The Structure of Evolutionary TheoryHarvard University Press, 2002 M03 21 - 1459 páginas The world's most revered and eloquent interpreter of evolutionary ideas offers here a work of explanatory force unprecedented in our time--a landmark publication, both for its historical sweep and for its scientific vision. |
Contenido
The Essence of Darwinismandthe | |
Chapter | |
Darwin as a Philosophical Revolutionary | |
Seeds of Hierarchy | |
Species Selection Wrights Rule and the Power of Interaction with | |
Punctuated Equilibrium and the Validation of Macroevolutionary Theory | |
The Primary Claimsof PunctuatedEquilibrium Data and Definitions Microevolutionary Links | |
Sources of Data forTesting Punctuated Equilibrium | |
Causal Clues from Differential Patterns of Relative Frequencies The Broader Implicationsof PunctuatedEquilibrium forEvolutionary Theory | |
A LargelySociological and FullyPartisan Historyof theImpact and Critique of Punctuated Equilibrium | |
The Integration ofConstraint | |
Constraint as a Primary Basis | |
An Interlude on Darwins Reaction | |
Darwin on the Principleof Divergence | |
Part I Chapters 27 | |
The PreDarwinian Debate | |
Owen and Darwin Darwins Strongbut Limited Interest inStructural Constraint Darwins Debt toBothPoles of the Dichotomy | |
Galtons Polyhedron | |
Part II Chapters 812 | |
The Modern Synthesis as a Limited Consensus | |
Towardsa Revised andExpanded Evolutionary Theory | |
A Speciational Basis for Macroevolution | |
Historical Constraint as the Primary | |
Setting of Historical Constraints inthe | |
The Integration of Constraint and Adaptation Structure | |
Exapting the Rich and Inevitable Spandrelsof History | |
The Proper Conceptual Formula | |
Chapter | |
Illustration Credits | |