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Social niche construction and evolutionary transitions in individuality

Social niche construction and evolutionary transitions in individuality
Social niche construction and evolutionary transitions in individuality
Social evolution theory conventionally takes an externalist explanatory stance, treating observed cooperation as explanandum and the positive assortment of cooperative behaviour as explanans. We ask how the circumstances bringing about this positive assortment arose in the first place. Rather than merely push the explanatory problem back a step, we move from an externalist to an interactionist explanatory stance, in the spirit of Lewontin and the Niche Construction theorists. We develop a theory of ‘social niche construction’ in which we consider biological entities to be both the subject and object of their own social evolution. Some important cases of the evolution of cooperation have the side-effect of causing changes in the hierarchical level at which the evolutionary process acts. This is because the traits (e.g. life-history bottlenecks) that act to align the fitness interests of particles (e.g. cells) in a collective can also act to diminish the extent to which those particles are bearers of heritable fitness variance, while augmenting the extent to which collectives of such particles (e.g. multicellular organisms) are bearers of heritable fitness variance. In this way, we can explain upward transitions in the hierarchical level at which the Darwinian machine operates in terms of particle-level selection, even though the outcome of the process is a collective-level selection regime. Our theory avoids the logical and metaphysical paradoxes faced by other attempts to explain evolutionary transitions.

0169-3867
59–79
Ryan, Paul
5ceaebdd-d256-49e2-a434-c3a7621b8a35
Powers, Simon
fa59309b-2ccb-4d5b-95b7-38949c742eb4
Watson, Richard
ce199dfc-d5d4-4edf-bd7b-f9e224c96c75
Ryan, Paul
5ceaebdd-d256-49e2-a434-c3a7621b8a35
Powers, Simon
fa59309b-2ccb-4d5b-95b7-38949c742eb4
Watson, Richard
ce199dfc-d5d4-4edf-bd7b-f9e224c96c75

Ryan, Paul, Powers, Simon and Watson, Richard (2016) Social niche construction and evolutionary transitions in individuality. Biology & Philosophy, 31 (1), 59–79. (doi:10.1007/s10539-015-9505-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Social evolution theory conventionally takes an externalist explanatory stance, treating observed cooperation as explanandum and the positive assortment of cooperative behaviour as explanans. We ask how the circumstances bringing about this positive assortment arose in the first place. Rather than merely push the explanatory problem back a step, we move from an externalist to an interactionist explanatory stance, in the spirit of Lewontin and the Niche Construction theorists. We develop a theory of ‘social niche construction’ in which we consider biological entities to be both the subject and object of their own social evolution. Some important cases of the evolution of cooperation have the side-effect of causing changes in the hierarchical level at which the evolutionary process acts. This is because the traits (e.g. life-history bottlenecks) that act to align the fitness interests of particles (e.g. cells) in a collective can also act to diminish the extent to which those particles are bearers of heritable fitness variance, while augmenting the extent to which collectives of such particles (e.g. multicellular organisms) are bearers of heritable fitness variance. In this way, we can explain upward transitions in the hierarchical level at which the Darwinian machine operates in terms of particle-level selection, even though the outcome of the process is a collective-level selection regime. Our theory avoids the logical and metaphysical paradoxes faced by other attempts to explain evolutionary transitions.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 September 2015
Published date: 2 January 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471930
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471930
ISSN: 0169-3867
PURE UUID: 062e3cba-8be7-4d26-bfb9-a9bd61217aba
ORCID for Richard Watson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2521-8255

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Date deposited: 22 Nov 2022 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:00

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Contributors

Author: Paul Ryan
Author: Simon Powers
Author: Richard Watson ORCID iD

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