Wright's adaptive landscape versus Fisher's fundamental theorem
Steven A. Frank

TL;DR
This paper clarifies the historical and conceptual differences between Wright's adaptive landscape and Fisher's fundamental theorem, emphasizing their distinct approaches to evolutionary dynamics and correcting common misinterpretations.
Contribution
It offers a detailed analysis showing that Wright's and Fisher's theories are fundamentally incommensurable and clarifies their actual positions on evolutionary processes.
Findings
Wright's theory is a detailed dynamical model of evolution.
Fisher's theory is an abstract invariance law.
Misinterpretations of Fisher's views are common in literature.
Abstract
Two giants of evolutionary theory, Sewall Wright and R. A. Fisher, fought bitterly for over thirty years. The Wright-Fisher controversy forms a cornerstone of the history and philosophy of biology. I argue that the standard interpretations of the Wright-Fisher controversy do not accurately represent the ideas and arguments of these two key historical figures. The usual account contrasts the major slogans attached to each name: Wright's adaptive landscape and shifting balance theory of evolution versus Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection. These alternative theories are in fact incommensurable. Wright's theory is a detailed dynamical model of evolutionary change in actual populations. Fisher's theory is an abstract invariance and conservation law that, like all physical laws, captures essential features of a system but does not account for all aspects of dynamics in real…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Philosophy and History of Science
