
Nails wrote:A situation which only exposes the frailty of the definition of a species.
At what point does an evolutionary line become a chicken?
When one individual is 99.5% chicken?
When 25% of the population are genetically chickens?
Species works as a concept in the here and now, but now over a period of time.
Even ring species can stretch the conceot to the limit (or maybe even beyond)
But my answer would defo be the egg, they appeared on earth before animals had first colonised the land - so we are looking at cambrain era, around 500 mya (some fish lay eggs, they just don't have the hard shell but are definately eggs) - Finding Nemo is an example my little one likes.....
The eggs we are familiar with are reptilian in origin, so date back to around 200 mya, before birds and long before chickens.
Shadowwolf wrote:Well at some point there were two almost chickens that mated and fertilised an egg, the egg grew a solid shell, got deposited and eventually hatched a chicken, all the while that egg contained the first chicken.
As we go back we travel through the various ancestors of the almost chickens, birds and on into reptiles, go further back — a lot further — and we get into simple multi-cellular organisms and such like and eventually single cells. Go far enough and our metaphorical chicken came before the egg but bears no resemblance to our beloved breakfast and dinner supplier.
The chicken or the egg causality dilemma is commonly stated as "which came first, the chicken or the egg?" To ancient philosophers, the question about the first chicken or egg also evoked the questions of how life and the universe in general began.[1]
Cultural references to the chicken and egg intend to point out the futility of identifying the first case of a circular cause and consequence. It could be considered that in this approach lies the most fundamental nature of the question. A literal answer is somewhat obvious, as egg-laying species predate the existence of chickens. However, the metaphorical view sets a metaphysical ground to the dilemma. To better understand its metaphorical meaning, the question could be reformulated as: "Which came first, X that can't come without Y, or Y that can't come without X?"
An equivalent situation arises in engineering and science known as circular reference, in which a parameter is required to calculate that parameter itself. Examples are Van der Waals equation and the famous Colebrook equation.
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M Paul Lloyd wrote:Am I right in thinking that chickens are the decendants of T-Rex?????
Shadowwolf wrote:Well at some point there were two almost chickens that mated and fertilised an egg, the egg grew a solid shell, got deposited and eventually hatched a chicken, all the while that egg contained the first chicken.
As we go back we travel through the various ancestors of the almost chickens, birds and on into reptiles, go further back — a lot further — and we get into simple multi-cellular organisms and such like and eventually single cells. Go far enough and our metaphorical chicken came before the egg but bears no resemblance to our beloved breakfast and dinner supplier.
Seems it was chicken!
The Beige Avenger wrote:Depending on how you look at the question, the answer is a definite "chicken" or "egg"