Zooplantman
Well-Known Member
Nice biologist's rant
Don’t spoil the ship | Biodiversity Revolution
Don’t spoil the ship | Biodiversity Revolution
I have to agree with the sentiments. There's many a time one of my non-zoological friends has come to me after seeing a documentary, believing that some invertebrate instinctively knew how to evolve to best survive it's environment.
Hix
I have to agree with the sentiments. There's many a time one of my non-zoological friends has come to me after seeing a documentary, believing that some invertebrate instinctively knew how to evolve to best survive it's environment.
Hix
"Yes! Yes! I know! Thorns will save me. I better get evolving on that."
Of course you're right but if you're trying to explain evolution you have to use lots of examples and it's not sensible to repeat the mantra about random mutations increasing or decreasing the fitness of certain individuals and so on for each one. You have to do it for the first example and reprise it for the second, but I think it's allowable to discuss any further cases in more conversational language - before summing up carefully in the final coda.
After all, there are very respectable precedents: Darwin could have called his second book on evolution The Ascent of the Peacock as it describes his second 'big idea', sexual selection. Of course from the general evolutionary perspective it could equally have been titled The Ascent of the Dodo or the brown rat or Yersinia pestis or any other species. I am sure Darwin knew this, but he also knew that nice Mr Murray (his publisher) would only be able to sell a book called The Ascent of Man.
Alan
It's The Descent of Man, not The Ascent of Man.