Guy Threepwood
Well-Known Member
- Oct 16, 2019
- 1,143
- 73
- 53
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Married
Evolution applies to populations rather than individuals. In evolutionary terms, success broadly means producing more viable offspring than the population average. In the population as a whole, the main contributions in this respect will come from the genetically fitter individuals. That's basically what evolutionary fitness means.
But random mutations, the ultimate source of all genetic novelty (according to ToE)- apply to individuals do they not?
Sure, superior designs will tend to out perform, outlast, and be replicated in greater numbers than inferior ones. That's why we see more Ford Mustangs on the road today than Ford Pintos.
The problem remains- how do you produce the superior designs before they can be selected?
We might want to select slight individual lucky mutations for future pay off, but nature has no such anticipation- the advantage has to be significant, right here, right now, yet significant advantages are very hard to come by through chance.
'micro-steps' at some point just don't work, an insignificant advantage is just that- an insignificant advantage= insignificant selection pressure.
Upvote
0