School of History and Philosophy of Science

RESEARCH SEMINAR

[The University of Sydney]

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7 March 2023



"Biological Essentialism Re-interred"

Samir Okasha, University of Bristol

Dates: Monday, 3/4/2023
Time: 5:30pm
Venue: F23, Michael Spence Building, Level 5, Room 501
How to register: Free, no registration required

Zoom Link: 
https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/85722285732<https://t.e2ma.net/click/o441vu/o4064bab/01ae7ue>



Abstract: In his forthcoming OUP book, which builds on his much-discussed 2008 
paper "Biological Essentialism Resurrected", Michael Devitt offers a forthright 
defence of biological essentialism, the doctrine that biological species (and 
possibly other taxa too) have partly intrinsic, probably genetic, essences. 
Devitt's position is striking, since the consensus in the philosophy of biology 
has long been that intrinsic essentialism of this sort is incompatible with 
both evolutionary theory and with standard taxonomic practice. However, Devitt 
argues that this consensus rests on a mistake. He argues that the 
anti-essentialist consensus stems from a failure to distinguish between the 
taxon question, which asks what makes an organism a member of one species 
rather than another, and the category question, which asks what all the 
different species taxa have in common. Devitt claims that a "relational" answer 
to the category question is compatible with an "intrinsic essence" answer to 
the taxon question. I scrutinize this claim and find it to be untenable, on the 
basis of a logical analysis of the relationship between the taxon and the 
category questions. I take this to refute Devitt's claim that the 
anti-essentialist consensus rests on a mistake.

Bio: Dr. Samir Okasha has been a Principal Investigator (2008-2011) on one of 
the major AHRC-funded research project, titled ‘Evolution, Cooperation and 
Rationality’ in collaboration with Professor Ken Binmore. The project led to a 
series of publications and an edited volume Evolution and Rationality (CUP 
2012).

Dr. Okasha was the Principal Investigator (2011-2016) on a research project 
entitled 'Darwinism and the Theory of Rational Choice', funded by a European 
Research Council Advanced Investigator Award. The project focused on 
understanding formal and conceptual connections between Darwinian Evolutional 
Theory and the Theory of Rationality. The project culminated in a book: Agents 
and Goals in Evolution, published by OUP in 2018.



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