Multi-Level Selection in Natural Selection: A Review of Okasha’s Ideas
Subject Areas : Philosophy of art
Keywords: Natural selection, Levels of selection, Group selection, Multi-Level selection, Fitness,
Abstract :
As the inheritance of a trait which can be effective in the survival of an organism was the cornerstone of Darwin's argument for the abstraction of natural selection, each level of the biological hierarchy from genome to a community of entities can be regarded as the subject of natural selection. So the idea of abstracting natural selection at multiple levels would not be unreasonable, especially with respect to evidence of altruism in the social and biological groups. Based on this argument, in his famous book Evolution and the Levels of Selection, Samir Okasha tried to make a framework for the multi-level selection by using statistical methods, which could be applied independently in any level of biological world. By employing the Price equation, he tried to describe the concepts of group selection in mathematical terms, which leads to philosophical debates especially about the causal relationship between the traits and fitness. He proposed the contextual analysis to separate the causal relationship and byproducts. On the other hand, relying on the concepts raised by the discussions as to multi-level selection, Okasha tried to explain biological events as well as the major evolutionary transitions.
روزنبرگ، آلگزاندر، درآمدى معاصر بر زیستشناسى، ترجمه پریسا صادقیه، انتشارات پیام امروز، 1392ش.
میاندارى، حسن، «ازخودگذشتگى تکاملى در سایهى خودخواهى تکاملى»، مجله پژوهشهاى جانورى (مجله زیستشناسى ایران)، ج26، ش2، 1392ش.
Arnold, A. J., & Fristrup, K., “The Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection: A Hierarchical Expansion”, Paleobiology, 1982.
Barrett, M., & Godfrey-Smith, P., “Group Selection, Pluralism, and the Evolution of Altruism”, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research LXV, 2003.
Dawkins, R., The Selfish Gene, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1976.
Lewontin, R. C., “The Units of Selection”, Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1970.
Okasha, S., Evolution And The Levels Of Selection, Oxford University Press, 2006.
Sober, E., The Nature of Selection, Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1984.
Williams, G. C., Adaptation and Natural Selection, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966.
Wilson, R. A., “Pluralism, Entwinement and the Levels of Selection”, Philosophy of Science, 2003.