The proper role of history in evolutionary explanations

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2021
Volume
57
Issue
1
Journal
Noûs
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
Hoboken, NJ : Wiley
Link to publishers version
Abstract

Evolutionary explanations are not only common in the biological sciences, but also widespread outside biology. But an account of how evolutionary explanations perform their explanatory work is still lacking. This paper develops such an account. I argue that available accounts of explanations in evolutionary science miss important parts of the role of history in evolutionary explanations. I argue that the historical part of evolutionary science should be taken as having genuine explanatory force, and that it provides how-possibly explanations sensu Dray. I propose an account of evolutionary explanations as comparative-composite explanations consisting of two distinct kinds of explanations, one processual and one historical, that are connected via the explanandum's evolvability to show how the explanandum is the product of its evolutionary past. The account is both a reconstruction of how evolutionary explanations in biology work and a guideline specifying what kind of explanations evolutionary research programs should develop.

Description
Keywords
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported