Incompatible nested developmental regulatory systems as a definition for 
species doesn’t seem to jibe with companies like eGenesis who are adapting pigs 
to grow organs for human use.   The latter says to me a relatively small 
genomic patch and not a rewrite.   When are species differences and exon edit 
distance contrary?   In other words, could one have a small exon edit distance 
and a difference in species, or a large edit distance and no difference in 
species?  I guess I am assuming some reasonably intelligent generative function 
that would create the a minimum length patch even if the raw DNA differences 
were quite large.

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of David Eric Smith
Sent: Sunday, December 27, 2020 12:15 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Discovery of 'cryptic species' shows Earth is even more 
biologically diverse | Wildlife | The Guardian

Yes, Nick, I think you already are where the discussion should have gone.

Questions posed, like “what _IS_ a species” are just trolling to rile up people 
like me, since it is clear I will respond in the same way I do to questions 
like “what _is_ emergence”, or “what _is_ a gene”.

The amazing thing about the levels K, P, C, O, F, G, S, from Linnaeus, are that 
the animals (+ fungi) and plants he needed to handle with them were so similar 
despite their superficial diversity, that the categories held up so well for so 
long.  Presumably this is a reflection of underlying nestedness in 
developmental regulatory systems, which then get reflected in affordances for 
diversification that can at least be shoehorned into roughly-corresponding 
levels by people committed to doing so because they want an invariant 
classification system.

Then we get Ernst Mayr, who will declare that they are breeding-able groupings, 
a criterion that of course is largely useless for asexuals (the nearest 
parallels one can find to it, for restriction/modification controls on gene 
transfer, are vastly more ad hoc and idiosyncratic).  But then this is the same 
Mayr who insisted that Woese would not bring any new thoughts into _his_ 
biology, where men were men and prokaryotes were prokaryotes, (and the 
prokaryotes knew their place) and so on.

On the “why do certain kinds of classes seem to show up, and how are they 
driven?” question, I have heard some fun things whose status today I don’t 
know.  I think one of them was that in many folk classifications worldwide, 
there tend to be category names corresponding much better-than-randomly to 
genus-level Linnaean categories.  (I’m almost sure I got this from Murray, and 
it is the kind of little factoid that he loved knowing and relating; as for 
some others of that kind, caveat lector.)  I may once have heard something 
about genera and the idea of “phylotypic” stages of development, but in saying 
that here I am incoherent, since the phylotypic stage, to the extent that there 
is one, tends to span much larger clades than genera.  There might yet be 
something to see here, though, to the extent that development has natural 
“kernels”, as Doug Erwin and Eric Davidson called them, and to the extent that 
diversification follows outlines written into the modularization of development.

Wish I knew more about this problem at a professional level, because I agree 
the causation versions of the question are interesting.

Eric




On Dec 27, 2020, at 2:22 PM, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Gary, and  EricS,

Well my vote is for Species, genus, etc., to be descriptive categories, levels 
of difference in the possession of traits.  As soon as we put our foot down, 
there, we discover that species differences are NOT as well correlated with 
levels of genetic differentiation or with gene flow as our theories would 
require.   “WHY are species?” then becomes a real and difficult question.  
Which, I think, relates to the question of why the genome is as modular as it 
is.  I whose interest is THAT?

I agree that cladistics, with its weird terminology that only a ideologue could 
love, is impenetrable.  But I think we have to penetrate it.  It is, after all, 
a descriptive method of arraying organisms on the basis of their manifest 
traits. It does allow us, for instance, to make a distinction between 
convergent evolution (where creatures that are fundamentally different look 
superficially similar) and divergent evolution (where creatures that are 
fundamentally similar look superficially different) because it can breath life  
into the notions  of fundamentally and  superficially.

Nick

Nicholas Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology
Clark University
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fwordpress.clarku.edu%2fnthompson%2f&c=E,1,UnB7k63SKcvaBW394o4XX8Kr918viefJc1jU_wc73MRPbogV-4MFPjtAV2C4BKWHTH_3Esdm4WZ0egV3stJQ4BQ7hDY1jALoe1ZElHwDVPvEvSE,&typo=1>


From: Friam <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On 
Behalf Of David Eric Smith
Sent: Sunday, December 27, 2020 11:53 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Discovery of 'cryptic species' shows Earth is even more 
biologically diverse | Wildlife | The Guardian

My late colleague Harold Morowitz once made a comment in an afternoon working 
conversation, which I found funny and fun.  He said something like “I remember 
only 45 years ago when the lagomorphs split off from the rodents”.

Kind of like Paul Erdos, the 4 billion year old man.

Eric





On Dec 27, 2020, at 12:44 PM, Gary Schiltz 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

When I studied biology at university back in the 1970s, my recollection is that 
most biologists in those days thought of species as an interbreeding population 
of individuals. Over the years, I've seen this definition give way more and 
more to defining species by genetic differences alone. Though I haven't been 
professionally a biologist for over 40 years (if ever), my life as a 
birdwatcher (and occasional keeper of coveted lists of species seen) has been 
affected by this shift. Based on genetic analysis (possibly tempered by studies 
of behavior, range, morphology), bird species are frequently "split" into two 
or more separate groups, either "subspecies", "races", or even full blown 
"species" (yay!! I've seen both those, add another species to my life list). Or 
the converse is also true - based on genetic analysis (tempered as above), 
ornithological consensus will deem two or more species to be merely different 
races or subspecies of one species, which we refer to as "lumping" (boo!!! lost 
some bragging rights about my life list).

I asked an ornithologist friend about this a couple of years ago. I've always 
been a "lumper" at heart, even if it does result in my life list being shorter. 
To me, if two individuals decide to mate, and produce offspring, they ought to 
be considered the same species. Maybe adding the requirement that the offspring 
are themselves fertile and able to produce fertile offspring. My ornithologist 
friend seems pretty firmly in the camp that defines species by their genetics. 
I asked him if this wasn't rather arbitrary, and the only thing I remember him 
mentioning (which I never followed up on studying) was the notion of a "clade". 
I won't comment further on that, since I know absolutely nothing about clades.

As a side note, we certainly don't classify currently living Homo sapiens 
individuals into different species, but then I don't know if the genetic 
differences among different races of people are more, or less, significant than 
that of some other animal species. This would, of course, be hugely (and 
justifiably, I believe) unpopular among us humans. I asked my parrots what they 
think, and they just chewed on the furniture more. I don't know if that 
signifies agreement or disagreement with my ornithologist friend.

On Sun, Dec 27, 2020 at 11:54 AM 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/dec/25/discovery-of-cryptic-species-shows-earth-is-even-more-biologically-diverse-aoe<https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fwww.theguardian.com%2fenvironment%2f2020%2fdec%2f25%2fdiscovery-of-cryptic-species-shows-earth-is-even-more-biologically-diverse-aoe&c=E,1,d8ssUiHUP3tLETjJmf50cEcV2upLKBND2qQAnwF__EwkcPtRZ4gDe8VeZoMCaUPYDxPsgQn0SuGFhkQvCAdrBxfgzxgbKmjGgeVhwULSGv75Zs7h4RD5BgK8B7U,&typo=1>
So what IS a species?  A level of distinctness of design, a degree of genetic 
differentiation, or an interbreeding population?  And what happens to Darwinism 
when these things turn out to be not particularly well correlated, in the way 
that the signs and symptoms of hunger turned out to be not so well correlated 
as the Cartesian model would require?  Steve Guerin:  if you want to demolish 
Darwinism, here is where you start.
Nick
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