Abstract
I admire Wilson & Sober's (W & S's) aim, to alert social scientists
that group selection has risen from the ashqs, and to explicate its
relevance to the behavioral sciences. Group selection has beenwidely misunderstood; furthermore, both authors have been
instrumental in illuminating conceptual problems surrounding
higher-level selection. Still, I find that this target article muddies
the waters, primarily through its shifting and confused
definition of a "vehicle" of selection.
The fundamental problem is an ambiguity in the definition of
"adaptation." On the one hand, any evolutionary change that
results from a selection process could be called an adaptation, by
definition; I call this the "weak" view of adaptation. A "strong"
view of adaptation, on the other hand, includes some notion of
design - the evolution of a specific complex trait understood, in
an engineering sense, to provide a mechanism favoring its
owner's success in contributing to the evolutionary lineage.