Publication | Open Access
A Matter of Individuality
792
Citations
51
References
1978
Year
Animal TaxonomyExperimental EvolutionTaxonomyPersonhoodSocial SciencesPersonal IdentityPhylogeneticsEvolutionary TaxonomySingle SpeciesSocial IdentityBiodiversityLife History TheoryEvolutionary ProcessBiological SpeciesIndividualismOrganismic BiologyCollective SelfHuman EvolutionBiologyIndividual ResponsibilityEvolutionary DynamicsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyEvolutionary AnatomyAnthropologyEvolutionary TheoryTaxonomy (Biology)
Biological species have been treated traditionally as spatiotemporally unrestricted classes. If they are to perform the function which they do in the evolutionary process, they must be spatiotemporally localized individuals, historical entities. Reinterpreting biological species as historical entities solves several important anomalies in biology, in philosophy of biology, and within philosophy itself. It also has important implications for any attempt to present an “evolutionary” analysis of science and for sciences such as anthropology which are devoted to the study of single species.
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