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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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Hodge, M. J. S., 1993. One Marxist's view of Darwin's ideas. Biology and Philosophy, v. 8, p. 469-476. Hodge, M. J. S., 2000. Knowing about evolution: Darwin and his theory of natural selection, in Creath, R., and Maienschein, J., eds., Biology and Epistemology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 27-47. Hodge, M. J. S., 2003. The notebook programmes and projects of Darwin's London years, ch. 2 in Hodge, J., and Radick, G., eds., The Cambridge Companion to Darwin. Cambridge: Cambridge
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
, Philip F., 1994. Darwin's Laboratory: Evolutionary Theory and Natural History in the Pacific. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, x + 540 p. MacRae, Donald G., 1958. Darwin and the social sciences, ch. 13 in Barnett, S. A., ed., A Century of Darwin. London: William Hinemann, p. 298-312. Magoun, H. W., 1960. Evolutionary concepts of brain function follwing Darwin and Spencer, in Tax, S., ed., The Evolution of Man: Man, Culture and Society, Volume 2 of Evolution after Darwin. Chicago: University
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
. McKinney, H. Lewis, 1972. Wallace and Natural Selection. New Haven: Yale University Press, xix + 193 p. McLellan, M. E., 1927. Dr. Rudolph Amandus Philippi. The Auk, v. 44, p. 158-159. McShea, Daniel W., 1991. Complexity and evolution: what everybody knows. Biology and Philosophy, v. 6, p. 303-324. Meacham, Standish, 1970. Lord Bishop: the Life of Samuel Wilberforce 1805-1873. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, x + 328 p. Meggers, Betty J., 1959. Evolution and Anthropology: a Centennial Appraisal
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 435-481. Moore, James R., 1989. Of love and death: why Darwin 'gave up Christianity', ch. 6 in Moore, J. R., ed., History, Humanity and Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 195-229. Moore, James R., 1991. Deconstructing Darwinism: the politics of evolution in the 1860s. Journal of the History of Biology, v. 24, p. 353-408. Moore, James R., 1994. The Darwin Legend. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 218 p. Moore, James R., 1996. Metabiographical
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
Text
PDF
Schloss, J., eds., Evolution and Ethics: Human Morality in Biological and Religious Perspective. Eerdmans, p. 55-70. Richmond, Marsha, 2006. The 1909 Darwin celebration: reexamining evolution in the light of Mendel, mutation, and meiosis. Isis, v. 97, p. 447-484. Ridley, Mark, 1982. Coadaptation and the inadequacy of natural selection. British Journal for the History of Science, v. 15, p. 45-68. Ridley, Mark, 1987. The Essential Darwin. London: Unwin Hyman, xii + 271 p. Ridley, Mark, 1992. Darwin
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
Text
PDF
Mysteries: is Evolution a Social Contruction? Cambridge: Harvard University Press, xii + 296 p. Ruse, Michael, 2000. The Evolution Wars: A Guide to the Debates. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, xviii + 428 p. Ruse, Michael, 2002. The prematurity of Darwin's theory of natural selection, ch. 15 in Hook, E. B., ed., Prematurity in Scientific Discovery: on Resistance and Neglect. Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 213-238. Ruse, Michael, 2003. Darwin and Design: Does Evolution have a purpose
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
Text
PDF
Sciences, v. 37, p. 26-40. Wilson, David B., 1983. Did the Devil Make Darwin Do It? Modern Perspectives on the Creation-Evolution Controversy. Ames: Iowa State University Press, xxii + 241 p. Wilson, Edmund B., 1909. The cell in relation to heredity and evolution, in Anonymous, ed., Fifty Years of Darwinism: Modern Aspects of Evolution, Centennial Addresses in Honor of Charles Darwin before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Baltimore, Friday, January 1, 1909. New York: Henry Holt
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
Alcippe and Cryptophialus. EVOLUTION AND NATURAL SELECTION: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES After completing the barnacle monograph, Darwin began to work up his materials on evolution and natural selection. He gathered new information from the literature, through his own experiments, and by requesting it from his informants. Although most of these informants did not know what Darwin was up to, he did confide in his botanist friend Joseph Dalton Hooker and later in another botanist, Asa Gray of Harvard
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
Text
PDF
and of Huxley. The fossil record was becoming less and less of a problem. So far as the scientific community was concerned, the battle for evolution was over. The question was no longer whether evolution has happened, but how and why. To the sixth (1872) edition, which was the last, Darwin appended a glossary. It was not written by Darwin himself, but by William S. Dallas, and to what extent Darwin approved of it is not quite clear. A more important addition was an entire chapter (Chapter VII
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
Text
PDF
single sentence. That sufficed, and human origins were a major consideration in the controversies that immediately followed. By the time that the Descent was published, the scientific community as a whole no longer seriously contested the fact of evolution, though the mechanisms were still controversial and long remained so. In the Descent Darwin treats human evolution from the point of view of both genealogy and mechanisms. He documents the relationships of our species to other animals
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
Darwin's death there was a worldwide reaction against Darwinism and against the rationalism that had given rise to it. For that reason idealistic philosophy became popular. Among scientists alternatives to natural selection flourished, including various notions often called Lamarckian. Some of these were vague claims that ultimately evolution would be explained as a result of as yet unspecified laws of nature. The notion that evolution is like the development of an embryo, headed toward a definite
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
Molecules to Men. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 81-102. Allen, Garland E., 1992. Evolution and history: history as science and science as history, in Nitecki, M. H., and Nitecki, D. V., eds., History and Evolution. Albany: State University of New York Press, p. 211-239. Allhoff, Fritz, 2003. Evolutionary ethics from Darwin to Moore. History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, v. 25, p. 51-79. Aloisi, Massimiliano, 1984. Il debito verso Darwin della patologia e della medicina, in
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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Evolution . History of Science, v. 16, p. 291-303. Engels, Eve-Marie, 1995. Die Rezeption von Evolutionstheorien im 19. Jahrhundert. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 448 p. Engels, Eve-Marie, 1995. Biologische Ideen von Evolution im 19. Jahrhundert und ihre Leitfunktion. Eine Einleitung, in Engels, E.-M., ed., Die Rezeption von Evolutionstheorien im 19. Jahrhundert. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, p. 13-66. Engels, Eve-Marie, 2000. Charles Darwin in der deutschen Zeitschriftenliteratur des 19. Jahrhunderts
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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scientific ideas, in Glick, T. F.; Puig-Samper, M. A., and Ruiz, R., eds., The Reception of Darwinism in the Iberian World. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, p. 229-238. Glick, Thomas F., and Kohn, David, 1996. Charles Darwin on Evolution: the Development of the Theory of Natural Selection. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company, 416 p. Glick, Thomas F.; Puig-Samper, Miguel Angel, and Ruiz, Rosaura, 2002. The Reception of Darwinism in the Iberian World. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
Herbert, Sandra, 2005. Charles Darwin, Geologist. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, xx + 485 p. Herbert, Sandra, 2005. The Darwinian revolution revisited. Journal of the History of Biology, v. 38, no. 1, p. 51-66. Herrera, Carlos M., 2002. What Darwin forgot to mention about orchids. Evolution, v. 56, p. 856-858. Herrnstein, Richard J., 1989. Darwinism and behaviourism: parallels and intersections, ch. 3 in Grafen, A., ed., Evolution and its Influence. Oxford: Clarendon Press, p. 35-61
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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, 2001. Annie's Box: Charles Darwin, his Daughter and Human Evolution. London: Fourth Estate, xiv + 316 p. Killingley, Dermot, 1995. Hinduism, Darwinism and evolution in late-nineteenth-century India, ch. 7 in Amigoni, D., and Wallace, J., eds., Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species: New Interdisciplinary Essays. Manchester: Manchester Universty Press, p. 174-202. Kinch, Michael Paul, 1975. British theories of biogeography, 1800-1859. Proceedings of the Oregon Academy of Sciences, v. 11, p. 92-99
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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, Gene, 1991. Darwin's Madagascan hawk moth prediction. American Entomologist, v. 37, p. 206-209. Kritsky, Gene, 1995. Darwin, Walsh, and Riley: the entomological link. American Entomologist, v. 41, p. 89-95. Kroeber, Alfred L., 1960. Evolution, history, and culture, in Tax, S., ed., The Evolution of Man: Man, Culture and Society, Volume 2 of Evolution after Darwin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, p. 1-16. Kr ger, Paul, 1920. Studien an Cirripedien. Zeitschrift f r Induktive Abstammungs
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, xi + 201 p. Provine, William B., 1982. Influence of Darwin's ideas on the study of evolution. Bioscience, v. 32, p. 501-506. Provine, William B., 1985. Adaptation and mechanisms of evolution after Darwin: a study in persistent controversies, ch. 28 in Kohn, D., ed., The Darwinian Heritage. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 825-866. Pruna, Pedro M., 1984. La recepci n de la ideas de Darwin en Cuba durante el siglo XIX. Quipu 1, 369-389. Puig-Samper
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
. 131, p. 966-974. Simpson, George Gaylord, 1961. Lamarck, Darwin and Butler: three approaches to evolution. American Scholar, v. 30, p. 238-249. Simpson, George Gaylord, 1972. The evolutionary concept of man, ch. 2 in Campbell, B., ed., Sexual Selection and The Descent of Man 1871-1971. Chicago: Aldine, p. 17-39. Sintonen, Matti, 1990. Darwin's long and short arguments. Philosophy of Science, v. 57, p. 677-689. Skagerstad, Peter, 1979. C.S. Peirce on biological evolution and scientific progress
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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PDF
. Warren, Leonard, 1998. Joseph Leidy: the Last Man who Knew Everything. New Haven: Yale University Press, xvi + 303 p. Washburn, Sherwood L., and Howell, F. Clark, 1960. Human evolution and culture, in Tax, S., ed., The Evolution of Man: Man, Culture and Society, Volume 2 of Evolution after Darwin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, p. 33-56. Wassersug, Richard J., and Rose, Michael R., 1984. A read-er's guide and retrospective to the 1982 Darwin centennial. Quarterly Review of Biology, v. 59
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