This is true, at least loosely speaking. I’m not sure why you were downvoted. Inducting from “nothing has ever permanently won” to “nothing ever will” would be overconfident, but noticing that nothing has ever permanently won and examining the reasons why might be very instructive.
Even bacteria? The specific genome that caused the black death is potentially extinct but Yersinia pestis is still around. Divine agents of Moloch if I ever saw one.
Its primary hosts are doing great. And it’s got nothing on bacillus subtilis or whatever that cyanobacteria with hundreds of billions per cubic meter of seawater is. And even those haven’t ‘won’ in the sense that sometimes gets discussed around here. They’re one form among many. Even bacteria are not the main primary producers in all environments—the land-plants take that up over a third of the earth’s surface (in a constantly shifting ecological arrangement with other things).
Additionally, if the history of life on Earth should show you anything its that nothing ever ‘wins’.
This is true, at least loosely speaking. I’m not sure why you were downvoted. Inducting from “nothing has ever permanently won” to “nothing ever will” would be overconfident, but noticing that nothing has ever permanently won and examining the reasons why might be very instructive.
Even bacteria? The specific genome that caused the black death is potentially extinct but Yersinia pestis is still around. Divine agents of Moloch if I ever saw one.
Its primary hosts are doing great. And it’s got nothing on bacillus subtilis or whatever that cyanobacteria with hundreds of billions per cubic meter of seawater is. And even those haven’t ‘won’ in the sense that sometimes gets discussed around here. They’re one form among many. Even bacteria are not the main primary producers in all environments—the land-plants take that up over a third of the earth’s surface (in a constantly shifting ecological arrangement with other things).