The Philosophy of Evolutionary Theory
Author(s): Elliott Sober
Couldn't load pickup availability
🚚 Free UK delivery on books (excluding sale). T&Cs apply.
Free click & collect on all orders.
Natural selection, mutation, and adaptation are well-known and central topics in Darwin's theory of evolution and in the 20th - and 21st -century theories which grew out of it, but many other important topics are used in evolutionary biology that raise interesting philosophical questions. In this book, Elliott Sober analyses a much larger range of topics, including fitness, altruism, common ancestry, chance, taxonomy, phylogenetic inference, operationalism, reductionism, conventionalism, null hypotheses and default reasoning, instrumentalism versus realism, hypothetico-deductivism, essentialism, falsifiability, the principle of parsimony, the principle of the common cause, causality, determinism versus indeterminism, sensitivity to initial conditions, and the knowability of the past. Sober's clear philosophical analyses of these key concepts, arguments, and methods of inference will be valuable for all readers who want to understand evolutionary biology in both its Darwinian and its contemporary forms.
- Introduces advanced undergraduates and graduate students in philosophy and in biology to the philosophy of evolutionary biology
- Integrates general questions in philosophy of science with more specific questions about philosophy of evolutionary theory
- Uses probability theory as a tool for addressing philosophical questions
Share
