what does the Theory of Evolution say about death? — TheMadFool
The whole article is worth a read, it's pretty breezy, and relates quite nicely to the OP. As to weather death 'evolved', well, no, death is a condition of evolution, so cannot have evolved; This is a logical/defintional point. Also, the question mixes up levels up analysis: death is what happens to individual organisms, evolution is what happens to species and their environments (the correlate of the latter is extinction, not death). — StreetlightX
"The scientific literature is full of explanations for aging: Protein aggregation, DNA damage, inflammation, telomeres. But these are the biological responses to an underlying cause, which is accumulating damage through thermal and chemical degradation.... If this interpretation of the data is correct, then aging is a natural process that can be reduced to nanoscale thermal physics—and not a disease." — StreetlightX
If you propagate - i.e. if your sperm cells win - then you outwit it. You personally will die but your line will live on. Beyond that, there is no ‘why’. — Wayfarer
What about cancer cells? Dysfunctional though they are they seem to be immune to both genetic signals and environmental stress. Immortality is possible. We don't really have to die even within the context of, I quote, "thermal and chemical degradation". This seems to suggest that it's the environment that has the greater say in death and not our genes which are fully capable of immortality. — TheMadFool
Cancer lifes you to death. — StreetlightX
So the so-called immortality of the cancer cell is a double-edged sword: it buys its immortality at the price of... life (which should tell you something about how life and death cannot be as cleanly separated as I think you'd like) — StreetlightX
You mean death is a part of life itself? — TheMadFool
So, what does the Theory of Evolution say about death? — TheMadFool
I'm not sure talk of 'parts' and 'wholes' is very appropriate here; I'd perhaps like to think about it in terms of Kant's dove - Kant imagined a dove which, feeling the resistance of air on its wings, figured that it would be much better off without the air getting in its way. But you'd know how that story ends. — StreetlightX
Loren Eiseley thought it did. In The Firmament of Time, he argues it became natural. — tim wood
Why would evolution, the world, anything, anyone, care if you lived forever? — T Clark
With its environment in a state of flux it appears as if death for the life form did indeed evolve....maybe. — Codger
I mean how does non living material evolve to produce a life form adapted to the conditions existing at that time? — Codger
I'm under the impression that evolution is about survival - life. If death is necessary for survival (paradox) then it's interesting to know why. — TheMadFool
Loren Eiseley thought it did. In The Firmament of Time, he argues it became natural.
— tim wood
If it evolved then death is necessary as opposed to contingent. The reason(s) why would be interesting to know. — TheMadFool
finite life-span — TheMadFool
"If this interpretation of the data is correct, then aging is a natural process that can be reduced to nanoscale thermal physics—and not a disease" — StreetlightX
But there are some organisms that don't age, and our reproductive cell line is immortal and doesn't age. So aging is not necessary, at least for some types of cells, and there is ongoing research showing some promise into slowing or even stopping the aging process in various animals, including humans. — Marchesk
I remain sceptical. After all, germ cells are not organisms, and the reason that they don't age is that they - exactly like cancer, actually - remain undifferentiated, retaining their pluripotential so they may turn into other cells. And organisms just are differentiated beings (among other things). — StreetlightX
The Water Hydra is a little creeper that seemingly doesn't age at all. It's stem cell can apparently self-rejuvenate as needed without the cap to division that apparently affect almost all other cellular life. — Akanthinos
I've rethought my response a bit. The general principle is still the same - if a characteristic, e.g. longevity, doesn't impact reproductive success, it will have no impact on evolution by natural selection. So, once a person leaves their reproductive years, natural selection becomes blind to their longevity. I rethought my response because, historically, men can continue fathering children longer than than women can bear. — T Clark
death became natural — tim wood
Death is a necessary condition of procession. — Monitor
Every progress in evolution is dearly paid for; miscarried attempts, merciless struggle everywhere. The more detailed our knowledge of nature becomes, the more we see, together with the element of generosity and progression which radiates from being, the law of degradation, the powers of destruction and death, the implacable voracity which are also inherent in the world of matter. And when it comes to man, surrounded and invaded as he is by a host of warping forces, psychology and anthropology are but an account of the fact that, while being essentially superior to all of them, he is the most unfortunate of animals. So it is that when its vision of the world is enlightened by science, the intellect which religious faith perfects realises still better that nature, however good in its own order, does not suffice, and that if the deepest hopes of mankind are not destined to turn to mockery, it is because a God-given energy better than nature is at work in us.
Very cool. I wonder how it 'works'. — StreetlightX
So, what does the Theory of Evolution say about death? — TheMadFool
Death has both genetic and environmental components. We die because it's programmed in our genes and also because we succumb to environmental stresses. — TheMadFool
So sex and death do go together. — apokrisis
The highly conserved morphological features of apoptosis suggest that it is under genetic control...
[Hydra] budding is dependent on feeding: well-fed polyps produce roughly one bud per day; starved polyps cease to form buds after 1–2 days. This striking dependence of budding on feeding is not due to a change in cell proliferation, as initially anticipated, but rather to apoptosis...
In reflecting on possible scenarios which might have led to this close association of apoptosis with metazoan evolution, we are impressed by the need to reduce cell-cell competition in multicellular tissues....
https://academic.oup.com/icb/article/45/4/631/636419
But it is also true that hydra depend on apoptosis, or programmed cell death — apokrisis
Well, yeah, but to be fair, so does all form of complex cellular life. — Akanthinos
This doesn't mean that organismal death is itself pre-programmed. — Akanthinos
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