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  1. Generalization in ecology and evolutionary biology: From hypothesis to paradigm. [REVIEW]Kari Vepsäläinen & John R. Spence - 2000 - Biology and Philosophy 15 (2):211-238.
    We argue that broad, simplegeneralizations, not specifically linked tocontingencies, will rarely approach truth in ecologyand evolutionary biology. This is because mostinteresting phenomena have multiple, interactingcauses. Instead of looking for single universaltheories to explain the great diversity of naturalsystems, we suggest that it would be profitable todevelop general explanatory frameworks. A frameworkshould clearly specify focal levels. The process orpattern that we wish to study defines our level offocus. The set of potential and actual states at thefocal level interacts with conditions at (...)
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  • From the Gaia hypothesis to a theory of the evolving self-organizing biosphere: Michael Ruse: The Gaia hypothesis: Science on a pagan planet. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2013, 251pp, $26 HB.David Schwartzman - 2015 - Metascience 24 (2):315-319.
    The Gaia hypothesis emerged from two interpenetrating traditions, the mechanist and the organicist, with the former tending to reductionism and the latter to holism. While mechanist James Lovelock is the acknowledged father, he collaborated with the organicist Lynn Margulis in the early 1970s when the first papers appeared in the scientific literature. Both continued to be active in Gaia-related conferences until Margulis’s premature death in late 2011. In a very readable exposition, Michael Ruse succeeds brilliantly in tracing the philosophical roots (...)
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  • Spanning rhetoric for a holistic science: James lovelock's geophysiology.M. L. Falersweany - 1995 - Social Epistemology 9 (2):165 – 174.
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