Cover image for Not by Design : Retiring Darwin's Watchmaker.
Not by Design : Retiring Darwin's Watchmaker.
Title:
Not by Design : Retiring Darwin's Watchmaker.
Author:
Reiss, John.
ISBN:
9780520944404
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (441 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- PART ONE: PROLEGOMENA -- 1. The Problem -- 2. Philosophical Background -- PART TWO: HOW DID WE GET INTO THIS MESS? -- 3. Design versus the Epicurean Hypothesis -- 4. Materialism, Teleology, and Evolution in the Enlightenment -- 5. Cuvier and the Principle of the Conditions for Existence -- 6. Darwin, Natural Theology, and the Principle of Natural Selection -- PART THREE: EVOLUTION IN MENDELIAN POPULATIONS -- 7. Existence and the Mathematics of Selection -- 8. Population Growth, Genetic Load, and the Limits of Selection -- 9. Natural Selection and Genetic Drift -- PART FOUR: THE CONDITIONS FOR EXISTENCE AND EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY -- 10. Adaptedness, Natural Selection, and the Conditions for Existence -- 11. How to Talk about Macroevolution -- 12. The Conditions for Existence as a Unifying Concept in Evolutionary Biology -- Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Glossary -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
More than two centuries ago, William Paley introduced his famous metaphor of the universe as a watch made by the Creator. For Paley, the exquisite structure of the universe necessitated a designer. Today, some 150 years since Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published, the argument of design is seeing a revival. This provocative work tells how Darwin left the door open for this revival--and at the same time argues for a new conceptual framework that avoids the problematic teleology inherent in Darwin's formulation of natural selection. In a wide-ranging discussion of the historical and philosophical dimensions of evolutionary theory from the ancient Greeks to today, John Reiss argues that we should look to the principle of the conditions for existence, first formulated before On the Origin of Species by the French paleontologist Georges Cuvier, to clarify the relation of adaptation to evolution. Reiss suggests that Cuvier's principle can help resolve persistent issues in evolutionary biology, including the proper definition of natural selection, the distinction between natural selection and genetic drift, and the meaning of genetic load. Moreover, he shows how this principle can help unite diverse areas of biology, ranging from quantitative genetics and the theory of the levels of selection to evo-devo, ecology, physiology, and conservation biology.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
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