Yes, it can also have this meaning and maybe other meanings too. Only that it's a failed interpretation, because in a competition they all survive, not only the fittest one. The fittest one is simply in a better condition than the rest. In a track field race, the fastest one wins and takes the golden medal, but the 2nd and 3d ones also win. And in a Marathon, everyone who finishes wins; the first one is simply the best."Survival of the fittest" has come to imply competition — Janus
This is true too. But as with competion, I'm afraid that these interpretations are only attempts to moderate the bad effect that Darwin's (controversial) theory has.I also tend to think that when it comes to social animals "fittest" applies to groups more significantly than it does to individuals — Janus
Only that it's a failed interpretation, because in a competition they all survive, not only the fittest one. — Alkis Piskas
This is true too. But as with competion, I'm afraid that these interpretations are only attempts to moderate the bad effect that Darwin's (controversial) theory has. — Alkis Piskas
I know what you mean. Only that I cannot think of any such case, I mean where people have died --certainly not on a large scale-- because of lack of resources, those being water, oil, electric power or other public utility services. But maybe you have some examples.The idea as I understand it is that it is the competition for survival, so they don't all survive. It is not necessarily competition directly against the others as in fighting to the death, but competition for resources. Those who gain the resources survive and those who cannot die. — Janus
I already talked about that. (Re: Nazis)What "bad effect"? — Janus
Yes, I know about this. But, if I'm not mistaken, it is a circular statement: I have to survive in order to reproduce, but at the same time, in order to survive I have to reproduce. ("I" of course extending to my family (as genealogy), my group, my country, my race, etc.)I see that part of Darwin's theory as being pretty much tautologous: it amounts to "those who can survive do and are more likely to reproduce than those who cannot survive." — Janus
"Survival of the fittest," works well for all sorts of things we don't think of as living. — Count Timothy von Icarus
3) What consequences or implications can this this phrase have for our lives if we embrace it as a principle and let it define our actions? — Alkis Piskas
No problem. I did. Thanks for the notice.Sorry, I can't edit posts from my smartphone, so please dismiss the above post due to wrong tags. — baker
I don't think this is a popular viewpoint among all people. But it must be certainly popular among criminals, fascists, bullies and in general by irrational and insane people.It seems that in popular parlance the concept of "survival of the fittest" is used as a heuristic for identifying the right course of action, the moral course of action, and to justify it. "Those who survive are doing things right". — baker
Likewise. In whatever way you look at it, it's a sick viewpoint and/or interpretation.In practical examples, this also means that someone who commits a crime but manages not to get caught by the justice system is "doing the right thing". — baker
Those who are repeatedly outcompeted for jobs, eventually die homeless.because in a competition they all survive, not only the fittest one. — Alkis Piskas
I think you're taking the sports analogy too far. Sports competitions are games, they are not the life-and-death competitions of everyday life.The fittest one is simply in a better condition than the rest. In a track field race, the fastest one wins and takes the golden medal, but the 2nd and 3d ones also win.
Only that I cannot think of any such case, I mean where people have died --certainly not on a large scale-- because of lack of resources, those being water, oil, electric power or other public utility services. — Alkis Piskas
Then, what about the poor families all over the world, esp. in India, which is overpopulated), who are over-reproductive? Can they be considered as fittest, when they die from famine, diseases and all sort of things just because they are poor? — Alkis Piskas
C. If the universe produced us, and we have purposes, then nature already obviously does create purpose. In a rather straightforward way, plungers are for unclogging toilets, hearts are for pumping blood, etc. Any comprehensive theory of the world needs to explain these, not deny them. If hearts don't have a purpose in the way plungers or corporations do, we need to be able to explain the similarities and differences in terms of something we DO understand, not claim the difference is in presence or lack "of purpose," the very thing we want to understand. That's just circular, question begging, and dogmatic. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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