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by schrodingersCat
4279 days ago
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Its generally understood that traits that encourage reproduction regardless of whether or not they encourage fitness will outperform other traits (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_selection). This is why you will see the appearance of coloration and seemingly useless adaptations faster than actually beneficial traits within a population (i.e. a giraffe's neck; its not for reaching those high leaves). Natural selection is generally concerning traits that promote survivability over time, a much slower process. A major hypothesis is that sexual selection may be a driving force behind differentiation of the sexes, probably originating from genetic information sharing among single-celled organisms. A competing hypothesis is that there is an intrinsic advantage to sexual reproduction versus asexual reproduction. I generally favor the former hypothesis because it generally fits the "short-sightedness" principle of evolution. |
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However, I am still reluctant to accept your distinction between natural selection and sexual selection. The article you link to even calls sexual selection "a mode of natural selection". The giraffe neck does not have fitness value in the sense of making it a better food processor, quite the opposite. But it does have fitness value in the sense of prospering those very genes, indeed otherwise the giraffe would not exist. Such a definition of fitness does tend to be tautological, but the alternative is no better, because it is inevitably based on a measure of survivability that in the end is necessarily arbitrary.