And you are making a false assumption that complexity is somehow prefered over simplicity. Remember, evolution has no goals? To say that there is a 'best system' or that evolution creates 'flawed designs' is saying that it has a goal.
a) I, or generally, humans, or whatever, can prefer complexity to simplicity, or whatever that has no bearing on the fact that [b]evolution[b] has no goal. Hell, even if complexity was better in terms of survivability, evolution wouldn't have that goal ( because that would be assuming that survivability is the goal of evolution).
I ask, once again: does the hurricane have a goal? does a volcano?
b) I didn't imply that complexity was inherently better than simplicity. I just said that evolution isn't the best method to design systems ( bringing the example that the complex systems it designs are not necessarily optimal, much like the way that the various products of a chemical reaction aren't necessarily the most stable ones)
And besides, we humans might make a big guffaw, but it's the simplest lifeforms that will continue on after we're all dead.
Also, not necessarily. If humanity leaves the planet, that may not be so.
Dauphin:
The better make-up that allows you to eat grass would still be selected for, just not as rapidly as the ability to avoid lions UNLESS the ability to eat grass is in some way related to the ability to avoid lions.
Actually,IIRC when the evolutionary pressure is something completely else, that will be what will determine the competitiveness of lifeforms in a population. I think this has been supported by latest studies, since I remember reading about it some time ago...
It's amazing how evolution is similar to chemical thermodynamics, kinetics and molecular dynamics, the more I think about it, the more it amazes me.
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