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If one says: that the traditional morphological concept of species - based on gross morphology - is empirically untenable. This means that this person and those who think as he define the concept of species in a way that makes morphological concept of species empirically untenable. This, of course makes me wonder what is meant by empirical. Taxonomy is older than DNA-sequencing by a few hundred years.
The matter has nothing to do with personal preferences or, indeed, utility but with truth & reality. I have the impression that your own background is in the physical sciences so I would expect you to appreciate these distinctions.
Quote from: Gerry Webster on March 29, 2009, 08:53:04 PMThe matter has nothing to do with personal preferences or, indeed, utility but with truth & reality. I have the impression that your own background is in the physical sciences so I would expect you to appreciate these distinctions. All members of a class do not need to be identical. However, we can define criteria that circumscribe a class. We can also define subclasses by defining criteria that that circumscribe these. That far I am with you but then we are of diverging opinions. I cannot see that you have shown that the Linnean system is untenable. You probably have underlying assumptions which you assume I accept a priori so you do not need to mention them. I probably do not accept them.My view is that we humans define the criteria used in classification. These definitions cannot be described as true or false. They are what they are. Let me make an example that is somewhat obsolete but easy to discuss: GöteYou are right. I have a technical background. That is precisely why I cannot see the problems in a mathematical approach to classification.
I am not quite sure what you mean by "more than a touch of relativism" Since you oppose it to your realistic view concerned with Truth I suppose it is not praise. I would have believed that my approach is the one used in mathematics and I think that you are completely mistaken but I would be very pleased if you could elaborate a little on your statement.Göte
one only has to look at the Sternbergia thread to see where it doesn't. And as for narcissus of the bulbocodium persuasion..........The debates between 'Splitters' & 'Lumpers' are the manifestations in the practical domain of the theoretical (or philosophical) problem - 'what is a species'?.
Quote from: gote on April 02, 2009, 11:05:13 AMI am not quite sure what you mean by "more than a touch of relativism" Since you oppose it to your realistic view concerned with Truth I suppose it is not praise. I would have believed that my approach is the one used in mathematics and I think that you are completely mistaken but I would be very pleased if you could elaborate a little on your statement.Göte Göte - I suggest the following:Rom Harre, (1970). The Principles of Scientific Thinking, University of Chicago Press.A good deal has been written about the 'species problem' since Linnaeus. The following provide useful introductions to the modern discussions to which I referred:D.L. Hull, (1965). The effect of essentialism on taxonomy - two thousand years of stasis. Brit. J. Phil. Sci. 15, 314-326; 16, 1-18.D.L. Hull, (1976). A matter of individuality. Philosophy of Science 45, 335-360.