Natural patterns (not random patterns) are pretty and interesting.
I suppose random patterns is a bad way of putting it.
But these patterns do stem from random mutations governed by natural selection.
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Natural patterns (not random patterns) are pretty and interesting.
Mutations are not random. And the concept of natural selection "governing" stuff" does appear to make much sense. Perhaps you have a better way of putting?I suppose random patterns is a bad way of putting it.
But these patterns do stem from random mutations governed by natural selection.
Mutations are not random. And the concept of natural selection "governing" stuff" does appear to make much sense. Perhaps you have a better way of putting?
Patterns in nature are not unusual. We regularly see both unspecific and repeated patterns. These are called simple structures. What we do not see often or at all is specific patterns. The trick here is knowing where the balance lies that separates the two. An overly critical person will see some sand dunes and claim it was designed while an overly optimistic one will see a series of platforms with holes through which the sun shines only for a few seconds a year at sunset and claim its a natural occurrence.Very interesting article on random patterns in nature, fractals are such an awesome example of how a simple algorithm can produce amazing patterns that seem designed
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patterns_in_nature
Simply put things break down. We make machines and if we don't maintain them they literally fall apart. Even our own bodies deteriorate. Entropy can roughly be described as the amount of randomness in a system. As complexity decreases entropy and randomness increases. To remove randomness and decrease entropy we have to add complexity again from outside the system.Another way of stating the second law then is: 'The universe is constantly getting more disorderly!' Viewed that way, we can see the second law all about us. We have to work hard to straighten a room, but left to itself it becomes a mess again very quickly and very easily. Even if we never enter it, it becomes dusty and musty. How difficult to maintain houses, and machinery, and our bodies in perfect working order: how easy to let them deteriorate. In fact, all we have to do is nothing, and everything deteriorates, collapses, breaks down, wears out, all by itself—and that is what the second law is all about.
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Simply put things break down. We make machines and if we don't maintain them they literally fall apart. Even our own bodies deteriorate. Entropy can roughly be described as the amount of randomness in a system. As complexity decreases entropy and randomness increases. To remove randomness and decrease entropy we have to add complexity again from outside the system.
Evolution arising from randomness and gaining complexity violates this principle! Nothing in the universe violates it. Even the universe itself is getting less complex. Life as a closed system will also deteriorate and lose complexity without intervention.
Technically speaking, we haven't actually observed anything that is random. We have only observed various degrees of order. At best you can talk of indeterminate states or processes.Simply put things break down. We make machines and if we don't maintain them they literally fall apart. Even our own bodies deteriorate. Entropy can roughly be described as the amount of randomness in a system. As complexity decreases entropy and randomness increases. To remove randomness and decrease entropy we have to add complexity again from outside the system.
Evolution arising from randomness and gaining complexity violates this principle! Nothing in the universe violates it. Even the universe itself is getting less complex. Life as a closed system will also deteriorate and lose complexity without intervention.
Surely "fitness" would be how well suited a species is for its' environment?
Of course it is different for humans, we're evolving much slower because of our reproductive patterns, also we nurture our weak so it's very different.
A guy who ruffies many woman and and impregnates them would be "fitter" than a guy who doesn't, interesting thought though not very humane.
I often think of technologically superior armies taking out lesser technological forces as natural selection, like guns vs spears etc.
I don't know why you think "natural selection is a diminishing factor in our evolution" just because we control our environments better. Natural selection is just the result of fitness differences right? And that still exists irrespective of how well we control our environment.perhaps that is because we largely now control our environments, thus natural selection is a diminishing factor in our evolution.
I don't know why you think "natural selection is a diminishing factor in our evolution" just because we control our environments better. Natural selection is just the result of fitness differences right? And that still exists irrespective of how well we control our environment.
Environment is one factor that plays a role but not the only one. A simple example would be bacteria that can only digest sucrose. This is an intrinsic disposition. It is a quality or power of these bacteria and this, in part, determines their fitness. This fitness/disposition is relative to the environment it lives in. Both the bacteria's intrinsic qualities AND the environment play a part in their survival and reproduction.i understood that if factors in the environment led to you not surviving or reproducing, then natural selection had ultimately determined your evolution. if you took those environmental factors away, then you would ultimately not have been influenced by them, because you would have been able to reproduce.
Ok, so here again are the two factors.take the following example: humans die from a wide range of viral, bacterial etc contagions. humans develop countermeasures. humans survive. it was not (from my understanding) inherited genetic traits which helped them to survive. surely if our advances in beneficial technologies serves to better ensure our survival, these would ultimately lessen the influence of our environment in our evolution?
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Fitness is not meant to be an unchanging quality. Polio or smallpox are not an issue due to two possible reasons.but if smallpox is no longer an issue due to herd immunity, then is it really an issue any more? let's say one day we eradicate polio or smallpox. even if we don't, smallpox currently has very little potential for determining our fitness into the future. add it to a growing list of environmental factors which no longer affect our "fitness", as they no longer act as a filter because we have developed ways to negate their influence.
Yes, while our intrinsic dispositions may not change much, we can alter our environment which in turn leads to fitness differences and natural selection.in the sucrose bug example, if the source of sucrose were to dry up tomorrow, that would be the end of them. however, if certain sources of human nutrition were to vanish tomorrow, we have the options of genetic modification, artificial cultivation or chemical synthesis to derive the necessary nutrients from alternative sources. because the sugar bug can not influence its environment, this course of action is not an option and therefore it is more susceptible to natural selection in this case.
I understand what you are trying to say. My point is that natural selection is not a quantifiable thing that happens less here or more there. Whenever you have fitness difference you have natural selection. The magnitude that each factor contributes towards these fitness differences may change. E.g., an environmental change or a change in the intrinsic dispositions of a creature.please bear in mind that i didn't say that natural selection has NO influence, just that its influence seems to be diminishing at this point in history. as witnessed by our current population. hope it's making sense![]()
And?Looked up lately?
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Of course we haven't because the universe is governed by laws so everything behaves in more or less predictable ways. Then there's also the butterfly effect and that none of us might have been here if that speck of space dust didn't land on our planet. We view things from a set frame of reference so it's hard to determine true randomness but if quantum randomness is true then given two identical universes they may both end completely different.Technically speaking, we haven't actually observed anything that is random. We have only observed various degrees of order. At best you can talk of indeterminate states or processes.
You are right with the idea that we influence or create our environment to such a degree that natural pressures no longer have much control. The problem is that there are also other genetic factors. We keep people with genetic diseases alive just long enough to reproduce thereby weakening our gene pool. Cancer, asthma, allergies, heart defects, or any other genetic disease you can name. They would all be "selected" against not by environmental pressures but simple survivability but these are all seeing an increase in our species.i understood that if factors in the environment led to you not surviving or reproducing, then natural selection had ultimately determined your evolution. if you took those environmental factors away, then you would ultimately not have been influenced by them, because you would have been able to reproduce.
take the following example: humans die from a wide range of viral, bacterial etc contagions. humans develop countermeasures. humans survive. it was not (from my understanding) inherited genetic traits (their "fitness") which helped them to survive. surely if our advances in beneficial technologies serves to better ensure our survival, these would ultimately lessen the influence of our environment in our evolution?
maybe my grammar/terminology is the issue here. i'm an evolution noob. please explain.
And?