(重新)生产mtEve

IF 0.9 4区 哲学 Q1 Arts and Humanities
Marina DiMarco
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引用次数: 2

摘要

1987年,Rebecca Cann、Mark Stoneking和Allan C. Wilson在《自然》杂志上发表了题为《线粒体DNA与人类进化》的文章,根据当代人类种群中线粒体DNA的差异,对人类进化进行了新的重构。这种系统发育包括所有人类线粒体DNA (mtDNA)谱系的非洲共同祖先,Cann等人的重建被称为“走出非洲”假说。由于线粒体dna完全通过母系遗传,最初被称为非洲夏娃的共同祖先后来被称为线粒体夏娃(简称mtEve)。在这篇论文中,我表明mtEve不是一个单一的、成功的或纯粹的科学发现。相反,她以多种方式被制造了很多次,每一次都相互影响。重要的是,尽管威尔逊和他的同事们宣称线粒体DNA是进化推理的确定性、客观性和共识的来源,但他们对线粒体夏娃的制作既依赖于新的分子和计算工具,也依赖于关于母体遗传确定性的流行假设。这种认识让我们重新评估这些作品的复杂后果,这些后果,就像mtEve自己一样,不能局限于纯粹的社会、物质或科学维度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
(re)Producing mtEve

In their 1987 Nature publication, “Mitochondrial DNA and Human Evolution,” Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan C. Wilson gave a new reconstruction of human evolution on the basis of differences in mitochondrial DNA among contemporary human populations. This phylogeny included an African common ancestor for all human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) lineages, and Cann et al.’s reconstruction became known as the “Out of Africa” hypothesis. Since mtDNA is inherited exclusively through the maternal line, the common ancestor who was first branded African Eve later became known as Mitochondrial Eve (mtEve, for short).

In this paper, I show that mtEve was not a single, successful, or purely scientific discovery. Instead, she was produced many times and in many ways, each of which informed the next. Importantly, though Wilson and colleagues heralded mitochondrial DNA as a source of certainty, objectivity, and consensus for evolutionary inference, their productions of Mitochondrial Eve depended as much on popular assumptions about the certainty of maternal inheritance as they did on new molecular and computational tools. This recognition lets us reevaluate the complex consequences of these productions, which, like mtEve herself, could not be confined to a purely social, material, or scientific dimension.

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来源期刊
自引率
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期刊介绍: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences is devoted to historical, sociological, philosophical and ethical aspects of the life and environmental sciences, of the sciences of mind and behaviour, and of the medical and biomedical sciences and technologies. Contributions are from a wide range of countries and cultural traditions; we encourage both specialist articles, and articles combining historical, philosophical, and sociological approaches; and we favour works of interest to scientists and medics as well as to specialists in the history, philosophy and sociology of the sciences.
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