Article ID: CBB001221609

Darwin's Principles of Divergence and Natural Selection: Why Fodor Was Almost Right (2012)

unapi

Darwin maintained that the principles of natural selection and divergence were the keystones of his theory. He introduced the principle of divergence to explain a fundamental feature of living nature: that organisms cluster into hierarchical groups, so as to be classifiable in the Linnaean taxonomic categories of variety, species, genus, and so on. Darwin's formulation of the principle of divergence, however, induces many perplexities. In his Autobiography, he claimed that he had neglected the problem of divergence in his Essay of 1844 and only solved it in a flash during a carriage ride in the 1850s; yet he does seem to have stated the problem in the Essay and provided the solution. This initial conundrum sets three questions I wish to pursue in this essay: (1) What is the relationship of the principle of divergence to that of natural selection? Is it independent of selection, derivative of selection, or a type of selection, perhaps comparable to sexual selection? (2) What is the advantage of divergence that the principle implies---that is, why is increased divergence beneficial in the struggle for life? And (3) What led Darwin to believe he had discovered the principle only in the 1850s? The resolution of these questions has implications for Darwin's other principle, natural selection, and permits us to readjust the common judgment made about Jerry Fodor's screed against that latter principle.

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Authors & Contributors
Bowler, Peter J.
Travis, Anthony S.
Sloan, Phillip R.
Richards, Evelleen
Nash, Richard
Morris, Mary
Concepts
Evolution
Natural selection
Darwinism
Species concept (biology)
Biology
Natural history
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
Great Britain
Ukraine
Americas
Netherlands
Germany
Southeast Asia
Institutions
Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.)
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