Return-Path: <@FINHUTC.HUT.FI:LOJBAN@CUVMB.BITNET> Received: from FINHUTC.hut.fi by xiron.pc.helsinki.fi with smtp (Linux Smail3.1.28.1 #14) id m0pOrFH-0000Q8C; Tue, 25 Jan 94 19:08 EET Message-Id: Received: from FINHUTC.HUT.FI by FINHUTC.hut.fi (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 4988; Tue, 25 Jan 94 19:07:26 EET Received: from SEARN.SUNET.SE (NJE origin MAILER@SEARN) by FINHUTC.HUT.FI (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 4986; Tue, 25 Jan 1994 19:07:26 +0200 Received: from SEARN.SUNET.SE (NJE origin LISTSERV@SEARN) by SEARN.SUNET.SE (LMail V1.2a/1.8a) with BSMTP id 0346; Tue, 25 Jan 1994 18:06:43 +0100 Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:03:08 EST Reply-To: "Robert J. Chassell" Sender: Lojban list From: "Robert J. Chassell" Subject: Darwin's five laws X-To: lojban@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu To: Veijo Vilva In-Reply-To: <9401201359.AA25176@albert.gnu.ai.mit.edu> (message from Logical Language Group on Thu, 20 Jan 1994 03:09:27 -0500) Content-Length: 8469 Lines: 202 In a message to soc.culture.scientists, on testing the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, Benjamin J. Tilly referred to "Darwin's theory of evolution". Lojbab passed the message on to the Lojban list. How should Lojbanists refer to what Darwin discovered? Why is it still common among speakers of English to hear Darwin's discoveries refered to as a `theory' rather than as a set of five `laws'? Consider this discussion of the conventional distinction among the terms hypothesis, theory, and law, from Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, 1958, page 409: _Hypothesis_ implies insufficiency of presently attainable evidence and, therefore, a tentative explanation; _theory_ implies a much greater range of evidence and greater likelihood of truth; _law_ implies a statement of order and relation in nature that has been found to be invariable under the same conditions. The terms are not rigidly applied, however... Darwin figured out how simple entities can become more complex without teleological guidance. His statements of order and relation have certainly been well established, so they should be called laws. The five laws of evolution by natural selection: 1. Evolution occurs. Unlike mathematical species, such as triangles or square, biological species change from one kind to another. 2. Multiplication of species. Species split into daughter species, or bud off different types of decendant. 3. Natural selection. In any generation, the relatively few individuals who survive, owing to a particularly well adapted combination of inherited characteristics, give rise to the next generation; and the combination of characteristics of the surviving subset of the generation may be different from the combination of characteristics of the generation as a whole. 4. Gradualism. Evolutionary change occurs through gradual change of populations. (Note that current discussions of `sudden' or `episodic' evolution refer to periods of time that are certainly `gradual', except by comparison to the even longer time scales that some have presumed.) 5. Common descent. All currently living organisms are descended from a single ancestor. (Adapted from "One Long Argument", Ernst Mayr, Harvard Univ. Press, 1991.) Mayr notes that most evolutionists in Darwin's time rejected one or more of these laws; and that Darwin himself saw them as a logically inseparable package. I myself suspect that the word "theory" remains in the conventional title because the ideas of evolution by natural selection require new ways of thinking: thinking about the importance of individuals in groups, rather than of stereotypes; thinking about unimaginably long periods of time; and thinking about consequences of changes so small that they have no consequences measurable within several generations. Also, Darwin's discoveries go against Aristotle's theories of causation, which work well for human artifacts such as plays and pots, and also go against hypotheses about biological speciation that grant humans the appearance of more importance in the nature of things than they possess as a species. Will someone volunteer to write a description of evolution by natural selection in Lojban, using all the appropriate abstractions that Lojban so conveniently provides? I lack the time to pass on more than a few thoughts: Evolution is a process, {pu'u farvi}. Speciation may be considered a point-event/achievement, {mu'e jutsi binxo}, a `point-event of a species type of transformation'. ---Except that in the case of speciation, the so-called point-event may persist over a period of time longer than is intuitively comprehensible! You can say: Individuals/members of a species experience different environments. lo lu'a jutsi cu lifri lo drata vanbi and Different environments experienced by members of a species cause the process and the point-event of evolution. lo dratyvanbi ri'i lo lu'a jutsi cu rinka lo pu'u je mu'e farvi One might even say The experience of life rewards members of a species for the atypical state of differences by the standard established by the stereotypical member of the last-mentioned. lo li'i jmive cu cnemu lo lu'a jutsi lo za'i drata be fi le'e ri Although this is a somewhat unusual use of the the gismu {cnemu}, I think it is applicable. It is a mistake to say that A sterotypical proto-lion evolves into a sterotypical lion. le'e clirycinfo cu farvi le'e cinfo since the experience of evolution, {li'i farvi}, applies to individuals. However, you might well say that the Children of individual proto-lions evolve into sterotypical lions. lo lu'a panzi be lu'a clirycinfo cu farvi le'e cinfo Robert J. Chassell bob@gnu.ai.mit.edu Rattlesnake Mountain Road bob@grackle.stockbridge.ma.us Stockbridge, MA 01262-0693 USA (413) 298-4725 ri'i BAI experienced by lifri modal, 1st place patient/passive case tag; happens to...,experienced by...,with passive... li'i experience of lifri liz x1 is an experience of to experiencer x2 mu'e point-event of mulno mub x1 is a point-event/achievement of pu'u process of pruce pup x1 is a process of za'i state of zasti zam x1 is a state of le'e LE the stereotypical lu'a LAhE an individual/member/component of farvi fav develop 'evolve' <> x1 develops/evolves towards/into x2 from x3 through stages x4 <> (cf. pruce, banro, makcu, ciste, cupra, ferti) jutsi jut species <> x1 is a species of genus x2, family x3, etc.; [open-ended tree-structure categorization] <> binxo bix bi'o become <> x1 becomes/changes/converts/transforms into x2 under conditions x3 <> [resultative, not-necessarily agentive, change]; (cf. cenba for non-resultative, galfi for agentive, stika for non-resultative, non-agentive change; zasni) lifri lif fri experience 'life' <> x1 [person/passive/state] undergoes/experiences x2 (event/experience); x2 happens to x1 <> [also has/have (of events/experiences); (adjective:) x1 is empirical; suggests passive undergoing but does not exclude active (per zukte) intent; a deserved experience: reward or punishment (= jernyfri, zanjernyfri, maljernyfri)]; (cf. cmavo list ri'i, jmive, fasnu, renvi) drata dat other <> x1 isn't the-same-thing-as/is different-from/other-than x2 by standard x3; x1 is something else <> (cf. mintu, frica) vanbi vab environment 'ambient' <> x1 (ind./mass) is part of an environment/surroundings/context/ambience of x2 <> [(adjective:) x1 is ambient]; (cf. cmavo list va'o, sruri, jibni, jbini, ferti, tcini) rinka rik ri'a cause <> x1 (event/state) effects/physically causes effect x2 (event/state) under conditions x3 <> [x1 is a material condition for x2; x1 gives rise to x2]; (cf. gasnu, krinu, nibli, te zukte, se jalge, bapli, jitro, cmavo list ri'a, mukti, ciksi, xruti) cnemu nem ne'u reward <> x1 (agent) rewards x2 [recipient] for atypical x3 (event/property) with reward/desserts x4 = <> [differs from earned payment because of atypical nature; rewards need not be positive but are in some sense deserved from the point of view of the rewarder: positive reward (= zanyne'u), punishment, penalty, demerit (= malne'u, sfane'u); x4 may be a specific object, a commodity (mass), an event, or a property; pedantically, for objects/commodities, this is sumti-raising from ownership of the object/commodity (= posne'u, po'ervelne'u for unambiguous semantics)]; (cf. dunda, friti, jerna, jinga, jivna, pleji, sfasa, venfu, prali, dapma) panzi paz offspring <> x1 is a [biological] offspring/child/kid/hybrid of parent(s) x2; (adjective:) x1 is filial <> (cf. grute, verba, bersa, tixnu, se rorci, patfu) clira lir early <> x1 (event) is early by standard x2 <> cinfo lion <> x1 is a lion/[lioness] of species/breed x2 <> jmive miv ji'e live <> x1 lives/is alive by standard x2; x1 is an organism/living thing <> [(adjective:) x1 is vital, organic]; (cf. lifri, morsi, stuzi, zvati, xabju)