Abstract
Both paleobiology and investigations of ‘major evolutionary transitions’ are intimately concerned with the macroevolutionary shape of life. It is surprising, then, how little studies of major transitions are informed by paleontological perspectives and. I argue that this disconnect is partially justified because paleobiological investigation is typically ‘phenomena-led’, while investigations of major transitions (at least as commonly understood) are ‘theory-led’. The distinction turns on evidential relevance: in the former case, evidence is relevant in virtue of its relationship to some phenomena or hypotheses concerning those phenomena; in the latter, evidence is relevant in virtue of providing insights into, or tests of, an abstract body of theory. Because paleobiological data is by-and-large irrelevant to the theory which underwrites the traditional conception of major transitions, it is of limited use to that research program. I suggest that although the traditional conception of major transitions is neither ad-hoc or problematically incomplete, its promise of providing unificatory explanations of the transitions is unlikely to be kept. Further, examining paleobiological investigations of mass extinctions and organogenesis, I further argue that (1) whether or not transitions in paleobiology count as ‘major’ turns on how we conceive of major transitions (that is, the notion is sensitive to investigative context); (2) although major transitions potentially have a unified theoretical basis, recent developments suggest that investigations are becoming increasingly phenomena-led; (3) adopting phenomena-led investigations maximizes the evidence available to paleobiologists.
Highlights
A body of work in evolutionary biology understands life’s history by positing crucial, ‘game-changing’ events—major transitions—which explain patterns in the diversity, complexity and disparity of life
The major transitions literature is firmly rooted in evolutionary biology, while mass extinctions are studied by paleobiologists, and flow between these disciplines is rare
I want to claim that phenomena-led investigations are a feature of the strategies paleobiologists adopt when gaining empirical traction on deep time, so it is crucial to see that my point is not restricted to the corner of paleobiology concerning mass extinctions
Summary
A body of work in evolutionary biology understands life’s history by positing crucial, ‘game-changing’ events—major transitions—which explain patterns in the diversity, complexity and disparity of life. Paleobiologists care deeply about the events and processes which shape life’s trajectory on the macro-scale, and posit events—mass extinctions for instance—which play gamechanging roles These discussions are oddly disjoint: in particular, evolutionary theorists concerned with major transitions don’t attend in detail to paleobiological evidence or paleobiological theorizing. The major transitions literature is firmly rooted in evolutionary biology, while mass extinctions are studied by paleobiologists, and flow between these disciplines ( from the latter to the former) is rare Both projects are interested in ‘the shape of life’ their actual explanatory targets often differ. Where the paleobiologist is interested in patterns as revealed by the fossil record, evolutionary biologists often investigate patterns in living biota Such factors surely play their part in explaining the lack of flow from paleobiology into the major transitions literature. It is thought that there are minimal conditions for a population to be subject to evolutionary forces (Lewontin 1970; Godfrey-Smith 2009)
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