Originally Posted by articulett
http://www.biomimicryinstitute.org/
The goal really of all "evolution" is to make something that can grow and evolve and get replicated... humans try to make products that work... nature can't help but do that... we can learn from the eons of experimentation... the "goal" is always to make more and better and more efficient "things" from the information that is evolving... things even more suited for the environment they are in. This is true of animals and our technology. If information could "think" it would all be trying to be replicated in some form in the future via it's vehicles and replicators-- those that "win" become part of evolving systems--species, technology, languages, etc.
Nothing is based on anything brand new--it's all refining and tweaking and clarifying the information accumulated from the eons past...
So I take it then that this whole Science hype isn't really necessary to technological inovation. Spiders build webs and birds build nests without "doing science."
What we call "Scientific" knowledge and theory is not indicative of or a result of so-called "intelligence," but is the result of a trail and error selection process that saves what works and is acceptble in the wider environment of ideas. Randomness and peer selection.
OK, humans have journals, but spiders don't. But evolution rolls on, journals, science, intelligence notwithstanding.
Computers we not invented, they evolved.
(Well, it wasn't the computers that evolved. It was the information.)
If information could "think"
But information doesn't think.
If the information that made a computer design evolved in a process akin to biological evolution, then changes to the design of a computer would have been random, some beneficial, some bad, and the beneficial design features would reproduce. There would be no analysis of the system with people saying that faster gates were needed, and they could be achieved by shrinking feature size, oxide thickness and voltages. There would be no analysis of bottlenecks and people
trying to fix bottlenecks in the processors. The source of the variation would be completely different to that which actually happened. The "selection" would also be different. There would be no analysis of failures,
and attempts to fix these failures.
In answer to an earlier question of Apathia's:
Sometimes (Often?) in history, technology has led science: the cannon before Newton's laws of motion for example, but arguably the two defining inventions of the twentieth century, the atom bomb and the transistor, were both invented as a result of directed research and engineering effort applied to apply principles from the two defining physical theories of the twentieth century, relitivity and quantum mechanics.
In both these cases, science initially led engineering.
This in completely unlike any process of biological evolution, although maybe one could argue that it does have some similarities with lamarkian evolution.
There are different sinatures omne would expect from evolved systems compared to intelligently developed systems. Only evolutionary approaches can produce "very complex" working systems.
Evolutionary systems can't reuse information from different "ancestors", whilst technological systems can. Pneumatic tyres didn't need to evolve separately for cars and aircraft. The eye needed to evolve separately in moluscs and vertebrates, and sometimes extra eyes have evolved from scratch in individual species. A designed system would tend to reuse what had been designed.