EVOLUTION
What is evolutionary theory and what are causes of evolution and the evidence of evolution?
The term 'evolution' evokes varied connotations. In simple and direct terms it is a process of change or development over a long period of time. Defined so, evolution can refer to any phenomena-- evolution of universe, evolution of human culture etc. -- that change over a period of time. However, in common parlance, evolution refers to biologic or organic evolution, which is the formation and development of life on earth. Biological evolution is "an unpredictable and natural process of temporal descent with genetic modification that is affected by natural selection, chance, historical contingencies and changing environments." (NABT, 1997) It is the change in genetics of a population over time.
Theory of Evolution:
The first scientific studies on evolution were conducted in the 1700s by two French biologists - Comte de Buffon and Baron Cuvier -- by studying the fossils and their anatomy, concluding that life on earth has undergone a series of changes. Chevalier de Lamarck, the French naturalist, proposed the first theory of evolution in 1809 suggesting that an animal's body part could change, depending on the extent to which it is used and such acquired traits became hereditary. Though his theory of the inheritance of acquired characteristics interested many scientists, it was only in 1858 when Charles R. Darwin, the English biologist presented his theory of evolution that the subject of evolution began gaining adequate scientific consideration. Since then, the scientific advancements and investigation has led to many refinements of the theory though the principal ideas of evolution remain more or less unchanged.
There is a tendency to reject evolutionary theory, considering it is as only a 'theory'. However theory of evolution is supported by a range of evidence from varied scientific disciplines and an evidentially corroborated theory becomes accepted as a scientific fact. "Today, nearly all biologists acknowledge that evolution is a fact. The term theory is no longer appropriate except when referring to the various models that attempt to explain how life evolves... It is important to understand that the current questions about how life evolves in no way implies any disagreement over the fact of evolution." (Campbell, 1990: p. 434) Today, the theory of evolution is considered the most important fundamental concept in the study of biological studies. (Dobzhansky, 1973)
The principal idea behind the theory of evolution is that all living things evolved from simple organisms and developed through the years to produce millions of species. This generally accepted scientific theory about the development of life since it origination has three major aspects.
The ancestral lineage between organisms-- living and extinguished
The appearance of new traits in a lineage
The reasons and processes that cause some traits to endure while others give way (Winkipedia, 2003)
The evolutionary theory explains these aspects. Evolutionary theory proposes that all species probably evolved from a single form of life, which existed about three and half billion years ago. Over the ages, the original basic form of life is considered to have evolved into more species and these, in turn, into many other species. This 'speciation' process as it is called led to the development of over 10 million species that live on earth today. The idea of speciation leads to another essential idea underlying it - the idea of common ancestry. As all species evolved from one basic life form, it is implied that any two species once had a common ancestor. But how can the idea of common ancestry are explained in the light of widely varying species? It only means that closely related or seemingly identical species, like human beings and gorillas, have a more recent ancestor, where as dissimilar species, like human beings and reptiles, have a common ancestor, which inherited the earth in a very distant past. Evolutionary changes only occur over long spans of time, ranging from decades of years to millions of years it is considered that evolution continues to occur today at rates, which are comparable to those of the past.
Causes of Evolution:
The evolutionary theory and its versions essentially attribute the cause of evolutionary change to the interaction of three processes -- mutation, natural selection and genetic drift. Mutation is a permanent change in the hereditary component of an organism. Mutation produces random or chance variation in the genetic or inherited features of an organism. To understand the process of mutation it is essential to understand how characteristics are inherited. The hereditary or genetic characteristics are carried by chromosomes, which in turn carry infinite number of genes, in the cells. Genes consist...
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