Transformed cladistics

Transformed cladistics, also known as pattern cladistics is an epistemological approach to the cladistic method of phylogenetic inference and classification that makes no a priori assumptions about common ancestry. It was advocated by Norman Platnick, Colin Patterson, Ronald Brady and others in the 1980s, but has few modern proponents. The book, Foundations of Systematics and Biogeography[1] by David Williams and Malte Ebach provides a thoughtful history of the origins of this point of view.

  1. ^ Williams, D. M. and M. C. Ebach. 2008. Foundations of Systematics and Biogeography. Springer Science+Business Media, New York.