http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ ... on?&path=/fiohaa wrote:except you fail to understand what evolution is.
Evolution doesn't have to be a random, "natural" process.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ ... on?&path=/fiohaa wrote:except you fail to understand what evolution is.
Indeed, spec series have more restrictions to prevent aero dominance, even though we all know that aero dominance gives us faster cars. So those spec series are sub-optimal when it comes to speed.fiohaa wrote:your theory doesnt make any sense because if you apply it to other categories where they have the SAME cars, you still see plenty of racing. So it doesn't hold!
That's why different teams on different race strategies is a sign of good health in F1. We've had a few years of monoculture with RB dominance and no apparent viable mutations. Lotus showed that being brave and trying mutations can lead to an alternative, even though that does mean trying a few non-viable mutations on the way eg front exit exhaust.Stradivarius wrote:Evolution actually encourages the competitors to find different strategies so they can take advantage of what the opponents leave behind.....
Lotus ... found something else, which turns out to be a weakness at Red Bull.
richard_leeds wrote:Indeed, spec series have more restrictions to prevent aero dominance, even though we all know that aero dominance gives us faster cars. So those spec series are sub-optimal when it comes to speed.fiohaa wrote:your theory doesnt make any sense because if you apply it to other categories where they have the SAME cars, you still see plenty of racing. So it doesn't hold!
However the premise of F1 is to have the fastest cars and allow optimisation to achieve that aim. That results in aero dominated designs which make overtaking very hard. Fewer restriction to allow even faster cars would result in even less overtaking.
We have proof of this when we look at series with more restrictions and see that they have more overtaking. If you want more overtaking in F1 then we need to ban more things so we remove the arms race based on speed. I gather this has already been tried, some people call it Indy while others call it GP2.
It's your choice, sub-optimal cars with wide margins of error that can overtake (GP2 or Indy) or cars optimised in an arms race to be very fast (F1).
I agree that teams will converge towards and optimum, but I am not sure if this will always result in "boring" racing. We often see teams dominate for some years, like Red Bull have done, and like Ferrari did 10 years ago. But even without disruptive solutions, the domination will usually end by itself. The more Ferrari dominated, the less the opposition had to loose by exploring new mutations. That is why we saw all the strongest teams except Ferrari move away from Bridgestone to Michelin after Ferrari's domination started. It wasn't necessarily because Michelin were any better than Bridgestone, it was simply due to the fact that Ferrari had the best car and in order to beat them, the other teams needed to try something different. At the same time, Ferrari, who were in the leading position, started to become conservative. They worked close with Bridgestone in order to develop tyres that were consistent and reliable, because they would normally win if nothing unexpected happened. They had the best car and the best driver and the best team and wanted consistency and predictability. McLaren and Williams and Renaualt and BAR, however, wanted the oposite. Now we see that Red Bull are very keen on changing the tyres, as their speciality is not tyre management, while Lotus wants to keep the tyres as they are.richard_leeds wrote:That's why different teams on different race strategies is a sign of good health in F1. We've had a few years of monoculture with RB dominance and no apparent viable mutations. Lotus showed that being brave and trying mutations can lead to an alternative, even though that does mean trying a few non-viable mutations on the way eg front exit exhaust.Stradivarius wrote:Evolution actually encourages the competitors to find different strategies so they can take advantage of what the opponents leave behind.....
Lotus ... found something else, which turns out to be a weakness at Red Bull.
There will be a tussle between the two. The competitive nature of F1 tends to favour convergence towards an optimum solution with the side effect of “boring” racing until the next disruptive solution arrives to change the order. Then they’ll converge towards that solution and we’ll go through the same cycle again.
Saribro wrote:http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ ... on?&path=/fiohaa wrote:except you fail to understand what evolution is.
Evolution doesn't have to be a random, "natural" process.
I don't really see the point of distinguishing between natural selection and human selection in this case. The governing mechanism of evolution is the same in any case: What brings success is likely to continue and will be the basis for the next generation/iteration, and what doesn't bring success is more likely to change in the next generation/iteration. The teams use their knowledge to improve their car and if the improvement works they are likely to keep it, but some times it turns out the improvement doesn't work as expected, or it may work, but make further improvement difficult and then this "branch" will die out, when the team finds a better solution trying a different direction. Actually, it won't necessarily die out, because the team will keep the knowledge of things that didn't work well and try it later on if things change. For example, the KERS didn't really die out in 2009 although it was abandoned. When the teams started using KERS in 2011 they could benefit from lessons learned in 2009. This is exactly what happens through natural selection, although generally much slower.fiohaa wrote:Saribro wrote:http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ ... on?&path=/fiohaa wrote:except you fail to understand what evolution is.
Evolution doesn't have to be a random, "natural" process.
i didnt say it was random. and i specifically said 'evolution by natural selection'.
and no it doesnt have to be a natural process, hence breeding.
but then thats not evolution by natural selection. thats....evolution by 'human' selection.
you could argue ultimately that everything is natural because we are products of the natural world, and therefore theres no such thing as 'man made'.
which is fair enough.
richard_leeds wrote:I thought random mutations was one of the key principles of evolution. That's how we get disruptive changes rather incremental changes.
im sorry, but you just cannot make the same comparisons between what is happening in a sport, and the natural process of evolution. its absurd.Stradivarius wrote: I don't really see the point of distinguishing between natural selection and human selection in this case. The governing mechanism of evolution is the same in any case: What brings success is likely to continue and will be the basis for the next generation/iteration, and what doesn't bring success is more likely to change in the next generation/iteration. The teams use their knowledge to improve their car and if the improvement works they are likely to keep it, but some times it turns out the improvement doesn't work as expected, or it may work, but make further improvement difficult and then this "branch" will die out, when the team finds a better solution trying a different direction. Actually, it won't necessarily die out, because the team will keep the knowledge of things that didn't work well and try it later on if things change. For example, the KERS didn't really die out in 2009 although it was abandoned. When the teams started using KERS in 2011 they could benefit from lessons learned in 2009. This is exactly what happens through natural selection, although generally much slower.
which is why i said in my last post:richard_leeds wrote:The term "evolution" isn't exclusive to the natural world, it can apply to other fields. .
Okay - so what was the original context of evolution we were talking about in? well......you brought it up, with this:Its not just termed 'evolution' which on its own can mean a lot of things.
A journal extract from the abstract of an article entitled: Universal Darwinism, its scope and limits....Unfortunately what we are seeing is natural consequence of evolution, the clock can't be turned back.
source: http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.100 ... 7-3983-3_5My argument is based on hierarchical functional descriptions of natural selection. I suggest that natural selection ought not to be thought of as a single process but rather as a series of processes which can be analysed in terms of a hierarchy of functional descriptions (in much the same way as many people think of cognition). This, in turn, casts doubt on the idea that it is possible in principle to settle debates about whether particular phenomena count as instances of natural selection.
The way I see it, whether or not such a comparison is absurd, depends entirely on what I am trying to demonstrate through the comparison. I don't think it is absurd to compare different competitions and looking at similarities in how the competitors change in order to improve their competitiveness.fiohaa wrote: im sorry, but you just cannot make the same comparisons between what is happening in a sport, and the natural process of evolution. its absurd.
Maybe I have not interpreted you correctly, but I fail to see why this analogy is dependent on the competitors having the same environment, the same resources and the same oportunities. Does a bear have the same resources as a deer? Does a short giraffe have the same oportunities as a tall giraffe? Does a tree growing on a peak have the same oportunities as a tree growing in a dip in the terrain?you have to distinguish between human and natural......its one of the fundamental topics with evolution by natural selection - Hence the theory is 'Evolution by natural selection'. The clue is in the title. Its not just termed 'evolution' which on its own can mean a lot of things.
there are so many human motivations, influences, and not to mention MONEY that shape F1 that deeming it to be a natural process is incredibly naiive.
Okay, teams learnt from lessons and improved on their creations - what on earth is your point? That in itself does not mean that eventually all the teams reach some performance wall.
The OP is trying to make a point that F1 is reaching some kind of performance plateau, and that its cyclical.
I'm arguing that this cannot be the case, due to points I've already made in previous posts. If his theory holds true, all the teams would eventually be competing for wins, and All be similar pace.
That is clearly not the case, why?
1. Massively different budgets (hence why teams should open up their accounts and we should do a Points/£ index)
2. because of this, its not a fair competition. That is a fact. None of the teams are operating in exactly the same environment.
This analogy would absolutely fine, if all the teams were operating in the same environment, each year, and the teams that 'survived' (did the best) were the ones that adapted. Okay......but the environment is not the same for each team, is it?
They each have completely different resources, in terms of labour, materials, All dictated by their budget.
If they all had the same budget - i would 100% agree with you. But they don't.
I think you've missed the forest for the trees here. The evolutionary changes to F1 aren't exemplified within the teams; they're seen in the sport as a whole. Look at any rule change, a variable that affects all teams, and you'll see very clear environmental factors driving that change in one direction or another. I'll leave it to someone else to point those out.fiohaa wrote:[...]
as i say, my main argument is simply that because all 11 teams have very different resources, they are not competing in the same environment, and so any kind of improvements made cannot be pinned down to an evolutionary process - of any kind.
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