Evolution As Natural History: A Philosophical Analysis

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-06-30
Publisher(s): Greenwood Pub Group
List Price: $69.15

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Summary

Wim van der Steen charts conceptual foundations of evolutionary biology and, on the basis of this, he evaluates applications of evolutionary theory outside biology. Philosophical analysis shows that key notions of the theory such as fitness, adaptation, selection, and optimality are empty place-holder concepts that call for context-dependent specifications of meaning. For example, as he points out, the notion of optimality is empty without a specification of constraints. Hence, the controversial thesis that animals perform optimal behaviors as a result of natural selection is meaningless rather than true or false. Analysis shows that many other controversies in evolutionary biology are spurious. Thus, the thesis of genic selectionism, which puts genes at center stage in evolutionary theory, is best reconstructed as an arbitrary conceptualization without substance. Disagreements over the thesis are futile. They reflect preferences for different conceptualizations which are ultimately equivalent. As concepts are properly specified, van der Steen asserts evolutionary theory turns out to be a body of interesting natural history at a low level of generality. General laws of evolution do not exist. Hence, evolutionary approaches do not allow sweeping claims about human nature. Unfortunately, in disciplines outside biology such claims are often defended with evolutionary approaches. Evolutionary theory also cannot serve as a foundation for normative views in ethics or epistemology. This is an important and controversial work for scholars and advanced researchers in biology and the philosophy of biology.

Author Biography

WIM J. van der STEEN is Professor of Philosophy of Biology, Faculties of Biology and Philosophy and Institute of Ethics, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, and has published in experimental biology, the philosophy of biology, the philosophy of medicine, and ethics.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1(6)
Problems with Fitness
7(18)
Introduction
7(1)
Preliminaries: The Generality of Biological Theories
8(3)
Fitness as Reproductive Survival: No Tautologies
11(1)
Fitness as a Supervenient Concept
12(1)
Supervenience Made Concrete
13(3)
The Propensity Interpretation: Mills and Beatty
16(1)
The Propensity Interpretation: Sober
17(1)
Some Recent Developments
18(4)
Conclusions
22(3)
Adaptationism
25(14)
Introduction
25(1)
Analyzing Riddles
26(2)
Selection without Selective Agents
28(8)
Conclusions
36(3)
The Chimera of Optimality
39(16)
Introduction
39(1)
Generality, Universality, and Testability
40(2)
Constraints and Free Will
42(3)
Hard and Soft Constraints
45(4)
Controversies over Constraints
49(5)
Conclusions
54(1)
The Units of Selection
55(18)
Introduction
55(1)
Genic Selectionism: The Issue of Representation
56(5)
The Puzzle of Screening-off
61(4)
Group Selection and Species Selection
65(6)
Conclusions
71(2)
Evolution and Altruism
73(26)
Introduction
73(1)
Egoism and Altruism: A Scheme for Conceptual Analysis
74(2)
Egoism versus Altruism: Samples from Ethics
76(4)
The Relevance of Empirical Issues
80(2)
Explaining Altruism in Animals
82(3)
The Paradigm of Evolutionary Psychology
85(4)
The Paradox of Altruism: Sesardic's View
89(3)
Dissolving the Paradox of Altruism
92(4)
Conclusions
96(3)
Evolution and Culture
99(12)
Introduction
99(1)
Natural and Cultural Selection
100(3)
Against Overarching Theories of Culture
103(2)
Evolutionary Psychologists on Culture
105(5)
Conclusions
110(1)
Against Evolutionary Ethics
111(20)
Introduction
111(1)
Demise of the Naturalistic Fallacy?
112(9)
No Foundations for Ethics?
121(4)
The Explanatory Relevance of Evolutionary Biology
125(2)
Evolutionary Thinking in Normative Settings
127(1)
Conclusions
128(3)
Evolution and Knowledge
131(18)
Introduction
131(1)
The Evolution of Cognition
132(4)
The Evolution of Scientific Theories
136(3)
Toward a Broader Perspective
139(7)
Concluions
146(3)
Diseases in an Evolutionary Perspective
149(12)
Introduction
149(1)
The Need for Darwinian Medicine
150(2)
Natural Selection and Psychopathology
152(5)
The Environment in Aggression and Psychopathology
157(3)
Conclusions
160(1)
Conclusions
161(4)
References 165(14)
Index 179

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