Levels of selection are artefacts of different fitness temporal measures

Mar 1, 2015·
Pierrick Bourrat
Pierrick Bourrat
· 0 min read
Abstract
In this paper I argue against the claim, recently put forward by some philosophers of biology and evolutionary biologists, that there can be two or more ontologically distinct levels of selection. I show by comparing the fitness of individuals with that of collectives of individuals in the same environment and over the same period of time – as required to decide if one or more levels of selection is acting in a population – that the selection of collectives is a by-product of selection at the individual level; thus, talking about two or more levels of selection represents merely a different perspective on one and the same process.
Type
Publication
Ratio, 28(1), pp. 40–50.