Locals may remember the Ulam Lectures given by Richard Lewontin last fall.
One of Lewontin's points was that adaptation to a fixed environment is a gross oversimplification. The fitness surface on which a species evolves is actually deformed by the presence of the species itself, not to mention all the other organisms who might be hanging around the neighborhood. And as a species evolves, so too does the deformation it gives to its own fitness surface and the fitness surfaces of other organisms in its environment. Well, it turns out that Lewontin has been arguing this point with his colleagues, or been being ignored by his colleagues on this subject, for over 20 years. A book, http://www.nicheconstruction.com, was published last year which argues the same point but with additional empirical and theoretical evidence. A few weeks before Lewontin's Ulam lecture the book was reviewed as "hyperbole" in Nature (425: 769), and a few weeks later the book was reviewed as "a major breakthrough" in Science (303: 472). The authors of Niche Construction have a short essay, Causing a Commotion, in this weeks Nature (429: 609) noting the above (though not the Ulam Lectures) and mentioning that Richard Dawkins is about to enter the fray with an article which will warn of the "pernicious" reasoning employed by niche construction arguments. -- rec -- |
I found it somewhat astounding these sorts of reactions to what is
pretty basic and obvious. Niches do not exist independently of the species in an ecosystem. However, over the last 5 years or so, I have increasingly butted up against these sorts of "crazy dogamatic ideas" in science, perhaps because I didn't receive a classical education in Biology (similarly Economics). (My education was in Maths and Physics instead!) I have come to understand that Kuhnian revolutions in science are a real feature of the scientific landscape, and the ridiculous paradigms can persist for generations of scientists, in spite of being clearly false. It makes it tough when you need to argue against a reigning paradigm, but paradigms are still essential for scientific theory. Occasionally, by dint of luck, one may be in a position of overturning a paradigm, which must be a truly exciting event to live through. Cheers On Fri, Jun 11, 2004 at 09:16:57AM -0600, Roger E Critchlow Jr wrote: > Locals may remember the Ulam Lectures given by Richard Lewontin last fall. > > One of Lewontin's points was that adaptation to a fixed environment is a > gross oversimplification. The fitness surface on which a species > evolves is actually deformed by the presence of the species itself, not > to mention all the other organisms who might be hanging around the > neighborhood. And as a species evolves, so too does the deformation it > gives to its own fitness surface and the fitness surfaces of other > organisms in its environment. > > Well, it turns out that Lewontin has been arguing this point with his > colleagues, or been being ignored by his colleagues on this subject, for > over 20 years. A book, http://www.nicheconstruction.com, was published > last year which argues the same point but with additional empirical and > theoretical evidence. A few weeks before Lewontin's Ulam lecture the > book was reviewed as "hyperbole" in Nature (425: 769), and a few weeks > later the book was reviewed as "a major breakthrough" in Science (303: 472). > > The authors of Niche Construction have a short essay, Causing a > Commotion, in this weeks Nature (429: 609) noting the above (though not > the Ulam Lectures) and mentioning that Richard Dawkins is about to enter > the fray with an article which will warn of the "pernicious" reasoning > employed by niche construction arguments. > > -- rec -- > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9AM @ Jane's Cafe > Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, etc.: > http://www.friam.org -- *PS: A number of people ask me about the attachment to my email, which is of type "application/pgp-signature". Don't worry, it is not a virus. It is an electronic signature, that may be used to verify this email came from me if you have PGP or GPG installed. Otherwise, you may safely ignore this attachment. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- A/Prof Russell Standish Director High Performance Computing Support Unit, Phone 9385 6967, 8308 3119 (mobile) UNSW SYDNEY 2052 Fax 9385 6965, 0425 253119 (") Australia [hidden email] Room 2075, Red Centre http://parallel.hpc.unsw.edu.au/rks International prefix +612, Interstate prefix 02 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available Url : /pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20040614/f91b5cef/attachment.bin |
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