Natural reward as the fundamental macroevolutionary force
Owen M. Gilbert

TL;DR
This paper proposes that natural reward, alongside natural selection, is a fundamental macroevolutionary force driving progress and innovation in the history of life, by rewarding early inventors with temporary monopolies.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of natural reward as a distinct evolutionary force that promotes progress, extending Darwinian theory without contradicting its core principles.
Findings
Natural reward incentivizes innovation and progress in evolution.
Natural reward leads to extinction-replacement macroevolution.
The dual forces of natural selection and natural reward explain major evolutionary trends.
Abstract
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection does not predict long-term progress or advancement, nor does it provide a useful way to define or understand these concepts. Nevertheless, the history of life is marked by major trends that appear progressive, and seemingly more advanced forms of life have appeared. To reconcile theory and fact, evolutionists have proposed novel theories that extend natural selection to levels and time frames not justified by the original structure of Darwin's theory. To extend evolutionary theory without violating the most basic tenets of Darwinism, I here identify a separate struggle and an alternative evolutionary force. Owing to the abundant free energy in our universe, there is a struggle for supremacy that naturally rewards those that are first to invent novelties that allow exploitation of untapped resources. This natural reward comes in form of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
