The Selfish GeneOxford University Press, 1978 - 224 pagina's As influential today as when it was first published, The Selfish Gene has become a classic exposition of evolutionary thought. Professor Dawkins articulates a gene's eye view of evolution - a view giving centre stage to these persistent units of information, and in which organisms can be seen as vehicles for their replication. This imaginative, powerful, and stylistically brilliant work not only brought the insights of Neo-Darwinism to a wide audience, but galvanized the biology community, generating much debate and stimulating whole new areas of research. |
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Pagina 75
... hawk or a dove . Hawks always fight as hard and as unrestrainedly as they can , retreating only when seriously injured . Doves merely threaten in a dignified conventional way , never hurting anybody . If a hawk fights a dove the dove ...
... hawk or a dove . Hawks always fight as hard and as unrestrainedly as they can , retreating only when seriously injured . Doves merely threaten in a dignified conventional way , never hurting anybody . If a hawk fights a dove the dove ...
Pagina 76
... hawk or dove , would in fact be evolutionarily stable on its own , and we should therefore not expect either of them ... hawk arises in the population . Since he is the only hawk around , every fight he has is against a dove . Hawks ...
... hawk or dove , would in fact be evolutionarily stable on its own , and we should therefore not expect either of them ... hawk arises in the population . Since he is the only hawk around , every fight he has is against a dove . Hawks ...
Pagina 79
Richard Dawkins. that any one individual was either a hawk or a dove . We ended up with an evolutionarily stable ratio of hawks to doves . In practice , what this means is that a stable ratio of hawk genes to dove genes would be achieved ...
Richard Dawkins. that any one individual was either a hawk or a dove . We ended up with an evolutionarily stable ratio of hawks to doves . In practice , what this means is that a stable ratio of hawk genes to dove genes would be achieved ...
Inhoudsopgave
Why are people? I | 1 |
The replicators | 13 |
Immortal coils | 22 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
advantage allele altruism altruistic behaviour ancestors animals ants argument average pay-off baby bees behave benefit birds body brain brothers and sisters chance chapter cheats child chromosome cistron complex copies copulate cost crossing-over cuckoo Darwin doves eggs evolution evolutionarily stable strategy evolutionary evolve example expect exploit father favour female fights gene pool genetic unit grudgers happen hawk hawks and doves human idea individual kin selection kind large number less living look male mate Maynard Smith means meme meme pool molecules mother natural selection nest offspring paradoxical parental investment particular pattern population possible predators predict primeval soup queen rearing reason reciprocal altruism relatedness replicators reproduction risk rival selfish gene theory sense sex ratio sexual share simple simulation social insects soup species sperms suckers suppose survival machines tend territory things tion Trivers W. D. Hamilton workers Wynne-Edwards young
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