Der reine Adaptationismus
The Origin and Definition of Biological Concepts
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Der reine Adaptationismus
Gruppe, O. (1887). Die griechischen Culte und Mythen in ihren Beziehungen zu den orientalischen Religionen, Bd. 1: xiii:; vgl. 267: »Adaptionismus«; vgl. 702.
teleological adaptationism
McLean, R.C. & Ivimey-Cook, W.R. (1956). Textbook of Theoretical Botany, vol. 2: 1252.
Darwin himself did not reject Lamarckian adaptationism
Monod, J. (1970). On values in the age of science. In: Tiselius, A. Nilsson, S. (eds.). The Place of Value in a World of Facts, 19-27: 23.
Adaptationism, the paradigm that views organisms as complex adaptive machines whose parts have adaptive functions subsidiary to the fitness-promoting function of the whole, is today about as basic to biology as the atomic theory is to chemistry. And about as controversial. Explicitly adaptationist approaches are ascendant in the sciences of ecology, ethology, and evolution because they have proven essential to discovery; if you doubt this claim, look at the journals. Gould and Lewontin's call for an alternative paradigm has failed to impress practicing biologists both because adaptationism is successful and well-founded, and because its critics have no alternative research program to offer. Each year sees the establishment of such new journals as Functional Biology and Behavioral Ecology. Sufficient research to fill a first issue of Dialectical Biology has yet to materialize.
Daly, M. (1991). Natural selection doesn’t have goals, but it’s the reason organisms do (Commentary on P.J.H. Schoemaker, The quest for optimally: a positive heuristic of sence?). Behaviorial and Brain Sciences 14, 219-220: 219.