I'm amazed! We agree on something.Natural selection does apply to all of those situations.
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I'm amazed! We agree on something.Natural selection does apply to all of those situations.
What definition of natural selection are you using? Certainly not any that I am familiar with. Darwin's summary is:Natural selection does apply to all of those situations. Evolutionary biology, however, is only concerned with natural selection as it applies to living organisms - it makes no statements about the origins of life or the existence of matter.
How so? Natural selection works through the subject being able to reproduce (or not, as the case may be) and pass along its genetic material.Natural selection does apply to all of those situations.
I agree, too! It's a giant love-fest!Hammegk said:I'm amazed! We agree on something.
As in, for example, the birth of stars from the remnants of previous stars.Upchurch said:How so? Natural selection works through the subject being able to reproduce (or not, as the case may be) and pass along its genetic material.
I have to disagree. The formation of a new star based on the material of old star is not dependant upon the old star's ability to survive in its environment.But it's something similar to selection.
No, it doesn't. Natural selection is really only concerned with the persistance of arrangements - biological reproduction is only an particular example of the more general principle.How so? Natural selection works through the subject being able to reproduce (or not, as the case may be) and pass along its genetic material.
That's not really a good example.As in, for example, the birth of stars from the remnants of previous stars.
How in the world are those examples of natural selection?A better one would be osmosis. Or the rounding of pebbles in a streambed or ancient desert. Or a sand-sifter.
So, a completely different definition than Darwin's.No, it doesn't. Natural selection is really only concerned with the persistance of arrangements - biological reproduction is only an particular example of the more general principle.
So, a completely different definition than Darwin's.
Or anyone else's, for that matter, since it completely leaves out the mechanism in natural selection that interrupts "the persistance of arrangements".So, a completely different definition than Darwin's.
In all the cases I cited above, certain objects disappear if they do not happen to "follow the pressure."Or is extinction not a part of natural selection?
Once upon a time, there was a complete void in space.
Hold on! I agree that the term natural selection is confusing and misleading here.
But there certainly are selection pressures for events other than biological ones. Here's one: There is significant pressure for a trickle of water to follow depressions in the ground rather than small hillocks. Another: There is pressure for a planetoid to end up in certain orbits around its sun. How about: There is pressure for mountains to appear where tectonic plates are compressing.
In all the cases I cited above, certain objects disappear if they do not happen to "follow the pressure."
~~ Paul
They left out the last line: "That one REALLY shows my total ignorance!"Ok, it does not really belong here, but nowhere else either...I am so pissed off at my local paper. Today's editorial cartoon?
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So...does my paper now openly advocate ignorance?
Well, the ones that can't see above themselves are beaten down by falling rocks, right? Yes, I understand that "selection pressure" does not mean physical pressure.PatKelley said:I think you might be misapprehending pressure in this context. Living organisms do not conform by being beaten down, as in water in a graviational field or pebbles being rounded.
(raises eyebrow) Darwin was addressing the subject of change in biological organisms. Not surprisingly, he was concerned with selection pressures that operate on biological organisms.So, a completely different definition than Darwin's.
I know you've already given what you think are examples of this, but could you please expain how these are examples?Nature exercises selection in other ways that reproduction and (biological) competition, too.