Gawdzilla wrote:That implies Paris Hilton is going to reproduce.kiki5711 wrote:how about "survival of the richest"?



Gawdzilla wrote:That implies Paris Hilton is going to reproduce.kiki5711 wrote:how about "survival of the richest"?
I smell a political motivation for the study.AnInconvenientScotsman wrote:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11063939
To summarise, a PhD student from Bristol University has published an article detailing how biodiversity varies directly with 'living space'; then, they have interpreted this as meaning that the availability of habitat and food is the primary driving force of evolution - not 'survival of the fittest'.
Would this not support what we already know, though? Why would species die out from lack of space or food? Because they can't compete with the other species occupying that space or the species that they share a food source with, I'm sure. Thoughts?
hackenslash wrote:Memes aren't genes, they're analogous and, like all analogies, there are limitations to its applicability.Robert_S wrote:But memetic selection does not seem to.hackenslash wrote:I always preferred accurate to pithy. YMMV.
Take the "most" out of it? The difference between first and second in the survival game is a very close run thing,The Mad Hatter wrote:Well, Survival of the fittest isn't innaccurate if you read it as 'that most well fit to its environment'
Well, apart from the fact that that doesn't actually parse correctly in English, it still isn't accurate, because the word 'most' implies that only the strong survive, which is anything but accurate. If you want a pithy but accurate phrase, then mine is the one I'll go with, because it gives precisely the right picture and is unambiguous.The Mad Hatter wrote:Well, Survival of the fittest isn't innaccurate if you read it as 'that most well fit to its environment'
In The Extended Phenotype (I think), Dawkins defines 6 or 7 different types of fitness commonly used by different biologists, with quite different implications depending on which you use.hackenslash wrote:Already been done. Fitness is defined as an expectation with regard to number of offspring.Pappa wrote:First define fitness.
The term has always been misleading. It should be 'survival to reproduction of the sufficiently fit, on average'.
Keep in mind, too, that even accepting natural selection as an integral part of evolutionary theory, Darwin himself spent many years lecturing that there is, in fact, a lot more to evolution.Robert_S wrote:If I'm not mistaken, Darwin didn't really think to much of the phrase.Pappa wrote:Darwin was explicit about that when he explained his theory too.Eriku wrote:Surely the survival of the fittest implies that there is competition over the resources in the habitat? If no conflict arises, then obviously other factors will be the main driving force... And where conflicts arise you can be pretty sure that if only one species survives, that species was the fittest. Unless artifical selection intervened, of course.
You appear to be assuming that inter-species competition is more important than intra-species competition in evolution - not necessarily so.Eriku wrote:Surely the survival of the fittest implies that there is competition over the resources in the habitat? If no conflict arises, then obviously other factors will be the main driving force... And where conflicts arise you can be pretty sure that if only one species survives, that species was the fittest. Unless artifical selection intervened, of course.
There is something in what this guy says. But what he says is not exactly new. Benign conditions like the warm rain forests do allow for greater biodiversity, because the stress levels are less, so extinctions are less. You don't get the climate butting in and wiping out the more marginal species.AnInconvenientScotsman wrote: To summarise, a PhD student from Bristol University has published an article detailing how biodiversity varies directly with 'living space'; then, they have interpreted this as meaning that the availability of habitat and food is the primary driving force of evolution - not 'survival of the fittest'.
Would this not support what we already know, though? Why would species die out from lack of space or food? Because they can't compete with the other species occupying that space or the species that they share a food source with, I'm sure. Thoughts?
That's not necessarily the case.Deersbee wrote: Furthermore, recently obtained DNA analysis suggests several population bottlenecks caused by environmental catastrophes reduced our species to just a few hundred individuals as recently as 70000 years ago...
+1Clinton Huxley wrote:Survival of the headline-grabbing sound-bite.
Move on, nothing to see.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests