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The evolution of complexity without natural selection, a possible large-scale trend of the fourth kind
2005
Paleobiology
A simple principle predicts a tendency, or vector, toward increasing organismal complexity in the history of life: As the parts of an organism accumulate variations in evolution, they should tend to become more different from each other. In other words, the variance among the parts, or what I call the "internal variance" of the organism, will tend to increase spontaneously. Internal variance is complexity, I argue, albeit complexity in a purely structural sense, divorced from any notion of
doi:10.1666/0094-8373(2005)031[0146:teocwn]2.0.co;2
fatcat:zsmkyuegpzbwjopvmqrpufkxhu