of lens-shape or -functioning inside the genome or elsewhere in the biological system that is the target of natural selection, nor an inherent tendency to produce lens-shape structures.
X
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Feedback
So, in adaptive evolution, there are two types of causal links.
There is:
(1) environmental change ---------> evolutionary change
There is also:
(2) evolutionary change ---------> evolutionary change.
The elementary fact that the outcome of (2) is the same as its input, provides an element of feedback.
This feedback may well account for long term macroevolutionary trends.
(By the way, in (2) I mean evolutionary change of the population under consideration, not of the species around it, which fall under environmental change.)
X
There is:
(1) environmental change ---------> evolutionary change
There is also:
(2) evolutionary change ---------> evolutionary change.
The elementary fact that the outcome of (2) is the same as its input, provides an element of feedback.
This feedback may well account for long term macroevolutionary trends.
(By the way, in (2) I mean evolutionary change of the population under consideration, not of the species around it, which fall under environmental change.)
X
Again... (with image)
Can this sort of environmental change lead to this sort of evolutionary change (long term trend), or not?
X
Environment & Human Evolution
The fact that adaptive evolution may well depend on the individuals changing themselves and not just on environmental change, is especially important in human evolution, because there is an extra source of change: culture.
Cultural changes changed the relation of the hominins with their environment, changing the selective regime.
This, and not environmental change, may well account for the many things that have happened in human evolution
The fact that there were many shifts in temperature&precipitation, as well as a slight trend (decline) in temperature, during the last 7 million years doesn't quite add up to an explanation of, say, the steady increase in brain-size in human evolution.
X
Cultural changes changed the relation of the hominins with their environment, changing the selective regime.
This, and not environmental change, may well account for the many things that have happened in human evolution
The fact that there were many shifts in temperature&precipitation, as well as a slight trend (decline) in temperature, during the last 7 million years doesn't quite add up to an explanation of, say, the steady increase in brain-size in human evolution.
X
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Change leads to Change
To make the set of (necessary) causal relations, aluded to in the last post, more explicit:
1 There is, due to selection or chance, evolutionary change.
2 This changes the properties of the organisms of a population.
3 This changes the relation of the organisms and their environment.
4 This changes the set of selection pressures acting on the population.
5 Leading to further change.
(repeat)
Ergo: there can be a whole series of evolutionary changes, macroevolution, due to selection, apart from any environmental change.
X
1 There is, due to selection or chance, evolutionary change.
2 This changes the properties of the organisms of a population.
3 This changes the relation of the organisms and their environment.
4 This changes the set of selection pressures acting on the population.
5 Leading to further change.
(repeat)
Ergo: there can be a whole series of evolutionary changes, macroevolution, due to selection, apart from any environmental change.
X
Environment & Macroevolution
There is a common assumption that a population changes only when the environment changes. This may well be wrong.
What constitutes a selection pressure is a consequence of both:
1 the environment
2 the properties of the organism.
This implies that there can be a series of changes in a population, theoretically without end, just because the organism changes. This is change apart from any environmental change.
X
What constitutes a selection pressure is a consequence of both:
1 the environment
2 the properties of the organism.
This implies that there can be a series of changes in a population, theoretically without end, just because the organism changes. This is change apart from any environmental change.
X
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Design comes from Nowhere
I'd like to make it clear, once and for all, that in nature, design, or rather that what we humans tend to recognize as design, really does come from nowhere.
Where does the shape of an eye-lens come from? From Nowhere.
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Where does the shape of an eye-lens come from? From Nowhere.
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Vain Search
I was rather struck by this citation from Darwin's "Origin Of Species":
In short, we shall have to treat species in the same manner as those naturalists treat genera, who admit that genera are merely artificial combinations made for convenience. This may not be a cheering prospect; but we shall at least be freed from the vain search for the undiscovered and undiscoverable essence of the term species.
The vain search is still with us.
In short, we shall have to treat species in the same manner as those naturalists treat genera, who admit that genera are merely artificial combinations made for convenience. This may not be a cheering prospect; but we shall at least be freed from the vain search for the undiscovered and undiscoverable essence of the term species.
The vain search is still with us.
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