LIFE TWO: EVOLUTION
To Home
Page
SO WHAT IS EVOLUTION
ALL ABOUT? A METAPHYSICAL QUESTION, OR WHAT THIS WEB-SITE IS ALL ABOUT.
HOW DOES EVOLUTION WORK, AND
WHY IT ISN'T RANDOM.
for an
intro: WHAT IS LIFE?
AND WHY DOES EVOLUTION
MATTER?
Did we evolve, and
are we evolving?
What is Evolution? You may have picked up
in your education a range of views. You might think that evolution is about progress and
change, or it's a random wander through possible forms of living things with each new form
coming about via natural selection acting on random mutations. Most Darwinists believe the
second option, while most everyone else believes the first - if they believe in evolution
at all. As a Darwinist myself I believe the second view, but it may only be part of the
story.
Evolution is the change of living things
through time. How does it happen? From generation to generation tiny changes in the
genetic codes of living things are constantly occurring. The life circumstances of each
living thing determines how well that living thing survives and reproduces, and hence how
far the changes to its genetic code will spread in the general population. A good change
is defined as one which allows an organism to live and reproduce more successfully,and a
bad one is one which inhibits the organism's life, but most genetic changes are in fact
neutral - no effect.
MUTATIONS:
the raw stuff of CREATION. Mutation, in
evolutionary biology, has two levels of meaning ...
DNA:That is changes in
the production code of organisms, which can be more than just single changes to a bit in a
DNA string. Whole genes can be duplicated, even chromosomes. Genes can change positions
and at every formation of a new zygote [fertilised egg] that's exactly what happens in
RECOMBINATION.
BODY: The end product of DNA mutations is
how the plant or animal then differs from its parents.
CAN RANDOM GENETIC CHANGES BE
CREATIVE? FOR AN INTERESTING EXAMPLE HERE'S AN ARGUMENT FROM FRANCISCO AYALA:CREATIVE
GENES



The Evolution Education Site Ring
This site ring is owned by John Stear
|
This page hosted by
Get your own Free Home Page