Re: Evolution increases the computational ability of organisms.
- From: Tim Tyler <seemysig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 21:59:14 GMT
Arkalen wrote:
On Sep 24, 8:44 pm, Tim Tyler <seemy...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Arkalen wrote:On Sep 23, 4:16 pm, Tim Tyler <seemy...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>You wouldn't argue that there has been no progress in automobile
manufacture since the Model T Ford - since modern cars still
have nuts as their most common component, and these show little
sign of development since the early days. Why make the same
argument with the role of bacteria in ecosystems?
Because human technology doesn't work like evolution.
Human technology is part of the evolutionary process.
What do you mean by that ?
Humans are animals. We are part of nature. Evolution
includes us.
The "modal bacter" does not indicate a lack of progress.
By most metrics, bacteria probably contain most of the world's
important non-human biological technology. They actually
*represent* a lot of the progress and technological invention
that I am talking about.
>I refer to the "intelligence explosion" of I. J. Good - whereby smartThe modern intelligence explosion should make the directionalityThere was no "modern intelligence explosion".
of evolution painfully obvious to everyone involved - or at
least I would have thought so.
things invent smarter things, smarter things invent even smarter
things - and so on, for quite some time.
Oh. Well, that hasn't happened yet so talking of a "modern
intelligence explosion" is a bit premature, but once it happens it
might indeed be impressive.
By my reckoning, Good's intelligence explosion actually
started millions of years ago - though you have a good
point if you are saying it has yet to really get properly
in gear and become a "proper" explosion.
That's quite possible. I was thinking of independent convergence butThere was *one* speciesMaybe - though there /is/ the chimpanzee outreach program. We are
that evolved human-level intelligence. And that species has since gone
on the dominate the whole planet, probably changing the environment
enough that it made the appearance of other such species impossible
(though of course that's talking on the million-year scale and we're
not there at all).
probably going to test our brain-enhancing techniques somehow.
given what you mean by "intelligence explosion" you're right.
It's interesting to speculate what creatures we might drag with
us for a while. Probably not many: the machine takeover will
be too rapid for much messing about with engineering of existing
species.
>Today's technological explosion is every bit a part of evolution
as all the technological developments that went before it.
In a trivial sense of "it came up because of evolution" you're right.
If you mean technological evolution is a continuation of the process
of biological evolution, and that a technological invention is analog
to gastrulation then I disagree.
*Gastrulation?!?* You've lost me there.
Evolution is changes in heritable information over time.
Human technology is part of that - along with most other
aspects of our phenotype.
Our technology is getting to the point where it can impact the
evolution of species enough for it to become another kind of
biological evolution, but it's not quite large-scale enough for me to
say it's there.
Huh? Have you been to a hospital recently?
I was assuming there that you thought evolution was specifically aimedBut if evolution is directional towards the appearance ofYou seem very confused about what I am saying. Progress doesn't
intelligence, why did it take so long ? And why did it create all
those other non-intelligent species around us ?
imply *rapid* progress. In the case of brains, progress was slow
and gradual - at least until recently. I understand that today's
computing facilities are exploding in size.
towards producing intelligence or whatever. Of course if it is it
doesn't mean that it will produce intelligence as early as possible,
but if it doesn't how is it different from undirected random walk
evolution ?
Of course if you don't believe that evolution aims specifically
towards some outcomes then what I said didn't apply.
Evolution /is/ "goal directed" these days, now that we are part of
it - and our plans have such a big influence over what lives and dies.
Sexual selection actually provides a mechanism for organisms'
goals to direct the path of evolution even before we came
on the scene.
Our ancestors who planned - and then succeeded - in screwing
their big brained, love-song singing peers were /probably/
not thinking about their long-term descendants at the time.
Or maybe they were. They probably had the connection
between sex and grandchildren all figured out back then. ;-)
--
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