Now on ScienceBlogs: Open Lab PSA

Seed Media Group

Evolving Thoughts

One man's struggle against impermanence

Search

Profile

John Wilkins is an eternal student, who thinks philosophy of biology is at least as interesting as politics or sport and twice as important. He has a PhD from the University of Melbourne and worked at the University of Queensland, in Australia, before taking up a research fellowship at the University of Sydney. After a varied career, involving factories, gardening, civil service, publishing, graphics, public relations but not, unfortunately for the CV, driving a truck, John finally completed his thesis on species concepts in 2004, which he has worked into two books.

This blog is designed evolved to host any random thoughts that happen to be passing through my forebrain at a given moment. So there will be errors...

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Search old and new blogs



Other Information

The previous instantiation of this blog is accessible here.




Add to Technorati Favorites: Technorati Profile
Wikio - Top of the Blogs - Sciences
Blog Directory - Blogged
John Wilkins's Profile
John Wilkins's Facebook Profile

« God of the gaps | Main | At last! An Australian geological period! »

Making sense of evolution

Category: EvolutionPhilosophy of ScienceSpecies and systematics
Posted on: November 19, 2006 5:20 PM, by John S. Wilkins

Some time back, I was doing driving duty for a conference of philosophers (that's the collective noun; another is a dispute of philosophers) on a skin diving trip, and one of my passengers was Jonathon Kaplan (actually, if I'd crashed and killed us all, a large swathe would have been cut through the philosophy of biology, not including me). Jon was talking about adaptive landscapes and the work of Sergey Gavrilets, who proposes that in a realistic view of adaptive landscapes with thousands of alleles there will be hyperplanes of high fitness connecting nearly all regions of genome space. This inspired me to write a paper on speciation, which is forthcoming in Biology and Philosophy. I won't bore you with that right now.

But Jon's conversation comes out of a book he coauthored with Massimo Pigliucci, entitled Making sense of evolution, which has just come out. I have seen some of it in manuscript, but not the finished product (hint!).

Massimo, who was at the PSA conference (though I failed to make contact due to the drinkingdiscussions I was having with other SciBlings), proposes a reconceptualisation of evolution using Gavrilets' work. He also proposes that "species" is a family resemblance predicate, a view that I concur with independently. He discusses the adaptive landscape here on his blog.

Gavrilets' work will revolutionise evolutionary thinking the same way that Sewall Wright's work did. Wright was the author of the mathematics of adaptive landscapes, although he at first called it a "field of genetic recombination". I think that Jon and Pigliucci will be to Gavrilets, what Dobzhansky was to Wright, getting the ideas out in a manner that non-mathematicians can absorb. For my money, it at the very least undercuts the conceptual dichotomies so popular in discussions of evolution, such as drift vs selection, and sympatric vs allopatric speciation.

It's good to see a biologist and a philosopher working together on technical matters in biology. I hope this is the beginning of a tradition of employmentopportunities for future collaboration between well-funded biologists and penurious philosophers. Anyone working in some field of biology who wants a philosopher for hire, please contact me...

Did you like this post? If so, please click on the "Share this" link above and add it to your favourite social bookmarking service, or submit it to the Open Laboratory 2009 via the link on the left bottom of the page. Many thanks. John.

Comments

1
Anyone working in some field of biology who wants a philosopher for hire, please contact me...

It has to be said:

"Have Pun, Will Travel"

Posted by: Ian H Spedding FCD | November 19, 2006 6:40 PM

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter
Visit the Collective Imagination blog
Advertisement

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM