Abstract

The last half century of paleornithological research has transformed the way that biologists perceive the evolutionary history of birds. This transformation has been driven, since 1969, by a series of exciting fossil discoveries combined with intense scientific debate over how best to interpret these discoveries. Ideally, as evidence accrues and results accumulate, interpretive scientific agreement forms. But this has not entirely happened in the debate over avian origins: the accumulation of scientific evidence and analyses has had some effect, but not a conclusive one, in terms of resolving the question of avian origins. Although the majority of biologists have come to accept that birds are dinosaurs, there is lingering and, in some quarters, strident opposition to this view. In order to both understand the ongoing disagreement about avian origins and generate a prediction about the future of the debate, here we use a revised model of scientific practice to assess the current and historical state of play surrounding the topic of bird evolutionary origins. Many scientists are familiar with the metascientific scholars Sir Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn, and these are the primary figures that have been appealed to so far, in prior attempts to assess the dispute. But we demonstrate that a variation of Imre Lakatos’s model of progressive versus degenerative research programmes provides a novel and productive assessment of the debate. We establish that a refurbished Lakatosian account both explains the intractability of the dispute and predicts a likely outcome for the debate about avian origins. In short, here, we offer a metascientific tool for rationally assessing competing theories—one that allows researchers involved in seemingly intractable scientific disputes to advance their debates.

Highlights

  • Why is it so difficult to separate the good scientific wheat from the bad scientific chaff? The answer to this question is two-fold

  • For each of these antagonisms, there is some practice that seems to be associated with good science—something that might help to characterize it, such as evidence gathering or theory evolution or scientific agreement—but it turns out that it is the good form of that practice which is associated with good science, not the practice itself

  • We argue that early theropod dinosaurs faced a conflict between the functional constraints favoring the retention of digits I, II, and II and the developmental constraints that favored loss of the condensation that normally develops into the first finger” (Wagner and Gauthier 1999, 5111). 2007: Lipkin, Sereno, and Horner document (t) even non-avian theropods have furculae

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Summary

Fossils with Feathers and Philosophy of Science

Received 8 February 2018; reviews returned 5 February 2019; accepted 6 February 2019 Associate Editor: Michael Alfaro. Abstract.—The last half century of paleornithological research has transformed the way that biologists perceive the evolutionary history of birds This transformation has been driven, since 1969, by a series of exciting fossil discoveries combined with intense scientific debate over how best to interpret these discoveries. The majority of biologists have come to accept that birds are dinosaurs, there is lingering and, in some quarters, strident opposition to this view. In order to both understand the ongoing disagreement about avian origins and generate a prediction about the future of the debate, here we use a revised model of scientific practice to assess the current and historical state of play surrounding the topic of bird evolutionary origins.

COMPETING STANDARDS OF SCIENCE
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
FAILURES OF FALSIFIABILITY AND IRRATIONALITY
REVISITING THE LAKATOSIAN MODEL
THE EVOLUTION OF BIRDS
Shortly thereafter an entomologist named Samuel
CHARACTERIZING PROGRESSIVE PRACTICE
CHARACTERIZING DEGENERATIVE PRACTICE
CHARACTERIZING STATIC PRACTICE
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