Natural Selection Limits Tries |
In the proceeding analysis, the
effects of natural selection were ignored. To understand how natural selection affects the
results consider the following example. Suppose the trapped scientist is now in a
two-story building. The computer starts with a message already in it, and this message
contains the knowledge to open all of the doors on the first story. Figure 15.8: Natural Selection Preserves Existing Genes
The scientist is instructed to draw one block from each basket. He is
to use the number that he draws to locate a position in the doors combination, and
he is to change the existing word at that position to the new word which he draws. For
example, on the first try, the scientist draws the number 12 and the word cat.
The original combination has the word dog at position 12. So the scientist replaces
this word with the word cat. When he makes this change, the last door on the first
floor slams shut because its combination is no longer correct. The scientist climbs down
the ladder and realizes that he is trapped. He becomes very agitated. He changes the word cat
back to dog, and the door opens. This example shows how and why natural selection preserves
existing molecular knowledge. Previous: Self Replication without Natural Selection
|
Pictures From the Galapagos-> Stuff Charles Darwin never Saw
| To buy book, click on the cover. | To return
home click on logo![]() |
| Copyright Intelligent Design Books Raleigh NC 2005 | |