Darwinian evolution as a dynamical principle

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Abstract

Darwinian evolution (DE)-biology's powerful process of adaptation-is remarkably different from other known dynamical processes. It is antithermodynamic, driving away from equilibrium; it has persisted for 3.5 billion years; and its target, fitness, can seem like "Just So"stories. For insights, we make a computational model. In the Darwinian Evolution Machine (DEM) model, resource-driven duplication and competition operate inside a cycle of search/compete/choose. We find the following: 1) DE requires multiorganism coexistence for its long-term persistence and ability to cross fitness valleys. 2) DE is driven by resource dynamics, like booms and busts, not just by mutational change. And, 3) fitness ratcheting requires a mechanistic separation between variation and selection steps, perhaps explaining biology's use of separate polymers, DNA and proteins.

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Kocher, C. D., & Dill, K. A. (2023). Darwinian evolution as a dynamical principle. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(11). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2218390120

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