Fitness “kinematics”: biological function, altruism, and organism–environment development
Biology and Philosophy, Volume 24, Number 4.
by Marshall Abrams
Abstract: It’s recently been argued that biological fitness can’t change over the
course of an organism’s life as a result of organisms’ behaviors.
However, some characterizations of biological function and biological
altruism tacitly or explicitly assume that an effect of a trait can
change an organism’s fitness. In the first part of the paper, I explain
that the core idea of changing fitness can be understood in terms of
conditional probabilities defined over sequences of events in an
organism’s life. The result is a notion of “conditional fitness” which
is static but which captures intuitions about apparent behavioral
effects on fitness. The second part of the paper investigates the
possibility of providing a systematic foundation for conditional
fitness in terms of spaces of sequences of states of an organism and
its environment. I argue that the resulting “organism–environment
history conception” helps unify diverse biological perspectives, and
may provide part of a metaphysics of natural selection.
Read the article.