The Units of Evolution: Essays on the Nature of Species

Front Cover
Marc Ereshefsky
MIT Press, 1992 - Psychology - 405 pages

The Units of Evolution is the first anthology devoted solely to the nature of species, one of the most hotly debated issues in biology and the philosophy of biology. The anthology is evenly balanced between biological and philosophical issues, making it equally useful for workers in both fields.In his general introduction, Marc Ereshefsky sketches the framework for the debate, explaining how biologists disagree over the definition of the term species, and philosophers struggle to evaluate the scientific utility of a categorization device that might lack a single defining characteristic.Essays in the first section offer various definitions of the species category, starting with Ernst Mayr's seminal work on species and including essays by Robert Sokal and Theodore Crovello, Paul Ehrlich and Peter Raven, Leigh Van Valen, Edward Wiley, Joel Cracraft, Brent Mishler and Michael Donoghue, Hugh Paterson, and Alan Templeton.The essays in the second section focus on such philosophical issues as whether species taxa are individuals or natural kinds, whether a monistic or pluralistic approach to systematics should be adopted, and the distinction between species and higher taxa.

Contributors Include
Michael Ghiselin, David Hull, John Beatty, Michael Ruse, Elliott Sober, Philip Kircher, and Marc Ereshefsky

From inside the book

Contents

2
17
Differentiation of Populations
57
5
79
Species Concepts and Speciation Analysis
93
7
106
A Case for Pluralism
121
9
159
Introduction to Part II
187
12
245
13
262
A Radical Solution to the Species Problem
279
14
293
Species
317
Natural Kinds Individuals or What?
343
17
361
Acknowledgments
399

11
223

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1992)

Marc Ereshefsky is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Calgary.

Bibliographic information