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Western Kentucky University

Alfred Russel Wallace

Series

2012

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Alfred Russel Wallace & The Notion Of Final Causes In Evolution, Charles H. Smith Jan 2012

Alfred Russel Wallace & The Notion Of Final Causes In Evolution, Charles H. Smith

Faculty/Staff Personal Papers

The methodology of Empiricism, with its emphasis on linking efficient causes to specific effects, has now dominated science for over three hundred years, and to productive end. Another of the other original Aristotelian concepts of causation, however, the notion of “final causes,” has largely been ignored by the scientific community – perhaps because it seems to necessitate teleology, or even direct interventions (“first causes”) from outside of the realm of natural process.

The most famous example of the operation of final causes comes down from ancient times. The sculptor is described as imagining what his completed form will look like, …


Natural Selection: A Concept In Need Of Some Evolution?, Charles H. Smith Jan 2012

Natural Selection: A Concept In Need Of Some Evolution?, Charles H. Smith

DLPS Faculty Publications

In some respects natural selection is a quite simple theory, arrived at through the logical integration of three propositions (the presence of variation within natural populations, an absolutely limited resources base, and procreation capacities exceeding mere replacement numbers) whose individual truths can hardly be denied. Its relation to the larger subject of evolution, however, remains problematic. It is suggested here that a scaling-down of the meaning of natural selection to “the elimination of the unfit,” as originally intended by Alfred Russel Wallace (1823-1913), might ultimately prove a more effective means of relating it to larger-scale, longer-term, evolutionary processes.