[Taxacom] RES: south-west Australia

Robinwbruce at aol.com Robinwbruce at aol.com
Sat Jun 25 17:41:17 CDT 2011


Hi Robin,
 
I am not sure about the real thing, but these representatives that you have 
 held in you hands were, in olden times, called organisms. Post-organismal  
biology has little time for such historical curiosities, after all why try 
to  confront the concrete when the abstract is so much more seductive.
 
Organisms as the real thing roots to Buffon I believe. If I am in  error, 
my foibles will, I hope, be pointed out.
 
Robin
 
(unusual to find two robins on the same thread, especially at this time of  
year)  
 
 
In a message dated 6/25/2011 10:43:29 P.M. GMT Daylight Time,  
releech at telus.net writes:

Who? Me?  Robin Leech? I think you are mistaken Michael. I think you have 
the 
wrong  guy here.

However, now that I have been brought into the discussion,  somewhere back 
a 
bit, in all this messy discussion,
I did strongly  disagree with one of you in this thread.

The species is the only real  thing.  The genera, and all the rest of the 
hierarchy created by us  is but a structure
we use so that we can see, and which will help us to  understand, the 
relationship of one species in relation to all the  others.
Everything from the genus on up is imaginary, a figment.  In  all my 70 
plus 
years of knowing and understanding about species,
I have  never yet held a genus or family in my hand.  I have held  
representatives of many species though, which, in turn, have  in
belonged to the human-created genera and  families.

Robin

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael  Heads" <michael.heads at yahoo.com>
To:  <taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2011 2:27  PM
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] RES: south-west Australia


Hi  Robin,

You wrote: 'Michael Heads says the panbiogeographic species  concept is 
"not 
special." How does one criticize a species concept with  such a 
characterization? Is it a valid species concept? Can we ever get an  
example?'

MH: I mentioned the paper by Mallet (2010 Biol. Philos.)  that dicusses 
these 
issues. Another good one is: Mallet, 2008, Phil.  Trans. Roy. Soc. Both the 
papers are freely available on the net. I'm not  sure what you mean by 'can 
we ever get an example'.

RZ: 'He also  says the species in diffeent groups is different. Like how? 
Do  
panbiogeographers recognize the usual list of different species concepts  
and 
pick one or the other as appropriate? Or is it something implied and  
unstated that cannot be discussed?'

MH: As you wrote in your last  mail: 'different species concepts can be 
most 
effectively used for  different groups'. The species concept may be 
different 
even in related  genera, depending on who revised or sequenced them. 
Everyone 
knows groups  in which the species (or genus, or family) concepts are very 
narrow, while  broad species are accepted in other groups. That's fine - 
there is no need  to have a single, overarching 'species concept' and we 
are 
suggesting that  the search for one is pointless.

RZ: The reason no one can pin down our  panbiogeographers is that their 
concepts are thin. They can never be  strongly confirmed if they are 
tergiversated and morphed with every  challenge.

MH: Which of our concepts has changed following a challenge?  We've been 
arguing that species are not special for decades - that's why  it's so 
satisfying to read Mallet's papers.




Wellington,  New Zealand.

My papers on biogeography are at:  http://tiny.cc/RiUE0

--- On Sun, 26/6/11, Richard Zander  <Richard.Zander at mobot.org> wrote:


From: Richard Zander  <Richard.Zander at mobot.org>
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] RES: south-west  Australia
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Received: Sunday, 26 June,  2011, 6:30 AM


I really think all taxacomers might profit from  reading Believing Bullsh.t 
by Stephen Law. He list 8 ways people immunize  their beliefs from contrary 
arguments. In addition to cautioning and  auditing ourselves for our own 
nonsense, I think certain elements  characterize how our favorite 
panbiogeographers immunize their methods of  study from our criticism.

Note here that Michael Heads says the  panbiogeographic species concept is 
"not special." How does one criticize  a species concept with such a 
characterization? Is it a valid species  concept? Can we ever get an 
example?

He also says the species in  diffeent groups is different. Like how? Do 
panbiogeographers recognize the  usual list of different species concepts 
and 
pick one or the other as  appropriate? Or is it something implied and 
unstated that cannot be  discussed?

The reason no one can pin down our panbiogeographers is that  their 
concepts 
are thin. They can never be strongly confirmed if they are  tergiversated 
and 
morphed with every challenge.

Law also cites a  Nuclear Option: when backed into a corner, one can also 
damn reason  itself. That is, if everyone looks to some standard, then for 
every -ism,  that's our own trip. Hence we hear the foibles of Darwinists, 
cladists,  and modern synthesists such that all systems of inquiry are so 
fraught  with problems that who are we to criticize anyone else.

I think  exchanges on Taxacom are phenomenally instructive because of the 
diversity  of foibles in thought we all exhibit, and particularly their 
serious  critical discussion by others. The panbiogeographers are 
disengaged 
from  this process, and the means are clearly discussed in Law's book.

This  is not to say that Law does not indulge in his own bullsh.t. His 
attacks  on theism fails again and again because he attaches handles (e.g. 
total  good) to the god concept then attacks the handles, then says if 
there 
are  no handles, what good is the god concept? He is also the typical  
philosopher who relies on reason totally, bows to science but is generally  
ignorant of science. For instance he says science cannot explain the  
creation of the universe. Nonsense. A physicist named Tryon figured out  
that 
the positive net mass energy of matter equals the negative  gravitational 
potential of matter. They cancel out and the universe what  thus created by 
quantum fluctuation involving pair generation in a vacuum.  Voila, the 
creation of the universe (for more see a book by Barry Parker  called 
Creation, cheap used at Amazon.com.



* * * * * * * *  * * * *
Richard H. Zander
Missouri Botanical Garden, PO Box 299, St.  Louis, MO 63166-0299 USA
Web sites:  http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/resbot/ and  
http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/bfna/bfnamenu.htm
Modern Evolutionary  Systematics Web site:  
http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/resbot/21EvSy.htm

-----Original  Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu  
[mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Michael  Heads
Sent: Friday, June 24, 2011 7:59 PM
To:  taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] RES: south-west  Australia

Hi Richard,

You wrote that 'a species is still defined  most generally as the basic 
unit 
of taxonomy'. This is true in the  Mayrian, antidarwinian synthesis. In 
Darwin and in panbiogeography the  species is not special and the basic 
unit 
is the character or, at the  taxonomic level, the taxon (whatever its rank).
You also wrote: 'Suggesting  that one should follow one or the other 
[biological species concept or  darwinian/panbiogeographic species concept] 
is not helpful since (1)  different species concepts can be most 
effectively 
used for different  groups (paraconsistency)...'. Exactly: this is the 
panbiogeographic  species concept - the 'species' in different groups are 
not 
necessarily  equivalent in their branch length or degree of reproductive  
isolation.

Michael Heads


Wellington, New  Zealand.

My papers on biogeography are at:  http://tiny.cc/RiUE0

--- On Sat, 25/6/11, Richard Zander  <Richard.Zander at mobot.org> wrote:


From: Richard Zander  <Richard.Zander at mobot.org>
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] RES: south-west  Australia
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Received: Saturday, 25 June,  2011, 1:36 AM


Well, sure, usage matters, but a species is still  defined most generally 
as 
the basic unit of taxonomy. This extra baggage  refers to either 
process-based theories, e.g. biological species concept,  or the 
panbiogeography concept which is vaguely defined as some step in a  
ranking. 
Suggesting that one should follow one or the other is not helpful  since 
(1) 
different species concepts can be most effectively used for  different 
groups 
(paraconsistency), (2) sometimes just "basic unit of  taxonomy" is good 
enough for a helpful contribution to  science.

"Real"? What is real? Genera are not real? There are theoretic  
explanations 
that describe their evolving, so evolution is not a  criterion. I think 
there 
is a lot of rejection of theoretic realities  going on nowadays, and I 
don't 
mean alternate  realities.


_______________________
Richard H. Zander
Missouri  Botanical Garden
PO Box 299
St. Louis, MO 63166  U.S.A.
richard.zander at mobot.org


________________________________

From:  taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu on behalf of Michael Heads
Sent: Fri  6/24/2011 12:44 AM
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom]  RES: south-west Australia



Hi Curtis,

Panbiogeography has  developed many new or unusual concepts for old ideas 
and 
terms, e.g.  evolution, origin, species, dispersal, ancestor etc. These new 
concepts  are clarified in the panbiogeographic literature, and may often 
be  
confusing if you haven't read it. For example, the concept 'species', as  
used by many biologists, is the 'absolute' concept of Mayr - species are  
real, subgenera and subspecies are not. 'The species' is the basis of  
evolutionary theory, biodiversity assesment and so on. Panbiogeography  
instead used the Darwinian, relativistic concept - a species is not  
special, 
and is just the unit between subspecies and subgenera.  Geneticists who 
work 
on speciation are now starting to use this and to  question why Mayr etc. 
were so antidarwinian (see the outstanding article:  Mallet, J. 2010. Why 
was 
Darwin's view of species rejected by twentieth  century biologists? Biol. 
Philos. 25:  497).

Michael

Wellington, New Zealand.

My papers on  biogeography are at: http://tiny.cc/RiUE0

--- On Fri, 24/6/11, Curtis  Clark <lists at curtisclark.org> wrote:


From: Curtis Clark  <lists at curtisclark.org>
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] RES: south-west  Australia
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu, Robinwbruce at aol.com,  
jgrehan at sciencebuff.org
Received: Friday, 24 June, 2011, 4:58  PM


On 6/22/2011 9:35 PM, Michael Heads wrote:
> You can use  it in any of the standard ways and people will know what you 
> mean  from the context.
How did Robin mean it? How did John mean "null  hypothesis"?

Panbiogeography can only seem esoteric, and subject to  marginalization,
if it uses technical terms commonly used by other  biologists, but with
different meanings, and without the differences being  clarified. It's
easy for the rest of us to assume "track", for example, to  be a
specialized term in panbiogeography, since it has a multiplicity  of
meanings in standard English, but most of us with a  biometrics
background would assume we know what "degrees of freedom" and  "null
hypothesis" mean, and would only be puzzled, and I admit put off,  by
what would seem to be redefinitions.

--
--
Curtis  Clark
Cal Poly  Pomona


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