Abstract
Fisher’s ‘fundamental theorem of natural selection’ is notoriously abstract, and, no less notoriously,
many take it to be false. In this paper, I explicate the theorem, examine the role that it played
in Fisher’s general project for biology, and analyze why it was so very fundamental for Fisher. I
defend Ewens (1989) and Lessard (1997) in the view that the theorem is in fact a true theorem if,
as Fisher claimed, ‘the terms employed’ are ‘used strictly as defined’ (1930, p. 38). Finally, I explain
the role that projects such as Fisher’s play in the progress of scientific inquiry.