Abstract :
Recent discussions in the philosophy of biology have brought into question some
fundamental assumptions regarding evolutionary processes, natural selection in particular.
Some authors argue that natural selection is nothing but a population-level,
statistical consequence of lower-level events (Matthen and Ariew [2002]; Walsh et al.
[2002]). On this view, natural selection itself does not involve forces. Other authors reject
this purely statistical, population-level account for an individual-level, causal account of
natural selection (Bouchard and Rosenberg [2004]). I argue that each of these positions
is right in one way, but wrong in another; natural selection indeed takes place at the level
of populations, but it is a causal process nonetheless.