2013
DOI: 10.3998/ptb.6959004.0005.003
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Developmental causation and the problem of homology

Abstract: While it is generally agreed that the concept of homology refers to individuated traits that have been inherited from common ancestry, we still lack an adequate account of trait individuation or inheritance. Here I propose that we utilize a counterfactual criterion of causation to link each trait with a developmental-causal (DC) gene. A DC gene is made up of the genetic information (which might or might not be physically contiguous in the genome) that is needed for the production of the organismic attributes t… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…It is of course possible to vastly improve how characters are formulated, in particular using understanding of development and developmental genetics to arrive at characterisations that refer more adequately to the syntax of morphogenesis, and therefore to elements that perhaps can be said to evolve. Baum, for example, has proposed a concept of individuated 'phenes' corresponding to organismal features that are caused by DC (developmental-causal) genes "made up of the genetic information (which might or might not be physically contiguous in the genome) that is needed for the production of the organismic attributes that comprise the trait" (Baum, 2013; see also Baum, 2019 in this volume). I have no doubt that will be extremely informative, but it is still based on the premise that organisms are atomisable, despite the potential of the idea to exclude 'parts' that are morphogenetic-syntactical nonsense from a developmental genetic point of view.…”
Section: The 'Character Evolution' Delusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is of course possible to vastly improve how characters are formulated, in particular using understanding of development and developmental genetics to arrive at characterisations that refer more adequately to the syntax of morphogenesis, and therefore to elements that perhaps can be said to evolve. Baum, for example, has proposed a concept of individuated 'phenes' corresponding to organismal features that are caused by DC (developmental-causal) genes "made up of the genetic information (which might or might not be physically contiguous in the genome) that is needed for the production of the organismic attributes that comprise the trait" (Baum, 2013; see also Baum, 2019 in this volume). I have no doubt that will be extremely informative, but it is still based on the premise that organisms are atomisable, despite the potential of the idea to exclude 'parts' that are morphogenetic-syntactical nonsense from a developmental genetic point of view.…”
Section: The 'Character Evolution' Delusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The problem of part existence is logically prior to homology (Baum, 2013;Olson, 2019). If, for example, parts were just subjective percepts without any existence outside of human perception then evaluating whether two 'leaves' are homologous would become a question of perceptual psychology rather than just natural science.…”
Section: Overview Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here I will start by laying out a parts-as-structures approach, which is based on connecting aspects of the phenotype to their underlying genetic causes. Since I have previously explored this developmental-causal framework in some detail (Baum, 2013), I will only provide sufficient detail here to explain how it may be adapted into a parts-as-function version, which is to say one which looks not at developmental cause but at adaptive potential.…”
Section: Overview Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unfortunately, in addition to the complexities with which the term "homology" is historically fraught (e.g., De Beer 1971;Hall 1994Hall , 2003Mindell and Meyer 2001;Wagner 2002;Brigandt and Griffiths 2007;Rieppel and Kearney 2007;McCune and Schimenti 2012;Baum, 2013;Minelli and Fusco 2013), this definition has the weakness of being tautological if we are seeking to use particular features as evidence for common ancestry (Gilbert 2003;Griffiths 2007). In this context, DWM is the explanation for homology, not its definition.…”
Section: Terminologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, DWM is the explanation for homology, not its definition. A variety of other definitions of homology run aground on the increasingly common observations that many homologous features are derived from different genes and/or different embryological/developmental pathways (Hall 1994;Shubin et al 2009; but see Baum 2013). Thus, many modern evolutionists revert to a very simple definition of homology: "structural and positional similarity… the same organ in different animals under a variety of form and function" (Panchen 1994: 56).…”
Section: Terminologymentioning
confidence: 99%