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Natural Adaptation Theory

A proposed refinement to classical Natural Selection, emphasizing that adaptation is not just a passive filter but an active, iterative process of fit-making between an organism (or community) and its environment. It focuses on the mechanisms of adaptability itself—plasticity, learning, niche construction—as traits that are selected for. The theory argues evolution favors not just static "fitness," but the capacity to generate new fits in response to change. For communities, this means valuing structures that enable learning and reorganization.
Example: A software developer community doesn't just survive by knowing one programming language (a static fit). It thrives through Natural Adaptation Theory: it selects for a culture of continuous learning, hackathons (niche construction for innovation), and modular organization that can pivot quickly. Its key adaptive trait is not a specific skill, but the meta-skill of adaptive capacity itself.
by Dumuabzu February 5, 2026
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The application of Darwin's core principles—variation, heredity, and differential survival—explicitly to communities as super-organisms. It argues that environmental pressures (climate, war, economic competition) naturally select for communities with the most adaptive bundles of institutions, technologies, and social norms. Communities that fail to adapt disintegrate or are absorbed. This frames history as the natural selection of social organisms.
Community Natural Selection Theory Example: Ancient Mesopotamian city-states that developed writing and codified law (adaptive traits) outcompeted and absorbed neighboring tribal societies that relied on oral tradition. Their social "organism" was more fit for complex administration and trade. This Community Natural Selection led to the dominance of a new, more complex community form.
by Dumuabzu February 5, 2026
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