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2 - The Evolutionary Derivation of Life-History Strategy Theory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

William S. Cooper
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
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Summary

The thrust of the Reducibility Thesis is that upon pursuing the implications of evolutionary principles far enough one arrives at laws of logic. The evolutionary considerations are asserted to give rise to the logical rules themselves, not merely to a tendency for organisms to obey externally imposed logical rules of mysterious origin. To demonstrate the thesis the logical theory must be extracted directly from the evolutionary theory. In so doing, care must be taken that the logic does not somehow get smuggled in the back door. It must be clear that the logic can be developed as an inherent part of evolutionary theory until the logic stands complete as an entity of biological origin.

The task of this chapter is to prepare the ground for that enterprise by reconstructing a portion of evolutionary theory to the point where it can serve as a platform on which to erect logical systems. But first let us look ahead at where this line of exploration will lead.

THE LADDER OF REDUCIBILITY

Can one start out with evolutionary theory and, by carefully drawing out its consequences, end up deriving systems of logic? We will try to show that this can indeed be accomplished in a chain of reductive reasoning involving several stages of ascent. An attempt has been made to make the stages correspond more or less to familiar bodies of theory in biology and logic.

Figure 2.1 shows the ladder of reductive relationships. The upward-pointing arrows on the left indicate implicative relationships.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Evolution of Reason
Logic as a Branch of Biology
, pp. 19 - 42
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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