Evolution
The book Why Evolution is True by Jerry Coyne presents a cogent case for evolution, a concept that can be controversial for some but accepted fact for others. This paper will work through the book -- the case that Coyne makes -- and offer reflections on my own journey of understanding the concept of evolution and its manifestation in the natural world.
Understanding Evolution
Evolution is not "fact," so much as a theory that is supported by a wealth of evidence. Just this alone lies at the heart of a lot of the misunderstanding about evolution. First proposed by Charles Darwin as a theory based on his observations of the natural world, evolution reflects the processes of adaptation that species go through, over time and successive generations. In adapting to their environments, species undergo changes that will, given enough time and dramatically different environments, result in the development of entirely new species.
The idea itself lacks controversy, in the sense that the theory of evolution is supported by a wealth of evidence, much of which is summarized by Coyne in this book. But the idea was controversial less for what it said than for what it meant. To the deeply religious, the Bible is the word of God and everything in the Bible is the truth, or must be, as the word of God. Evolution's argument inherently meant that the timeline for the development of this world was not as written in the Bible. The logic then is simply that if something contradicts the literal word of God, then that something is blasphemous, or worse. Essentially, people have often challenged the teachings of religion, or the ways in which religion has structured society, but evolution was supported by evidence, and rapidly adopted. This theory became a bigger threat to religion, to its power in society, not because it challenged the idea that the world is only a few thousand years old but because it challenged the idea of the Bible is the literal word of God. It would be right and reasonable to challenge other elements of the Bible if any one element was proven false.
For proponents of the theory of evolution, there is no particular dichotomy that must exist wherein evolution is either true or false, but for those who were threatened by what evolution symbolized, this is the case. Coyne sets out in his introductory chapter that he aims to show how evolution is right, and this has always been the approach of the scientific community, and a point of conflict between it and the religious community. The scientific community views evolution as something correct -- a theory built of observation for which evidence amassed since has held up. There is no contrast in this view -- evolution does not exist in opposite of anything. That framing, of evolution as opposite to something -- the word of God -- is one for religious people, and maybe the more aggressive atheists.
Evolution rests on a couple of key premises, which are introduced at the outset. Natural selection is the first. Natural selection refers to the process of species selecting desirable traits through reproduction. That species seek to reproduce with others of the species that are found desirable, and that the desirable traits tend to be those related to the ability to produce offspring with a better chance of survival. Those desirable traits, then, are bred in species.
We as humans have bred many species for particular traits. Every dog breed evolved from the wolf, yet they are very different from one another, and most are nothing like wolves at all. But breeding for traits has resulted in these different types of dogs with unique traits. Domestic animals and plants both are bred for specific traits, traits that for one reason or another are found to be desirable. We do the same with each other, too.
Another element of natural selection is survival, which is in the concept of survival of the fittest. In nature,...
On Why Evolution is TrueIntroductionDarwin catapulted the theory of evolution to the main stage with his Origin of Species. In Why Evolution is True, Coyne (2009) takes a look at the theory of evolution and breaks it down from various perspectives to show why it has more explanatory power than the theory of Creationism. This review identifies the themes in Coyne�s (2009) book, discusses my own personal journey of discovery,
Natural selection is the very efficient and predictable means of evolution by which a species adapts to its environment, that results in evolutionary change as individuals with particular characteristics have a greater survival or reproductive rate than others in a population, and these genetic characteristics are then passed on to their offspring (Natural pp). In other words, natural selection is a consistent difference in survival and reproduction between different genotypes
Natural Selection First described in full by Charles Darwin, natural selection refers to the process by which organisms evolve by adapting to their environments. Natural selection does not occur instantly in response to an environmental change, however. Rather, natural selection occurs over the course of several successive generations. Those organisms that successfully survive the environmental changes due to their inherited traits will pass on their genes to their offspring. Thus, only
evolution and natural selection is the addition of information. The process of evolution requires massive amounts of new information be added to an existing gene pool. What most people refer to as evolution is, in fact, natural selection. Natural selection occurs when genes that already exist in an animals' DNA, or sometimes on defective genes that have lost information (called mutation) are somehow altered. Neither process adds information to
Evolution Is True What Is Evolution? This chapter highlights the six elements that make up evolution: 1) growth/evolution; 2) gradualism; 3) speciation; 4) shared origins; 5) natural selection; and 6) nonselective evolutionary change mechanisms (Coyne, 2009). Of these, the foremost is the evolution concept itself, which implies genetic modification of any given species with time. To elaborate, over a number of generations, species of animals may transform into a rather different
Darwin's Finches And Natural Selection Polymorphism pertains to the existence of two distinctly different groups of a species that still belong to the same species. Alleles for these organisms over time are governed by the theory of natural selection, and over this time the genetic differences between groups in different environments soon become apparent, as in the case of industrial melanism." (Biology Online, 2000) Darwin's finches are an excellent examples of
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