Article ID: CBB225246599

Are natural selection explanatory models a priori? (2015)

unapi

The epistemic status of Natural Selection (NS) has seemed intriguing to biologists and philosophers since the very beginning of the theory to our present times. One prominent contemporary example is Elliott Sober, who claims that NS, and some other theories in biology, and maybe in economics, are peculiar in including explanatory models/conditionals that are a priori in a sense in which explanatory models/conditionals in Classical Mechanics (CM) and most other standard theories are not. Sober’s argument focuses on some “would promote” sentences that according to him, play a central role in NS explanations and are both causal and a priori. Lange and Rosenberg criticize Sober arguing that, though there may be some unspecific a priori causal claims, there are not a priori causal claims that specify particular causal factors. Although we basically agree with Lange and Rosenberg’s criticism, we think it remains silent about a second important element in Sober’s dialectics, namely his claim that, contrary to what happens in mechanics, in NS explanatory conditionals are a priori, and that this is so in quite specific explanatory models. In this paper we criticize this second element of Sober’s argument by analyzing what we take to be the four possible interpretations of Sober’s claim, and argue that, terminological preferences aside, the possible senses in which explanatory models in NS can qualify, or include elements that can qualify, as a priori, also apply to CM and other standard, highly unified theories. We conclude that this second claim is unsound, or at least that more needs to be said in order to sustain that NS explanatory models are a priori in a sense in which CM models are not.

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Authors & Contributors
Birch, Jonathan
Ariew, André
Bradley, Ben S.
Brzezinski Prestes, María Elice de
Creath, Richard
Flannery, Michael A.
Journals
British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Biology and Philosophy
Publishers
University of Toronto
Cambridge University Press
Fundo Mackenzie de Pesquisa
University of Alabama Press
Concepts
Philosophy of biology
Natural selection
Biology
Evolution
Causality
Adaptation (biology)
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Sober, Elliott R.
Cuvier, Georges
Jennings, Herbert Spencer
Laplace, Pierre Simon
Mill, John Stuart
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
21st century
20th century, early
Places
England
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