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My point is/was that the natural world is full of mystery and wonder. We haven't discovered everything about everything. It could be that we would have to discover what would hold an advantage.Careful there, the notion that organisms adapt to circumstances is a bit backwards. Organisms don't mutate in order to adapt, mutations occur and then selection pressures render some advantageous...the ones that are produce advantages survive, or at least the ones that don't actively produce disadvantages. So the question is, what selection pressures would make a 9-legged spider hold an advantage?
I don’t know how seriously I can take a poster which was created using AI discussing the nuances of the will to live. Something generated by a non-living program to espouse the virtues of the will to live is a little too meta for me.
Sure, but the analytical step isn't to look at what "adaptations" have occurred but what sorts of things would contribute to selection pressures. @Bradskii's point that the arrangement of the legs would render the specimen particularly vulnerable to predation is salient precisely because it considers the kinds of things that promote or reduce viability.My point is/was that the natural world is full of mystery and wonder. We haven't discovered everything about everything. It could be that we would have to discover what would hold an advantage.
No, you have it backwards (and Fervent beat me to it). Something doesn't evolve to fit something. There's a random variation in the genetic makeup which might give it 9 legs and IF that confers a benefit then the spider may live a little longer than his mates with the usual 8 legs. In which case the genes for 9 legs will be passed on to his (or her) offspring and they will reap the minor benefits of said variation. And that benefit will propagate through the group of spiders in that environment. So the group will evolve. An individual doesn't.Sure, could be that we just haven't discovered what specific circumstances the 9 legged spider has adapted to.
And hey, while we're playing 'Spot the Idiotic Mistake' here's another for you.
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Great, but I wasn't responding based on the scientific developments of what was said. I was responding to the mystery of it all. The deeper perhaps unanswerable question of why. I wasn't addressing the how... I will leave that to the people whose expertise it is to discover.Sure, but the analytical step isn't to look at what "adaptations" have occurred but what sorts of things would contribute to selection pressures. @Bradskii's point that the arrangement of the legs would render the specimen particularly vulnerable to predation is salient precisely because it considers the kinds of things that promote or reduce viability.
See my response to @FerventNo, you have it backwards (and Fervent beat me to it). Something doesn't evolve to fit something. There's a random variation in the genetic makeup which might give it 9 legs and IF that confers a benefit then the spider may live a little longer than his mates with the usual 8 legs. In which case the genes for 9 legs will be passed on to his (or her) offspring and they will reap the minor benefits of said variation. And that benefit will propagate through the group of spiders in that environment. So the group will evolve. An individual doesn't.
When actually what happened is that someone wanted to criticise evolution and showed that they knew so little about the very basics of nature that they couldn't even draw a spider correctly. But this is par for the course. Those that criticise the loudest always seem to know the least about the subject.
And hey, while we're playing 'Spot the Idiotic Mistake' here's another for you.
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It's not a mystery. We know how it happens and why. It's not rocket surgery. The great mystery as far as I'm concerned is why nobody before Darwin's time had figured it out. The details can be incredibly complex, but the basic theory is so simple that it could easily be explained to an eight year old.See my response to @Fervent
Not all of us have moved from human to god status where we know everything. Be patient with me, it's supposed to be a characteristic of a god.It's not a mystery. We know how it happens and why. It's not rocket surgery. The great mystery as far as I'm concerned is why nobody before Darwin's time had figured it out. The details can be incredibly complex, but the basic theory is so simple that it could easily be explained to an eight year old.
I don’t know how seriously I can take a poster which was created using AI discussing the nuances of the will to live. Something generated by a non-living program to espouse the virtues of the will to live is a little too meta for me.
I doubt that we'll ever know everything. They say that the more you know, the more you realise how much you don't know. But evolution is one of the things that we do know very well indeed.Not all of us have moved from human to god status where we know everything.
"Natural selection" and "will to live" seem like two ways of saying the same thing. How are they different?
Yes, no doubt experts are well explored in their various fields. I do not deny that and we should be very grateful for their insights.I doubt that we'll ever know everything. They say that the more you know, the more you realise how much you don't know. But evolution is one of the things that we do know very well indeed.
Yeah, typically people with the most assurance of their knowledge are the least acquainted with anything resembling as much. Which is why wisdom is far more precious than knowledge in my book, and I qualify myself as a philosophical skeptic. Though that realization/quote is in reference to what is known as "deep knowledge" rather than surface claims like the trustworthiness of scientific procedures and the associated theories.They say that the more you know, the more you realise how much you don't know.
If you created that picture not using AI, then I’m concerned about how you think spiders, fish, and birds look. The spider has 9 legs, the bird on the bottom left has a backwards wing, and the fish looks deranged.Oh come on now, Trop, could AI produce a personality as whacky as mine? I've been called all kinda names, but this is a real head scratcher, LOL!
Here's a pic of me for proof...
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