Willi Hennig

Hennig coined the key terms synapomorphy, symplesiomorphy, and paraphyly. He also asserted, in his "auxiliary principle", that "the presence of apomorphous characters in different species 'is always reason for suspecting kinship [i.e., that species belong to a monophyletic group], and that their origin by convergence should not be presumed a priori' (Hennig, 1953). This was based on the conviction that 'phylogenetic systematics would lose all ground on which it stands' if the presence of apomorphous characters in different species were considered first of all as convergences (or parallelisms), with proof to the contrary required in each case." This has been viewed as an application of the parsimony principle to the interpretation of characters, an important component of phylogenetic inference.
He is also remembered for '''Hennig's progression rule''' in cladistics, which argues controversially that the most primitive species are found in the earliest, central part of a group's area. Provided by Wikipedia
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Published: [2013]
Superior document: Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DGBA Physical Sciences <1990
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