Pittsburgh Professors Challenge Darwin 193
Syberghost writes "Darwin's Theory of Evolution comes under an interesting attack from an American anthropologist and an Italian biochemist, according to an article from University of Pittsburgh's school newspaper. In a nutshell, Schwartz and Maresca argue that change is not gradual as Darwin stated, but comes rapidly in response to drastic mutations caused by shifting environmental conditions."
Pardon my ignorance but (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:3, Informative)
On another note, Darwin supports his theory of evolution. He looks like a monkey! [wikipedia.org]
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:4, Insightful)
I've never been clear on the distinction between P.U. and catastrophism (not in the Velikovsky sense, though). When I first learned about the fossil record, a major point was the mass extinctions that have occurred throughout history. The "Cambrian explosion" is thought to have followed the extinction of >80% of all species, where entire phyla were wiped out. Perhaps not coincidentally, all modern phyla were present in the Cambrian era. (If memory serves there were several even worse extinctions that followed.) The naive but obvious conclusion I drew from this is that massive changes in ecosystem and depopulation of niches increased the potential for adaptive radiation as organisms moved into new niches. This would also mean that more mutations might yield an increase in fitness, since what determines fitness would be so drastically different. In a stable ecosystem, in contrast, niches don't get emptied or added and hence populations stay more static.
Is this part of the modern evolutionary theory? (I am a biophysicist, but I don't know much about evolutionary theory.)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
But the earth isn't that static. Ice ages, volcanos, forest fires, floods, earthquakes, tsunamis and the like can all dramatically change an ecosystem. Moreover, consider that a mutation in one species, once it becomes widely propogated, might trigger a stress on a predator or prey of that species. PU is small-scale, catastrophism is large; catastrophism is also more likely to wipe out all members
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:3, Funny)
You aren't a mathematics student by any chance are you? I hope to god you are otherwise I shall lose all faith in the human race...
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:5, Insightful)
I suspect these fellows have some interesting new postulate, and the Pitt News just got it wrong.
It's not news, it's a PR piece. (Score:4, Interesting)
From the banner at the top of the site, the Pitt News is a student newspaper. Student newspapers quite often do little fluff pieces on professors in various departments.
Pitt News (Score:2)
I can't really see it matching the Washington Post or New York Times any time soon.
Sean D.
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
You've pretty much got most of that wrong. First of all, observed rates of morphological change are many times FASTER than even the fastest transition in the fossil record. The problem isn't that changes happe
Nothing to see here, folks (Score:2)
Yes, it's just punctuated equilibrium, and it's been discussed quite a lot for many years and really doesn't contradict Darwinism at all. No one is suggesting that evolution happens via "saltation" - when genomes makea radical shifts in one generation. Large random changes in a genome are just about guaranteed to be nonviable. The only thing that is even apparently controversial (it really isn't) is whether the rate of change is hihgly variable or not.
Dawrwinism proposes that such powerful evolutionar
Re:Nothing to see here, folks (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:3, Informative)
There's nothing in the article that leads me to that reading, though, so yeah, either MrFlibb read the actual research and found something more than the article, or this sounds like total crap.
Environmental stress does not lead to mutation (Score:2)
Environmental stress leads to changes in selective pressure (not in mutation), and often to changes in the traits subject to significant directional selective pressure. This acts on the ongoing background (and relatively constant) mutation rate, to drive divergence from the existing means and toward some new equilibrium, and you get rapid evolutionary divergence from the parent population.
Also, there is nothing in exist
Re:Environmental stress does not lead to mutation (Score:2)
Heat shock proteins, released during times of stress, can increase mutation rates. There are a number of types of environmental stress, outside of chemical or radiological insults, which can influence mutation rates.
This acts on the ongoing background (and relatively constant) mutation rate
I realize that some very respectable researchers have asserted a fairly constant mutation rate, but the hypervariable regions of viruses (along
Re:Environmental stress does not lead to mutation (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
I wrote a reply to that effect: (Score:5, Insightful)
The professor hasn't challenged evolution by natural selection, but rather gradualism, as did Steven J. Gould. Darwin did posit gradualism, so an accurate headline would have been to say that the professor had challenged Darwin. As it is, it appears that it is the theory of evolution, rather than the detail of Charles Darwin's theories that is being challenged.
The article is to be commended upon the elucidation of the "dual mutation theory"; is it a shame that it did not make clearer that this theory restores natural selection to the driving seat.
This is important, since responsible editing that promotes truth over political advantage should seek avoid false inferences from being drawn by the less sophisticated.
Faithfully,
Re:I wrote a reply to that effect: (Score:2)
But of course, creationists and ID theorists never tell you THAT part of the story. Just that Gould supposedly called into question all of evolution and showed that
Flaw in Shorter Form (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:3)
BitterAndDrunk said:
Bingo! Stephen would be quite pround of you. =)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punctuated_equilibriu m [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Jay_Gould [wikipedia.org]
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
Re:Pardon my ignorance but (Score:2)
As many people have pointed out, Gould overplayed his hand on this. Darwin's "gradualism" was essentially borrowed from geology: it was in contrast to catastrophism. But it doesn't nec
Must... not... troll... must... debate... politely (Score:2, Funny)
I RTFA... (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, nothing guarantees that the offspring won't be a horrible mutant and die because of an "unknown disease".
Re:I RTFA... (Score:3, Interesting)
these things could mutate over hundreds of generations without ever harming individual fitness and then suddenly get triggered, exposing a shitload of mutations at once, spread in different variations over the whole population.
Those new findings would only strengthen an already strong mechanism.
Oh yes indeed (Score:2)
Welcome to the new dark ages....
Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:5, Insightful)
The title of TFA reads, "Professor Challenges Evolution", when in fact he is doing nothing of the sort.
From TFA: While Schwartz is challenging a specific premise of evolutionary doctrine, he is by no means refuting the entire theory. Apparently, Nan Ama Sarfo felt the story would be read more if it appeared to jump on the anti-evolution ID bandwagon.
Shame on you, Nan.
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:5, Insightful)
But why is he doing this? Here's a clue: Hmm, interesting fields he's in. Just like Steve Fuller did in the Dover ID trial, some people in philosophy of science have a vested interest in creating the appearance of warring camps of ideas rather than evidence-based epistemology. To paraphrase them, 'science is about persuading people, not proving ideas'.
One more thing,Schwartz has been pushing this idea for 6 years, it's not new news even for him:
Book Review published in 7/2000 [macrodevelopment.org]
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:2, Informative)
I'm not sure what side you are on, but it needs to be made clear that punctuated equilibrium DOES NOT challenge natural selection as the mechanism for evolution. Punctuated equilibrium simply refines the time scales over which natural selection works.
If, for example, the Great Rift Valley in Africa warmed significantly over a few hundred thousand years,
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:2)
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:2)
Pardon my ignorance, but can't all three theories be true, in that all of them (and likely other things we don't understand yet) be driving forces of evolution?
SB
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:2)
I seem to disctinctly remember Richard Dawkins attacking Pu
Re:Misleading, sensationalist headline. (Score:2)
Damn Professors! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn Professors! (Score:2)
RTFA (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Damn Professors! (Score:3, Funny)
Umm, not all code...
Before this devolves into an ID blast-fest ... (Score:4, Insightful)
The only feature of classic Darwinism that he's refuting is about a single organism's offspring being the only one with the new trait. Interesting notion, but hardly revolutionary.
Re:Before this devolves into an ID blast-fest ... (Score:2)
Did you read the research, or is this just two different interpretations of some awful science writing?
-1, deceptive headline (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Please, everyone, email Zonk at games@slashdot.org and tell him to stop doing this. This is just too annoying.
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
You really think nerds pretend to be above that? I don't. They just want the pecking order to be based on different criteria.
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
True science involves experimentation thereby exploring the underlying laws of nature. Until a few hundred years or so ago, scientific philosophers debated about how fast light went, how things fall, the nature and position of the planets alongside with how many Angels could dance on the head of a pin etc. Then a few daring individuals did experiments that shattered, to the great chagrin and fierce resistance of these "scientists", many
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Evolution could have been refuted by contradictory finds in the fossil record. Recent discoveries of ERV insertions in primate DNA could have blown common descent out of the water. Instead, ERV insertion observations added yet more compelling evidence for primate evolution, including humans.
Lying about evolution and lying about scie
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Neither evolution, creationism or ID have been proved or refuted by repeatable EXPERIMENTS, such as are done in other branches of science. All of them are philosophies, not science. You may be more comfortable with one of these, but NONE of them are supported and tested in the LABORATORY, such as other real sciences are. REAL science is repeatable. Einstein's theories seemed far out when first put forth, but have been EXPERI
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Yes "could have been". As in the potential existed. But it wasn't refuted, because the evidence didn't contradict it.
Neither evolution, creationism or ID have been proved or refuted by repeatable EXPERIMENTS,
No amount of "experimenting" will "prove" any explanation in science. Absolutely nothing in science is ever proven. Claiming that evolution is not science because it cannot be "proven" only demonstrates that you are
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Experimentation by definition IS science. If a theory cannot be tested by experiment, it is a philosophy. Until a few centuries ago, philosophers argued back and forth about beliefs. After that, real science, based on experiments came to be, PROVED over and over again which beliefs were true. Philosophers and religious teachers speculate and argue, but Scientists try to discover TRUTH
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
Your use of capital letters is very convincing, but the idea that "science" excludes evolutionary biology, geology, cosmology and linguistics (and the other historical sciences) is a strange one. All these endeavours make testable, falsifiable predictions and are therefore science by any reasonable definition.
Re:-1, deceptive headline (Score:2)
-> The theories of electrodynamics, which have resulted in all the wonderful gadgets, such as the computer you are now reading this on. -> The theory of nuclear fission, which has resulted in weapons that could destroy mankind.
-> The theories behind the chemical reactions of both life and non-life, that make possible the modern materials all around you.
-> Einstein theories and quantum theories have been experimentally verif
Punctuated Equilibrium (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the point he's making is that it's simply not being taught. I know plenty of people (especially on Slashdot) who still believe the old "millions of years of small gradual changes" bit. Natural selection and gradual modification MAKE SENSE to most people and seems fairly persuasive, but it's not really what happened. Honestly I think it's a bit of bait 'n switch... explain evolution one way to a person, then later on "Oh by the way nobody really believes that."
Re:Punctuated Equilibrium (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Punctuated Equilibrium (Score:2)
There's nothing substantially wrong with that statement at all, as long as no one thinks that "gradual" means "evenly paced morphologic change." In terms of actual adaptive change, evolution is still the accumulation of small changes no matter how you slice it. There are certainly some seemingly major jumps, but these are in fact themselves fairly simple in terms of the complexity
It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
I highly doubt that one day we were born from a monkey with exactly the same mutations that are present in us all today - over time things just worked out this way.
Perhaps someone who isn't still drunk from last night can better explain where I'm coming from?
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
There are basically two choices, but both are BELIEFS you can choose from.
One is: The path of your origins is "out of the goo by way of the zoo to you".
The other is: Your ancestors were put here by a transcendent Creator God who has a purpose for your existence.
Neither of the above can be "proved", but you may believe one or the other. Many, if not most people still believe the latter is more satisfying.
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
False dichotomy. Also misrepresents the status of evolution, which is well-supported by a mountain of evidence.
One is: The path of your origins is "out of the goo by way of the zoo to you".
Hopelessly oversimplified statement of the theory of evolution.
The other is: Your ancestors were put here by a transcendent Creator God who has a purpose for your existence.
Why is this mutually exclusive with evolution? Why is this the only other
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
Common descent is proven, sorry. If you are not an ape, descended from other apes, then what are ape molars doing in your mouth? How come you have exactly the same number of hair folicles as an ape? Why do you have the same sort of rotational shoulder that is unique to apes? And so on. You can't escape placing humanity, as well as every other creature, into a single tree of descent. The evidence converges from so many differ
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
Yes and my Honda descended from a Ford some time ago. If you are a car, how come you have four wheels, steering mechanism and some kind of engine etc? Common characteristics in no way proves descent. If any thing this tends to show that whoever DESIGNED the ape used some similar components for you and me to accomplish the task of chewing food. Human designers do that all the time -- re-use operational comp
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
In biological life, we end up with patterns that are necessarily linked in both tim
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
Living things are much more diverse than manmade devices, but nevertheless have many common design features. The underlying chemistry of life with its DNA codes is a tried and true design, just as 4 wheels are in an automobile. The very nature of bio-identification, such as fingerprints, iris scans and the blood vessels in the palm of your hands depend on the uniqueness of each individual. The structure of hemoglobin is similar in al
Re:It doesn't change anything (Score:2)
Common design features are not at all demanded by design (since design demands nothing in particular at all: that's why it's useless as an explanation), but they are absolutely demanded by common descent. And not just similarities: a very very specific pattern of similarities.
"The underlying chemistry of life with its DNA codes is a tried and true design, just as 4 wheels are in an automobile."
The
I liked this theory bettery... (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously, is the author of TFA a moron or what? Punctuated Equilibria is not the same as "Science is wrong!!!11one"
mod up. (Score:2)
this poor researcher (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:this poor researcher (Score:2)
"Darwinism's presence in science is so overwhelming," Schwartz said. "For the longest time, there was no room for alternative thinking among the scientific community."
-- the prof who published the paper
Poppycock (Score:5, Insightful)
Darwin's thesis is in two parts - that evolution occurs, and that the mechanism is natural selection. The first part is not under any scientific debate. The second part, the proposal that natural selection is the mechanism has been understood to be not the best mechanism for the process of evolution has been understood for nearly 100 years. Darwin did not understand genes, genetics, nor the mechanisms of genetic drift that occur within populations. This knowedge postdates Darwin's original work.
The understanding of evolutionary mechanism works at the level of genes, and populations whereas Darwinism was concerned mainly with species.
This view of the mechanism of evolution is widely misunderstood in the creationistic and anti-evolution communities, and ignorant articles often appear trying to discredit evolution based on a fundamental misappropriation of the topic.
It's a shame that this sort of article was published on Slashdot - it shows a great ignorance of the topic.
Variation _AND_ Selection (Score:2)
When Darwin wrote it, heritability was clearly accepted as a fact, but nobody was close to thinking about the mechanisms in any more detail than an almost prurient interest in the diversity of mechanisms for reproduction.
Over and over Darwin emphasises that variation necessarily precedes selection
Re:Poppycock (Score:2)
http://www.the-scientist.com/2003/11/17/14/1/ [the-scientist.com]
If you plan to use random drift for that, you'll have a heck of a time explaining why things consistently "randomly drift" in the right direction.
That is challenged quite widely. Natural selection is one mechanism for speciation, others like random genetic drift in isolated populations are often viewed to be more important in modern theory.
Evolution != Speciation (Score:2)
But (as I'm sure you'll admit) evolution isn't the same thing as speciation; you could, for example, have two different species (say, hares and foxes) engaged in an ongoing arms race, evolving quite rapidly, yet neither population splitting into two or more sub-species. Conversely, you could, at least in principle, have two populations of the same species that were separated in some way gradually "drift" into separate species. So the evolution of adaptive traits is not the same thing as speciation, and,
Re:Evolution != Speciation (Score:2)
Well, no, but evolution (at least as it is defined in the current vernacular) is the mechanism by which speciation occurs. It is interesting that in Darwin's time evolution meant something rather different, and he never or rarely used the term to describe his theory.
So the evolution of adaptive traits is not the same thing as speciation, and, as I said before, it is natural selection, not genetic drift, which drives evolution.
Changes in the statistics of the prese
Playing with words (Score:3, Insightful)
Changes in the statistics of the presence of genes in a population over time is evolution.
No, this is a meme of the anti-evolution crowd (part of the "scientists dispute evolution" nonsense) that is to often repeated by loose-thinking scientists and popularizations. You are confusing one of the intermediate effects of evolution (an effect which, as you note, could have multiple causes apart from evolution) with evolution itself. Lets see how that sort of fuzzy thinking looks like in another environmen
Re:Playing with words (Score:2)
Sorry, that is just not correct. Evolution is NOT defined in modern biology as adaptive change. Your basic premise is wrong, making your arguments specious.
Here's a link to a relevant page in a decent online Biology text. Give is a look.
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyP ages/H/Hardy_Weinberg.html#When_the_Hardy-Weinberg _Law_Fails_to_Apply [rcn.com]
Re:Playing with words (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny, I feel the same way about your argument. A quick google shows about a 50/50 split in the definitions which specify "adaptive change" (in some form or another) as opposed to the ones such as you site. To give just a few examples:
Why is it one or the other (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why is it one or the other (Score:2)
Gould and Eldredge explicitly stated that punctuated equilibrium and gradualism are not mutually exclusive. It's actually a little bit funnier than that. When Gould and Eldredge came out with punctuated equilibrium, those that they pegged as gradu
Re:Why is it one or the other (Score:2)
Bacteria can change more quickly than apes because bacteria reproduce much more quickly, but relative to the organisms themselves, the changes are slow.
Just a technicality, that's not the full picture: An additional reason bacteria can change more quickly than cellular organisms is that they can actually absorb and exchange genes directly. Thus even a single bacterium can within its own lifetime "evolve" quite dramatically, in a way that has no parallel in complex life forms like apes ... it's a totally d
Re:Why is it one or the other (Score:2)
Re:Why is it one or the other (Score:2)
True, indeed. (Although they do at least partially 'make up for it in numbers')
ID will miss the lesson (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:ID will miss the lesson (Score:2)
Indeed, I've seen creationists making this exact claim on conservative discussion forums. One creationist even said that he was going to add Professor Schwartz to a list that he was compiling of scientists who agree that evolution is "religious dogma" (this stemmed from a previous discussion where he claimed that "thousands" of scientists would agree to such a statement but absolutely refu
Actual article by Schwartz and Maresca (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Actual article by Schwartz and Maresca (Score:2)
Even when they do, they are basically still the same bacteria. An e-coli or coccus may adapt to stress, but they still remain one or the other even though both have adapted to survive. No distinct new type of bacteria is created that might have some of the best traits of either.
Re:Actual article by Schwartz and Maresca (Score:2)
At best, what he describes is one of MANY known engines of variation in genomes. The idea that discovering a mechanism of increased variation is a challenge to the idea of natural selection is utterly absurd. This really sounds like the case of a US crackpot who is hyping beyond recognition the otherwise perfectly mainstream work of an Italian scientist.
Why attack Darwin? (Score:2)
Luria and Delbruck (Score:2, Informative)
Whether or not you consider evolution to... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Whether or not you consider evolution to... (Score:2)
I believe that the biggest impediment to understanding evolution is that people can't wrap their heads around the time scales involved. Even punctuated equilibrum argues that it takes millenia (thousands of generations) for macro changes to occur.
Not a challenge at all (Score:4, Insightful)
All this means is that the size of a step in a particular direction an animal can take can be large to accomodate a large environmental impulse. But most environmental changes are gradual and therefore most responses are as well. Otherwise there would be big oscillations, e.g., an ostrich has a parakeet which has a penguin, etc.
Control system 101. The guy just thinks the steps can be greater than we imagine. Makes sense since we don't get many opporunities to experience significant changes.
One tooth at a time (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll be honest with you. I never ran the tests. (Score:2)
Difference Engine Much? (Score:2)
Pittsburgh Profesors Challenge Darwin (Score:2, Funny)
Be at the Pennsylvania state fairgrounds!
As the Deadly duo
The Pittsburgh Professors
challenge the
Father of Modern Biology
Charles Darwin
to a handicap grudge match in the steel cage.
It promises to be a match the world will never forget as high flying theories and hard core evidence are used to bash each others skulls in.
The Violence! The Pain! The pure Savagery! This match is not for the faint of heart, only come if you want pure action.
Ticket are on sale RIGHT NOW
Seems like a good time to discuss misconceptions (Score:3, Informative)
Some basic background:
Punk eek was opposed to phyletic uniformatism/gradualism (which many consider to have been a cheap straw man anyway). This was a debate over macroevolutionary history: the patterns of large scale morphological and species change. Contrary to popular opinion, macroevolutionary change is subject to all sorts of different forces: things like large scale, genetic drift, extinction events, and so on. No biologist claims that natural selection is the only factor in the particular history of life on earth.
This guy is is not talking about things on the scale of punk eek. He's talking about things on the scale of microevolution, and what he's proposing seems to be a form of saltationism. At best, he's attacking a purported gradualism in actual mutation rates (which itself is nonsense: it's mainstream genetics that different species have all sorts of different mutation rates as well as different rates of morphological change). But for all the rhetoric, nothing he says that's actually correct is even slightly revolutionary. At best, he's proposing another mechanism for variation: variation that involves "good tricks" in a certain genomic sequence that environmental stressors can make happen in many different individuals at once. But variation of ANY sort still just provides the raw material for natural selection to work on. And without natural selection at work, mutation would still be just ultimately random garbage. It's only by placing mutations through the sieve of actually being expressed in individuals that any information about the environment can be imprinted onto a given gene pool. That's the only way we know of that random jostling can be transformed into functional movement. For the mutations to somehow "predict" or "will themselves" to happen in certain linked ways that have a non-random purpose requires some other mechanism, and this guy proposes nothing.
And that's me being the most charitable. Most of the rest of what the guy says is just total nonsense. For instance, he implies that cellular repair systems resist mutation (heck, he even speaks about whether they "willingly" resist change or not!). Well... yes. But they fail. All the time. Most everyone reading this has recent and unique several mutations, right now. And that's not even to mention that you'd have to be grossly misinformed about Darwin to think that "Darwins theory" says ANYTHING about genetic mutation. Darwin hadn't a clue what genes or DNA or the rest of it even were! All he spoke about was the differential success of different variations. Of course, what Darwin thought is irrelevant trivia to what is true in biology, but still, this guy is just showing both his ignorance and his obsession with the idea that Darwin is some sort of "high priest" whom he is fighting against.
Now consider this: "according to Schwartz, mutations occur recessively and are passed unknowingly until the mutation saturates the population. Then, when members of the population receive two copies of the mutation, the trait appears suddenly."
Either the reporter got this wrong, or this guy is really misinformed. Mutations can be recessive or dominant. Nothing about them makes them occur "recessively" only. While the scenario he describes can and does happen (recessive traits that don't really start appearing in force in a population until they become near fixed), nothing about it is particularly revolutionary. And something with complex functionality and specification like fully formed "teeth" is not going to evolve completely out of sight, unexpressed, and then burst onto the scene all at once. That, kids, is called saltation, and while big saltationist jumps can certainly happen (and can spring out via the recessive/dominant pathway), they are very very very unlikely to ever hit upon something functional and useful. Remember: only the actual testing
Evolution of theories (Score:3, Insightful)
Evolution theory seems to be quite reasonable because it seems to rely on very few postulates when compared to other theories.
If other theories need fewer postulates and provide more answers, then chances there are that they will succeed.
I'd suggest a quick read of "The Fabric of reality" [penguin.co.uk] by David Deutsch [wikipedia.org] for deeper details about this philosophy.
In any case theories about evolution are themselves subject to evolution whenever the objective is to provide answers.
blood lines (Score:2)
Darwin based his theory on morphological observations long before the genetic mechanisms were first postulated. Darwin couldn't even have defined "rate of change" within the modern view. I was reading about rare blood types just the other day.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type [wikipedia.org]
Re:Whoa... Pitt news (Score:2, Informative)