it is not wrong because only the strongest and smartest animals survived and evolved till now!
"Survival of the fittest" is a phrase originating in evolutionary theory, as an alternative description of natural selection. The phrase is today commonly used in contexts that are incompatible with the original meaning as intended by its first two proponents: British polymath philosopher Herbert Spencer (who coined the term) and Charles Darwin.
" Survival of the fittest. "
British polymath philosopher, Herbert Spencer.
Not Charles Darwin, but infact a man called Herbert Spencer. Darwin himself merely highlighted Spencer's coinage "Survival of the Fittest" in his edition of the "Evolution of Species", giving specific reference to him, however, it has become a misconception that Darwin himself coined the phrase. However, he did indeed devise the evolutionary theory, and go on his travels around the world looking for fossil records.
It did not come from anywhere, the phrase should be 'Happy as a pig in muck/mud'. This creates an image of a pig rooting through a muddy field looking for roots/grubs in the ground which is their natural way of feeding.
Survival of the fittest is a not quite accurate phrase for natural selection. Natural selection is, The non-random survival and reproductive success of randomly varying organisms.
The phrase "survival of the fittest" was coined by British philosopher Herbert Spencer, not Charles Darwin. Darwin's theory of natural selection was similar to this concept but did not use the exact phrase.
Natural selection.
Survival of the fittest. The group that is fit for it's environment will survive.
" Survival of the fittest " is an inaccurate phrase coined by one Herbert Spencer, though Darwin did use this phrase in later edition of The Origin. The theory of evolution by natural selection showed how the " fit " survive and, more importantly, achieve reproductive success. Tell your teacher to stop using this phrase!
"Survival of the fittest" is a phrase originating in evolutionary theory, as an alternative description of natural selection. The phrase is today commonly used in contexts that are incompatible with the original meaning as intended by its first two proponents: British polymath philosopher Herbert Spencer (who coined the term) and Charles Darwin.
Herbert Spencer did not actually use the term "survival of the fittest"; that phrase was coined by Herbert Spencer's contemporary, Charles Darwin. Spencer, however, adopted Darwin's ideas of natural selection and social evolution in his own works.
The phrase was coined by Herbert Spencer and Darwin used it in later editions of his work, '' On the Origin. " Not in the definitive first edition though.
It means the reproductively fittest organisms have offspring that carry the traits that made them reproductively fit. Remember, the fittest survive to reproduce, not the strongest. In some immediate environments, among humans, that could mean the richest, the funniest, the famous, or even the luckiest.
The catch phrase for the concept of social Darwinism was "survival of the fittest." This phrase was coined by Herbert Spencer to describe the belief that competition and natural selection should be applied to human societies as well.
It should be noted that it wasn't Darwin who coined the phrase "survival of the fittest", and that biologists do not generally use the phrase, as it is an inaccurate description of natural selection. Natural selection is the mechanism by which populations adapt to changing circumstances, or the mechanism that filters the genetic drift of populations to better fit existing circumstances. Natural selection is the term used to describe the differential reproduction of variant alleles. Alleles that affect the reproductive capabilities of the organism that bears them positively will increase their frequency in the population gene pool. Alleles that affect their own reproduction negatively will decrease their frequency.
survival of the fittest