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    The debate has yet to address what exactly the use of 'fo... — Carmelics
    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Challenges→The debate over whether drift is a force remains incomplete

    The debate has yet to address what exactly the use of 'forces' is supposed to do for evolutionary theory

    CausationPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguageCausation

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    The debate has yet to address when explanations utilizing a force metaphor are u...The debate over whether drift is a force remains incomplete

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    Drift is a force, though less force-like than selection, mutation, and...78%Drift is an evolutionary force, but a force of a different color from ...77%The debate has yet to address when explanations utilizing a force meta...76%Drift is not a distinct kind of force separate from selection75%

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    Brandon (2006), however, argues that “eliminating heterozygosity” is not sufficient to show that drift is directional, given that (as Stephens would readily acknowledge) if there were two alleles at a locus, beginning at equal frequencies, we could not predict which of the two alleles would go to fixation, only that one of them would; Brandon likens this to saying that “a 20-Newton force is acting on object A”, (2006: 325), which, he seems to imply, is not a directional claim. Moreover, he argue

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