The Gene's-Eye View of Evolution
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17 194 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 21 July 2021
- ISBN 9780198862260
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages258 pages
- Size 239x165x14 mm
- Weight 580 g
- Language English 147
Categories
Short description:
The central aim of this accessible book is to show how the gene's-eye view differs from the traditional organismal account of evolution, trace its historical origins, clarify typical misunderstandings and, by using examples from contemporary experimental work, show why so many evolutionary biologists still consider it an indispensable heuristic.
MoreLong description:
'Arvid ?gren has undertaken the most meticulously thorough reading of the relevant literature that I have ever encountered, deploying an intelligent understanding to pull it into a coherent story. As if that wasn't enough, he gets it right.' (Richard Dawkins)
To many evolutionary biologists, the central challenge of their discipline is to explain adaptation, the appearance of design in the living world. With the theory of evolution by natural selection, Charles Darwin elegantly showed how a purely mechanistic process can achieve this striking feature of nature. Since then, the way many biologists have thought about evolution and natural selection is as a theory about individual organisms. Over a century later, a subtle but radical shift in perspective emerged with the gene's-eye view of evolution in which natural selection was conceptualized as a struggle between genes for replication and transmission to the next generation. This viewpoint culminated with the publication of The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins (Oxford University Press, 1976) and is now commonly referred to as selfish gene thinking.
The gene's-eye view has subsequently played a central role in evolutionary biology, although it continues to attract controversy. The central aim of this accessible book is to show how the gene's-eye view differs from the traditional organismal account of evolution, trace its historical origins, clarify typical misunderstandings and, by using examples from contemporary experimental work, show why so many evolutionary biologists still consider it an indispensable heuristic. The book concludes by discussing how selfish gene thinking fits into ongoing debates in evolutionary biology, and what they tell us about the future of the gene's-eye view of evolution.
The Gene's-Eye View of Evolution is suitable for graduate-level students taking courses in evolutionary biology, behavioural ecology, and evolutionary genetics, as well as professional researchers in these fields. It will also appeal to a broader, interdisciplinary audience from the social sciences and humanities including philosophers and historians of science.
It deserves a wide readership beyond the community of professional evolutionists. If I were offering a course on the philosophy of biology, my required textbooks would be Darwin's On the Origin of Species and ?gren's most valuable survey.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction: A New Way to Read Nature
Historical Origins
Defining and Refining Selfish Genes
Difficulties of the Theory
Inclusive Fitness and Hamilton's Rule
Empirical Implications
Conclusion: The Gene's-Eye View Today