Felix wrote: ↑June 7th, 2018, 5:24 am
Thinking critical: "Natural selection explains perfectly how simplicity evolves into complexity without the necessity of a predetermined purpose."
I said nothing about "predetermined purposes," only intentional behaviour (conscious or not), which can be seen throughout Nature.
To me intentional behaviour requires a predetermined purpose, the predetermined purpose is what drives or motivates the behaviour.
Natural selection does not explain why the simplest life forms should evolve into more complex ones when doing so would greatly decrease their reproductive and adaptive capacity. For example, it is estimated that cyanobacteria have thrived on earth for over 3 billion years. Such simple organisms are far and away the fittest in terms of survival, and so according to the principles of natural selection, the evolutionary process should have ended there - no survival advantage, only disadvantages, could be gained from increased complexity.
There is no law in evolution which states genetic variation will increase the chances of survival, natural selection explains that certain genetic variations can be advantageous to a species in a particular environment and other genetic variations can have the opposite affect, it is more probable that the individuals with the favourable variations will live long enough to reproduce as opposed to the other.
There is no inconsistency in the claim that natural selection explains the evolution of simplicity to complexity simply because, basic life forms still exist. If the Cyanobacteria's environment has remained reasonably unchanged for the last few billion years there would have been nothing to drive them to extinction or prevent them from flourishing.
Again there is no law in evolution that states one species is driven to extinction once speciation has occurred.
The problem with your argument is the use of the word "should" as in "simplest life forms should evolve into more complex ones". It's not matter of what evolution
should do for who are we to make this claim? It is simply a case of what evolution
does[/] do.