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The organismic critique within the Modern Synthesis and after .

The organismic critique within the Modern Synthesis and after . Philippe Huneman IHPST, Paris. Questions about the Modern Synthesis (MS). Is It over ? Has it been replaced ? Should it be over / extended ? But also :

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The organismic critique within the Modern Synthesis and after .

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  1. The organismic critique within the Modern Synthesis and after. Philippe Huneman IHPST, Paris

  2. Questions about the Modern Synthesis (MS) • Is It over ? Has it been replaced ? Shouldit be over / extended ? But also : • Diditreallyexist as a synthesis (i.e., as a unity)? • Whatwas the nature of suchunity(theory, set of models, etc.)

  3. My 2 independentprojects 1. Understand the relations between the emerging philosophy of biology (in the 60s) and the Modern Synthesis (role of Mayr in setting the debates : autonomy claims, reductionnism, evolutionism-centeredview, etc.) 2. Assess the current critique of the MS from the view point of the organisms -> today : what about the MS on this issue?

  4. The space of controversies Organisms Not only natural selection (no adptationnism) Gould Genes Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Dawkins • Dawkins • Lyn Mayr • Gould Genes Not only natural selection (no adaptationnism) Lynch Michod Organisms Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Mayr

  5. The space of controversies Organisms Not only natural selection (no adaptationnism) Gould Genes Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Dawkins Optimisation line • Dawkins • Lyn Mayr • Gould Genes Not only natural selection (no adaptationnism) Lynch Michod Organisms Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Mayr Organismic line

  6. Question : whatdoesitowe to the « Modern Synthesis » (as a not necessarilysynthetic set of books, papers, etc.?) • Outline • Evolutionary organicism, then and now • Population genetics and the Modern Synthese(s)

  7. I. Evolutionary organicism, then and now ?

  8. A 2 decades-long critique of suborganismic/adaptationist biology • Gould (1983): the « hardening of the Synthesis » • Walsh (2010) The triumph of « suborganismal biology » (= MS) and the recent prospects for « organismal » biology (phenotypic plasticity, adaptivity of organisms)

  9. What is crucial : the status of adaptation. (Depew 2010, on the duality (UK /US) of the Synthesis; the « hardening » is the triumph of the former) Receivedview : an adaptation = a (trait) result(ing) from natural selection Challenges : adaptation as changing the environment (Odling-Smee et al. 2003); adaptation as adaptive plasticity (Walsh 2003, 2010, West-Eberhardt...) Oldproblem : how to get the adaptedness of organisms ?

  10. The current organismic critique of MS, fourfold(after Huneman HPLS 2010) Bauplan? Niche construction Newman and Muller - Evo-devo West-Eberhardt, adaptive plasticity

  11. But: organismic critique is not new Indeeditwas a crucial moment in the consolidation/ aftermath of the MS: Ernst Mayr, “Where Are We?” Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology 24 (1959): 1–14. Ernst Mayr, “Cause and Effect in Biology” Science 134 (1961): 1501–06; Theodosius Dobzhansky, “Biology, Molecular and Organismic,” American Zoologist 4 (1964): 443–52. Sewall Wright, “Gene and Organism,” The American Naturalist 87, no. 832 (1953): 5–18. George Gaylord Simpson, “The Status of the Study of Organisms,” American Scientist 50, (1962): 36–45. case of Waddington left aside here Is this a last stage of the MS ? A first round of interpretation ?

  12. Organicism, 60s. • The level of organicism is emphasized as proper to biology • Especiallyagainst the rise of Molecular Biology

  13. Arguments by Wright (levels) and Mayr (2 causes) werecruciallyinfluential …

  14. Essential idea, 1. • Biology is hierarchised. Reduction, in Nagel’ssense (Dobzhansky, Mayr cite Nagel 1961) does not work. Each level is not deducible from the precedings

  15. Wright, 1953

  16. Mayr 1955 • Critique of « beanbaggenetics » One- or two-loci model are unable to capture the complexity of causal interactions in evolutionary dynamics

  17. Evolutionary thinking is holistic and interactionist - Dobzhansky • “Talking about traits as though they were independent entities is responsible for much confusion in biological and especially in evolutionary thought” (1970, 65). • “A change in the genotype alters the reaction norm, and some of the alterations may enable the new genotype to produce a harmonious response where the ancestral has been a failure … Selection deals not with the genotype as such, but with its dynamic properties, its reaction norm, which is the sole criterion of fitness in the struggle for existence.” (1937, 170).

  18. Essential idea, 2. (Mayr). • What’sproper to biology is evolutionary style explanations. (« ultimate ») • « Nothing in biology makessense etc. » (Dobzhansky 1964.)

  19. The strategy. (1) + (2) = the proper biological (= evolutionary) level is organism (and beyond). MAYR Notice : curiously, evolutionary explanation and organicism are tied (whereas, one couldthinkthat evolutionary explanations are level-independent) • A first reason : genes are too close to chemistry (via molecular biology) • A second reason : critique of geneticatomism(as misleading abstraction); interactionism: concretecomplexityoccursat the organismic level In biology, a second kind of explanation may be added to the first, or reductionist explanation, made in terms of physical, chemical and mechanical principles. This second form of explanation, which can be called compositionist in contrast to reductionist, is in terms of adaptive usefulness of structures and processes to the whole organism and to the species of which it is a part, and still further, in terms of ecological function in which the species occurs. (Simpson 1964)

  20. II.2. Mayr’s organicism

  21. Mayr ? “It is hard to exaggerate the significance of Mayr's defense of the proximate/ultimate distinction in establishing philosophy of biology as a legitimate special area of inquiry” (Beatty 1994) Most quoted author in Hull’s classical « What philosophy of biology is not ? » (19 occurrences)

  22. Critique of geneticatomism Twopolemic stances: 1942-53, downplay the role of geneticists in the founding of modern evolutionary biology 1955-later (after the discovery of DNA): vindicate the specificity of evolutionary biology againstmolecular biology

  23. Historical sketch of MS by Mayr « Several historians have mistakenly thought that this synthesis within genetics had solved all the problems of Darwinism. That assumption, however, failed to take account of an important gap. One of the two major branches of evolutionary biology, the study of the origin of biodiversity, had been left out of the major treatises of Fisher, Haldane, and Wright. Actually, unknown to these geneticists, the problems of the origin of biodiversity had already been solved in the 1920s by several European naturalists, most important among them, Moritz Wagner, Karl Jordan, Poulton, Chetverikov and Stresemann. Thus, evolutionary biology around 1930 found itself in a curious position. It faced two major seemingly unsolved problems: the adaptive changes of populations and the origin of biodiversity. Two large and very active groups of evolutionists worked on these problems. One of these groups consisted of the population geneticists. As summarized in the works of Fisher, Haldane, and Wright, this group had solved the problem of gradual evolution of populations through natural selection. But they had not made any contribution to the problem of how species arise (speciation) - that is, to the problem of the origin of biodiversity. The other group of evolutionists consisted of the naturalists taxonomists.”

  24. The two explananda of evolution : adaptation, diversity (notice how itdiffers from Dobzhansky, quotedabove) About Systematics and the origins of species (1942): “The real objective of my volume was to explain a whole set of phenomena,—such as species and speciation, as the effects of selection on populations, as the role of geography at the level of species and populations, and as the role of species in macroevolution,— that were omitted in the accounts of the geneticists or that were based on the findings of the systematists, such as in the volumes of Dobzhansky, Timoféeff-Ressovsky and Huxley”

  25. “It is now understood that evolution consists in two major processes, the changes (usually adaptational) of populations in time, and the multiplication of species in space that is the origin of new organic diversity.The latter process, more often called speciation, has been clouded with confusion ever since 1859. Darwin in his early unpublished writings (1837 to 1844) had come to the conclusion that geographic isolation was a necessary prerequisite for speciation and that therefore allopatricspeciation was the prevailing, if not the only, form of speciation (Kottler1978; Sulloway1979). However, by 1859 when he published the Origin, Darwin had concluded that sympatric speciation, the splitting of a single population without geographic isolation, was at least equally common.” Mayr, JHB paper on Weissmann, 1985

  26. What’s the trouble with population genetics ?? Speciationappearswhengeneticenvironment of the genes change (e.g. atboundaries of territories). (« Change of environment and speciation » (1954)) • This assumes that the effect of genes is (organsims- and gene-contextual) dependent. • Usual PG models (atomistic etc.) are not realistic • Whatcausallyaccounts for speciation are changes in reproductive barrierswhichimplywholegenotypes and organismic behaviour

  27. Consequences « Population » is not exemplarilyrepresented by population genetics! A population is indeed biological : itreproducesitselfthrough the reproduction of someorganisms. « In the study of biological species one deals with biological populations. (…) Only a small fraction of any biological population reproduces, because not everyindividual in a population survives up to the reproductive age and reproducessuccessfully. This is true on the average of onlytwo of the total number of a prenatal pair in a sexuallyreproductingspecies. » (« What is a species and whatit is not », Phil Sci 1996) From the viewpoint of diversity questions, the causal consistency of population is due to organisms (and not genes)

  28. Consequences, 2 -> Population genetics does not exemplify the evolutionary style of explanation: “Evolutionary biology dealing with highly complex systems [not genes, PH]operated by historically evolved genetic programs, must pursue a very different strategy of research in order to provide explanations. Its most productive method is the comparative method, for which the taxonomists have laid the foundation. Indeed I can hardly think of a evolutionary problem that has not developed out of some findings of taxonomy.” (“the role of systematics in biology”)

  29. Hence Mayr rejects the textbookdefinition of evolution as « changes in allelefrequencies in a population ». • “Evolution is not a change in gene frequencies, as is claimed so often, but the maintenance (or improvement) of adaptedness and the origin of diversity. Changes in gene frequency are a result of such evolution, not its cause.” (Mayr 1997, 2093). • Mayr wouldsubscribe to Walsh’sideathatitprovidsesonly a shadow (« pseudo-process » sensu Salmon) of the evolutionary process. • This is not at all the MS targeted by Walsh, Muller, Gerhardts and Kirschner, West-Eberhardt etc. • Defining a version of MS -> role of population genetics (viz. the result/causediff.).

  30. II. (the speculative part…) ii. Population genetics and the versions of Modern Synthesis

  31. Claim 1, weak. Population genetics is central in evolutionary biology becauseitmathematicallyexplainswhy evolution by NS is possible (eg Gayon 1998) (assumingparticularinheritance) • Claim 2, strong. Population geneticsprovides the fine-grainedknowledge of the processof evolution as a population level phenomenon (Hamilton, Maynard-Smith, Williams, Price, Grafen, Michael Lynch, etc.)

  32. The call for an extended MS oftenrejects 2. Especially : « PG is not a causalknowledge of evolution. » The issue : is PG a statistical or a causal understanding of evolutionary dynamics ??

  33. A parallel in quantitative genetics • Lande-Arnold 1983, measurement of selection on correlatedcharacters (i=1….n) • G = variance-covariance matrix of breeding values • P-1 s = set of partial regression of relative fitnesses on characters (Corresponds to univariatebreeder’sequation R=hs)

  34. Major idea:Grepresents how the genic architecureconstrains the response to selection • Yet major problems to get causal explanations out of it (Pigliucci 2005; Barton and Turelli 1989).

  35. Back: Twoviews of PGstatistical / causal • Abstract away from causes in general • The content is pure maths (Price equ.) and statistics • Hence causes have to be plugged in from the outside • They are the causes of fitness (pertaining to ecology, physiology, etc.) • It is not the core of MS but has instrumental value • What causes evolution is differentialreplication, which is the explanandum of PG • Hence PG captures the process of Natural Selection • Thereforeit is the core of evolutionary theory • And e.g. grounds itsmethodology (FTNS -> optimisation methods).

  36. Fisher’stake on PG. The statement of the principle of Natural Selection in the form of a theorem determining the rate of progress of a species in fitness to survive (this term being used for a well-defined statistical attribute of the population), together with the relation between this rate of progress and its standard error, puts us in a position to judge of the validity of the objection which has been made, that the principle of Natural Selection depends on a succession of favourable chances. The objection is more in the nature of an innuendo than of a criticism, for it depends for its force upon the ambiguity of the word chance, in its popular uses. The income derived from a Casino by its proprietor may, in one sense, be said to depend upon a succession of favourable chances, although the phrase contains a suggestion of improbability more appropriate to the hopes of the patrons of his establishment. It is easy without any very profound logical analysis to perceive the difference between a succession of favourable deviations from the laws of chance, and on the other hand, the continuous and cumulative action of these laws. It is on the latter that the principle of Natural Selection relies. (Fisher GTNS, 1930, 37.)

  37. A sketch of a possible causal argument.Fisher’sparallelwithstatisticalmechanics : FTNS and 2ndlaw as two main causal laws StatMech is a causal knowledge, even if statisticallyabstracting from many causal interactions, becauseitaveragesawaytoo-fine-grained causes PG is possible becausemany interactions betweengenes in the genetic background of one or twoloci in a population can be averaged out, and by tracing the dynamics of the focal loci one capturesits dynamics on any background

  38. Note : About adaptationism • PG as such is neutral about adaptationism – nothingentailsthat NS is the most important cause of evolution • How to derivethisdarwinian claim ? • Only if the fundamentaltheorem of NS is true • Fisher’s position : PG is a causal knowledge of evolution, FTNS grounds adaptationism • FTNS (Frank &Slatkin 1992) is about the change in mean fitness causeddirectlyby NS, hence assumes a causal understanding of population dynamics.

  39. Tworhetorics of natural selection Hull • Differential replication of replicators according to interactions of interactors “Interactors”  is the level where causation is Dawkins • Differential replication of replicators embedded in vehicles (Differential) “replication” is where causation takes place

  40. A by-product of this alternative Debates on geneselectionism: Classicalcounter-argument (Sober 1982): gene selection is bookkeeping, does not capture causal processes. (whereasgeneselectionistswouldsaythat causal dispositions are in the relatedness value r, e.g. West et al. 2007)

  41. Conclusion At least two versions of MS MS M : organicism; PG not the central core MS F : PG = science of the process of ENS; core of the evolutionary theory (Lynch’sdictum) (may be analogous to Depew’s distinction, UK and US styles in MS…)

  42. The space of controversies Organisms Not only natural selection (no adptationnism) Gould Genes Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Dawkins • Dawkins • Lyn Mayr • Gould MS F Genes Not only natural selection (no adaptationnism) Lynch Michod Organisms Mostly natural selection ( adaptationnism) Mayr MS M

  43. a. Calls for « organismal » biology target MS F Issues about the causal nature of PG seemunavoidable. b. In terms of interpreting the models (especially PG) MS is NOT a synthetic theory c. Extending (resp. expanding, overcoming, etc.) the Modern Synthesiscan’tmakesenseexcept if one specifieswhichSynthesis.

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