4.3 Article

What Evolvability Really Is

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Volume 65, Issue 3, Pages 549-572

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bjps/axt014

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Funding

  1. Australian National University
  2. Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg, Austria

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In recent years, the concept of evolvability has been gaining in prominence both within evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo) and the broader field of evolutionary biology. Despite this, there remains considerable disagreement about what evolvability is. This article offers a solution to this problem. I argue that, in focusing too closely on the role played by evolvability as an explanandum in evo-devo, existing philosophical attempts to clarify the evolvability concept have been overly narrow. Within evolutionary biology more broadly, evolvability offers a robust explanation for the evolutionary trajectories of populations. Evolvability is an abstract, robust, dispositional property of populations, which captures the joint causal influence of their internal features on the outcomes of evolution (as opposed to the causal influence of selection, which is often characterized as external). When considering the nature of the physical basis of this disposition, it becomes clear that the many existing definitions of evolvability at play within evo-devo should be understood as capturing only aspects of a much broader phenomenon.

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