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Evolving Thoughts

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Snowflake Grumpafudamus 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 a position as a Sessional Lecturer at the University of Queensland, in Australia. 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.

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Category: EvolutionGeneral ScienceHumorLogic and philosophyPhilosophy of ScienceReligionSocial evolutionSpecies and systematics
Posted on: July 4, 2007 8:38 AM, by John S. Wilkins

Back from the drinking sessionconference, with many good thoughts.

One in particular is due to the talk by Aiden Lyons at ANU on probability and evolution - after more than two decades trying to figure it out, I had to wait for a grad student to put it all neatly into perspective. His argument that there are at least three if not four senses or interpretations of probability and chance in evolution that - apart from anything else - prevents fitness being tautological, raises many more questions, but that is the nature of good papers.

Another, in no particular succession, is whether we need to start a discipline of Unapologetics to counter really bad theological justifications of religion.

I am also led by several papers, one by Peter Godfrey-Smith and another by Paul Griffiths and his collaborators Ed Machery and Stefan Linquist, both on the nature of innateness as a concept, and Paul's paper also on a concept - of homology - to wonder if there may be the beginnings of a historical critical methodology for constructing the likely speciality-specific deviations of terms like this from "folk belief", via the use of X-phi (experimental philosophy), developed initially by Stephen Stich. If we know pretty much what the naive folk concept is, then we have a good reason to think we can work out what semantic variables have been changed in the refiguring of a concept in a given discipline. Of course, there are complications - common sense is common only in the sense that it is what the wider culture receives from experts. So the current received meaning may already have been modified by the sciences (as in the concept of "species"). Food for thought.

More as it occurs to me.

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Comments

#1

Do you have any material on the concept of "unaplogetics?" And I want to thank you for the paper by Griffiths, Machery and Lindquist. PZ is going to give a talk here in Minnesota on the neural basis of religious belief, which some have recently been saying is "innate." I look forward to seeing how the talk and the paper fit together.

Posted by: Mike Haubrich, FCD | July 4, 2007 11:19 AM

#2

um, this is a Sokal-like parody, right? (I mean, except for the "I'm back" part.)

Posted by: divalent | July 4, 2007 11:52 AM

#3

I was thinking of collating those jibes which arouse theocons to gibbering rage and calling it Apoplectics...

Posted by: Ian H Spedding FCD | July 4, 2007 2:23 PM

#4

John - are you going to post more on Lyons' work? I'm interested in this, being an evolutionary biologist and a statistician and all that.

Bob

Posted by: Bob O'H | July 5, 2007 1:50 PM

#5

The issue here is that Aiden's work is still in progress. He's giving a version at the ISHPSSB conference in a couple of weeks. But it would be problematic to post his arguments in detail before he does.

Posted by: John Wilkins | July 5, 2007 9:50 PM

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