Best 16 quotes of John Maynard Smith on MyQuotes

John Maynard Smith

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    As an evolutionary biologist, I have learned over the years that most people do not want to see themselves as lumbering robots programmed to ensure the survival of their genes. I don't think they will want to see themselves as digital computers either. To be told by someone with impeccable scientific credentials that they are nothing of the kind can only be pleasing.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection is the only workable explanation that has ever been proposed for the remarkable fact of our own existence, indeed the existence of all life wherever it may turn up in the universe.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Evolutionary game theory is a way of thinking about evolution at the phenotypic level when the fitnesses of particular phenotypes depend on their frequencies in the population.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Genetics is about how information is stored and transmitted between generations.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Information imposes certain criteria on how it can be stored.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    It is an occupational risk of biologists to claim, towards the end of their careers, that the problems which they have not solved are insoluble.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    It is in the nature of science that once a position becomes orthodox it should be suggested to criticism.... It does not follow that, because a position is orthodox, it is wrong.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Mathematics is so much easier than words mathematics makes things clear that words merely muddle and confuse and mess up.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Mathematics without natural history is sterile, but natural history without mathematics is muddled.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Paradoxically, it has turned out that game theory is more readily applied to biology than to the field of economic behavior for which it was originally designed

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    Scientific theories tell us what is possible; myths tell us what is desirable. Both are needed to guide proper action.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    So far, we have been able to study only one evolving system and we cannot wait for interstellar flight to provide us with a second. If we want to discover generalizations about evolving systems, we will have to look at artificial ones.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    The evolution of sex is the hardest problem in evolutionary biology.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    This argument [that life is too improbable to have arisen by chance] comes up repeatedly: its latest manifestation is Hoyle's discussion of the likelihood of a wind blowing through a junkyard assembling a Boeing 707 [sic]. What is wrong with it? Essentially, it is that no biologist imagines that complex structures arise in a single step.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    You couldn't have human society without language.

  • By Anonym
    John Maynard Smith

    There is no theoretical reason to expect evolutionary lineages to increase in complexity with time, and no empirical evidence that they do so. Nevertheless, eukaryotic cells are more complex than prokaryotic ones, animals and plants are more complex than protists, and so on. This increase in complexity may have been achieved as a result of a series of major evolutionary transitions. These involved changes in the way information is stored and transmitted. [The major evolutionary transitions, Nature 374, 227 - 232 (16 March 1994)]