The structure of evolutionary theory / Stephen Jay Gould.
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transparent Author: Gould, Stephen Jay.
transparent Title Statement: The structure of evolutionary theory / Stephen Jay Gould.
transparent Published: Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2002.
transparent Description: xxii, 1433 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
transparent ISBN: ISBN 0674006135 (alk. paper)
transparent ISBN 9780674006133 (alk. paper)
transparent Bibliography Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 1344-1387) and index.
transparent Contents Note: Contents: Defining and revising the structure of evolutionary theory : Theories need both essences and histories ; The structure of evolutionary theory: revising the three central features of Darwinian logic ; Apologia pro vita sua : A time to keep ; A personal odyssey. Epitomes for a long development : Levels of potential originality ; An abstract of one long argument -- The history of Darwinian logic and debate : The essence of Darwinism and the basis of modern orthodoxy: an exegesis of the Origin of Species : A revolution in the small ; Darwin as a historical methodologist : One long argument ; The problem of history ; A fourfold continuum of methods for the inference of history. Darwin as a philosophical revolutionary : The causes of nature's harmony : Darwin and William Paley ; Darwin and Adam Smith. The first theme: the organism as the agent of selection ; The second theme: natural selection as a creative force : The requirements for variation : Copious ; Small ; Undirected. Gradualism ; The adaptationist program. The third theme: the uniformitarian need to extrapolate: environment as enabler of change. Judgments of importance -- Seeds of hierarchy : Lamarck and the birth of modern evolutionism in two-factor theories : The myths of Lamarck ; Lamarck as a source ; Lamarck's two-factor theory: sources for the two parts : The first set: environment and adaptation ; The second set: progress and taxonomy ; Distinctness of the two sets. Lamarck's two-factor theory: the hierarchy of progress and deviation ; Antinomies of the two-factor theory. An interlude on Darwin's reaction ; No allmacht without hierarchy: Weissman on germinal selection : The allmacht of selection ; Weismann's argument on Lamarck and the allmacht of selection ; The problem of degeneration of Weismann's impetus for germinal selection ; Some antecedents to hierarchy in German evolutionary thought : Haeckel's descriptive hierarchy in levels of organization ; Roux's theory of intracorporeal struggle. Germinal selection as a helpmate to personal selection ; Germinal selection as a full theory of hierarchy. Hints of hierarchy in supraorganismal selection: Darwin on the principle of divergence : Divergence and the completion of Darwin's system ; The genesis of divergence ; Divergence as a consequence of natural selection ; The failure of Darwin's argument and the need for species selection : The calculus of individual success ; The causes of trends ; Species selection based on propensity for extinction. Postscript: solution to the problem of the "delicate arrangement". Coda -- Internalism and laws of form: pre-Darwinian alternatives to functionalism : Prologue: Darwin's fateful decision ; Two ways to glorify God in nature : William Paley and British functionalism: praising God in the details of design ; Louis Agassiz and continental formalism: praising God in the grandeur of taxonomic order ; An epilog on the dichotomy. Unity of plan as the strongest version of formalism: the pre-Darwinian debate : Mehr Licht on Goethe's leaf ; Geoffroy and Cuvier : Cuvier and Conditions of Existence ; Geoffroy's formalist vision ; The debate of 1830: foreplay and aftermath. Richard Owen and English formalism: the archetype of vertebrates : No formalism please, we're British ; The vertebrate archetype: constraint and nonadaptation ; Owen and Darwin. Darwin's strong but limited interest in structural constraint : Darwin's debt to both poles of the dichotomy ; Darwin on correlation of parts ; The "quite subordinate position" of constraint to selection -- The fruitful facets of Galton's polyhedron: channels and saltations in post-Darwinian formalism : Galton's polyhedron ; Orthogenesis as a theory of channels and one-way streets: the marginalization of Darwinism : Misconceptions and relative frequencies ; Theodor Eimer and the ohnmacht of selection ; Alpheus Hyatt: an orthogenetic hard line from the world of mollusks ; C.O. Whitman: an orthogenetic dove in Darwin's world of pigeons. Saltation as a theory of internal impetus: a second formalist strategy for pushing Darwinism to a causal periphery : William Bateson: the documentation of inherent discontinuity ; Hugo de Vries: a most reluctant non-Darwinian : Dousing the great party of 1909 ; The (not so contradictory) sources of the mutation theory ; The mutation theory: origin and central tenets ; Darwinism and the mutation theory : Confusing rhetoric and the personal factor ; The logic of Darwinism and its different place in de Vries' system. De Vries on macroevolution. Richard Goldschmidt's appropriate role as a formalist embodiment of all that pure Darwinism must oppose --
transparent Pattern and progress on the geological stage : Darwin and the fruits of biotic competition : A geological license for progress ; The predominance of biotic competition and its sequelae. Uniformity on the geological stage : Lyell's victory in fact and rhetoric ; Catastrophism as good science: Cuvier's Essay ; Darwin's geological need and Kelvin's odious spectre : A question of time (too little geology) ; A question of direction (too much geology) -- The modern synthesis as a limited consensus : Why synthesis? ; Synthesis as restriction : The initial goal of rejecting old alternatives ; R. A. Fisher and the Darwinian core ; J. B. S. Haldane and the initial pluralism of the synthesis ; J. S. Huxley: pluralism of the type. Synthesis as hardening : The later goal of exalting selection's power ; Increasing emphasis on selection and adaptation between the first (1937) and last (1951) edition of Dobzhansky's Genetics and the Origin of Species ; The shift in G. G. Simpson's explanation of "quantum evolution" from drift and nonadaptation (1944) to the embodiment of strict adaptation (1953) ; Mayr at the inception (1942) and codification (1963): shifting from the "genetic consistency" to the "adaptationist" paradigm ; Why hardening?. Hardening on the other two legs of the Darwinian tripod : Levels of selection ; Extrapolation into geological time. From overstressed doubt to overextended certainty : A tale of two centennials ; All quiet on the textbook front : Adaptation and natural selection ; Reduction and trivialization of macroevolution -- Segue to part II -- Towards a revised and expanded evolutionary theory : Species as individuals in the hierarchal theory of selection : The evolutionary definition of individuality : An individualistic prolegomenon ; The meaning of individuality and the expansion of the Darwinian research program : Criteria for vernacular individuality ; Criteria for evolutionary individuality. The evolutionary definition of selective agency and the fallacy of selfish genes : A fruitful error of logic ; Hierarchical vs. genic selectionism : The distinction of replicators and interactors as a framework for discussion ; Faithful replication as the central criterion for the gene-centered view of evolution ; Sieves, plurifiers, and the nature of selection: the rejection of replication as a criterion of agency ; Interaction as the proper criterion for identifying units of selection ; The internal incoherence of gene selectionism ; Bookkeeping and causality: the fundamental error of gene selectionism ; Gambits of reform and retreat by gene selectionists. Logical and empirical foundations for the theory of hierarchical selection : Logical validation and empirical challenges : R. A. Fisher and the compelling logic of species selection ; The classical arguments against efficacy of higher-level selection ; Overcoming these classical arguments, in practice for interdemic selection, but in principle for species selection. Emergence and the proper criterion for species selection : Differential proliferation or downward effect ? ; Shall emergent characters or emergent fitnesses define the operation of species selection?. Hierarchy and the sixfold way : A literary prologue for the two major properties of hierarchies ; Redressing the tyranny of the organism: comments on characteristic features and differences among six primary levels : The gene-individual : Motoo Kimura and the "neutral theory of molecular evolution" ; True genic selection. The cell-individual ; The organism-​individual ; The deme-individual ; The species-​individual : Species as individuals ; Species as interactors ; Species selection as potent. The clade-​individual. The grand analogy: a speciational basis for macroevolution : Presentation of the chart for macroevolutiona​ry distinctiveness ; The particulars of macroevolutiona​ry explanation : The structural basis ; Criteria for individuality ; Contrasting modalities of change: the basic categories ; Ontogenetic drive: the analogy of Lamarckism and anagenesis ; Reproductive drive: directional speciation as an important and irreducible macroevolutiona​ry mode separate from species selection ; Species selection, Wright's rule, and the power of interaction with directional speciation ; Species level drifts as more powerful than the analogous phenomena in microevolution ; The scaling of external and internal environments ; Summary comments on the strengths of species selection and its interaction with other macroevolutiona​ry causes of change --
transparent Punctuated equilibrium and the validation of macroevolutiona​ry theory : What every paleontologist knows : An introductory example ; Testimonials to common knowledge ; Darwinian solutions and paradoxes : The paradox of insulation from disproof ; The paradox of stymied practice. The primary claims of punctuated equilibrium : Data and definitions ; Microevolutiona​ry links ; Macroevolutiona​ry implications : Tempo and the significance of stasis ; Mode and the speciational foundation of macroevolution. The scientific debate on punctuated equilibrium: critiques and responses : Critiques based on the definability of paleontological species : Empirical affirmation ; Reasons for a potential systematic underestimation of biospecies by paleospecies ; Reasons for a potential systematic overestimation of biospecies by paleospecies ; Reasons why an observed punctuational pattern might not represent speciation. Critiques based on denying events of speciation as the primary locus of change ; Critiques based on supposed failures of empirical results to affirm predictions of punctuated equilibrium : Claims for empirical refutation by cases : Phenotypes ; Genotypes. Empirical tests of conformity with models. Sources of data for testing punctuated equilibrium : Preamble ; The equilibrium in punctuated equilibrium: quantitatively documented patterns of stasis in unbranched segments of lineages ; The punctuations of punctuated equilibrium: tempo and mode in the origin of paleospecies : The inference of cladogenesis by the criterion of ancestral survival ; The "dissection" of punctuations to infer both existence and modality : Time ; Geography ; Morphometric mode. Proper and adequate test of relative frequencies: the strong empirical validation of punctuated equilibrium : The indispensabilit​y of data on relative frequencies ; Relative frequencies for higher taxa in entire biotas ; Relative frequencies for entire clades ; Causal clues from differential patterns of relative frequencies. The broader implications of punctuated equilibrium for evolutionary theory and general notions of change : What changes may punctuated equilibrium instigate in our views about evolutionary mechanisms and the history of life? : The explanation and broader meaning of stasis : Frequency ; Generality ; Causality. Punctuation, the origin of new macroevolutiona​ry individuals, and resulting implications for evolutionary theory : Trends ; The speciational reformulation of macroevolution : Life itself ; General rules ; Particular cases : Horses as the exemplar of "life's little joke" ; Rethinking human evolution. Ecological and higher-level extensions. Punctuation all the way up and down? The generalization and broader utility of punctuated equilibrium (in more than a metaphorical sense) at other levels of evolution, and for other disciplines in and outside the natural sciences : General models for punctuated equilibrium ; Punctuational change at other levels and scales of evolution : A preliminary note on homology and analogy in the conceptual realm ; Punctuation below the species level ; Punctuation above the species level : Stasis analogs: trending and non-trending in the geological history of clades ; Punctuational analogs in lineages: the pace of morphological innovation ; Punctuational analogs in faunas and ecosystems. Punctuational models in other disciplines: towards a general theory of change : Principles for a choice of examples ; Examples from the history of human artifacts and cultures ; Examples from human institutions and theories about the natural world ; Two concluding examples, a general statement, and a coda. Appendix: a largely sociological (and fully partisan) history of the impact and critique of punctuated equilibrium : The entrance of punctuated equilibrium into common language and general culture ; An episodic history of punctuated equilibrium : Early stages and future contexts ; Creationist misappropriatio​n of punctuated equilibrium ; Punctuated equilibrium in journalism and textbooks. The personal aspect of professional reaction : The case ad hominem against punctuated equilibrium ; An interlude on sources of error ; The wages of jealousy : The descent to nastiness ; The most unkindest cut of all ; The wisdom of Agassiz's and von Baer's threefold history of scientific ideas ; A coda on the kindness and generosity of most colleagues -- The integration of constraint and adaptation (structure and function) in ontogeny and phylogeny: historical constraints and the evolution of development : Constraint as a positive concept : Two kinds of positivity : An etymological introduction ; The first (empirical) positive meaning of channeling ; The second (definitional) positive meaning of causes outside accepted mechanisms. Heterochrony and allometry as the locus classicus of the first positive (empirical) meaning; channeled directionality by constraint : The two structural themes of internally set channels and ease of transformation as potentially synergistic with functional causality by natural selection: increasing shell stability in the gryphaea heterochronocli​ne ; Ontogenetically channeled allometric constraint as a primary basis of expressed evolutionary variation: the full geographic and morphological range of cerion uva ; The aptive triangle and the second positive meaning: constraint as a theory-bound term for patterns and directions not built exclusively (or sometimes even at all) by natural selection : The model of the aptive triangle ; Distinguishing and sharpening the two great questions : The structural vertex ; The historical vertex. An epitome for the theory-bound nature of constraint terminology.
transparent Deep homology and pervasive parallelism: historical constraint as the primary gatekeeper and guardian of morphospace : A historical and conceptual analysis of the underappreciate​d importance of parallelism for evolutionary theory : A context for excitement ; A terminological excursus on the meaning of parallelism : The nine fateful little words of E. Ray Lankester ; The terminological origin and debate about the meaning and utility of parallelism. A symphony in four movements on the role of historical constraint in evolution: towards the harmonious rebalancing of form and function in evolutionary theory : Movement one, statement: deep homology across phyla: Mayr's functional certainty and Geoffroy's structural vindication : Deep homology, archetypal theories, and historical constraint ; Mehr licht (more light) on Goethe's angiosperm archetype ; Hoxology and Geoffroy's first archetypal theory of segmental homology : An epitome and capsule history of hoxology ; Vertebrate homologs in structure and action ; Segmental homologies of arthropods and vertebrates: Geoffroy's vindication : Rediscovering the vertebrate rhombomeres ; More extensive homologies throughout the developing somites ; Some caveats and tentative conclusions. Geoffrey's second archetypal theory of dorso-ventral inversion in the common bilaterian groundplan. Movement two, elaboration: parallelism of underlying generators: deep homology builds positive channels of constraint : Parallelism all the way down: shining a light and feeding the walk : Parallelism in the large: pax-6 and the homology of developmental pathways in homoplastic eyes of several phyla : Data and discovery ; Theoretical issues ; A question of priority. Parallelism in the small: the origin of crustacean feeding organs. Pharaonic bricks and Corinthian columns. Movement three, scherzo: does evolutionary change often proceed saltation down channels of historical constraint? ; Movement four, recapitulation and summary: early establishment of rules and the inhomogeneous population of morphospace: Dobzhansky's landscape as primarily structural and historical, not functional and immediate : Bilaterian history as top-down by tinkering of an initial set of rules, not bottom-up by adding increments of complexity ; Setting of historical constraints in the Cambrian explosion ; Channeling the subsequent directions of bilaterian history from the inside ; An epilog of Dobzhansky's landscape and the dominant role of historical constraint in the clumped population of morphospace -- The integration of constraint and adaptation (structure and function) in ontogeny and phylogeny: structural constraints, spandrels, and the centrality of exaptation in macroevolution : The timeless physics of evolved function : Structuralism's odd man outside ; D'Arcy Thompson's science of form : The structure of an argument ; The tactic and application of an argument ; The admitted limitation and ultimate failure of an argument ; Odd man in (D'Arcy Thompson's structuralist critique of Darwinism) and odd man out (his disparagement of historicism ; An epilog to an argument. Order for free and realms of relevance for Thompsonian structuralism. Exapting the rich and inevitable spandrels of history: Nietzsche's most important proposition of historical method ; Exaptation and the principle of quirky functional shift: the restricted Darwinian version as the ground of contingency : How Darwin resolved Mivart's challenge of incipient stages ; The two great historical and structural implications of quirky functional shift ; How exaptation completes and rationalizes the terminology of evolutionary change by functional shifting ; Key criteria and examples of exaptation. The complete version, replete with spandrels: a revisit to San Marco ; Three major reasons for the centrality of spandrels, and therefore of nonadaptation, in evolutionary theory. The exaptive pool: the proper conceptual formula and ground of evolvability : Resolving the paradox of evolvability and defining the exaptive pool ; The taxonomy of the exaptive pool : Franklins and Miltons, or inherent potentials vs. available things ; Choosing a fundamentum divisionis for a taxonomy: an apparently arcane and linguistic matter that actually embodies a central scientific decision ; Cross-level effects as Miltonic spandrels, not Franklinian potentials: the nub of integration and radical importance. A closing comment to resolve the macroevolutiona​ry paradox that constraint ensures flexibility whereas selection crafts restriction -- Tiers of time and trials of extrapolationis​m, with an epilog on the interaction of general theory and contingent history : Failure of extrapolationis​m in the non-isotrophy of time and geology : The specter of catatrosphic mass extinction: Darwin to Chicxulub ; The paradox of the first tier: towards a general theory of tiers of time. An epilog on theory and history in creating the grandeur of this view of life.
transparent Summary, Etc. Note: Review: "With attention to detail, Stephen Jay Gould first describes the content and discusses the history and origins of the three core commitments of classical Darwinism: that natural selection works on organisms, not genes or species; that it is almost exclusively the mechanism of adaptive evolutionary change; and that these changes are incremental, not drastic. Next, he examines the three critiques that currently challenge this classic Darwinian edifice: that selection operates on multiple levels, from the gene to the group; that evolution proceeds by a variety of mechanisms, not just natural selection; and that causes operating at broader scales, including catastrophes, have figured prominently in the course of evolution. Then, in a stunning tour de force that will likely stimulate discussion and debate for decades, Gould proposes his own system for integrating these classical commitments and contemporary critiques into a new structure of evolutionary thought." "In 2001 the Library of Congress named Stephen Jay Gould one of America's eighty-three Living Legends - people who embody the "quintessential​ly American ideal of individual creativity, conviction, dedication, and exuberance." Each of these qualities finds full expression in this peerless work, the likes of which the scientific world has not seen - and may not see again - for well over a century."-​-​Jacket.
transparent Local Note: NWRCCatalogISO2​0250428
transparent Elect. Loc./Access: Table of contents http://catdir.l​oc.gov/catdir/t​oc/fy035/200104​3556.html
transparent Table of contents http://www.gbv.​de/dms/ohb-​opac/334504627.​pdf
transparent Subject: Evolution (Biology)
transparent Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution)
transparent Adaptation (Biology)
transparent Natural selection.
transparent Life--Origin.
transparent Biological Evolution
transparent Adaptation, Biological
transparent Origin of Life
transparent Selection, Genetic
transparent Évolution (Biologie)
transparent Théorie des équilibres ponctués (Évolution)
transparent Adaptation (Biologie)
transparent Sélection naturelle.
transparent Vie--Origines.
transparent evolution. aat
transparent Natural selection fast
transparent Adaptation (Biology) fast
transparent Evolution (Biology) fast
transparent Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) fast
transparent Evolutionstheor​ie gnd
transparent Evolutietheorie​. gtt
transparent Onderbroken evenwicht. gtt
transparent EVOLUÇÃO HUMANA (TEORIA) larpcal
transparent Evolution (Biology) nli
transparent Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) nli
transparent Evolutionstheor​ie. swd

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