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Published 2014 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

Evolutionary and Newtonian Forces

Abstract

A number of recent papers have criticized what they call the dynamical interpretation of evolutionary theory found in Elliott Sober's The Nature of Selection. Sober argues that we can think of evolutionary theory as a theory of forces analogous to Newtonian mechanics. These critics argue that there are several important disanalogies between evolutionary and Newtonian forces: Unlike evolutionary forces, Newtonian forces can be considered in isolation, they have source laws, they compose causally in a straightforward way, and they are intermediate causes in causal chains. Here we defend and extend the forces analogy by arguing that each of these criticisms is based on a misunderstanding of Newtonian forces. Our discussion also has the interesting consequence that natural selection turns out to be more similar to forces such as friction and elastic forces rather than the more canonical gravitation.

Additional Information

For helpful comments and discussions, we would like to thank two anonymous referees and an editor at Ergo as well as André Ariew, Sam Baron, Mark Colyvan, Kenny Easwaran, Luke Glynn, Mohan Matthen, Peter Menzies, Roberta Millstein, Elliott Sober, Chris Stephens, James Woodward, and audience members at the University of British Columbia, Texas Tech University, the American Philosophical Association (Pacific Division), the Society for Exact Philosophy, and the University of Sydney.

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Published - evolutionary-and-newtonian-forces.pdf

Accepted Version - evolutionaryforces_finalarchive_.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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