Systematics and the Darwinian Revolution

Taxonomies of living things and the methods used to produce them changed little with the institutionalization of evolutionary thinking in biology. Instead, the relationships expressed in existing taxonomies were merely reinterpreted as the result of evolution, and evolutionary concepts were developed to justify existing methods. I argue that the delay of the Darwinian Revolution in biological taxonomy has resulted partly from a failure to distinguish between two fundamentally different ways of ordering identified by Griffiths (1974): classification and systematization. Classification consists of ordering entities into classes, groups defined by the attributes of their members; in contrast, systematization consists of ordering entities into systems, more inclusive entities whose existence depends on some natural process through which their parts are related. Evolutionary, or phylogenetic, systematics takes evolutionary descent to be the natural process of interest in biological taxonomy. I outline a genera...

[1]  S. Gould,et al.  Darwinism and the expansion of evolutionary theory. , 1982, Science.

[2]  G. Griffiths The Future of Linnaean Nomenclature , 1976 .

[3]  E. Sober Sets, Species, and Evolution: Comments on Philip Kitcher's "Species" , 1984, Philosophy of Science.

[4]  J. Farris Formal Definitions of Parapliyly and Polyphyly , 1974 .

[5]  R. Carroll Response to Wyss and de Queiroz , 1984 .

[6]  C. Patterson Verifiability in Systematics , 1978 .

[7]  M. Ghiselin “Definition,” “Character,” and Other Equivocal Terms , 1984 .

[8]  Niles Eldredge,et al.  Phylogenetic Patterns and the Evolutionary Process. , 1981 .

[9]  N. Platnick Gaps and Prediction in Classification , 1978 .

[10]  D. Hull Are Species Really Individuals , 1976 .

[11]  Joel Cracraft,et al.  Species Concepts and Speciation Analysis , 1983 .

[12]  Michael T. Ghiselin,et al.  On Psychologism in the Logic of Taxonomic Controversies , 1966 .

[13]  George Gaylord Simpson,et al.  Principles of Animal Taxonomy , 1961 .

[14]  Peter F. Stevens,et al.  Metaphors and typology in the development of botanical systematics 1690-1960, or the art of putting new wine in old bottles , 1984 .

[15]  John H. Ostrom,et al.  Archaeopteryx and the origin of birds , 1976 .

[16]  R. Sokal,et al.  Principles of numerical taxonomy , 1965 .

[17]  E. S. Gaffney,et al.  An Introduction to the Logic of Phylogeny Reconstruction , 1979 .

[18]  David L. Hull,et al.  THE EFFECT OF ESSENTIALISM ON TAXONOMY—TWO THOUSAND YEARS OF STASIS (I) * , 1965, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.

[19]  E. Mayr,et al.  The biological meaning of species , 1969 .

[20]  E. Mayr Animal Species and Evolution , 1964 .

[21]  E. Vrba Species and speciation , 1987 .

[22]  D. Watson Vertebrate Paleontology , 1946, Nature.

[23]  M. Ghiselin Categories, life, and thinking , 1981, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[24]  G. Ledyard Stebbins,et al.  The Major Features of Evolution . George Gaylord Simpson. Columbia Univ. Press, New York, 1953. 434 pp. Illus. $7.50 , 1954, Science.

[25]  N. Platnick Philosophy and the Transformation of Cladistics , 1979 .

[26]  C. Pigott Genetics and the Origin of Species , 1959, Nature.

[27]  G. Nelson OUTGROUPS AND ONTOGENY , 1985, Cladistics : the international journal of the Willi Hennig Society.

[28]  K. Queiroz**,et al.  The Ontogenetic Method for Determining Character Polarity and its Relevance to Phylogenetic Systematics , 1985 .

[29]  Peter D. Ashlock,et al.  An Evolutionary Systematist's View of Classification , 1979 .

[30]  Anthony Manser The Concept of Evolution , 1965 .

[31]  E Mayr,et al.  Biological Classification: Toward a Synthesis of Opposing Methodologies , 1981, Science.

[32]  D. Hull A Matter of Individuality , 1978, Philosophy of Science.

[33]  M. Ghiselin A Radical Solution to the Species Problem , 1974 .

[34]  C. Michener Discordant Evolution and the Classification of Allodapine Bees , 1977 .

[35]  D. Kitts The Names of Species: A Reply to Hull , 1984 .

[36]  R. Bernier The Species as an Individual: Facing Essentialism , 1984 .

[37]  E. Wiley,et al.  Karl R. Popper, Systematics, and Classification: A Reply to Walter Bock and Other Evolutionary Taxonomists , 1975 .

[38]  D. Hull Individuality and Selection , 1980 .

[39]  M. Ruse The Darwinian Revolution , 2019 .

[40]  E. Mayr The nature of the darwinian revolution. , 1972, Science.

[41]  Ernst Mayr,et al.  Principles of systematic zoology , 1969 .

[42]  K. Holsinger The Nature of Biological Species , 1984, Philosophy of Science.

[43]  E. Wiley Ancestors, Species, and Cladograms—Remarks on the Symposium , 1979 .

[44]  A. Wyss,et al.  Phylogenetic methods and the early history of amniotes: a comment on Carroll (1982) , 1984 .

[45]  AN APPROACH TO THE THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION , 1969 .

[46]  Julian Huxley,et al.  The new systematics , 1941 .

[47]  E. Mayr Systematics and the Origin of Species , 1942 .

[48]  T. Dobzhansky Genetics and the Origin of Species , 1937 .

[49]  G. Griffiths On the foundations of biological systematics , 1974 .

[50]  Gary James Jason,et al.  The Logic of Scientific Discovery , 1988 .

[51]  N. Eldredge Cladism and Common Sense , 1979 .

[52]  Gertrude Himmelfarb,et al.  Darwin and the Darwinian Revolution , 1959 .

[53]  N. Platnick,et al.  Systematics and Biogeography , 1981 .

[54]  David L. Hull,et al.  Philosophy Of Biological Science , 1974 .