Sameness, novelty, and nominal kinds

Verfasser / Beitragende:
[David Haig]
Ort, Verlag, Jahr:
2015
Enthalten in:
Biology & Philosophy, 30/6(2015-11-01), 857-872
Format:
Artikel (online)
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024 7 0 |a 10.1007/s10539-014-9456-9  |2 doi 
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100 1 |a Haig  |D David  |u Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, 02138, Cambridge, MA, USA  |4 aut 
245 1 0 |a Sameness, novelty, and nominal kinds  |h [Elektronische Daten]  |c [David Haig] 
520 3 |a Organisms and their genomes are mosaics of features of different evolutionary age. Older features are maintained by ‘negative' selection and comprise part of the selective environment that has shaped the evolution of newer features by ‘positive' selection. Body plans and body parts are among the most conservative elements of the environment in which genetic differences are selected. By this process, well-trodden paths of development constrain and direct paths of evolutionary change. Structuralism and adaptationism are both vindicated. Form plays a selective role in the molding of form. 
540 |a Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht, 2014 
690 7 |a Adaptation  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Developmental constraint  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Evolvability  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Formal cause  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Homology  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Novelty  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Strategic gene  |2 nationallicence 
690 7 |a Transposable elements  |2 nationallicence 
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950 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |P 100  |E 1-  |a Haig  |D David  |u Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, 02138, Cambridge, MA, USA  |4 aut 
950 |B NATIONALLICENCE  |P 773  |E 0-  |t Biology & Philosophy  |d Springer Netherlands  |g 30/6(2015-11-01), 857-872  |x 0169-3867  |q 30:6<857  |1 2015  |2 30  |o 10539