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Genes, Categories, and Species: The Evolutionary and Cognitive Cause of the Species Problem
 
 
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Genes, Categories, and Species: The Evolutionary and Cognitive Cause of the Species Problem [Hardcover]

Jody Hey (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

July 19, 2001 0195144775 978-0195144772 1
In Genes, Categories and Species, Jody Hey provides an enlightening new solution to one of biology's most ironic and perplexing puzzles.

When Darwin showed that life evolves, and that it does so by natural selection, he transformed our understanding of living things. But the very question Darwin addressed-the nature of species-continues to pose an awkward conundrum for biologists. Despite enormous efforts by a great many scholars, biologists still cannot agree on how to identify species or even how to define the word "species."

Genes, Categories, and Species is not like other books on the species problem, for it does not begin by asking, "What is a species?" Instead, it focuses on the very fact that biologists are stumped by species and their curious behavior in coping with that uncertainty.

Faced with a persistent conundrum-and no lack of data on the subject-biologists who ponder the species problem have ceased to ask the most essential of scientific questions: "What new information do we need to resolve the problem?" This is the question that motivates this book and leads to the discoveries it reveals. The answer to the species problem lies not with the processes and patterns of biological diversity, Hey contends, but rather in the way the human mind perceives and categorizes that diversity.

The promise of this book is twofold. First, it allows biologists to understand the causes of the species problem and to use this knowledge to avoid the major confusions that arise over species. Second, with its explanation of the species problem, it gives scholars and students of human nature a humbling example of how ill-suited the human mind is for certain kinds of scientific questions.

Editorial Reviews

Review


"His casual style and thought-provoking examples are convincing...Combining the data collection Hey calls for with a treatment of species concepts as models would advance our understanding of how the world of real evolutionary groups is structured." -- Kerry L. Shaw, Science


"In this important and refreshing view of the species debate, Jody Hey draws on a range of philosophical and evolutionary arguments to argue convincingly . . ."--Heredity


"This book links together philosophy, linguistics, and biology in an innovative fashion to arrive at a resolution of the long-standing "species question" of biology. Hey is able to frame his arguments in a style that makes what might otherwise be impenetrable, engaging. It will stimulate useful discussion and insight into the history of science, the physics-envy of ecologists, and the ability of scientists to be truly objective. A thought-provoking and profoundly insightful work."--Choice


About the Author


Jody Hey is Professor of Genetics at Rutgers University, where he uses both mathematical theory and DNA sequencing to study the process of evolution. In recent years he has conducted research on the evolutionary divergence of fruit fly species and on the evolutionary origins of modern humans. This book was written while Dr. Hey was visiting the University of Edinburgh, Scotland with the aid of a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 1 edition (July 19, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195144775
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195144772
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,529,555 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Do you want to stop suffering "the species problem"?, August 31, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Genes, Categories, and Species: The Evolutionary and Cognitive Cause of the Species Problem (Hardcover)
Jody Hey's book provides an answer to a problem that has plagued biologists over the past century. Biologists have been suffering "the species problem": how can we come up with a definition for biological species? The word "species" is famous and incredibly popular. Biologists, and newspapers and magazines use the word daily, nature lovers and conservationsist love to count them, and of course Darwin wrote the book that shook the world with "species" in the title. As biologists we have had a burning passion to paint a tidy picture in words to exactly capture what species are. The debate has paraded over numerous books, and has taken up very much journal space. Yet there is no agreement on exactly what a species is! Jody Hey, a theoretical and empirical biologist, has come up with a convincing answer. Hey has weaved together philosophical, psychological, anthropological, and biological information (down to the genetic level) to show us how we have been trying to define the undefinable. Humans love to delineate recurrent patterns in our world, and put them in neat categories. But our categorization process is a very human thing and it has limitations for how we see our world. The species problem, Jody Hey describes, is like "trying to put clouds into boxes." Jody Hey shows us that 'species' are unreal, but that there are things out there in our biological worlds that are real, though fuzzy. These are "evolutionary groups." They are real because evolutionary forces have acted on them in the past, and continue to act on them in the present. Biologists must become comfortable with the notion that biological nature is fuzzy and stop looking for pithy definitions of "species". In this way we can get on with studying the really interesting problems -- how evolutionary processes work.
If you are a person interested in discovering how human thinking (and language) can distort our picture of the world, then this book provides a fascinating account. If you are a biologist who uses the word "species", this book is ESSENTIAL reading.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Are dogs one species or many species? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
real evolutionary groups, gene tree history, large evolutionary groups, fuzzy species, count creep, recurrent circumstances, replicating capacity, molecular replicators, species taxa, real species, species problem, branching history, nominalist critique, taxonomic species, other natural kinds, taxa exist, species taxon, fish category, species uncertainty, species debates, evolutionary entities, recurrence cycle, phylogenetic species concept, prototype effects, partial boundaries
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Maynard Smith
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