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2 - A new way of seeing the fossil record

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Derek Turner
Affiliation:
Connecticut College
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Summary

In 1972, Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge published a paper entitled “Speciation and Punctuated Equilibria: an alternative to phyletic gradualism.” This paper, which built upon earlier work by Eldredge (1971), sparked a debate about what, if anything, paleontology has to add to evolutionary theory. Even though much of the controversy has died down, a good understanding of that debate is crucial for anyone who wants to think about paleontology's contribution to evolutionary theory. In this chapter, I will trace some of the main arguments in the early discussion of Eldredge and Gould's idea, but I want to do so with three guiding questions in mind:

  1. Over the years, Gould repeatedly presented PE as posing a challenge to traditional evolutionary thinking. How exactly does PE depart from a reductionist – or as Gould often called it, an “extrapolationist” – view of evolution? And what exactly are the phenomena, trends, or patterns that call for such a departure?

  2. To what extent did philosophical ideas that were “in the air” in the early 1970s – especially the ideas of Thomas Kuhn – influence the discussion of PE?

  3. Since scientists cannot directly observe past evolutionary processes, and since they cannot experiment on large-scale evolutionary processes, how have they gone about trying to test PE?

Type
Chapter
Information
Paleontology
A Philosophical Introduction
, pp. 16 - 36
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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