Biological Systematics: History and Theory

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Author(s): Igor Ya. Pavlinov
Series: Species and Systematics
Publisher: CRC Press
Year: 2021

Language: English

Cover
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Epigraph
Table of contents
Preface
Introduction
1 A Brief Introduction to Systematics
1.1 What Is the Natural System?
1.2 What Is Biological Systematics?
1.2.1 The Structure of Systematics
1.2.2 What Does Systematics Study?
1.2.3 How Does Systematics Study?
1.2.4 Why Does Systematics Study?
2 Conceptual History of Systematics
2.1 Some Preliminary Considerations
2.1.1 How a Conceptual History of Systematics Can Be Written
2.1.2 History of Systematics as an Evolutionary Process
2.1.3 Major Stages of the Conceptual History of Systematics
2.2 Prehistory of Systematics
2.2.1 An Initial Step: Folk Systematics
2.2.2 Becoming Aware of the Method
2.2.3 The Herbal Epoch
2.3 The Beginning of Systematics: Scholastic Revolution
2.3.1 Major Features
2.3.2 Major Stages
2.4 Emergence of Biological Systematics: Anti-Scholastic Revolution
2.4.1 Major Non-Scholastic Motives
2.4.2 The Natural Systematics
2.4.3 The Origin of Typology
2.4.4 “Taxonomic Esotericism”
2.5 A Step Forward: Evolutionary Revolution
2.5.1 First Ideas
2.5.2 First Debates
2.6 A Step Aside: Positivist Revolution
2.7 Homage to Metaphysics: Post-Positivist Revolution
3 Some Philosophical Considerations
3.1 Classical and Non-Classical Science
3.2 Cognitive Situation
3.2.1 Cognitive Triangle
3.2.2 Conceptual Space
3.2.3 Conceptual Pyramid
3.3 Some Cognitive Regulators
3.3.1 Between Umgebung and Umwelts
3.3.2 Between Holism and Reductionism
3.3.3 Between Realism and Nominalism
3.3.4 Between Monism and Pluralism
3.4 Knowledge as an Information Model
3.5 The Logical Bases
3.6 Argumentation Schemes
3.7 Methodologies and Methods
3.7.1 Scientific Status of Methodologies and Methods
3.7.2 Basic Methods
4 An Outline of Taxonomic Theory
4.1 Taxonomic Theory as a Quasi-Axiomatics
4.1.1 General and Particular Taxonomic Theories
4.1.2 Basic Quasi-Axioms and Principles
4.2 Defining Basic Notions: Two Case Studies
4.2.1 Taxonomic Reality
4.2.2 Classification System
5 Major Research Programs in Systematics
5.1 The Phenetic Program
5.2 Rational Systematics
5.2.1 The Onto-Rational Program
5.2.2 The Episto-Rational Program
5.3 The Numerical Program
5.3.1 Major Features
5.3.2 Two Basic Versions
5.3.3 Basic Controversies
5.4 The Typological Program
5.4.1 Major Features
5.4.2 Contemporary Developments
5.5 The Biomorphic Program
5.6 The Biosystematic Program
5.7 The Phylogenetic Program
5.7.1 Major Features
5.7.2 Evolutionary Taxonomy
5.7.3 Cladistic Systematics
5.8 The Evolutionary Ontogenetic Program?
6 Taxonomic Puzzles
6.1 Between Natural and Artificial Classifications
6.2 Between Taxon and Character
6.3 Hierarchies: To Rank or Not to Rank?
6.4 Between Similarity and Kinship
6.5 What Is the (Arche)Type?
6.6 Homology, an Unresolved Problem
6.7 An Undiscoverable Essence of Species?
References
Index