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[MOVED] The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis

stevevw

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But its wholly irrelevant for science. Your inability to understand this is one of the reasons why you are never going to be taken seriously.
OF course, I understand this. But you are the one bringing up religion and injecting it into a scientific thread. I have not mentioned anything even remotely religious in this thread. If you have noticed my arguments are based on science and I have posted scientific links.

I only explained that context because you kept bringing up religion and belief so that you may understand that people of religious faith can understand science and evolution as there are many including scientists who are religious yet support evolution. You seem to think that because someone is religious this discounts any scientific views they have.
 
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VirOptimus

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OF course, I understand this. But you are the one bringing up religion and injecting it into a scientific thread. I have not mentioned anything even remotely religious in this thread. If you have noticed my arguments are based on science and I have posted scientific links.

I only explained that context because you kept bringing up religion and belief so that you may understand that people of religious faith can understand science and evolution as there are many including scientists who are religious yet support evolution. You seem to think that because someone is religious this discounts any scientific views they have.
No, thats your interpretation of what I post.

I can only judge you on what you post and your history show that you have posted against natural selection for years. Your arguments have changed but its very very clear you only do this because your religious belief makes you question the science.

You have no science background, but still want to debate the ToE on a religious board with known ID arguments. The case is closed.
 
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stevevw

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No, thats your interpretation of what I post.

I can only judge you on what you post and your history show that you have posted against natural selection for years.
What does posting against natural selection even mean. Are you saying when I cite scientific facts about natural selection that mention it is not the only force in evolution that this is against natural selection? Have I ever said natural selection is not part of evolution? Are you saying no one can criticize the standard theory and if they do they must not be religious? If that is the case we may as well stop these categories altogether.
Your arguments have changed but it's very very clear you only do this because your religious belief makes you question the science.
So if there are questions about the SET that need to be asked and discussed when do you think I can ever do this without claims it is only because of my religious beliefs.
You have no science background, but still want to debate the ToE on a religious board with known ID arguments.
First this thread and the section it comes under is scientific. Are you saying that any topics under science on CF is not really about science but religion? Second I do have some scientific background. I have studied aspects of evolution under Social Sciences as part of my degree. Though not biology this still covered the basics of evolution especially aspects of the EES in psychology and sociology.

But here's the hypocrisy I see. You have said that others in this thread have pointed out my misunderstandings IE "anyone just has to see what you write to know its rubbish". Yet some of those people are laypersons. So you are quite happy to allow laypeople without scientific backgrounds to judge and determine if I know the science and then back you in trying to discredit me. But are not willing to allow the same for me who does have some scientific background.
The case is closed.
Gee I hope so.
 
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VirOptimus

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What does posting against natural selection even mean. Are you saying when I cite scientific facts about natural selection that mention it is not the only force in evolution that this is against natural selection? Have I ever said natural selection is not part of evolution? Are you saying no one can criticize the standard theory and if they do they must not be religious? If that is the case we may as well stop these categories altogether. So if there are questions about the SET that need to be asked and discussed when do you think I can ever do this without claims it is only because of my religious beliefs.
First this thread and the section it comes under is scientific. Are you saying that any topics under science on CF is not really about science but religion? Second I do have some scientific background. I have studied aspects of evolution under Social Sciences as part of my degree. Though not biology this still covered the basics of evolution especially aspects of the EES in psychology and sociology.

But here's the hypocrisy I see. You have said that others in this thread have pointed out my misunderstandings IE "anyone just has to see what you write to know its rubbish". Yet some of those people are laypersons. So you are quite happy to allow laypeople without scientific backgrounds to judge and determine if I know the science and then back you in trying to discredit me. But are not willing to allow the same for me who does have some scientific background.
Gee I hope so.
No, you do not have a scientific background and certainly have not studied the ToE in accademia.

My points stand.
 
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stevevw

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You obviously didn't understand the article. It does not say what you claim it says, hence my asking you for evidence in support of your claim.
Actually it is more of a case of not taking the time to read it properly. That wasn't the purpose of why I linked that article so I acknowledge I skimped over that part.

Your claim: "If you step outside the US in most countries the % in favour of evolution goes down and belief in God goes up."
What the article says: Many countries reject evolution, but likewise many countries have higher acceptance than the US. There is no comment on belief in God.
Actually the point I was making wasn't so black and white about religious belief versus support for evolution. It was about people with religious belief also supporting evolution. I was trying to show that many people of belief still support evolution. That science is a separate issue to belief and people can hold both. That people of belief despite supporting evolution are going to have some way or reconciling evolution with their belief. That their position should not disqualify them from ever commenting on evolution especially on controversial issues.

But on the point of the article, I assumed that as many countries such as in South America, Asia and the Middle East as religious then they were either going to believe that God played a part in evolution in some way or not support evolution altogether. This was based on the assumption that the more a person understands science the less likely they are to be religious and the more religious a person is the less likely they are to support evolution. I realize that this is a wrong assumption.

However, other statistics support the argument that while Christianity in its various forms constitutes the largest religion in the world, it is not the religion of the majority of people.
I wasn't just thinking about religion but beliefs in God or gods in general. Islam is the second major religion and Judaism is also pretty big and both believe in the same creator God as the Christians.

You failed on both premises of your assertion. You might want to take more time in future to understand the articles you read.
Yes, agree but more of a case of taking the time to read the article.
 
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stevevw

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No, you do not have a scientific background and certainly have not studied the ToE in accademia.

My points stand.
Yet I have a degree in Humanities covering psychology and sociology. I have also done comprehensive study of evolution for over 10 years now.

But still, this doesn't explain how you are willing to allow non-qualified people to determine the science when it comes to discrediting me. You seem to have one rule for anyone who agrees with you and another for anyone who doesn't. Under your rules posters like Speedwell who says he is a layman cannot comment with any authority. Yet I happen to think he knows something about evolution enough to participate in the debate. Just like myself. You are committing a logical fallacy.

PS. I seem to remember that you said your specialty was philosophy and not biology.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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But here's the hypocrisy I see. You have said that others in this thread have pointed out my misunderstandings IE "anyone just has to see what you write to know its rubbish". Yet some of those people are laypersons. So you are quite happy to allow laypeople without scientific backgrounds to judge and determine if I know the science and then back you in trying to discredit me.
You don't need a scientific background to recognise a misinterpretation of a quoted article, if you understand the subject the article is about.

But would you care to point out the posts from people without scientific backgrounds that have judged your knowledge of the science?

But are not willing to allow the same for me who does have some scientific background.
Maybe it's because your posts give a very good impression of someone lacking a scientific background who has constructed a distorted view of science from bits & pieces pulled from online articles and papers.
 
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stevevw

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You don't need a scientific background to recognize a misinterpretation of a quoted article if you understand the subject the article is about.
OK then as you want me to go back and find the posts to support my claim that the EES is being discredited please show me where I have misunderstood the science. Let's get down to the detail and determine if this is the truth rather than loose assertions.

But would you care to point out the posts from people without scientific backgrounds that have judged your knowledge of the science?
As I am soon to post a reply to your post 195 about how posters are discrediting the EES I will do this at the same time as they seem to be related. Should be tonight as I am preoccupied this afternoon.

Maybe it's because your posts give a very good impression of someone lacking a scientific background who has constructed a distorted view of science from bits & pieces pulled from online articles and papers.
The problem is I disagree that I have misunderstood the science. How do you know that it is others who have not understood the EES that is causing them to misunderstand the science or the interpretation of the evidence? After all, I have been studying the EES for many years and it seems that the EES was a fairly new or neglected topic for others.

I think a lot of what you call a misunderstanding of the science IMO is actually personal opinions about the evidence and the status of the SET and the EES as there was no evidence to support what was said. I have gone back over those posts and can see how personal views are being put forward as opposed to dealing with what the papers actually say and verify.

But I will go into more detail later on this as I think this is part of how the EES is being discredited by either not understanding the EES papers or devaluing what they are saying.

Anyway, I said go back and find these posts where I have misunderstood the papers I posted and I would like some evidence to show that I have misunderstood things.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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OK then as you want me to go back and find the posts to support my claim that the EES is being discredited please show me where I have misunderstood the science. Let's get down to the detail and determine if this is the truth rather than loose assertions.
This was all explained fairly early on in your postings.

The problem is I disagree that I have misunderstood the science. How do you know that it is others who have not understood the EES that is causing them to misunderstand the science or the interpretation of the evidence? After all, I have been studying the EES for many years and it seems that the EES was a fairly new or neglected topic for others.

I think a lot of what you call a misunderstanding of the science IMO is actually personal opinions about the evidence and the status of the SET and the EES as there was no evidence to support what was said. I have gone back over those posts and can see how personal views are being put forward as opposed to dealing with what the papers actually say and verify.
I have pointed out instances of you misunderstanding specifics of the science already. The main problem I see with your posts here is a misunderstanding of the nature of the debate and differences between the SET and the ESS. This also was explained earlier.
 
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stevevw

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This was all explained fairly early on in your postings.
The trouble is as part of replying to your post 95 I have been revising the posts of the thread and I do not really see where this is the case. I actually see the opposite of how some are misunderstanding the full implications of the EES and I think this is the basis for why they think I have misunderstood things. I don't think you really understand the EES properly to then assess whether I understand things properly. But anyway I am just about finished on the other post so I will explain this in that post. But I will give an example of a prelude.

In post 100 I mention that some of the EES forces produce variations that are not the result of genetic variations or adaptive selection (variations preserved by NS that prove an adaptive fit to environments). You replied saying "All are the result of genetic variation and natural selection".
That is all variation is the result of genetics and natural selection IE (NS preserving variations that prove a benefit to adaptive fit for a creature).

This is a basic difference in the debate that came up a lot in the posts where posters were continually stating that variation is only the result of gene change and adaptive evolution (preserved by NS). But before someone points out NS doesn't produce variation I understand this. But what people often say is that NS preserves ceratin variations thus produces them in the end. This seemed to be another misunderstanding where people thought I didn't understand things. But rather this was about semantics.

Anyway, I was posting evidence showing that the EES papers disagreed with this view and that this was a fundamental difference between the SET and the EES. But this was either overlooked and denied. The point is you or others had never given any support for what you claimed and I was posting support from the EES papers that specifically supported what I was stating.

You and others then claimed I was misunderstanding the papers but once again did not provide any support. But as far as I can see the papers clearly support what I said IE

Instead of privileging selected mechanisms such as random variation, genetic control, and natural selection, the multitude of factors that dynamically interact in the evolutionary process will be better expounded by a pluralistic theory framework.
Why an extended evolutionary synthesis is necessary


The above is talking about the EES forces that also produce variations besides random mutations and gene change. It also mentions that some variations are well suited and adaptive thus minimizing and sometimes bypassing natural selections role.


In addition, natural selection may be ‘bypassed’ by environmental induction, causing potentially adaptive developmental variation in many individuals of a population at once and long before natural selection may become effective.

Why an extended evolutionary synthesis is necessary

This emphasis on constructive development and reciprocal causation leads the EES to recognize several additional classes of evolutionary process (an extension anticipated by Endler [114]), including processes that generate novel variation, bias selection and contribute to inheritance (figure 2).

http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019

Variation can also be produced by other EES forces like niche construction, plasticity, and inheritance beyond genes. Sometimes not involving gene change at all and sometimes bypassing NS. My point was that the EES papers do support that evolutionary and adaptive variation can be produced by other processes besides the MS or SET of gene change and adaptations to environments by NS.

The most striking and contentious difference from the original MS concerns the relative significance of natural selection versus generative variation in evolution.

In the EES, developmental processes, operating through developmental bias, inclusive inheritance, and niche construction, share responsibility for the direction and rate of evolution, the origin of character variation, and organism-environment complementarity.

As a consequence, the EES predicts that organisms will sometimes have the potential to develop well-integrated, functional variants when they encounter new conditions, which contrasts with the traditional assumption of no relationship between adaptive demand and the supply of phenotypic variation
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019


So please explain how I have misunderstood the differences between the SET and the EES on this matter as the papers seem to clearly support what I have said. As I spent a bit of time on this post I will post the reply to your post 95 tomorrow. But in saying that it is pretty similar to the example I have given.

Kind regards
Steve
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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In post 100 I mention that some of the EES forces produce variations that are not the result of genetic variations or adaptive selection (variations preserved by NS that prove an adaptive fit to environments). You replied saying "All are the result of genetic variation and natural selection".
That is all variation is the result of genetics and natural selection IE (NS preserving variations that prove a benefit to adaptive fit for a creature).
You're seeing only what you want to see... You asked about developmental plasticity, niche construction, and inclusive inheritance, and I said "All are the result of genetic variation and natural selection, and their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection."

As I explained before, there are various ways to view these processes and different timescales on which to view them and their results. SET and EES differ as to which are most productive approaches.
 
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Gottservant

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I've always felt the problem with Evolution, is agency.

Evolution may increase as the size of a city increases, but until you say "I belong in this city" or "that city": you have no agency (no agency that can optimize the probability of your "evolving" in one or other city).

If you had agency, then you would have mindfulness - and the cumulative effect of different adaptations, would begin to be efficacious.
 
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stevevw

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You're seeing only what you want to see... You asked about developmental plasticity, niche construction, and inclusive inheritance, and I said "All are the result of genetic variation and natural selection, and their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection."

As I explained before, there are various ways to view these processes and different timescales on which to view them and their results. SET and EES differ as to which are most productive approaches.
OK before I reply I want to clarify your point that developmental plasticity, niche construction, and inclusive inheritance are all the result of "genetic variation and natural selection, and their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection."

When you say the result of "genetic variation and natural selection" are you saying past "genetic variation and natural selection". I would assume you also mean when you say "their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection" that you are talking about the variations from those EES forces passed down to offspring are subject to NS.
 
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stevevw

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I've always felt the problem with Evolution, is agency.

Evolution may increase as the size of a city increases, but until you say "I belong in this city" or "that city": you have no agency (no agency that can optimize the probability of your "evolving" in one or other city).

If you had agency, then you would have mindfulness - and the cumulative effect of different adaptations, would begin to be efficacious.
Without implying any supernatural influences there is a degree of agency in the EES as it places more importance on the ability of the creature to determine its own evolution rather than be a passive entity subject to some outside influence dictating its fate and direction of evolution as the SET basically views things.

This is especially relevant for the EES forces of niche construction and inclusive inheritance. These forces include how creatures can change environments to create adaptive fit rather than being change genetically for an adaptive fit. The inclusive inheritance includes creatures behaviors such as through culture or in how parents behave and create a positive pre and after the birth environment.

This can promote evolvability and adaptability. This is primarily based on epigenetics with the expression of genes rather than gene change itself. But basically these forces allow agency of creatures in that their behaviour, ability, knowledge will determine evolutionary outcomes.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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When you say the result of "genetic variation and natural selection" are you saying past "genetic variation and natural selection".
What else could it mean?

I would assume you also mean when you say "their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection" that you are talking about the variations from those EES forces passed down to offspring are subject to NS.
What else could it mean?

Incidentally, whatever you're doing with your posts to change the colours, it's messing up the quoting in replies.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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Without implying any supernatural influences there is a degree of agency in the EES as it places more importance on the ability of the creature to determine its own evolution rather than be a passive entity subject to some outside influence dictating its fate and direction of evolution as the SET basically views things.
All creatures have that kind of agency over their evolution because all creatures change their environments just by living. This is simply a feature of evolution. The question for SET & EES is, what level and type of environmental changes should be considered as worthy of special consideration, and over what timescales?
 
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stevevw

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All creatures have that kind of agency over their evolution because all creatures change their environments just by living. This is simply a feature of evolution. The question for SET & EES is, what level and type of environmental changes should be considered as worthy of special consideration, and over what timescales?
Yes but the EES has grouped certain behaviors/inputs because they show that they also cause evolutionary change. Those behaviors (niche construction, hereditary beyond genes) and inputs (developmental) are regarded as forces of evolution besides and on par with gene change and natural selection because they also produce adaptive and hereditable variations.
 
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stevevw

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What else could it mean?
What else could it mean?
OK just checking.
Incidentally, whatever you're doing with your posts to change the colors, it's messing up the quoting in replies.
OK, I'm just selecting a color from the menu within the post. I do that to highlight the links from my commentary. But I will just make the links Italicized instead so they are differentiated.

You said that "developmental plasticity, niche construction, and inclusive inheritance are all the result of genetic variation and natural selection, and their generational outputs are all subject to natural selection."

Yet the EES papers clearly say that for example niche construction and inclusive inheritance can produce variations that can be inherited without gene change. The fact that inclusive inheritance is also known as non-genetic inheritance shows this is the case. IE

More generally, the EES recognizes that the evolutionary process has a capacity for ‘bootstrapping’ such that prior evolution can generate supplementary information-supplying and adaptation-generating evolutionary processes, expressed in plasticity, learning, non-genetic inheritance, niche construction and culture. In fact, the conceptual change associated with the EES is largely a change in the perceived relationship between genes and development: a shift from a programmed to a constructive view of development. Although genes are fundamental to development and heredity, they are not causally privileged in either of these processes [
9,129,130].
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019

Also
By contrast, the EES regards the genome as a sub-system of the cell designed by evolution to sense and respond to the signals that impinge on it [8]. Organisms are not built from genetic ‘instructions’ alone, but rather self-assemble using a broad variety of inter-dependent resources. Even where there is a history of selection for plasticity, the constructive development perspective entails that prior selection underdetermines the phenotypic response to the environment.

This difference in how development is conceived strongly affects evolutionary interpretations. Readers that view developmental plasticity as programed by genetically specified switches or reaction norms, pre-screened by prior selection, would find it hard to envisage how responses to the environment can be the starting point for evolutionary change as plasticity-led evolution then reduces to selection on genetic variation. Conversely, if, for instance, as a result of exploratory processes, development is constructive and open-ended, entirely new functional phenotypes may be able to emerge with little or no initial genetic modification, yet nonetheless generate critical new raw material for subsequent bouts of selection (e.g. [30]). In such cases, the genetically specified reaction-norm approach is limited because phenotypic variation results from ontogenetic selective processes, rather than genes, responding to environmental variation.

http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019

Regarding the EES forces being caused by prior natural selection, alone is also contested by the
EES. This seems to be at the crux of the difference in interpretation that supporters of the SET seem to miss and probably a cause of why some in this thread may acknowledge the influences of the EES but not fully appreciate them as causes and drivers of evolution on par with NS. IE

The standard response at this stage is to point out that any adaptive directionality in evolution caused by plasticity, niche construction, and extra-genetic inheritance can, in fact, be explained by natural selection in the past. How else could something like niche construction improve the fit between organism and environment? This response views causation according to Mayr’s proximate-ultimate distinction. Natural selection is viewed an ultimate cause, responsible for the adaptive fit between organism and environment. Plasticity, niche construction, and extra-genetic inheritance, however, are viewed as proximate causes, responsible only for the development of organisms through interpretation of the genetic code fashioned by natural selection.

To be sure, natural selection is hard to escape so it is likely to be part of the explanation. But, if the Lewontin conditions are causally intertwined, one cannot move backward in time and single out natural selection as an independent process, alone responsible for adaptation. And, therefore, one cannot invoke the proximate-ultimate distinction to refute alternative representations of evolution by natural selection. Doing so is to assume what is contested – that the Lewontin conditions are autonomous.

Failure to appreciate that how we choose to represent Lewontin’s conditions affects what counts as an evolutionary explanation appears to be a major source of communication failure surrounding the extended evolutionary synthesis.
How do living beings fulfil the conditions for evolution by natural selection? – Extended Evolutionary Synthesis

In regards to the generational outputs of the EES forces all being subject to natural selection. This is also contested by the EES. Natural selection (NS) power comes from the fact that it can test variations to preserve well-suited variations that provide an adaptive benefit. But what if some of the EES forces can produce well suited and adaptive variations in the first place. Where does that leave NS? It's not as if NS is the determining factor for whether those variations as suitable or not nor adaptive. Therefore its power and role are reduced and even bypassed.

For example, as mentioned niche construction allows creatures to create well suited and adaptive environments that influence the type of variation which is also well suited and adaptive. They go hand in hand and so long as the creature continues to create this environment and/or modifies it then there will be a good fit between creatures, their offsprings, and environments thus bypassing NS. The same for inheritance beyond genes as this often is associated with behaviors and relationships between parents and offsprings in creating conditions that promote fitness and therefore evolvability.

Also, developmental processes create a feedback link between environments and creatures where developmental mechanisms respond to environmental pressures to produce certain forms that are well suited and adaptive. It is not as if NS can determine these developmental responses as unsuitable and non-adaptive. Therefore NS role is diminished and at best refining what has already been selected.
These EES forces fulfill all three of Lewontin's [98] conditions for evolution by natural selection without NS being dominant of contributing at all. IE

While plasticity is well recognized within the field, what is less well appreciated is that the specific adaptive phenotypes generated need not be the direct targets of past selection, but may be the expression of the more general ability of developmental processes to accommodate novel inputs adaptively, thereby enabling functionally integrated responses to a broad range of conditions [27,34].
This recognition of a variety of distinct routes to phenotype–environment fit furnishes the EES with explanatory resources that traditional perspectives lack.

http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019
 
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stevevw

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Steve, any chance of you giving examples of the posts in this thread you say are trying to discredit the EES?
Apart from the obvious discrediting of the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES) in post Post #65 which says that the EES is 'woo' there are a number of posts that indirectly discredit the EES. This is based on the fact that the posters are either not bothering to understand the EES or are denying its full implications and thus discrediting it.

This comes from two basic reasons that I see repeated throughout the posts.

1) despite acknowledgment of the EES forces there is still a reluctance to see them as independent evolutionary causes. The language used in posts is still along the lines of the standard view which is primarily about adaptive evolution (variations through mutation, gene change, and natural selection). That the EES forces themselves are the result of natural selection (NS) and not independent evolutionary causes on par with gene change and NS as causes. In other words, the standard view is still maintained at the expense of the EES forces thus discrediting the EES.

For example
Post #32. I said that supporters of the Standard Evolutionary Theory (SET) minimized and underestimate the EES forces and see them as constraints to NS and explanations for the absence of adaptive evolution through NS. Whereas the EES forces are actually causing evolution on par gene change and NS. This was seen by the poster "as a fictional caricature of the SET and EES".

The poster also said that "all parties acknowledge these factors as contributors to evolution", (IE EES forces) but they qualified this by saying "but all are subject to NS", (all being the EES forces and their outcomes). They also claimed the evidence was inconclusive for the EES.

My contention is that despite the claims that the standard view acknowledges the EES forces it doesn’t really acknowledge the EES forces because nothing has really been changed. This is qualified with the traditionalist language still being used like ”but all are subject to NS" in how the EES is seen by posters and in mainstream literature. For example, most of the EES paper say the following along similar lines

but more often the defenders of the traditional conception argue that ‘all is well’ with current evolutionary theory, which they see as having ‘co-evolved’ together with the methodological and empirical advances that already receive their due in current evolutionary biology [33]. But the repeatedly emphasized fact that innovative evolutionary mechanisms have been mentioned in certain earlier or more recent writings does not mean that the formal structure of evolutionary theory has been adjusted to them. On the contrary, the discrepancies between the current usage of evolutionary concepts and the predictions derived from the classical model have grown.
Why an extended evolutionary synthesis is necessary

Plus, despite claims that evidence for the EES is inconclusive this also doesn't seem to be the case.

Indeed, a growing number of challenges to the classical model of evolution have emerged over the past few years, such as from evolutionary developmental biology [16], epigenetics [17], physiology [18], genomics [19], ecology [20], plasticity research [21], population genetics [22], regulatory evolution [23], network approaches [14], novelty research [24], behavioural biology [12], microbiology [7] and systems biology [25], further supported by arguments from the cultural [26] and social sciences [27], as well as by philosophical treatments [2831]. None of these contentions are unscientific, all rest firmly on evolutionary principles and all are backed by substantial empirical evidence.
Why an extended evolutionary synthesis is necessary

Plus evidence that the EES forces are not just merely constraints and explanations for the absence of NS but forces in their own right that cause evolution on par with the adaptive view of gene theory and NS. That they can diminish and even bypass NS in the process of producing well suited and adaptive variations is here.

Explaining the origin of adaptations requires understanding how pre-existing developmental processes generate heritable phenotypic variants from genetic, epigenetic, and environmental inputs. Developmental bias and plasticity, therefore, play central roles in the EES as generators of novel, yet potentially functional and coordinated, phenotypic variation.

This conception of bias is different from the traditional characterization of developmental constraints: rather than accounting for the absence of evolution or adaptation, developmental bias is also a source of adaptive variation.

The EES is thus characterized by the central role of the organism in the evolutionary process, and by the view that the direction of evolution does not depend on selection alone and need not start with mutation.

The most striking and contentious difference from the original MS concerns the relative significance of natural selection versus generative variation in evolution. In the EES, developmental processes, operating through developmental bias, inclusive inheritance, and niche construction, share responsibility for the direction and rate of evolution, the origin of character variation, and organism-environment complementarity.
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019

Particular forms of phenotypic change are taken as the result of internal generative conditions rather than external pruning. Thus, a significant amount of explanatory weight is shifted from external conditions to the internal properties of evolving populations. In addition, natural selection may be ‘bypassed’ by environmental induction, causing potentially adaptive developmental variation in many individuals of a population at once and long before natural selection may become effective.
Why an extended evolutionary synthesis is necessary

Other posts along similar lines such as

Post #104 where the poster said they were not denying the EES forces as evolutionary causes but then said it wasn’t helpful to view evolution through this narrow casual way (narrow way as in including the EES forces). That the cause of evolution is heritable variation in populations combined with NS.

IMO and as far as the evidence from the EES papers this is discrediting the EES because what the poster basically described is the traditionalist's view of evolution that the EES papers were saying they dispute. Including the EES as causes actually expand the evolutionary view not narrow it. That’s why it’s called the (Expanded Evolutionary Synthesis). The EES forces are seen as alternative and additional causes of evolution on par and sometimes instead of the traditionalist's view of heritable variations caused by genes (random mutations) and NS.

* The same poster questioned how variations can happen without genetic change.
* Denied Niche construction as an evolutionary force in its own right by saying the Modern Synthesis (MS) treats it as separate and not a cause.
* Denied inheritance beyond genes as a valid cause of evolution.

As far as I understand the EES provides evidence that the EES forces can produce heritable variation without gene change and adaptive evolution (NS). By not acknowledging the EES forces and calling the EES a narrowing of the evolutionary view it is discrediting the EES. I have provided support for this above and again here.

Biological inheritance is typically defined as the transmission of genes from parents to offspring. However, it is increasingly recognized that there are multiple mechanisms that contribute to heredity [
5961]. Parent-offspring similarity occurs not only because of the transmission of DNA but because parents transfer a variety of developmental resources that enable reconstruction of developmental niches [60,6265].

More generally, the EES recognizes that the evolutionary process has a capacity for ‘bootstrapping’ such that prior evolution can generate supplementary information-supplying and adaptation-generating evolutionary processes, expressed in plasticity, learning, non-genetic inheritance, niche construction, and culture. In fact, the conceptual change associated with the EES is largely a change in the perceived relationship between genes and development: a shift from a programmed to a constructive view of development. Although genes are fundamental to development and heredity, they are not causally privileged in either of these processes [9,129,130].
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/282/1813/20151019


Other similar posts
Post
#63 was similar again. In response to my claim that the EES can produce non-genetic heritable change, the poster asks how non-adaptive heritable change can even happen. This shows either a lack of understanding and appreciation for the EES as it clearly states that non-adaptive heritable change can happen.

Post #71
I said that the difference between the SET and the EES is that variations are not produced by NS acting on random mutations to get an adaptive fit. The poster said, “it is the same process for the EES and the SET that produces variation”. I cannot see how this is the case when the EES papers clearly state that there are a number of different evolutionary causes that produce variation in the EES and that some are well suited and have adaptive fit therefore are not the result of random mutations and NS. IE check support already given from EES papers.

Post #89 is another that minimizes the EES by denying that not many of the EES papers mention how there is a big difference in the EES and the SET.

Here are other similar posts #126, #127 and #100,
I won't go into the 2nd point as it is sort of covered in the above which was that posters like in mainstream literature make the standard or traditionalists view of evolution through adaptations based on gene change and NS the prominent view and in doing this they deny and discredit the EES. I won't link evidence for this as I already have above and earlier in this post. But will link the relevant posts.

Post
#39,
I said that some make NS the be-all and end-all in pointing out how some determine evolution by the adaptive view through NS which is given prominence as the main and only cause of evolutionary change. I was told by the poster in reply that this claim was a straw man and asked who is making it the be-all and end-all.

The point is the EES papers are stating this and the lack of recognition that the papers state this is a denial of what the EES is saying. If there is a dispute that this is not the case then evidence needs to be supplied. An important clarification needs to be made here. This is not about the personal views of posters alone but the general view as explained in the EES papers so that needs to be addressed. I have given ample support for this.

Post #124,
mentions a similar quote where I stated that most people conceive evolution as by random mutations and natural selection. The poster states that this is a falsehood and not what the EES says about the SET.

Regards
Steve
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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Yes but the EES has grouped certain behaviors/inputs because they show that they also cause evolutionary change. Those behaviors (niche construction, hereditary beyond genes) and inputs (developmental) are regarded as forces of evolution besides and on par with gene change and natural selection because they also produce adaptive and hereditable variations.
I already addressed this.
 
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