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Survival of the fittest is a phrase which is a shorthand for a concept relating to competition for survival or predominance. Originally applied by Herbert Spencer in his Principles of Biology of 1864, Spencer drew parallels to his ideas of economics with Charles Darwin's theories of evolution by what Darwin termed natural selection.
The phrase is a metaphor, not a scientific description; and it is not generally used by biologists, who almost exclusively prefer to use the phrase "natural selection".
History of the phrase[]
While the British economist Herbert Spencer is often credited with introducing the phrase "survival of the fittest" in his 1851 work Social Statics (relating to free market economics) or his First Principles of a New system of Philosophy of 1862, he actually did not use the phrase until after reading Darwin's Origin of Species. and introduced it in his Principles of Biology of 1864, vol. 1, p. 444, writing "This survival of the fittest, which I have here sought to express in mechanical terms, is that which Mr. Darwin has called 'natural selection', or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life."
In The Man Versus The State of 1884 Spencer used this phrase to reinforce his social theories, writing "Thus by survival of the fittest, the militant type of society becomes characterized by profound confidence in the governing power, joined with a loyalty causing submission to it in all matters whatever." Companies which offer better goods and services survive better in the marketplace and tend to accumulate an ever-growing market share. Poorly-adapting companies will be forced out by better-adapting ones: "killed" by the competition.
In the first four editions of The Origin of Species, Charles Darwin used the phrase "natural selection" [1] and preferred that phrase. However, Spencer's Principles of Biology drew parallels between his economic theories and Darwin's biological ones and made first use in print of the phrase "survival of the fittest". Darwin agreed with Alfred Russel Wallace that this phrase avoided the troublesome anthropomorphism of "selecting", though it "lost the analogy between nature's selection and the fanciers'." It was used by Darwin in the 5th edition of The Origin published on 10 February 1869, in a secondary header of Chapter 4 about natural selection [2] and at several places in the text, mostly using the phrase "Natural Selection, or the Survival of the Fittest". He gave full credit to Spencer, writing "I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term natural selection, in order to mark its relation to man's power of selection. But the expression often used by Mr. Herbert Spencer, of the Survival of the Fittest, is more accurate, and is sometimes equally convenient." At this time the word "fittest" would have primarily meant "most suitable" or "most appropriate" rather than "in the best physical shape".
In modern times, however, the phrase is widely used in popular literature as a catchphrase for any topic related or analogous to evolution and natural selection. It has thus been applied to principles of unrestrained competition, and it has been used extensively by both proponents and opponents of Social Darwinism. Its shortcomings as a description of Darwinian evolution have also become more apparent (see below).
Evolutionary biologists criticize how the term is used by non-scientists and the connotations that have grown around the term in popular culture. The phrase also does not help in conveying the complex nature of natural selection and modern biologists prefer and almost exclusively use the term natural selection. Indeed, in modern biology, the term fitness measures reproductive success and is not explicit about the specific ways in which organisms can be "fit" as in "having phenotypic characteristics which enhance survival and reproduction" (which was the meaning that Spencer had in mind).
Is "survival of the fittest" a tautology?[]
The phrase "survival of the fittest" is sometimes claimed to be a tautology, essentially stating "those who survive best are those who survive best" or "those who reproduce most are those who reproduce most".
In evolutionary biology the word "fitness" quantifies potential or realized reproductive success (as in "realized fitness"). Darwin and Spencer used "fittest" to refer to those individuals that are functionally most capable to tackle life challenges, i.e. to individuals endowed with phenotypic characteristics which improve most strongly one's probability of survival and reproduction.
The full cause-and-effect picture of how natural selection generates fitness differences is that those individuals which end up reproducing more do it because they differed from others in biologically relevant traits that affected their probability of surviving and/or reaching reproduction in better condition.
For instance, a gazelle that for some biomechanical reason runs faster than average will be more likely to escape predators and will therefore be more likely to produce more offspring than slower ones since the latter would get to reproduce during fewer breeding seasons. The faster gazelle would therefore be more likely to be "selected", i.e., it would have higher relative fitness than slower ones.
In the gazelle example, "survival of the fittest" would simply mean that faster gazelles have highest fitness because they are more "fitted to" escaping predators. Saying the latter is fully explicit about the causation of fitness differences in a given environment: "Survival" is simply an incidential observation in so many cases, which individually may or may not be entirely accidental (the fastest gazelle may be struck dead by lightning), while "fitness" is a property abstracted from the observation of so many deaths and survivals: in our example, saying that speed adds to the fitness of an individual gazelle is saying that it increases the individual's chances for procreation: the statement "survival of the fittest" is a tautology when applied retrospectively or descriptively (statistically), but it is not when applied prospectively or individually.
"Survival of the fittest" and morality[]
Many critics of evolution argue that "survival of the fittest" is a justification for violence and cruelty by premising human "rights" on the perceived quality of an individual by an arbitrary measure of "fitness". Evolution proponents often consider this to be an example of the naturalistic fallacy (or more specifically the is-ought problem), which states that prescriptive, moral statements cannot be derived from purely descriptive premises. On this view, while some have tried to use evolution as a justification for pseudoscientific ideas such as some forms of well known eugenics, these ideas are not actually supported by evolutionary theory.
External links[]
Tautology links[]
- Darwin's Untimely Burial by Stephen J. Gould
- Evolution and Philosophy: A Good Tautology is Hard to Find by John Wilkins, part of the talk.origins archive.
- CA500: "Survival of the fittest is a tautology" from the talk.origins index to creationist claims by Mark Ridley.
- Is "survival of the fittest" a tautology by Don Lindsay.
- Darwin's Great Tautology by The Doubting Thomas (pseudonym)
Morality link[]
- CA002: Survival of the fittest implies that "might makes right"
- David Hume - Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion
- Evolution and philosophy - Does right make right? by John S. Wilkins.
- "Survival of the fittest" by Alan Keyes.
- Darwinism and Laissez-Faire Capitalism from the Institute for Creation Research
Origins of the phrase[]
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zh:適者生存
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