The classic case for competitiveness as a force driving change was made by Charles Darwin in The Origin of Species by Natural Selection (1859). Adaptation, the ability to react successfully to a changed environment, accounts for multiplicity in the world of nature. Long billed birds are better able to dip beneath the surface of shallow lagoons for their food; the sharp, hard, short beaks of certain finches allow them to crack nuts and seeds. Darwin's reading of nature, so immediately popular and at the same time so controversial, fit well within the goals of nineteenth‐century scientific thought. Tracing the causes of change to fixed, logical patterns allowed scientists to remove non‐objective elements from their equations for evolution. Such issues as value, valor, or virtue held no place in a system of analysis unless they had survival value.
Article navigation
1 February 1997
Review Article|
February 01 1997
COMPETITION AND EVOLUTION
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2051-3143
Print ISSN: 1059-5422
© MCB UP Limited
1997
Competitiveness Review (1997) 7 (2): i–iv.
Citation
Hayward M (1997), "COMPETITION AND EVOLUTION". Competitiveness Review, Vol. 7 No. 2 pp. i–iv, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb046348
Download citation file:
109
Views
Suggested Reading
Toucan beak composite structure ratio analysis and simulation
Bioinspired, Biomimetic and Nanobiomaterials (March,2015)
Historical recovery heroes – Charles Darwin
Mental Health and Social Inclusion (May,2011)
UK consumers' willingness to pay for laying hen welfare
British Food Journal (June,2020)
Mechanical performance analysis and experimental study of soft-bodied bird-billed pneumatic gripper
Industrial Robot (January,2022)
British Patent Abridgements
Aircraft Engineering (July,1961)
Related Chapters
The Cooperative Gene: Evolution, Human Nature, and Politics
Biopolicy: The Life Sciences and Public Policy
The management of lagoons to conserve their natural heritage
Wetland management: Proceedings of the international conference organized by Institution of Civil Engineers and held in London on 2–3 June 1994
‘He Died a Lot’: Gothic Gameplay in What Remains of Edith Finch
Death, Culture & Leisure: Playing Dead
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
