
Publication details
Year: 2013
Pages: 3909-3928
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Driftability", Synthese 190 (17), 2013, pp. 3909-3928.
Abstract
In this paper, I argue (contra some recent philosophical work) that an objective distinction between natural selection and drift can be drawn. I draw this distinction by conceiving of drift, in the most fundamental sense, as an individual-level phenomenon. This goes against some other attempts to distinguish selection from drift, which have argued either that drift is a population-level process or that it is a population-level product. Instead of identifying drift with population-level features, the account introduced here can explain these population-level features based on a property that I label driftability. Additionally, this account shows that biology’s “first law”—the Principle of Drift (Brandon, J Phil 102(7):319–335 2006)—is not a foundational law, but is a consequence of driftability.
Publication details
Year: 2013
Pages: 3909-3928
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Driftability", Synthese 190 (17), 2013, pp. 3909-3928.