ABSTRACT

Species Problems and Beyond offers a collection of up-to-date essays discussing from an interdisciplinary perspective the many ramifications of the ‘Species Problem.’ The authors represent experts in the philosophy of biology, in species-level evolutionary investigations, and in biodiversity studies and conservation. Some of the topics addressed concern the context sensitivity of the term ‘species’; species as individuals, processes, natural kinds, or as ‘operative concepts’; species delimitation in the age of Big (genomic) Data; and taxonomic inflation and its consequences for conservation strategies. The carefully edited volume will be an invaluable resource for philosophers of biology and evolutionary biologists alike.

– Olivier Rieppel, Rowe Family Curator of Evolutionary Biology, Negaunee Integrative Research Center, Field Museum, USA

Species, or ‘the Species Problem’, is a topic in science, in the philosophy of science, and in general philosophy. In fact, it encompasses many aspects of the same problem, and these are dealt with in this volume. Species are often thought of as fundamental units of biological matter to be used in ecology, conservation, classification, and biodiversity. The chapters in this book present opposing views on the current philosophical and conceptual issues of the Species Problem in biology.

Divided into four sections, Concepts and Theories, Practice and Methods, Ranks and Trees and Names, and Metaphysics and Epistemologies, the book is authored by biologists, philosophers, and historians, many leaders in their fields. Topics include ontology of species, definitions of both species category and units, species rank, speciation issues, nomenclature, ecology, and species conservation.

Species Problems and Beyond aims to clarify the contemporary issues of the Species Problem. It is ideal for use in upper-level seminars and courses in Evolutionary Biology, Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Biology, Systematics and Taxonomy, and Phylogenetics/Cladistics, and for any scholar in these fields.

part Section 1|124 pages

Concepts and Theories

chapter 3|26 pages

‘Species' as a Technical Term

Multiple Meanings in Practice, One Idea in Theory

chapter 4|14 pages

What Should Species Be?

Taxonomic Inflation and the Ethics of Splitting and Lumping

chapter 5|20 pages

The Good Species

part Section 2|50 pages

Practice and Methods

chapter 6|18 pages

Species in the Time of Big Data

The Multi-Species Coalescent, the General Lineage Concept, and Species Delimitation

part Section 3|68 pages

Ranks and Trees and Names

chapter 10|36 pages

The Species before and after Linnaeus

Tension between Disciplinary Nomadism and Conservative Nomenclature

part Section 4|98 pages

Metaphysics and Epistemologies

chapter 13|14 pages

(Some) Species Are Processes

chapter 14|22 pages

Metaphysical Presuppositions about Species Stability

Problematic and Unavoidable

chapter 15|26 pages

Critique of Taxonomic Reason(ing)

Nature's Joints in Light of an ‘Honest' Species Concept and Kurt Hübner's Historistic Philosophy of Science

part |14 pages

Afterword

chapter 16|12 pages

Continuing after Species