Interesting stuff. Were you involved in writing this ?
Quote:
We see that variability itself is part of a species' strategy. In other words, what we see as the
result of evolution are not populations with optimal behavior, but rather populations which
can learn!!
This is an excellent point. Though I don't think it is an new idea, it is one that most people fail to grasp.
Quote:
Evolution is no longer simply the selection of “optimal behavior", but the
selection of species that can both produce and cope with change.
I think we are still speaking of optimal behavior, it is just that our perception of the environment for which it is optimal has expanded.
In the larger environment (the process of selection itself) variation and adaptability are in fact "optimal behavior" or more precisely, optimal characteristics.
Sexual reproduction oviously provides an advantage in this capacity for variation.
It seems that the optimization of the rates of variation are expressed in societal taboos regarding incest, and inter-racial reproduction.
We have a balance between, small groups on the one hand, (not too small though) and occasional intermixing of these groups on the other. Thus allowing for just the right amount of variation it seems.
You have the protective father, and brother who are wary of the foreigner, combined with the young lovers' irresistable attraction to the forbiden mate. "never a tale of more woe" etc etc.
These are ideas from a book by Carl Sagan.
We see this principle expressed also in the development of actual intelligence and learning, and its superiority to mere instint.
Culminating in our capacity for reflective thought, and resulting "conciousness" .
Truly fascinating!