Back to required reading
Much of the impetus for "the dynamic view" of evolution comes from Elliott Sober's 1984 book The Nature of Selection. Since then there have been many papers that specifically address the issue of whether or not natural selection and drift are forces or perhaps just causes. Many of them defend what they explicitly call "The Statistical View". A few relevant papers are below
- Stephens, Selection, Drift, and the Forces of Evolution
- Millstein, Are Random Drift and Natural Selection Conceptually Distinct
- Millstein, Natural Selection as a Population Level Cause
- Sober, from The Nature of Selection, (selection of vs. selection for)
- Bouchard and Rosenberg, Fitness, Probability and the Principles of Natural Selection
- Shapiro and Sober, Epiphenomenalism the Do's and Don't's
- Millstein and Skipper, (Mis)representing Mathematical Models: Drift as a Physical Process
- Here is the blog for the journal where Ariew, Matthen, and others respond