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| Survival of the fittest. Sirvival of the fittest is often regard as a way of nature in which the strongest (or, more literally, the fittest) survive and reproduce so as to ensure the continued existence of the species or of the being itself. In reality things are almost as describe above, but not quite. The predicate "fittest" is an a posteriori jusgement. Humanity "labels" the surviving species or being as "fittest". In reality sometimes a being not nearly as fit as another survives a fight, or a "fit" species can be eradicated by a flash flood for instance. The difference between what the term means in reality and what it means in reality can be quite different: the luckiest. I mean to seperate the thoughts of a process from the actual occurances. It is not the "fitness" that makes a being or a species survive; it is survival that makes us call them that.
__________________ Sapere Aude! |
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A few similar thoughts from a very old book: I have seen something else under the sun: The race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong, nor does food come to the wise or wealth to the brilliant or favor to the learned; but time and chance happen to them all. Moreover, no one knows when their hour will come: As fish are caught in a cruel net, or birds are taken in a snare, so people are trapped by evil times that fall unexpectedly upon them. |
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Percentagewise one can predict which creature will have the most chance of survival, but it tells one nothing of what will happen. Statistics are not something one can use as a soothsayer. They only throw dust in the eyes. In the medical line of work realising what would boost the odds of certain species (or substrains) can be very valueble, but you are now speaking of a controlled environment. Reality is in no way controlled, nor controllable. To get to your question if I would still call it a posteriori: yes, I would. The reason huanity knows certain strains are drug-resistant is because that has been observed. Therefore it is an a posteriori judgement. It also is an a posteriori judgement because one can only say so for sure after having observed said process again. This is not what the topic was about though. It was about the distinction between reality and what we think in the subject of survival of the fittest. Indeed the difference of what takes place and what humanity deems to take place. No matter how accurate, the two are not the same and no matter if a judgement is equal to what takes place it is always a posteriori. You seem to be mixing the two up Aedes.
__________________ Sapere Aude! |
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You bring up judgement of "the fittest" in this thread. Can't your argument be applied to any adjective or quality at all? It applies just as much to calling something "big" or "red" as to calling something "fit". (Or the superlatives, biggest, reddest, or fittest). So what do you find unique about "survival of the fittest" that merits its own thread? |
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You are right Aedes, I was basing this argument on the thought that universals do not exist as such. I have posted a great text on this by William of Ockham (here) by the way. For anyone who hasn't read it: enjoy!. I created this topic because of a turn in my discussion with Pyth on Hobbes' Social Contract Theorey (HSCT). It seemed prudent to discuss "survival of the fittest" before continuing. Do you think I should have mentioned that in the opening post?
__________________ Sapere Aude! |
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The term itself was coined by Thomas Huxley, sometimes refered to as Darwin's Bulldog. Evolutionary fitness has never refered to the strongest anything. It has always been about Luck. The "random mutations" that in most cases would make an individual in a species less fit to survive, happen to make it more fit to survive in another ecological niche. So things like natural disaster and general environment change factor into survival evolutionary fitness. The point behind the theory of evolution is debunk any claim to progressional evolution, meaning that a better species replaces the one before it, or better versions of the same species replace worse ones. The theory is to show that evolution is random at its heart and is no respecter of strentgh, progression, species, or individual. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - GoshisDead for the above post! | ||
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Wel said GoshisDead. Allthough I did not know what the reason for the formulation was I think it was well formulated. Do you think the formulation is correct Gosh?
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But we certainly recognize this in science, so it's nothing new. Journals and funding agencies specifically require that you declare and define your outcome measures before doing a study. So if you're doing a study to determine fitness in a past era, you need to in advance decide which data in your study sample will meet your criteria of greater or lower fitness. Similarly, in a prospective report (say I predict that mosquitos will be more fit than polar bears if global warming continues), I still need to define that term and there has to at least be some logic to it. The definition and/or the logic will come from prior understanding. Quote:
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One interesting side note is that many organisms have been shown to reproduce more quickly under environmentally adverse conditions (this is actually true in human populations in which there are high infant / child mortality rates). Thus, adverse conditions may lead to higher reproductive rates that introduce a greater likelihood of advantageous genotypes arising. The mechanism for this is being studied closely in animals in the Chernobyl containment area. |
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