The structure of evolutionary theory:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.]
Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press
2002
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 1433 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0674006135 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Gould, Stephen Jay |d 1941-2002 |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)121391876 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The structure of evolutionary theory |c Stephen Jay Gould |
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] |b Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press |c 2002 | |
300 | |a XXII, 1433 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 4 | |a Evolution (Biology) | |
650 | 4 | |a Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Evolutionstheorie |0 (DE-588)4071051-8 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Evolutionstheorie |0 (DE-588)4071051-8 |D s |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | STEPHEN JAY GOUL D THE STRUCTURE O F EVOLUTIONARY THEORY CHAPTER 1 :
DEFINING AND REVISING THE STRUCTURE OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 1 PART I,
CHAPTERS 2- 7 THE HISTORY OF DARWINIAN LOGIC AND DEBATE 9 1 SEGUE TO
PART II 58 5 PART II, CHAPTERS 8-12 TOWARDS A REVISED AND EXPANDED
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 593 BIBLIOGRAPHY 1344 ILLUSTRATION CREDITS 138 8
INDEX 1393 CHAPTER 1 : DEFINING AND REVISING THE STRUCTURE OF
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 1 * THEORIES NEED BOTH ESSENCES AND HISTORIES 1 *
THE STRUCTURE OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY : REVISING THE THREE CENTRA L
FEATURES OF DARWINIAN LOGIC 1 2 *APOLOGIA PRO VITA SUA 2 4 A TIME TO
KEEP 24 A PERSONAL ODYSSEY 3 3 * EPITOMES FOR A LONG DEVELOPMENT 48
LEVELS OF POTENTIAL ORIGINALITY 48 AN ABSTRACT OF ONE LONG ARGUMENT 5 3
PART I: THE HISTORY OF DARWINIAN LOGIC AND DEBAT E CHAPTER 2 : THE
ESSENCE OF DARWINISM AND THE BASIS O F MODERN ORTHODOXY: AN EXEGESIS OF
THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES 9 3 * A REVOLUTION IN THE SMALL 9 3 * DARWIN AS A
HISTORICAL METHODOLOGIST 9 7 ONE LONG ARGUMENT 9 7 THE PROBLEM OF
HISTORY 99 A FOURFOLD CONTINUUM OF METHODS FOR THE INFERENCE OF HISTORY
103 * DARWIN AS A PHILOSOPHICAL REVOLUTIONARY 11 6 THE CAUSES OF
NATURE S HARMONY 11 6 DARWIN AND WILLIAM PALEY 11 6 DARWIN AND ADAM
SMITH 12 1 THE FIRST THEME : THE ORGANISM AS THE AGENT OF SELECTION 125
THE SECOND THEME: NATURAL SELECTION AS A CREATIVE FORCE 13 7 THE
REQUIREMENTS FOR VARIATION 14 1 COPIOUS 14 1 SMALL 14 3 UNDIRECTED 144
GRADUALISM 146 THE ADAPTATIONIST PROGRAM 1 S S THE THIRD THEME : THE
UNIFORMITARIAN NEED TO EXTRAPOLATE : ENVIRONMENT AS ENABLER OF CHANGE 15
9 * JUDGMENTS OF IMPORTANCE 16 3 CHAPTER 3 : SEEDS OF HIERARCHY 170 *
LAMARCK AND THE BIRTH OF MODERN EVOLUTIONISM IN TWO-FACTOR THEORIES 170
THE MYTHS OF LAMARCK 170 LAMARCK AS A SOURCE 174 LAMARCK S TWO-FACTOR
THEORY: SOURCES FOR THE TWO PARTS 175 THE FIRST SET : ENVIRONMENT AND
ADAPTATION 176 THE SECOND SET : PROGRESS AND TAXONOMY 179 DISTINCTNESS
OF THE TWO SETS 18 1 LAMARCK S TWO-FACTOR THEORY : THE HIERARCHY O F
PROGRESS AND DEVIATION 17 5 ANTINOMIES OF THE TWO-FACTOR THEORY 18 9 *
AN INTERLUDE ON DARWIN S REACTION 19 2 * NO ALLMACHT WITHOUT HIERARCHY:
WEISSMAN ON GERMINAL SELECTION 19 7 THE ALLMACHT OF SELECTION 197
WEISMANN S ARGUMENT ON LAMARCK AND THE ALLMACHT OF SELECTION 20 1 THE
PROBLEM OF DEGENERATION AND WEISMANN S IMPETUS FO R GERMINAL SELECTION
203 SOME ANTECEDENTS TO HIERARCHY IN GERMAN EVOLUTIONARY THOUGHT 20 8
HAECKEL S DESCRIPTIVE HIERARCHY IN LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION 20 8 ROUX S
THEORY OF INTRACORPOREAL STRUGGLE 21 0 GERMINAL SELECTION AS A HELPMATE
TO PERSONAL SELECTION 214 GERMINAL SELECTION AS A FULL THEORY OF
HIERARCHY 219 * HINTS OF HIERARCHY IN SUPRAORGANISMAL SELECTION : DARWIN
ON THE PRINCIPLE OF DIVERGENCE 224 DIVERGENCE AND THE COMPLETION OF
DARWIN S SYSTEM 224 THE GENESIS OF DIVERGENCE 232 DIVERGENCE AS A
CONSEQUENCE OF NATURAL SELECTION 23 4 THE FAILURE OF DARWIN S ARGUMENT
AND THE NEED FO R SPECIES SELECTION 236 THE CALCULUS OF INDIVIDUAL
SUCCESS 23 8 THE CAUSES OF TRENDS 240 SPECIES SELECTION BASED ON
PROPENSITY FOR EXTINCTION 246 POSTSCRIPT: SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM OF THE
DELICATE ARRANGEMENT 24 8 * CODA 24 9 CHAPTER 4: INTERNALISM AND LAWS
OF FORM : PRE-DARWINIAN ALTERNATIVES TO FUNCTIONALISM 25 1 N PROLOGUE:
DARWIN S FATEFUL DECISION 25 1 * TWO WAYS TO GLORIFY GOD IN NATURE 260
WILLIAM PALEY AND BRITISH FUNCTIONALISM : PRAISING GOD IN TH E DETAILS
OF DESIGN 262 LOUIS AGASSIZ AND CONTINENTAL FORMALISM: PRAISING GOD IN
THE GRANDEUR OF TAXONOMIC ORDER 271 AN EPILOG ON THE DICHOTOMY 278 *
UNITY OF PLAN AS THE STRONGEST VERSION OF FORMALISM : THE PRE-DARWINIAN
DEBATE 28 1 MEHR LICHT ON GOETHE S LEAF 28 1 GEOFFROY AND CUVIER 29 1
CUVIER AND CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE 29 1 GEOFFROY S FORMALIST VISION 298
THE DEBATE OF 1830: FOREPLAY AND AFTERMATH 304 RICHARD OWEN AND ENGLISH
FORMALISM : THE ARCHETYPE OF VERTEBRATES 312 NO FORMALISM PLEASE, WE RE
BRITISH 312 THE VERTEBRATE ARCHETYPE: CONSTRAINT AND NONADAPTATION 31 6
OWEN AND DARWIN 32 6 * DARWIN S STRONG BUT LIMITED INTEREST IN
STRUCTURAL CONSTRAINT 33 0 DARWIN S DEBT TO BOTH POLES OF THE DICHOTOMY
330 DARWIN ON CORRELATION OF PARTS 332 THE QUITE SUBORDINATE POSITION
OF CONSTRAINT TO SELECTION 339 CHAPTER 5 : THE FRUITFUL FACETS OF
GALTON S POLYHEDRON: CHANNELS AND SALTATIONS IN POST-DARWINIAN FORMALISM
342 * GALTON S POLYHEDRON 342 * ORTHOGENESIS AS A THEORY OF CHANNELS AND
ONE-WAY STREETS : THE MARGINALIZATION OF DARWINISM 35 1 MISCONCEPTIONS
AND RELATIVE FREQUENCIES 35 1 THEODOR EIMER AND THE OHNMACHT OF
SELECTION 35 5 ALPHEUS HYATT: AN ORTHOGENETIC HARD LINE FROM TH E WORLD
OF MOLLUSKS 36 5 C.O. WHITMAN: AN ORTHOGENETIC DOVE IN DARWIN S WORLD OF
PIGEONS 38 3 N SALTATION AS A THEORY OF INTERNAL IMPETUS : A SECOND
FORMALIST STRATEGY FOR PUSHING DARWINISM TO A CAUSAL PERIPHERY 396
WILLIAM BATESON : THE DOCUMENTATION OF INHERENT DISCONTINUITY 396 HUGO
DE VRIES: A MOST RELUCTANT NON-DARWINIAN 41 5 DOUSING THE GREAT PARTY OF
1909 41 5 THE (NOT SO CONTRADICTORY) SOURCES OF THE MUTATION THEORY 41 8
THE MUTATION THEORY: ORIGIN AND CENTRAL TENETS 42 5 DARWINISM AND THE
MUTATION THEORY 43 9 CONFUSING RHETORIC AND THE PERSONAL FACTOR 43 9 THE
LOGIC OF DARWINISM AND ITS DIFFERENT PLACE IN DE VRIES SYSTEM 44 3 DE
VRIES ON MACROEVOLUTION - 446 RICHARD GOLDSCHMIDT S APPROPRIATE ROLE AS
A FORMALIS T EMBODIMENT OF ALL THAT PURE DARWINISM MUST OPPOSE 45 1
CHAPTER 6: PATTERN AND PROGRESS ON THE GEOLOGICAL STAGE 467 * DARWIN AND
THE FRUITS OF BIOTIC COMPETITION 467 A GEOLOGICAL LICENSE FOR PROGRESS
467 THE PREDOMINANCE OF BIOTIC COMPETITION AND ITS SEQUELAE 470 *
UNIFORMITY ON THE GEOLOGICAL STAGE 479 LYELL S VICTORY IN FACT AND
RHETORIC 479 CATASTROPHISM AS GOOD SCIENCE : CUVIER S ESSAY 484 DARWIN S
GEOLOGICAL NEED AND KELVIN S ODIOUS SPECTRE 49 2 A QUESTION OF TIME (TOO
LITTLE GEOLOGY) 496 A QUESTION OF DIRECTION (TOO MUCH GEOLOGY) 497
CHAPTER 7 : THE MODERN SYNTHESIS AS A LIMITED CONSENSUS 50 3 * WHY
SYNTHESIS? 50 3 * SYNTHESIS AS RESTRICTION 505 THE INITIAL GOAL OF
REJECTING OLD ALTERNATIVES 505 R. A. FISHER AND THE DARWINIAN CORE 50 8
J. B. S. HALDANE AND THE INITIAL PLURALISM OF THE SYNTHESIS 51 4 J. S.
HUXLEY: PLURALISM OF THE TYPE 51 6 - SYNTHESIS AS HARDENING 51 8 THE
LATER GOAL OF EXALTING SELECTION S POWER 51 8 INCREASING EMPHASIS ON
SELECTION AND ADAPTATION BETWEEN TH E FIRST (1937) AND LAST (1951)
EDITION OF DOBZHANSKY S GENETICS AND THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES 524 THE SHIFT
IN G . G. SIMPSON S EXPLANATION OF QUANTUM EVOLUTION FROM DRIFT AND
NONADAPTATION (1944) TO THE EMBODIMENT OF STRICT ADAPTATION (1953) 528
MAYR AT THE INCEPTION (1942) AND CODIFICATION (1963) : SHIFTING FROM THE
GENETIC CONSISTENCY TO THE ADAPTATIONIST PARADIGM 53 1 WHY
HARDENING? 54 1 * HARDENING ON THE OTHER TWO LEGS OF THE DARWINIAN
TRIPOD 543 LEVELS OF SELECTION 544 EXTRAPOLATION INTO GEOLOGICAL TIME 55
6 N FROM OVERSTRESSED DOUBT TO OVEREXTENDED CERTAINTY 56 6 A TALE OF TWO
CENTENNIALS 56 6 ALL QUIET ON THE TEXTBOOK FRONT 57 6 ADAPTATION AND
NATURAL SELECTION 57 7 REDUCTION AND TRIVIALIZATION OF MACROEVOLUTION 57
9 SEGUE TO PART II 585 PART II: TOWARDS A REVISED AND EXPANDED
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY CHAPTER 8 : SPECIES AS INDIVIDUALS IN THE
HIERARCHICAL THEORY OF SELECTION 59 5 * THE EVOLUTIONARY DEFINITION OF
INDIVIDUALITY 59 5 AN INDIVIDUALISTIC PROLEGOMENON 59 5 THE MEANING OF
INDIVIDUALITY AND THE EXPANSION OF THE DARWINIA N RESEARCH PROGRAM 597
CRITERIA FOR VERNACULAR INDIVIDUALITY 60 2 CRITERIA FOR EVOLUTIONARY
INDIVIDUALITY 60 8 * THE EVOLUTIONARY DEFINITION OF SELECTIVE AGENCY AND
THE FALLACY OF - SELFISH GENES 613 A FRUITFUL ERROR OF LOGIC 61 3
HIERARCHICAL VS. GENIC SELECTIONISM 614 THE DISTINCTION OF REPLICATORS
AND INTERACTORS AS A FRAMEWORK FOR DISCUSSION 615 FAITHFUL REPLICATION
AS THE CENTRAL CRITERION FOR THE GENE - CENTERED VIEW OF EVOLUTION 61 6
SIEVES, PLURIFIERS, AND THE NATURE OF SELECTION : THE REJECTION O F
REPLICATION AS A CRITERION OF AGENCY 61 9 INTERACTION AS THE PROPER
CRITERION FOR IDENTIFYING UNITS OF SELECTION 62 2 THE INTERNAL
INCOHERENCE OF GENE SELECTIONISM 625 BOOKKEEPING AND CAUSALITY : THE
FUNDAMENTAL ERROR O F GENE SELECTIONISM 63 2 GAMBITS OF REFORM AND
RETREAT BY GENE SELECTIONISTS 63 7 LOGICAL AND EMPIRICAL FOUNDATIONS FOR
THE THEORY O F HIERARCHICAL SELECTION 644 LOGICAL VALIDATION AND
EMPIRICAL CHALLENGES 644 R. A. FISHER AND THE COMPELLING LOGIC OF
SPECIES SELECTION 644 THE CLASSICAL ARGUMENTS AGAINST EFFICACY O F
HIGHER-LEVEL SELECTION 646 OVERCOMING THESE CLASSICAL ARGUMENTS, IN
PRACTICE FO R INTERDEMIC SELECTION, BUT IN PRINCIPLE FOR SPECIES
SELECTION 64 8 EMERGENCE AND THE PROPER CRITERION FOR SPECIES SELECTION
65 2 DIFFERENTIAL PROLIFERATION OR DOWNWARD EFFECT? 65 2 SHALL EMERGENT
CHARACTERS OR EMERGENT FITNESSES DEFINE TH E OPERATION OF SPECIES
SELECTION? 65 6 HIERARCHY AND THE SIXFOLD WAY 673 A LITERARY PROLOGUE
FOR THE TWO MAJOR PROPERTIES OF HIERARCHIES 673 REDRESSING THE TYRANNY
OF THE ORGANISM: COMMENTS ON CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES AND DIFFERENCES
AMONG SIX PRIMARY LEVELS 68 1 THE GENE-INDIVIDUAL 683 MOTOO KIMURA AND
THE NEUTRAL THEORY OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION 684 TRUE GENIC SELECTION 68
9 THE CELL-INDIVIDUAL 69 5 THE ORGANISM-INDIVIDUAL 70 0 THE
DEME-INDIVIDUAL 70 1 THE SPECIES-INDIVIDUAL 703 SPECIES AS INDIVIDUALS
703 SPECIES AS INTERACTORS 704 SPECIES SELECTION AS POTENT 709 THE
GLADE-INDIVIDUAL 71 2 * THE GRAND ANALOGY: A SPECIATIONAL BASIS FOR
MACROEVOLUTION 71 4 PRESENTATION OF THE CHART FOR MACROEVOLUTIONARY
DISTINCTIVENESS 71 4 THE PARTICULARS OF MACROEVOLUTIONARY EXPLANATION 71
6 THE STRUCTURAL BASIS 71 6 CRITERIA FOR INDIVIDUALITY 720 CONTRASTING
MODALITIES OF CHANGE: THE BASIC CATEGORIES 72 1 ONTOGENETIC DRIVE : THE
ANALOGY OF LAMARCKISM AND ANAGENESIS 72 2 REPRODUCTIVE DRIVE :
DIRECTIONAL SPECIATION AS AN IMPORTANT AND IRREDUCIBLE MACROEVOLUTIONARY
MODE SEPARATE FRO M SPECIES SELECTION 72 4 SPECIES SELECTION, WRIGHT S
RULE, AND THE POWER OF INTERACTION WITH DIRECTIONAL SPECIATION 73 1
SPECIES LEVEL DRIFTS AS MORE POWERFUL THAN THE ANALOGOU S PHENOMENA IN
MICROEVOLUTION 73 5 THE SCALING OF EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL ENVIRONMENTS 73
8 SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE STRENGTHS OF SPECIES SELECTION AND ITS
INTERACTION WITH OTHER MACROEVOLUTIONARY CAUSES OF CHANGE 74 1 CHAPTER 9
: PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM AND THE VALIDATION O F MACROEVOLUTIONARY THEORY
74 5 * WHAT EVERY PALEONTOLOGIST KNOWS 74 5 AN INTRODUCTORY EXAMPLE 74 5
TESTIMONIALS TO COMMON KNOWLEDGE 74 9 DARWINIAN SOLUTIONS AND PARADOXES
75 5 THE PARADOX OF INSULATION FROM DISPROOF 75 8 THE PARADOX OF STYMIED
PRACTICE 76 1 * THE PRIMARY CLAIMS OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 765 DATA
AND DEFINITIONS 765 MICROEVOLUTIONARY LINKS 774 MACROEVOLUTIONARY
IMPLICATIONS 78 1 TEMPO AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF STASIS 782 MODE AND THE
SPECIATIONAL FOUNDATION OF MACROEVOLUTION 783 * THE SCIENTIFIC DEBATE ON
PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM : CRITIQUES AND RESPONSES 784 CRITIQUES BASED ON
THE DEFINABILITY OF PALEONTOLOGICAL SPECIES 784 EMPIRICAL AFFIRMATION
784 REASONS FOR A POTENTIAL SYSTEMATIC UNDERESTIMATION OF BIOSPECIE S BY
PALEOSPECIES 78 9 REASONS FOR A POTENTIAL SYSTEMATIC OVERESTIMATION OF
BIOSPECIE S BY PALEOSPECIES 792 REASONS WHY AN OBSERVED PUNCTUATIONAL
PATTERN MIGHT NO T REPRESENT SPECIATION 793 CRITIQUES BASED ON DENYING
EVENTS OF SPECIATION AS THE PRIMARY LOCUS OF CHANGE 79 6 CRITIQUES BASED
ON SUPPOSED FAILURES OF EMPIRICAL RESULTS T O AFFIRM PREDICTIONS OF
PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 80 2 CLAIMS FOR EMPIRICAL REFUTATION BY CASES 80
2 PHENOTYPES 802 GENOTYPES 81 0 EMPIRICAL TESTS OF CONFORMITY WITH
MODELS 812 N SOURCES OF DATA FOR TESTING PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 822
PREAMBLE 822 THE EQUILIBRIUM IN PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM : QUANTITATIVEL Y
DOCUMENTED PATTERNS OF STASIS IN UNBRANCHED SEGMENT S OF LINEAGES 82 4
THE PUNCTUATIONS OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM : TEMPO AND MODE IN THE
ORIGIN OF PALEOSPECIES 83 9 THE INFERENCE OF CLADOGENESIS BY THE
CRITERION OF ANCESTRAL SURVIVAL 84 0 THE DISSECTION OF PUNCTUATIONS TO
INFER BOTH EXISTENC E AND MODALITY 85 0 TIME 85 1 GEOGRAPHY 85 2
MORPHOMETRIC MODE 85 2 PROPER AND ADEQUATE TESTS OF RELATIVE FREQUENCIES
: THE STRON G EMPIRICAL VALIDATION OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 85 4 THE
INDISPENSABILITY OF DATA ON RELATIVE FREQUENCIES 85 4 RELATIVE
FREQUENCIES FOR HIGHER TAXA IN ENTIRE BIOTAS 85 6 RELATIVE FREQUENCIES
FOR ENTIRE CLADES 86 6 CAUSAL CLUES FROM DIFFERENTIAL PATTERNS O F
RELATIVE FREQUENCIES 870 THE BROADER IMPLICATIONS OF PUNCTUATED
EQUILIBRIUM FOR EVOLUTIONARY THEORY AND GENERAL NOTIONS OF CHANGE 874
WHAT CHANGES MAY PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM INSTIGATE IN OU R VIEWS ABOUT
EVOLUTIONARY MECHANISMS AND THE HISTORY OF LIFE? 874 THE EXPLANATION AND
BROADER MEANING OF STASIS 874 FREQUENCY 875 GENERALITY 876 CAUSALITY 877
PUNCTUATION, THE ORIGIN OF NEW MACROEVOLUTIONARY INDIVIDUALS , AND
RESULTING IMPLICATIONS FOR EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 88 5 TRENDS 886 THE
SPECIATIONAL REFORMULATION OF MACROEVOLUTION 89 3 LIFE ITSELF 897
GENERAL RULES 90 1 PARTICULAR CASES 90 5 HORSES AS THE EXEMPLAR OF
LIFE S LITTLE JOKE 90 5 RETHINKING HUMAN EVOLUTION 90 8 ECOLOGICAL AND
HIGHER-LEVEL EXTENSIONS 91 6 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 92 2 GENERAL MODELS FOR
PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 92 2 PUNCTUATIONAL CHANGE AT OTHER LEVELS AND
SCALES OF EVOLUTION 928 A PRELIMINARY NOTE ON HOMOLOGY AND ANALOGY IN TH
E CONCEPTUAL REALM 928 PUNCTUATION BELOW THE SPECIES LEVEL 93 1
PUNCTUATION ABOVE THE SPECIES LEVEL 936 STASIS ANALOGS : TRENDING AND
NON-TRENDING IN THE GEOLOGICAL HISTORY OF CLADES 936 PUNCTUATIONAL
ANALOGS IN LINEAGES : THE PACE OF MORPHOLOGICAL INNOVATION 93 9
PUNCTUATIONAL ANALOGS IN FAUNAS AND ECOSYSTEMS 946 PUNCTUATIONAL MODELS
IN OTHER DISCIPLINES : TOWARDS A GENERAL THEORY OF CHANGE 95 2
PRINCIPLES FOR A CHOICE OF EXAMPLES 95 2 EXAMPLES FROM THE HISTORY OF
HUMAN ARTIFACTS AND CULTURES 952 EXAMPLES FROM HUMAN INSTITUTIONS AND
THEORIES ABOUT TH E NATURAL WORLD 957 TWO CONCLUDING EXAMPLES, A GENERAL
STATEMENT, AND A CODA 962 * APPENDIX: A LARGELY SOCIOLOGICAL (AND FULLY
PARTISAN) HISTORY O F THE IMPACT AND CRITIQUE OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM
972 THE ENTRANCE OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM INTO COMMON LANGUAG E AND
GENERAL CULTURE 972 AN EPISODIC HISTORY OF PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 97 9
EARLY STAGES AND FUTURE CONTEXTS 979 CREATIONIST MISAPPROPRIATION OF
PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 986 PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM IN JOURNALISM AND
TEXTBOOKS 990 THE PERSONAL ASPECT OF PROFESSIONAL REACTION 99 9 THE CASE
AD HOMINEM AGAINST PUNCTUATED EQUILIBRIUM 1000 AN INTERLUDE ON SOURCES
OF ERROR 101 0 THE WAGES OF JEALOUSY 101 4 THE DESCENT TO NASTINESS 101
4 THE MOST UNKINDEST CUT OF ALL 1019 THE WISDOM OF AGASSIZ S AND VON
BAER S THREEFOLD HISTORY O F SCIENTIFIC IDEAS 102 1 A CODA ON THE
KINDNESS AND GENEROSITY OF MOST COLLEAGUES 1022 CHAPTER 10 : THE
INTEGRATION OF CONSTRAINT AND ADAPTATION (STRUCTUR E AND FUNCTION) IN
ONTOGENY AND PHYLOGENY : HISTORICAL CONSTRAINTS AND THE EVOLUTION OF
DEVELOPMENT 102 5 * CONSTRAINT AS A POSITIVE CONCEPT 102 5 TWO KINDS OF
POSITIVITY 1025 AN ETYMOLOGICAL INTRODUCTION 1025 THE FIRST (EMPIRICAL)
POSITIVE MEANING OF CHANNELING 102 7 THE SECOND (DEFINITIONAL) POSITIVE
MEANING OF CAUSES OUTSID E ACCEPTED MECHANISMS 103 2 HETEROCHRONY AND
ALLOMETRY AS THE LOCUS CLASSICUS OF THE FIRS T POSITIVE (EMPIRICAL)
MEANING . CHANNELED DIRECTIONALITY BY CONSTRAINT . 103 7 THE TWO
STRUCTURAL THEMES OF INTERNALLY SET CHANNELS AND EAS E OF TRANSFORMATION
AS POTENTIALLY SYNERGISTIC WITH FUNCTIONAL CAUSALITY BY NATURAL
SELECTION : INCREASING SHELL STABILITY IN TH E GRYPHAEA
HETEROCHRONOCLINE 104 0 ONTOGENETICALLY CHANNELED ALLOMETRIC CONSTRAINT
AS A PRIMARY BASIS OF EXPRESSED EVOLUTIONARY VARIATION: THE FULL
GEOGRAPHI C AND MORPHOLOGICAL RANGE OF CERION UVA 1045 THE APTIVE
TRIANGLE AND THE SECOND POSITIVE MEANING : CONSTRAINT AS A THEORY-BOUND
TERM FOR PATTERNS AND DIRECTIONS NOT BUILT EXCLUSIVEL Y (OR SOMETIMES
EVEN AT ALL) BY NATURAL SELECTION 105 1 THE MODEL OF THE APTIVE TRIANGLE
105 1 DISTINGUISHING AND SHARPENING THE TWO GREAT QUESTIONS 1053 THE
STRUCTURAL VERTEX 1053 THE HISTORICAL VERTEX 1055 AN EPITOME FOR THE
THEORY-BOUND NATURE OF CONSTRAIN T TERMINOLOGY 1057 DEEP HOMOLOGY AND
PERVASIVE PARALLELISM : HISTORICAL CONSTRAINT AS THE PRIMARY GATEKEEPER
AND GUARDIAN OF MORPHOSPACE 106 1 A HISTORICAL AND CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS
OF THE UNDERAPPRECIATE D IMPORTANCE OF PARALLELISM FOR EVOLUTIONARY
THEORY 106 1 A CONTEXT FOR EXCITEMENT 106 1 A TERMINOLOGICAL EXCURSUS ON
THE MEANING OF PARALLELISM 1069 THE NINE FATEFUL LITTLE WORDS OF E. RAY
LANKESTER 1069 THE TERMINOLOGICAL ORIGIN AND DEBATE ABOUT THE MEANING AN
D UTILITY OF PARALLELISM 107 6 A SYMPHONY IN FOUR MOVEMENTS ON THE ROLE
OF HISTORICAL CONSTRAINT IN EVOLUTION: TOWARDS THE HARMONIOUS
REBALANCING OF FORM AND FUNCTION IN EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 1089 MOVEMENT
ONE, STATEMENT: DEEP HOMOLOGY ACROSS PHYLA : MAYR S FUNCTIONAL CERTAINTY
AND GEOFFROY S STRUCTURAL VINDICATION 1089 DEEP HOMOLOGY, ARCHETYPAL
THEORIES, AND HISTORICAL CONSTRAINT 108 9 MEHR LICHT (MORE LIGHT) ON
GOETHE S ANGIOSPERM ARCHETYPE 1092 HOXOLOGY AND GEOFFROY S FIRST
ARCHETYPAL THEORY O F SEGMENTAL HOMOLOGY 1095 AN EPITOME AND CAPSULE
HISTORY OF HOXOLOGY 1095 VERTEBRATE HOMOLOGS IN STRUCTURE AND ACTION 110
1 SEGMENTAL HOMOLOGIES OF ARTHROPODS AND VERTEBRATES : GEOFFROY S
VINDICATION 110 6 REDISCOVERING THE VERTEBRATE RHOMBOMERES 1107 MORE
EXTENSIVE HOMOLOGIES THROUGHOUT TH E DEVELOPING SOMITES 110 9 SOME
CAVEATS AND TENTATIVE CONCLUSIONS 1112 GEOFFREY S SECOND ARCHETYPAL
THEORY OF DORSO-VENTRAL . INVERSION IN THE COMMON BILATERIAN GROUNDPLAN
1117 MOVEMENT TWO, ELABORATION: PARALLELISM OF UNDERLYING GENERATORS:
DEEP HOMOLOGY BUILDS POSITIVE CHANNELS OF CONSTRAINT 112 2 PARALLELISM
ALL THE WAY DOWN : SHINING A LIGHT AN D FEEDING THE WALK 112 2
PARALLELISM IN THE LARGE : PAX-6 AND THE HOMOLOGY OF DEVELOPMENTAL
PATHWAYS IN HOMOPLASTIC EYES OF SEVERAL PHYLA 112 3 DATA AND DISCOVERY
112 3 THEORETICAL ISSUES 1127 A QUESTION OF PRIORITY 1130 PARALLELISM IN
THE SMALL : THE ORIGIN OF CRUSTACEAN FEEDING ORGANS 113 2 PHARAONIC
BRICKS AND CORINTHIAN COLUMNS 1134 MOVEMENT THREE, SCHERZO : DOES
EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE OFTEN PROCEED BY SALTATION DOWN CHANNELS OF
HISTORICA L CONSTRAINT? 1142 MOVEMENT FOUR, RECAPITULATION AND SUMMARY :
EARLY ESTABLISHMEN T OF RULES AND THE INHOMOGENOUS POPULATION OF
MORPHOSPACE : DOBZHANSKY S LANDSCAPE AS PRIMARILY STRUCTURAL AND
HISTORICAL , NOT FUNCTIONAL AND IMMEDIATE 1147 BILATERIAN HISTORY AS
TOP-DOWN BY TINKERING OF AN INITIAL SET O F RULES, NOT BOTTOM-UP BY
ADDING INCREMENTS OF COMPLEXITY 1147 SETTING OF HISTORICAL CONSTRAINTS
IN THE CAMBRIAN EXPLOSION 115 5 CHANNELING THE SUBSEQUENT DIRECTIONS OF
BILATERIAN HISTOR Y FROM THE INSIDE 116 1 AN EPILOG ON DOBZHANSKY S
LANDSCAPE AND THE DOMINAN T ROLE OF HISTORICAL CONSTRAINT IN THE CLUMPED
POPULATION O F MORPHOSPACE 1173 CHAPTER 11: THE INTEGRATION OF
CONSTRAINT AND ADAPTATION (STRUCTUR E AND FUNCTION) IN ONTOGENY AND
PHYLOGENY : STRUCTURAL CONSTRAINTS , SPANDRELS, AND THE CENTRALITY OF
EXAPTATION IN MACROEVOLUTION 1179 THE TIMELESS PHYSICS OF EVOLVED
FUNCTION 1179 STRUCTURALISM S ODD MAN OUTSIDE 1179 D ARCY THOMPSON S
SCIENCE OF FORM 1182 THE STRUCTURE OF AN ARGUMENT 1182 THE TACTIC AND
APPLICATION OF AN ARGUMENT 118 9 THE ADMITTED LIMITATION AND ULTIMATE
FAILURE O F AN ARGUMENT 1196 ODD MAN IN (D ARCY THOMPSON S STRUCTURALIST
CRITIQUE O F DARWINISM) AND ODD MAN OUT (HIS DISPARAGEMENT OF
HISTORICISM) 120 0 AN EPILOG TO AN ARGUMENT 1207 ORDER FOR FREE AND
REALMS OF RELEVANCE FO R THOMPSONIAN STRUCTURALISM 120 8 * EXAPTING THE
RICH AND INEVITABLE SPANDRELS OF HISTORY 1214 NIETZSCHE S MOST IMPORTANT
PROPOSITION OF HISTORICAL METHOD 1214 EXAPTATION AND THE PRINCIPLE OF
QUIRKY FUNCTIONAL SHIFT : THE RESTRICTED DARWINIAN VERSION AS THE GROUND
OF CONTINGENCY 121 8 HOW DARWIN RESOLVED MIVART S CHALLENGE OF INCIPIENT
STAGES 1218 THE TWO GREAT HISTORICAL AND STRUCTURAL IMPLICATIONS OF
QUIRK Y FUNCTIONAL SHIFT 1224 HOW EXAPTATION COMPLETES AND RATIONALIZES
THE TERMINOLOGY O F EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE BY FUNCTIONAL SHIFTING 1229 KEY
CRITERIA AND EXAMPLES OF EXAPTATION 1234 THE COMPLETE VERSION, REPLETE
WITH SPANDRELS : EXAPTATION AND TH E TERMINOLOGY OF NONADAPTATIVE ORIGIN
1246 THE MORE RADICAL CATEGORY OF EXAPTED FEATURES WITH TRUL Y
NONADAPTIVE ORIGINS AS STRUCTURAL CONSTRAINTS 1246 DEFINING AND
DEFENDING SPANDRELS : A REVISIT TO SAN MARCO 1249 THREE MAJOR REASONS
FOR THE CENTRALITY OF SPANDRELS, AND THEREFORE OF NONADAPTATION, IN
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY 1258 * THE EXAPTIVE POOL: THE PROPER CONCEPTUAL
FORMULA AN D GROUND OF EVOLVABILITY 1270 RESOLVING THE PARADOX OF
EVOLVABILITY AND DEFINING TH E EXAPTIVE POOL 1270 THE TAXONOMY OF THE
EXAPTIVE POOL 1277 FRANKLINS AND MILTONS, OR INHERENT POTENTIALS VS .
AVAILABLE THINGS 1277 CHOOSING A FUNDAMENTUM DIVISIONIS FOR A TAXONOMY :
AN APPARENTLY ARCANE AND LINGUISTIC MATTER THAT ACTUALL Y EMBODIES A
CENTRAL SCIENTIFIC DECISION 1280 CROSS-LEVEL EFFECTS AS MILTONIC
SPANDRELS, NOT FRANKLINIA N POTENTIALS: THE NUB OF INTEGRATION AND
RADICAL IMPORTANCE 1286 A CLOSING COMMENT TO RESOLVE THE
MACROEVOLUTIONARY PARADO X THAT CONSTRAINT ENSURES FLEXIBILITY WHEREAS
SELECTION CRAFT S RESTRICTION 1294 CHAPTER 12: TIERS OF TIME AND TRIALS
OF EXTRAPOLATIONISM , WITH AN EPILOG ON THE INTERACTION OF GENERAL
THEORY AN D CONTINGENT HISTORY 1296 *FAILURE OF EXTRAPOLATIONISM IN THE
NON-ISOTROPY OF TIM E AND GEOLOGY 129 6 THE SPECTER OF CATASTROPHIC MASS
EXTINCTION : DARWIN TO CHICXULUB 1296 THE PARADOX OF THE FIRST TIER :
TOWARDS A GENERAL THEORY O F TIERS OF TIME 1320 - AN EPILOG ON THEORY
AND HISTORY IN CREATING THE GRANDEUR O F THIS VIEW OF LIFE 1332
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Gould, Stephen Jay 1941-2002 |
author_GND | (DE-588)121391876 |
author_facet | Gould, Stephen Jay 1941-2002 |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Gould, Stephen Jay 1941-2002 |
author_variant | s j g sj sjg |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV014964533 |
classification_rvk | WH 1400 WH 2000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)59432219 (DE-599)BVBBV014964533 |
dewey-full | 576.8 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
dewey-ones | 576 - Genetics and evolution |
dewey-raw | 576.8 |
dewey-search | 576.8 |
dewey-sort | 3576.8 |
dewey-tens | 570 - Biology |
discipline | Biologie |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV014964533 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T19:08:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0674006135 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-010086148 |
oclc_num | 59432219 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29T DE-703 |
owner_facet | DE-29T DE-703 |
physical | XXII, 1433 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2002 |
publishDateSearch | 2002 |
publishDateSort | 2002 |
publisher | Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Gould, Stephen Jay 1941-2002 Verfasser (DE-588)121391876 aut The structure of evolutionary theory Stephen Jay Gould Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press 2002 XXII, 1433 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Evolution (Biology) Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) Evolutionstheorie (DE-588)4071051-8 gnd rswk-swf Evolutionstheorie (DE-588)4071051-8 s DE-604 GBV Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=010086148&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Gould, Stephen Jay 1941-2002 The structure of evolutionary theory Evolution (Biology) Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) Evolutionstheorie (DE-588)4071051-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4071051-8 |
title | The structure of evolutionary theory |
title_auth | The structure of evolutionary theory |
title_exact_search | The structure of evolutionary theory |
title_full | The structure of evolutionary theory Stephen Jay Gould |
title_fullStr | The structure of evolutionary theory Stephen Jay Gould |
title_full_unstemmed | The structure of evolutionary theory Stephen Jay Gould |
title_short | The structure of evolutionary theory |
title_sort | the structure of evolutionary theory |
topic | Evolution (Biology) Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) Evolutionstheorie (DE-588)4071051-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Evolution (Biology) Punctuated equilibrium (Evolution) Evolutionstheorie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=010086148&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gouldstephenjay thestructureofevolutionarytheory |