•  87
    Άτοπία and Plato’s Gorgias
    International Studies in Philosophy 25 (1): 69-77. 1993.
  •  178
    Extended phenotypes and extended organisms
    Biology and Philosophy 19 (3): 327-352. 2004.
    Phenotype, whether conventional or extended, is defined as a reflectionof an underlying genotype. Adaptation and the natural selection thatfollows from it depends upon a progressively harmonious fit betweenphenotype and environment. There is in Richard Dawkins' notion ofthe extended phenotype a paradox that seems to undercut conventionalviews of adaptation, natural selection and adaptation. In a nutshell, ifthe phenotype includes an organism's environment, how then can theorganism adapt to itsel…Read more
  •  117
    Niche Construction Theory and Human Architecture
    with John Odling-Smee
    Biological Theory 6 (3): 283-289. 2011.
    In modern evolutionary theory, selection acts on particular genes and assemblages of genes that operate through phenotypes expressed in environments. This view, however, overlooks the fact that organisms often alter their environments in pursuit of fitness needs and thus modify some environmental selection pressures. Niche construction theory introduces a reciprocal causal process that modifies natural selection relative to three general kinds of environmental components: abiota, biota (other or…Read more
  •  85
    Socrates amidst the academics?∗
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 34 (2). 1991.
    No abstract