Really? The most effecient and advantageous thing possible? Of all possible mutations?Darth Wong wrote:You know, I actually assumed you must be reasonably well-educated until you spouted that idiotic tripe. Natural selection creates enormous pressure to have the most advantageous variations possible, because all other variations tend to be wiped out.Middleclass wrote:Natural selection offers no such thing. A species can evolve some mutation, over a great deal of time, which is more advantagous than before. But there is no pressure to have the most advantagous thing possible.
I mean, I may have mis-stated my point, but it sounds to me like your endorsing the idea that every mutation is perfect for the species it occurs in, that there is no possible mutation which would increase a genetic Pareto Effeciency.
To my knowledge, evolution only produces changes that create comparative advantage. Being able to out compete is far different from having the best of all possible mutations.
Allow me to restate my point for the sake of clarity. What I was trying to say is that if evolution were guided by an intelligence, then the outcome is drastically different. Take, for example, peacocks. They have enormous tailfeathers that make it easier for predators to catch them, but easier for them to attract a female. On the whole, a reproductive advantage, and a product of evolution. But if this resembled an economy, then peacocks would be agreeing with one another to have their tails reduced by half. The peacocks who enjoy the longest tails, and hence the easiest mating, still would. But all peacocks would find it easier to run away from enemies. Evolution, at least in this case, has failed to produce a Pareto Effeciency, which is a characteristic of the market.
That is all I meant by evolution failing to produce the best possible outcome.