KLI Colloquia are invited research talks of about an hour followed by 30 min discussion. The talks are held in English, open to the public, and offered in hybrid format.
Fall-Winter 2025-2026 KLI Colloquium Series
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https://us02web.zoom.us/j/5881861923?omn=85945744831
Meeting ID: 588 186 1923
25 Sept 2025 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
A Dynamic Canvas Model of Butterfly and Moth Color Patterns
Richard Gawne (Nevada State Museum)
14 Oct 2025 (Tues) 3-4:30 PM CET
Vienna, the Laboratory of Modernity
Richard Cockett (The Economist)
23 Oct 2025 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
How Darwinian is Darwinian Enough? The Case of Evolution and the Origins of Life
Ludo Schoenmakers (KLI)
6 Nov (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Common Knowledge Considered as Cause and Effect of Behavioral Modernity
Ronald Planer (University of Wollongong)
20 Nov (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Rates of Evolution, Time Scaling, and the Decoupling of Micro- and Macroevolution
Thomas Hansen (University of Oslo)
4 Dec (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Chance, Necessity, and the Evolution of Evolvability
Cristina Villegas (KLI)
8 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Embodied Rationality: Normative and Evolutionary Foundations
Enrico Petracca (KLI)
15 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
On Experimental Models of Developmental Plasticity and Evolutionary Novelty
Patricia Beldade (Lisbon University)
29 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Jan Baedke (Ruhr University Bochum)
Event Details

Topic description / abstract:
The species problem – a group of interrelated questions pertaining to the ontological status of species, definitions of the species category and delimitation of species taxa – is one of the most vexing and most passionately debated topics in biology. It has a historical, philosophical and biological dimension. After a short introduction highlighting, among other things, the homonymy of the term “species” and, very briefly, a historical misrepresentation of the history of notions about species, I will focus on the main cause underlying the species problem: nature’s fuzzy boundaries and the mismatch between a discrete ordering system (taxonomy) and a continuous process (evolution). Most importantly, I will give a short overview of the practical ramifications of the species problem. While species taxa are philosophical individuals with extramental reality, there is a fair chance that the species category might be an artefact just like the higher Linnean categories. Nonetheless, it is widely used as a kind of basic currency in many different disciplines, from evolutionary biology and macroecology to conservation biology and environmental policy. This distorts many purportedly quantitative analyses and poses a serious challenge that needs to be addressed if biology is to be a rigorously scientific discipline.
Biographical note:
Born in Kiel, Germany, in 1974 to a German mother and a Greek father. I studied biology, history of science and philosophy in Kiel and Jena and graduated with a degree in biology (“Diplom”) from the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität in Jena. I got a PhD in zoology in 2005 and my habilitation for zoology and evolutionary biology in 2009 from the Christian-Albrechts-Universität in Kiel. Since 2011 I have been head of the Mammal Collection at the Natural History Museum in Vienna. My main research interests are intraspecific diversity, phylogeography and population/conservation genetics in mammals, particularly deer, and birds as well as the history and theory of evolutionary biology, systematics and taxonomy, with a special focus on species concepts and the species problem.