Evolution by natural selection

From Issuepedia
Revision as of 21:05, 27 May 2008 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (→‎Related Pages: evidence)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Overview

Evolution by natural selection (EbNS) is a scientific theory which explains the process of species origins, i.e. how the different species of life on Earth came to be.

It is often referred to as simply "the theory of evolution" or just "evolution", although this is actually a conflation of two different concepts:

  • evolution refers to the idea that the nature of a species can change (or "evolve") over time – a fact which can be directly observed over human timescales, especially in lower life-forms such as bacteria.
  • natural selection refers to the idea that competition for scarce resources inevitably leads to a contest in which those who are more "fit", i.e. those individuals whose particular characteristics make them more likely to win the "competition" for those resources, are more likely to survive and pass any heritable component of that "fitness" on to their descendants.

These two processes in combination lead to a typically very slow but nonetheless almost inescapable gradual improvement of the "fitness" of any particular species.

Controversy

The main controversies surrounding this theory relate to whether this gradual improvement is sufficient to account for:

  • the creation of life from inanimate matter (an idea never proposed by Darwin but largely accepted as the best likely explanation)
  • the evolution of complex life-forms, especially animals, from one-celled organisms
  • the evolution of humans from animals (specifically primates)

Although EbNS is overwhelmingly embraced by the scientific community, it is stridently opposed by a number of Christian groups who prefer Biblically-correct fake explanations.

Related Pages

Books

Predictions

This section is currently for taking notes; to be organized later.

  • Tiktaalik, a genus of extinct sarcopterygian (lobe-finned) fish from approximately 375 million years ago (late Devonian period), satisfies ToE predictions that an intermediate form between fish and land-walking creature should have existed at some time (possibly multiple times).
  • More popularly, the evolutionary evidence says that whales evolved on land and returned to the sea, and therefore there should be a transitional form (a possibility often ridiculed by anti-evolutionists); a form was first discovered in the mid-2000s, and many others were subsequently found in the same area.
  • The theory of human-primate common ancestry had a small snag in that the other 3 primates in the group have 48 chromosomes, while humans only have 46; due to the contraints of genetics, the most likely sequence of events was fusion of two chromosomes. When the chimpanzee(?) genome was sequenced, the match was found (human chromosome #2 has markers which match what would result from the fusion of two particular chimp chromosomes).

Links

Reference

Editorials/Opinion

Discussion/Forums