Darwinian Populations and Natural Selection

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Monographie

  • Pages : IX-207
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  • Support : Print
  • Format : 24 cm.
  • Langues : Anglais
  • Édition : Original
  • Ville : Oxford
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  • ISBN : 978-0-19-955204-7
  • URL : Lien externe
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  • Date de création : 09-10-2011
  • Dernière mise à jour : 08-03-2015

Résumé

Anglais

In 1859, Darwin described a deceptively simple mechanism that he called "natural selection", a combination of variation, inheritance, and reproductive success. He argued that this mechanism was the key to explaining the most puzzling features of the natural world, and science and philosophy were changed forever as a result. The exact nature of the Darwinian process has been controversial ever since, however. Godfrey-Smith draws on new developments in biology, philosophy of science, and other fields to give a new analysis and extension of Darwin's idea. The central concept used is that of a "Darwinian population," a collection of things with the capacity to undergo change by natural selection. From this starting point, new analyses of the role of genes in evolution, the application of Darwinian ideas to cultural change, and "evolutionary transitions" that produce complex organisms and societies are developed. Darwinian Populations and Natural Selection will be something to be reckoned with for anybody interested in the conceptual foundations of evolutionary theory and in the applicability of Darwinian ideas beyond the strict confines of biological evolution. – Contents : – 1. Introduction and Overview; – 2. Natural Selection and its Representation; – 3. Variation, Selection, and Origins; – 4. Reproduction and Individuality; – 5. Bottlenecks, Germ Lines, and Queen Bees; – 6. Levels and Transitions; – 7. The Gene's Eye View; – 8. Cultural Evolution.