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George C. Williams Quotes


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George C. Williams
May 12, 1926 -
Nationality: American
Category: Scientist
Subcategory: American Scientist

I am convinced that it is the light and the way.

   

Darwin based his theory on generalizations that were strictly empirical. You can go out and see that organisms do vary, that variations are inherited, and that every organism is capable of increasing its numbers in sufficiently favorable circumstances.

   

Most evolving lineages, human or otherwise, when threatened with extinction, don't do anything special to avoid it.

   

I think that my main criticism in that book was directed at the general assumption that adaptation characterizes populations and species, rather than simply the individuals in the populations and species.

   

The moment-of-conception fallacy implies that fertilization is a simple process with never a doubt as to whether it has or has not happened.

   

Ever since then, all descendant vertebrates have had the forward end of the digestive system and the forward end of the respiratory system very much involved with each other. This manifests itself in the human body with a crossing of the two systems in the throat.

   

Many traditional religions foster attitudes that ought to have disappeared as biological understanding accumulated over the last century.

   

The general rule is that anything that is passed on in reproduction does not undergo senescence.

   

The only realistic view is that a human life arises gradually, which is not much help in making personal decisions or devising public policy.

   

Job's avoidance of rebellion against God has nothing to do with God being good or wise or anything like that; it's strictly because God is so powerful, and you don't fight something when you are so much weaker than that which you would fight.

   

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