4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

On Reciprocal Illumination and Consilience in Biogeography

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 407-415

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11692-009-9070-y

Keywords

Biogeography; Consilience; Croizat; Hennig; Method; Reciprocal illumination; Whewell

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Biogeography deals with the combined analysis of the spatial and temporal components of the evolutionary process. To this purpose, biogeographical analysis should consider two extra steps: a reciprocal illumination step, and a consilience step. Even if the traditional challenges of biogeography were successfully handled, the obtained hypothesis is not necessarily meaningful in biogeographical terms--it needs continuous test in the light of external hypotheses. For this reason, a concept analogous to Hennig's reciprocal illumination is valuable, as well as a sort of biogeographical consilience in Whewell's sense. Firstly, through the search for different classes of evidence, information useful to improve the hypothesis can be accessed via reciprocal illumination. Following, a more general hypothesis would arise through a consilience process, when the hypothesis explains phenomena not contemplated during its construction, as the distribution of other taxa or the existence (or absence) of fossils. This procedure aims to evaluate the robustness of biogeographical hypotheses as scientific theories. Such theories are reliable descriptions of how life changes its form both in space and time, putting historical biogeography close to Croizat's statement of evolution as a three dimensional phenomenon.

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