I'm working on a paper for a conference on Darwin - something of an
excuse for myself and two colleagues to have a Xmas drink together in
Portugal.  The topic, at least in working form, is 'simplexity and
tropical fish realism'.  One or two in here raise their spines,
stickleback fashion, whenever teleology raises its head.  Orn has
fought them off long and hard - my thanks for that.  I found this
whilst brushing up a bit on Darwinism via the Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy on-line.  The relevance to teleology is in the last line,
though I've left the rest in as we should all know some prawns are
colour-blind to red.


To take one startling example, he was able to test and confirm a
hypothesis that a group of males, with a color pattern that matched
that of the pebbles on the bottoms of the streams and ponds they
populated except for bright red spots, have that pattern because a
common predator in those populations, a prawn, is color blind for red.
Red spots did not put their possessors at a selective disadvantage,
and were attractors for mates. (Endler 1983, 173-190) We may refer to
this pattern of coloration as a complex adaptation that serves the
functions of predator avoidance and mate attraction. But what role do
those functions play in explaining why it is that the males in this
population have the coloration they do?

This color pattern is an adaptation, as that term is used in
Darwinism, only if it is a production of natural selection (Williams
1966 261; Brandon 1985; Burian 1983). In order for it to be a product
of natural selection, there must be an array of color variation
available in the genetic/developmental resources of the species wider
that this particular pattern but including this pattern. Which factors
are critical, then, in producing differential survival and
reproduction of guppies with this particular pattern? The answer would
seem to be the value-consequences this pattern has compared to others
available in promoting viability and reproduction. In popular parlance
(and the parlance favored by Darwin), this color pattern is good for
the male guppies that have it, and for their male offspring.
(Binswanger 1990; Brandon 1985; Lennox 2002). This answer strengthens
the ‘selected effects’ or ‘consequence etiology’ accounts of selection
explanations by stressing that selection ranges over value
differences. The reason for one among a number of color patterns
having a higher fitness value has to do with the value of that pattern
relative to the survival and reproductive success of its possessors.

Selection explanations are, then, a particular kind of teleological
explanation, an explanation in which that for the sake of which a
trait is possessed, its valuable consequence, accounts for the trait's
differential perpetuation and maintenance in the population.

Now that the teleology question is settled, can anyone explain what
advantage to the prawns it is to be colour blind to red?
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