Southwind17; said:
How the traits/elements pass/incorporate is IRRELEVANT to the analogy of what's OBSERVED 'in the field'. There are no books on evolutionary theory or design technology lying around on the ground in the Savannah next to the lion and the land rover!
Irrelevant to the analogy of what's OBSERVED afterwards. Drop it!
Irrelevant to the analogy of what's OBSERVED afterwards. Drop it!
Irrelevant to the analogy of what's OBSERVED afterwards. Drop it!
Irrelevant to the analogy of what's OBSERVED afterwards. Drop it!
The above assertions are not correct. Because living things Evolved, and were not designed, they retain "undesirable" features that cannot be discarded of changed. Human feet and the human back are inordinately prone to injury because their form is ill suited to the function of bipedal locomotion. However, because natural selection only modifiers what is available through small steps, we're stuck with them. There will never be a rapid change in the form of these features, as there can be overnight in the design of a machine.
Example: Two bicycles of similar design can have radically different wheels merely because the designer wants solid core wheels rather than spokes, and it's as easy for the designer to make that change as it is to retain the spoke design. Machines are clearly made by intelligent designers, who actively seek out flaws, correct them, and institute radical overhauls. Because the creation process for machines bears no resemblance to the creation process of living things, machines are not restricted in retaining the characteristics of earlier machines, as living things necessarily are.
Which is why we're only using machines as an analogy; they must be different, by definition. How they compare absolutely is irrelevant. How they separately came to be complex like they are is entirely the point.
No machine is perfect, and if the 'ideal' materials have yet to be developed then the machine MUST 'inherit' those of its predecessor, for the time being. For 'selection pressure' read: 'technological advancement', or 'consumer demand'.
But the end result in both instances is increased complexity and/or better functionality.
No, a thousand times no. The result of evolution is living things that effectively perpetuate themselves. That present life forms include highly complex creatures is nothing but an incidental emergent property. Evolution is
not trying to build fast, sleek, strong, smart animal, Evolution is creating things that are good at perpetuating themselves. Televisions are not made to perpetuate more televisions.
True, but we're excluding those examples. We're talking about machines displaying incremental improvement only.
Every new machine is designed by humans, who can take characteristics from anywhere, including things they just thought up. There's no resemblance between inherited DNA and machine design. The process is important, because the characteristics of the final product are informed by the process.
We're NOT comparing 'them'; you are! We're simply comparing the very similar MANIFEST incremental changes that apply to both evolved organisms and designed machines!
The whole premise of your OP is to educate someone about Evolution through comparison to the development of machine designs.
I've highlighted the most pertinent aspects of this response for a reason. Please feel free to dwell on them, and re-read, if necessary.
Get it, now?!
I understand your point, I just disagree with the validity of it.