Snedecor Lecture
Statistical
Laboratory
Iowa State University
DATE AND TIME: Monday,
March 27, 2006, 4:10 p.m.
PLACE: 319
Snedecor
SPEAKER: Arnold Faden, Professor Emeritus,
Department of Economics, Iowa State
University
TITLE: The Pure Theory of Natural Selection: Fisher’s
Fundamental Theorem and
Beyond
ABSTRACT
People realized soon after the publication of
The Origin of Species (1859) that the principle of natural selection had
applications far beyond its original scope, to competitive situations of all
kindscompetition for wealth, power, office, beliefs among firms, nations,
politicians, ideologies, theories, etc.
This suggests that it might
be useful to identify the common core underlying these applications, stripping
off the particular institutional trappings of each, and leaving the “pure”
theory behind.
I take the key idea to be
long-term differential
growth rates. Prior to my paper of 1991, I take this subject to
consist of just one theorem, by R. A. Fisher (1930, 1958), which may be stated
as:
the rate of change of mean fitness equals the variance of
fitness (For Fisher, “fitness” = growth rate). It turns out that this
equation is just one of an infinite system of equations, and that the entire
system is needed to answer some questions of interest such as: what
distributions over growth rates perpetuate themselves (i.e., belong to the same
location family at all different times)? Or, belong to the same scale
family? Some results of relevance to “pure” probability theory will also
be noted.
Afterwards I shall tentatively indicate how the theory
may be modified and extended to make it more realistic by incorporating
competition (which limits overall growth), variation, interaction and
organization. And I shall try to assess the role of natural selection in a
reasonable world view.
References
R. A. Fisher,
The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection (Dover, 2
nd, 1958),
p. 37, 39.
A. M. Faden, “Natural Selection, Economics and Probability,”
p. 596-602,
Economic Models, Estimation, and Socioeconomic Systems:
Essays in Honor of Karl A. Fox (North-Holland,
1991).
COFFEE: 3:45 p.m., 104 Snedecor
Hall
Seminar schedules and abstracts are available via WWW:
http://www.stat.iastate.edu/
Jeanette La Grange
Department of Statistics
102
Snedecor
Iowa State University
Ames, IA 50010-1210
515 294-3440
(office)
515 294-4040 (fax)
http://www.stat.iastate.edu/directory/staff/jeanette.html