Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER 2 PATTERNS OF CLASSIFICATION
- CHAPTER 3 PATTERNS OF PHYLOGENY
- CHAPTER 4 HOMOLOGY AND THE EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER 5 GEOLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL EVIDENCE
- CHAPTER 6 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: THE DEVELOPMENT OF TAXONOMY
- CHAPTER 7 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: PHENETICS AND CLADISTICS
- CHAPTER 8 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: THE CURRENT DEBATE
- CHAPTER 9 CLASSIFICATION AND THE RECONSTRUCION OF PHYLOGENY
- CHAPTER 10 IS SYSTEMATICS INDEPENDENT?
- CHAPTER 11 MECHANISMS OF EVOLUTION: DARWINSM AND ITS RIVALS
- CHAPTER 12 MECHANISMS OF EVOLUTION: THE SYNTHETIC THEORY
- CHAPTER 13 SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
- CHAPTER 14 PHILOSOPHY AND BIOLOGY
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
CHAPTER 4 - HOMOLOGY AND THE EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER 2 PATTERNS OF CLASSIFICATION
- CHAPTER 3 PATTERNS OF PHYLOGENY
- CHAPTER 4 HOMOLOGY AND THE EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER 5 GEOLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL EVIDENCE
- CHAPTER 6 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: THE DEVELOPMENT OF TAXONOMY
- CHAPTER 7 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: PHENETICS AND CLADISTICS
- CHAPTER 8 METHODS OF CLASSIFICATION: THE CURRENT DEBATE
- CHAPTER 9 CLASSIFICATION AND THE RECONSTRUCION OF PHYLOGENY
- CHAPTER 10 IS SYSTEMATICS INDEPENDENT?
- CHAPTER 11 MECHANISMS OF EVOLUTION: DARWINSM AND ITS RIVALS
- CHAPTER 12 MECHANISMS OF EVOLUTION: THE SYNTHETIC THEORY
- CHAPTER 13 SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
- CHAPTER 14 PHILOSOPHY AND BIOLOGY
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
In Chapters 2 and 3, I set out to suggest that the theory that evolution has occurred is the explanans of the phenomenon of natural classification (the explanandum). We also saw that the hierarchical pattern of classification, apart from being the normal way in which classifications of objects are presented, is the result, at least historically, of an accepted method. That method, described in Chapter 6, is logical division. But since the time of Darwin and Wallace, the resulting hierarchy has been regarded as the natural pattern. Most methods of classifying organisms are therefore designed to produce a divergent hierarchy not just for convenience but because it is presumed to correspond to a real phenomenon in nature.
But classifications depend on characters possessed by the objects to be classified. Thus if the natural arrangement of organism is a divergent hierarchy, there must be an underlying divergent hierarchy of characters, and there should be something more to a character correctly uniting two species than a coincident resemblance. Behind the idea that one is dealing with the “same” character in two species, or higher taxa, is the concept of homology. Thus as natural classification is logically prior to phylogeny, homology is perhaps to be regarded as logically prior to natural classification.
It is not the case, however, that the concept of homology arose before that of natural classification in the history of systematics.
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- Classification, Evolution, and the Nature of Biology , pp. 62 - 84Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992