Does natural selection explain the selforganization of the entire cosmos?
Journal Title: Extreme Life, Biospeology & Astrobiology - International Journal of the Bioflux Society - Year 2012, Vol 4, Issue 1
Abstract
Because only enduring systems ultimately persist, physicist D. B. Kelley’s theory of universal selection, or “preservation of the stable,” expounds enormously upon the genesis of every lasting phenomenon in history, making it arguably the most interdisciplinary discovery ever made in science. In his new book, The Origin of Everything, Kelley thus shows Darwin’s principle of natural selection, or survival of the fittest, to explain not only the origin of species as exposed in 1859, but the genesis of every steadfast assemblage ever to have endured. In other words, it isn’t just stable species that are naturally selected to exist, as all of Nature’s many unwavering systems are ultimately selected. Kelley therefore demonstrates that preservation of the stable is not an innate characteristic of being, but an extremely powerful process, or deterministic mechanism, which absolutely demands fitness from all such ensembles. It therein explains the tremendous amount of variation among Nature’s many assemblages, as well as their stability, or order. However extraordinary, it even unites Darwinism and Einsteinian relativity, as it further clarifies the relative formation of every phenomenon ever to have been. Consequently, our Earth isn’t the only ecology governed by survival of the fittest, for our entire cosmos is an astronomical ecosystem determined in full via preservation of the stable itself. These findings are also in perfect accord with the stringent demands of modern biology’s three-part algorithm, or the three fundamental mechanisms responsible for life’s stability and evolution. Remarkably, universal selection has even been confirmed at reputable laboratories through numerous experiments in physics, quantum physics, chemistry and more. While Darwin thus revolutionized all of our various biological sciences by revealing the immense logic behind every adaptation of every species, Kelley holds that universal selection revolutionizes science in its entirety. He claims that it illuminates “the natural origins and therefore the natural order throughout our universe as a whole.”
Authors and Affiliations
Jack Claycomb
Does natural selection explain the selforganization of the entire cosmos?
Because only enduring systems ultimately persist, physicist D. B. Kelley’s theory of universal selection, or “preservation of the stable,” expounds enormously upon the genesis of every lasting phenomenon in history, maki...
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