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Chicken comes before the Egg
Now that scientists have proved that the chicken arrived before the egg what does this tell us about evolution?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Er no they haven't
This is a particularly bad instance of Journalists badmly reporting a science story - aided and abetted by one of the scientists who just couldn't resist the temptation of a snappy sound-bite and appearance in the national press with a "silly season" story.
I really can't do better than this comment
http://scienceblogs.c..._this_is_no_way_t.php
This is a particularly bad instance of Journalists badmly reporting a science story - aided and abetted by one of the scientists who just couldn't resist the temptation of a snappy sound-bite and appearance in the national press with a "silly season" story.
I really can't do better than this comment
http://scienceblogs.c..._this_is_no_way_t.php
That the chicken came before the egg is easily shown by pure logic:
At some stage in the evolutionary process a pre-chicken, due to a succesion of random mutations, gave rise to a strain which could not mate with the parent strain - a new species, a chicken. A pre-chicken would have laid an egg (a pre-chicken's egg, note) containing that last mutation which completed the separation, - an egg which produced a chicken. That chicken then laid the first chicken's egg. So the sequence is:
Pre-chicken - pre-chicken's egg - chicken - chicken's egg. QED.
At some stage in the evolutionary process a pre-chicken, due to a succesion of random mutations, gave rise to a strain which could not mate with the parent strain - a new species, a chicken. A pre-chicken would have laid an egg (a pre-chicken's egg, note) containing that last mutation which completed the separation, - an egg which produced a chicken. That chicken then laid the first chicken's egg. So the sequence is:
Pre-chicken - pre-chicken's egg - chicken - chicken's egg. QED.
Yes, jake, but the original question obviously meant it literally, purely as a riddle. Given that chickens produce eggs which produce more chickens, which came first?
The logic shows that the chicken came before the chicken's egg.
And there was an extraordinarily literal answer from Victor Serebriakoff late prominent member of Mensa, who once said that the egg obviously came first because there were species producing eggs before the chicken arrived!
I had to explain gently to him that the question is "Which came first, the chicken or a chicken's egg?" not "Which came first, the chicken or any old egg?" otherwise there is no riddle.
The logic shows that the chicken came before the chicken's egg.
And there was an extraordinarily literal answer from Victor Serebriakoff late prominent member of Mensa, who once said that the egg obviously came first because there were species producing eggs before the chicken arrived!
I had to explain gently to him that the question is "Which came first, the chicken or a chicken's egg?" not "Which came first, the chicken or any old egg?" otherwise there is no riddle.
yes... the thing is, chicken has changed its name over the years (from pre-chicken to chicken) while egg is still egg. So the answer is more to do with words than with biology. If you defined chicken as 'something that comes out of an egg' (which of course is far too wide to be much use in real life), the answer would be much trickier.
Look, folks , you're making too much of this riddle (and Old Geezer is making the same mistake as Victor Serebriakoff did). The riddle wasn't concerned with anything as complicated as previous egg-layers - that they existed is so obvious that the riddle would have been pointless - but to chickens and chicken's eggs. Since they seem to exist in an endless continuum, which came first?
My explanation (thogh sound) is one of those cases where one deals with a joke in a spirit of tongue-in-cheek mock-seriousness.
My explanation (thogh sound) is one of those cases where one deals with a joke in a spirit of tongue-in-cheek mock-seriousness.
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