throwaway1
-
Posts
2 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Posts posted by throwaway1
-
-
Hello everyone!
I had an argument about evolution with someone I know and they claimed that efficiency is a criteria of evolution (as in evolution drifts towards more efficiency).
I then pointed out that our very first ancestors (single-celled organisms) were technically already the most efficient organisms and evolution doesn't drift towards more efficiency or less efficiency, it's all about survivability, efficiency really doesn't matter. I mean if efficiency truly was a criteria wouldn't we have to be able to set a minimum standard for how efficient an organism has to be in order to survive? Can we even quantify efficiency in organisms?
ps: I'm not a biologist obviously
0
Question about Evolution and Efficiency
in Evolution, Morphology and Exobiology
Posted · Edited by throwaway1
Thanks for your reply.
The person I am having this argument with had this to say:
"Again, you've stated that my argument was an arbitrary amount of efficiency is required
for survival but that's not my argument. If you asked them whether
evolution resulted in capabilities or practices that can be considered
efficient in for example our species that may have helped us survive,
you'd get an answer relevant to this argument."
I told him that it can result in capabilities or practises that can be considered efficient, but it can also result in capabilities or practises that could be considered inefficient, it goes both ways. Who is right? Is efficiency a criteria?