Hi all,

Here is the title and abstract for Paul Griffiths' (Sydney) department seminar 
talk this Wed, Sep 23 from 1-2:30pm in the Muniment Room, Quadrangle Building, 
University of Sydney:

Holding pathology hostage

In The Biological Foundations of Bioethics (2015) Tim Lewens states that the 
concept of pathology should not be “hostage to evolutionary enquiry”. In this 
talk I disagree, and discuss some ways in which recent advances in biology 
ought to change ideas about about health and disease.  First, traditional 
biomedical thought is at least insufficiently sensitive to the fact that each 
stage in an organism’s life-history is adapted to the particular needs of that 
life-stage. Children are more than ‘immature’ adults and ageing is not merely a 
failure to stay young. Second, the role of adaptive phenotypic plasticity in 
the new DOHaD (developmental origins of health and disease) paradigm implies 
that phenotypic differences can reflect different trade-offs that organisms 
have made with their limited developmental resources. Whether a phenotype is 
dysfunctional needs to be assessed in light of the overall strategy reflected 
in that and other phenotypes of the individual. Moreover, since individuals 
respond to the varied environments in which they find themselves by developing 
different phenotypes (on multiple timescales) the question of whether a 
phenotype is dysfunctional depends on the environment with which the organism 
is trying to cope. The health of an organism and the quality of its environment 
are entwined conceptually, as well as causally.

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