Dimensions of Darwinism
Themes and Counterthemes in Twentieth-Century Evolutionary Theory
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:31st Mar '86
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This collection of essays analyses the development, meaning and problems of twentieth-century evolutionary theory.
This collection of twelve essays by biologists, historians, and philosophers examines the growth and conceptual structure of the modern evolutionary synthesis, or 'neo-Darwinism'. Taken as a whole, it provides a penetrating analysis of the development, meaning and problems of twentieth-century evolutionary theory.Originally published in paperback in 1986, the essays in this book discuss questions about the growth and conceptual structure of the modern evolutionary synthesis, or 'neo-Darwinism'. Written by biologists, historians and philosophers, the collection provides a penetrating analysis of the development, meaning and problems of twentieth-century evolutionary theory. Part I includes discussion of the role of eugenics in shaping the biological interests of R. A. Fisher; the abandonment of Lamarckism; the influence of systematics and the concepts of adaptation and random drift in the development of Sewall Wright's theory; and explanation of how the synthesis 'hardened' in the decades following its original presentation. Part II examines the history of mimetic theory as a case study in evolutionary thought, while Part III introduces the reader to some aspects of the German tradition. Finally, Part IV addresses the debates that existed around the time of publication.
ISBN: 9780521310215
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
Weight: 510g
348 pages