I find the matter unclarified. Given the large variability of the Pleistocene climate and habitat (that Kurzban mentions), what does the quoted definition of the EEA mean? “A statistical composite...weighted by frequency and fitness-consequences” looks pretty much like a time and a place—just an average one instead of one asserted to be the actual environment, habitat, and social structure over the whole Pleistocene. Both concepts ignore the variation.
Did you read the whole post? I thought it was relatively clear—if I had to summarize it in my own words, I guess I’d say something like “the EEA is not a specific physical or temporal location, but rather those properties in the environment of the organism which have stayed invariant over very long periods”. It doesn’t “ignore” the variation, it’s specifically defined via the complement of the variation.
Variation is a feature of the environment, which itself makes certain demands of creatures that live in it. This is not taken into account by just taking the average of everything. If you have one foot in a pot of boiling water and the other in a pot of ice water is not the equivalent of having both feet in a pleasantly hot bath. Even though the average temperature will be about the same.
True, which is why the EEA is more complicated than just an average. Like it said in the post:
These invariances can be described as sets of conditionals of any degree of complexity, from the very simple (e.g., the temperature was always greater than freezing) to a two-valued statistical construct (e.g., the temperature had a mean of 31.2 C. and standard deviation of 8.1), to any degree of conditional and structural complexity that is reflected in the adaptation (e.g., predation on kangaroo rats by shrikes is 17.6% more likely during a cloudless full moon than during a new moon during the first 60 days after the winter solstice if one exhibits adult male ranging patterns).
I find the matter unclarified. Given the large variability of the Pleistocene climate and habitat (that Kurzban mentions), what does the quoted definition of the EEA mean? “A statistical composite...weighted by frequency and fitness-consequences” looks pretty much like a time and a place—just an average one instead of one asserted to be the actual environment, habitat, and social structure over the whole Pleistocene. Both concepts ignore the variation.
Did you read the whole post? I thought it was relatively clear—if I had to summarize it in my own words, I guess I’d say something like “the EEA is not a specific physical or temporal location, but rather those properties in the environment of the organism which have stayed invariant over very long periods”. It doesn’t “ignore” the variation, it’s specifically defined via the complement of the variation.
I really don’t see what distiction you are drawing there.
Not sure we’re talking about the same thing, so probably better to ask, what do you mean when you say that it ignores the variation?
It leaves it out. Explicitly saying “I am going to include only what did not change” is still ignoring whatever did change.
Variation is a feature of the environment, which itself makes certain demands of creatures that live in it. This is not taken into account by just taking the average of everything. If you have one foot in a pot of boiling water and the other in a pot of ice water is not the equivalent of having both feet in a pleasantly hot bath. Even though the average temperature will be about the same.
True, which is why the EEA is more complicated than just an average. Like it said in the post: