I think the attribution you are looking for is "Darwins' theory of evolution". He wrote several books hypothesizing his theories, the most pertinent to your question being "Origin of Species". You might also want to look up something called the "kalisto effect"... It is a theory based on a similar principal, but in which, occasionally evolution takes makes a giant step and creates a short lived, but particularly efficient abhoritional species
Darwinism
This is the concept of gradualism.
Concept called gradualism. Not hypothesis, as it has been tested and confirmed, especially among the " little shellies. "
Gradualism.
That theory is called punctuated equilibrium.
Others have said twice: it is called Punctuated Equilibrium.
a hypothesis can also be called an educated GUESS. while a theory can be considered as a group of guesses with particular proper research
No, it happens in small leaps. This is called punctuated equilibrium. Gradualism is actually the answer to the question though punctuated equilibrium is also another tempo of evolutionary change.
Darwin's theory is correct but the smaller parts within that answer is called Gradualism which is more commonly used
Darwin's classic theory of evolution assumed that evolution is a slow, contunuous process, by which new species evolve and emerge. This is referred to at times as "organic evolution" and the "synthetic theory of evolution", or just the Darwinian theory of evolution. A newer theory, proposed originally by Niles Eldridge and Stephen Jay Gould is known as "punctuated equilibria", a model in which the evloution of new species occurs only periodically, in relatively rapid spurts. See "Time Frames the Rethinking of Darwinian Evolution and the Theory of Punctuated Equilibraia, Simon & Schuster, 1985"AnswerThe slow, constant process has also been called "gradualism."
it is called steadily
hypothesis