“Tangential”  would seem to  understate the case.  Please reply here if you 
want to talk about Arnold’s dangly bitsl  Please please do not gum up a 
perfectly good conversation about spandrels.  

Thanks, 

 

Nick 

Nick Thompson

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2021 11:09 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Friday Fodder

 

Bit of a tangent, but...

 

Consider Arnold in the role of Terminator. He managed to convey a lot of menace 
and dominance simply from size and overall shape; never once brandishing his 
penis to intimidate anyone.

 

Having recently watched the theatrical release of Terminator, I was surprised 
to find that in addition to the numerous ass shots I knew were there, there is 
full frontal of Arnold early in the film. The dangly bits are enshadowed, but 
not really hidden. Happens as he's walking through a park towards 3 "punks", 
leading up to the iconic "Your clothes, give them to me." line. 

 

 

 

On Tue, Mar 23, 2021 at 11:12 AM Prof David West <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Because I left before it ended, I have no idea how the spandrel discussion 
ended. Nick requested an explanation/elaboration/justification for my continued 
skepticism/resistance (other than being willfully obstinate for no reason) to 
the notion of spandrel. Hence the following — elaborated beyond the specific 
question of spandrel  as fodder for continuing discussion next Friday.

 

1- I am convinced that evolutionary biologists are secretly required to read 
Rudyard Kipling as prerequisite to the granting of a Ph.D.. Because, every 
story about the evolution of a specific feature — Friday it was the 
pseudo-penis of female hyenas — sounds like, and is as convincing as, one of 
Kipling's Just So stories. [Yes, trolling.]

 

2- Pseudo-penis as spandrel:

   a- Testosterone flooded female hyenas are selected because aggressive 
females have survival value in matriarchal hyena society. This really seems, to 
me, to pose a chicken-egg problem: matriarchy or female bullies first?

   b- Testosterone flooding creates a space — a spandrel — a space that is then 
"decorated." One example of 'decoration' is the pseudo-penis.

   c- by what mechanism does the decoration come about? Nick said it was a 
direct result of testosterone flooding, that "all" such results would appear, 
that none of them was independently 'selected for." This is a specific area 
where I fail to understand what Nick is saying and need correction. If I heard 
correctly that all effects of testosterone flooding would appear — Nick 
emphatically said "all" and "will" in his explanation — then:

    -- we should not only see a clitoris run amok, but also beards, rock hard 
pecs instead of pillow-breasts,  20-inch biceps, denser bones, and overall 
greater muscle mass.

    -- the "purpose" of the pseudo-penis is aggression display and 
reproductive-act dominance. But, of all the results of testosterone flooding 
that "will" result, a big penis seems the least useful for that purpose. 
Muscles and size would seem more than sufficient. Consider Arnold in the role 
of Terminator. He managed to convey a lot of menace and dominance simply from 
size and overall shape; never once brandishing his penis to intimidate anyone. 
(And if we assume he was as liberal a user of steroids in his body-building 
career as many of his colleagues, his penis would not have scared a squirrel.)

    -- Why so baroque a decoration?

    -- Why did testosterone cause the clitoris to merge with the urethra and 
the vagina? Did these not exist as separate organs in predecessor species to 
the hyena? How is that even possible? is the pseudo-penis not a 
clitoris-urethra-vagina at all but some kind of evolution of an avian cloaca?

    -- This specific decoration seems to have anti-survival consequences (most 
firstborn hyenas are also stillborn) and yet this decoration seems immune to 
selection. Or maybe not, we have yet to see what might succeed hyenas a few 
million years from now.

 

3- More general issue: whole-part evolution. Jon seemed to understand what I 
was trying to say last Friday on this matter.

   a- Consider the peregrine falcon. Some of the traits/features that make it a 
formidable predator: very lightweight bones coupled with overdeveloped muscles 
which contribute to its ability to withstand G forces and make 200 mile per 
hour dives (and withstand the shock of kinetic energy when it hits its prey); 
razor sharp talons; notched beak to sever spinal columns; full-color binocular 
vision with resolution that allows seeing a pigeon at distances greater than a 
mile; nictating membrane to protect from wind force during dives; and ability 
to see into the ultra-violet spectrum.

   b- If I understand Darwin (a huge if): each of these features is the result 
of a sequence of selected/preserved minute changes in single molecules: e.g. 
keratin, opsins, crystallins. Each of these molecules are expressed as a 
sequence of amino acid 'letters', 20 in number. If the string of letters were 
100 characters in length (crystallins and opsins are much longer) then the odds 
of any given string are 20 to the 100 power. By comparison, the number of 
hydrogen atoms in the universe is estimated to be 10 to the 90th power.

   c- If evolution proceeded with one amino acid letter pairing with a second, 
getting selected, then pairing with a third, etc., each addition being one of 
20 equally probable options; then, coming up with the string that expresses, 
precisely, as the falcon's beak is fantastically improbable (winning the 
lottery every year since the Big Bang).

   d- This brings in the question of time. Has there been sufficient time for a 
process of random change / selection to allow the formation of such a string. 
This was a huge issue for Darwin because the prevailing scientific estimate of 
the age of the Earth was twenty-million years. [Lord Kelvin using the equations 
of thermodynamics.] This was not nearly enough time for Darwin's evolution and 
he was "greatly troubled by it." Rutherford, using radioactive decay equations, 
"saved" Darwin by extending the age of the Earth to 4.5 billion years.

   e- Kind-of. If evolution literally proceeds one amino acid letter at a time 
to assemble a specific string that has a probability of existing of 1 / 20 to 
the hundredth power (or more) — there is insufficient time since the Big Bang 
for that string to emerge via chance.

   f- it seems as if some kind of short-cut is essential. Suppose you have 
parallel/simultaneous evolution of 'sub-strings' and then 'main-line' evolution 
proceeds upon combinations (wholes) of these strings, Then, it is quite likely 
that 4.5 billion years provides sufficient time. This, it seems to me, suggests 
that evolution deals with an aggregate, a whole; not individual amino acids 
one-by-one, or even sub-strings one-by-one.

   g- Which circles back to the falcon. If each of the mentioned 
traits/features evolved independently and sequentially then we run out of time 
again. If each of the traits/features evolved independently then there seems to 
be a macro-problem of how they 'just happened' to occur simultaneously and 
apparently 'in concert'.

 

So my conclusion, apparently wrong because it disagrees with the experts in the 
group, is that evolution must proceed whole-organism to whole-organism and not, 
feature-trait by feature-trait the way that it is presented.

 

This also means, that individual feature-traits — as marvelous as the the 
falcon's eye or as silly as the pseudo-penis — cannot, and should not be 
"explained" independently. To do so is to focus on the 'noise' and not the 
'signal'. Such efforts are the product of 19th century thinking and unworthy of 
complexity scientists like yourselves.

 

davew

 

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