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06-20-2003, 11:27 AM | #11 |
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Oolon,
That thread can be found on the link in my OP. Of course, pz was mistaken, as my quotes clearly show...and *thats* what im arguing against. Im trying to correct yet another Gouldian misrepresentation. -GFA |
06-21-2003, 06:52 AM | #12 | |
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As I pointed out before, Gould did not paint his critics as drooling, single-minded slaves to the altar of adaptationism. He acknowledged their good and worthy contributions, and he himself wrote at length on selection as a central mechanism of evolution. At the heart, we also know that all of these people, Gould, Lewontin, Maynard Smith, Dawkins, etc., are largely in agreement about the fact of evolution. However, a curious thing happens in these discussions. Gould considered himself a pluralist, and wrote extensively on alternative mechanisms to selection...not to deny adaptation, but to bring to our attention the richness and complexity of evolution. The response from many of the people you cite was to revile him. Out of one side of their mouth they would say that his ideas were trifling, unimportant, and muddled; out of the other side they would agree with him, and claim that they already incorporated all of his thought into their research, and had done so long ago. Their defenders do as you have done, and find passages where these authors pay lip service to non-adaptationist ideas, and make this peculiar claim that there is no substantive difference between the views of a Pinker and of a Lewontin...other than the fact that Lewontin is a lying marxist, of course. This is the real misrepresentation, unfortunately. There are important differences in structuralist vs. functionalist explanations, for instance, and it's bad enough that the differences are blithely swept under the rug, but even worse, the ultra-Darwinian orthodoxy then claims that they are structuralists, too. They aren't. I'm sorry, but John Maynard Smith is not Brian Goodwin. We see the same thing with anti-reductionists and reductionists; try as some might to pretend so, Lewontin's ideas are not a subset of Dawkins'. It requires an ignorance of a large body of opposing literature to argue otherwise, and it's hard not to be amused when someone tries to critique Gould by claiming that scientists like Dawkins and Pinker are not overwhelmingly adaptationist in their perspective. It's like someone trying to argue that Michael Jordan wasn't a great basketball player because he tried his hand at baseball once. It's even more amusing when the critique parrots a title by Arthur Jensen, of all people. Whatever were you thinking? Why would anyone start off a discussion with a reference that immediately discredits his opinion? |
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06-21-2003, 07:22 AM | #13 | |||||
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I mean, I laughed out loud at this line... Quote:
Or this: Quote:
And this: Quote:
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It really is a pretty funny article. |
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06-21-2003, 01:53 PM | #14 | ||||
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I am willing to believe that Gould's affinity for hyperbole made him misstep, and that he meant to say what you think he said. My point is that he didnt actually say that "adaptationists" were simply overemphasizing selection over neutral mechanisms and by-products. Quote:
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Lastly, I just had to chuckle at the bit about Mayr having a record of “subsumption of other people's ideas”...in a thread about Gould! Oh, I love irony! |
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06-21-2003, 02:02 PM | #15 |
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Let me just restate my point a bit more clearly:
1) Gould has said "adaptationists" only consider adaptive hypotheses. 2) Pz, despite the obvious meaning of the words, thinks Gould is saying that "adaptationists" focus primarily on adaptation, and/or only find adaptive explanations "significant or interesting". Both 1 and 2 are unambiguously false, both in theory (illustrated by the explicit disavowal of that approach by leading scholars) and in practice (illustrated by a cursory glance at the primary literature, where you find neutral theories tested and accepted). This is Gould's "muddle". Where there are real disagreements (like theories involving higher-level selection), I, for one, would extend the term. But this is not the purpose of the thread. -GFA |
06-22-2003, 04:41 PM | #16 | |
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I still agree with him about gene - level selection. But quite frankly, I don't know exactly what Dawkins thinks about adaptation"ism". |
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06-22-2003, 05:33 PM | #17 | |||||
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I recommend The Structure of Evolutionary Theory. In particular, read Chapter 7: "The Modern Synthesis as a Limited Consensus", pp. 503-591. Nowhere in that long chapter does he make the assertion that you claim (although I wouldn't be horribly surprised if at some time in his career he had brashly said something along those lines -- he wasn't one to waffle). It's actually a nuanced discussion of the hardening of the neo-Darwinian synthesis from an early pluralism to an emphasis on adaptation, which better represents his position than your misrepresentation. For instance, of Wright he says: Quote:
Gould similarly documents Dobzhansky's increasing emphasis on adaptation in succeeding editions of Genetics and the Origin of Species, and a similar shift in Simpson's work. He dissects Mayr in detail; you must be aware of Mayr's comment that "Neutral polymorphism is an infinitesimal percentage of all evolutionary phenomena." It is inarguable that there is a strongly adaptationist bias in most contemporary evolutionary biology, and nowhere is it more evident than in evolutionary psychology. I can sympathize with someone who defends that bias, but it is extremely peculiar to see people, especially evolutionary psychologists, deny that it exists. |
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06-26-2003, 11:42 PM | #18 |
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*Bump*
I'll respond as soon as I get back from vacation. -GFA |
06-27-2003, 06:37 AM | #19 | |
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If the charge is only that there is a focus on adaptation in evolutionary biology, I think many people would say unrepentently, 'guilty as charged!' Nonadaptive features are interesting, and like I've said before, for any phenotype, you have to consider both adaptationist and nonadaptationist hypotheses. Assuming that something is a spandrel is no less an assumption than assuming something is an adaptation. However, I see nothing at all wrong with a biased research focus on adaptive evolution. Who wants to spend their career demonstrating that the nose really is not an adaptation for holding glasses?
Regarding Gould, and what he said or did not say, I'll say this. I read Gould long before I read anything by any evolutionary psychologist, and the impression I got was that evoutionary psychologists and indeed many other evolutionary biologists, were indeed pursuing a Pandaptationist, Panglossian, paradigm, who thought that all phenotypes and behaviors were adaptations, who simply ignored or ruled out a priori the existence of spandrels, and who were in general totally ignorant of the role of contingency in evolution. Oh, and these people were also genetic determinists who were either ignorant or ignoring the role of environmental influences on phenotypes, assumed that there were genes for nearly every behavior, and that those genes were both necessary and sufficient to produce the behavior. Perhaps I wasn't reading carefully enough, but then maybe he wasn't speaking carefully enough. For instance, in a 1984 essay, he wrote: Quote:
Certainly many people would infer from this statement that there are some scientists out there who are not merely placing an emphasis on adaptation (which not even Gould challenges), but who are arguing that virtually every form and behavior is an adaptation. Patrick |
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06-27-2003, 08:23 AM | #20 | |
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At least, to begin with, I was just plain confused. I hadn’t realised Dawkins and co were such genetic determinists. It didn’t chime with what I remembered, didn’t feel right. So I went back to Dawkins again. On returning to Gould since, I find myself too often muttering ‘but that’s not what was intended / said’, ‘but so-and-so acknowledged this, so why are you arguing about it as if they hadn’t?!’, and so on. Dawkins for one has certainly emphasised other factors in evolution, while making no bones about what the interesting stuff is. As I’ve said before, impacts and extinctions, drift, spandrels and whatever are all very well, but can they make an eye? The problem is, I’m now reluctant, given the shelf-fulls I’ve still to read, to bother with Gould. I’m sure I’m missing out on some great stuff (I’ll never forget the story of the statue of someone which fell and embedded itself in the ground, about which the statue-person’s rival commented that he’d always preferred him in the concrete rather than the abstract (or similar... actually, I’ve done a good job of forgetting it ), and a chapter about working out the total number of species from how many fall out of a tree when you spray it with something deadly), but I just don’t have time to be sent off in wrong-headed directions any more. He was a good writer (though outclassed by Dawkins for clarity), but I just can’t see myself ever recommending him. Cheers, Oolon |
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