The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

(Michael S) #1

weaknesses and problems, interdemic selection has now been empirically validated
as an important force in evolution—thus strengthening a prima facie case for the
even greater importance of species selection in macroevolution.



  1. Two theoretical resolutions and clarifications have established both a
    sound theoretical basis, and a strong argument for the empirical potency, of species
    selection as an important component of macroevolution: first, the recognition of
    differential proliferation rather than downward effect as the most operational
    criterion for defining and recognizing species selection; second, the
    acknowledgment that emergent fitnesses under the interactor approach, rather than
    emergent features treated as active adaptations of the species, constitute the proper
    criterion for identifying species selection. The former insistence upon emergent
    features (by me and other researchers, and in error), while logically sound and
    properly identifying a small subset of best and most interesting cases, relegated the
    subject to infrequent operational utility, and thus to relative impotence. The proper
    criterion (under the interactor approach) of emergent fitness universalizes the
    subject by permitting general identification in the immediacy of the current
    mechanics of selection, and not requiring knowledge—often unavailable given the
    limits of historical archives—of adaptive construction and utility in ancestral
    states.

  2. The six levels recognized for convenience, and not accompanied by any
    claim of completion or exclusivity—gene, cell lineage, organism, deme, species
    and clade—feature two important principles that make the theory of hierarchical
    selection so different from, while still in the lineage and tradition of, exclusivistic
    Darwinian organismal selection. First, adjacent levels may interact in the full range
    of conceivable ways—in synergy, orthogonally, or in opposition. Opposition has
    been stressed in the existing literature, but only because this mode is easier to
    recognize, and not for any argument of greater importance in principle. Second, the
    levels operate non-fractally, with fascinating and distinguishing differences in
    mode of functioning, and relative importance of components, for each level. For
    example, the different mechanisms by which organisms and species maintain their
    equally strong individuality dictate that selection should dominate at the
    organismal level, while selection, drift, and drive should all play important and
    balanced roles at the species level.

  3. To cite just one difference (from conventions of the organismal level) for
    each nonstandard level, and to make the key point about distinctiveness of levels in
    an almost anecdotal manner: random change may be most prominent in relative
    frequency at the level of the gene-individual; true gene selection also plays an
    important, if limited, role (largely in the mode that has been given the unfortunate
    name—for its implication of opposition, almost in ethical terms, to the supposed
    standard of proper organismal selection—of "selfish DNA"); however, the
    Dawkinsian argument for exclusivity of genie selection only records the confusion
    of a preferred level of bookkeeping with an erroneous claim for a privileged locus
    of selection. Selection among cell-lineages, although ancestrally important in the
    evolution of multicellular organisms, has largely been suppressed by the
    organismal level in the interests
    74 THE STRUCTURE OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY

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