The Ant and the Peacock: Altruism and Sexual Selection from Darwin to TodayThis book is a success story. It explains two long-running puzzles of the theory of natural selection. How can natural selection favour those, like the ant, that renounce tooth and claw in favour of the public-spirited ways of the commune? How can it explain the peacock's tail, flamboyant and a burden to its bearer; surely selection would act against useless ornamentation? Helena Cronin's enthralling account blends history, science and philosophy in a gripping tale that is scholarly, entertaining and eminently readable. The hardback edition was selected by Nature as one of the best scientific books in 1992. Also the New York Times chose it as one of their best books of 1992. The author divides her time between the Philosophy Department at the London School of Economics and the Zoology Department at Oxford. |
From inside the book
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Efni
Walking archives | 3 |
A world without Darwin | 7 |
1859 and beyond | 35 |
Goodbye to all that | 47 |
Darwinism old and new | 53 |
Organism to gene | 59 |
Structures to strategists | 66 |
Complexities and diversities | 79 |
Until careful experiments are made | 205 |
Ghosts of Darwinism surpassed | 231 |
A happy ending to the peacocks tale | 243 |
Altruism now | 253 |
Altruism reanalysed | 264 |
Altruism then | 267 |
Altruism unseen | 274 |
Altruism levelled down | 283 |
Demarcations of design | 81 |
The scrapheap of chance | 87 |
Strange deviations tied together | 93 |
Artefacts of our minds | 106 |
The sting in the peacocks tail | 113 |
The career of a controversy | 118 |
Nothing but natural selection? | 123 |
Coloration for protection | 124 |
Coloration for recognition | 129 |
Explaining away display | 131 |
Coloration without selection | 133 |
Males for Darwin females for Wallace? | 146 |
A century of natural selection | 155 |
Can females shape males? | 165 |
Not choosing just looking | 167 |
The instability of a vicious feminine caprice | 168 |
The trouble with taste | 174 |
Do sensible females prefer sexy males? | 183 |
Not just a pretty tail | 186 |
Is good sense sensible? | 191 |
Good taste makes good sense | 201 |
The social insects Kind kin | 293 |
Make dove not war Conventional forces | 311 |
Human altruism A natural kind? | 325 |
Wise before the event | 353 |
Morality at enmity with nature | 367 |
Darwinian bodies Lamarckian minds | 371 |
Rhetorical skirmishes | 378 |
Breeding between the lines | 381 |
Speciating for the greater good | 387 |
Mating or weaning? | 390 |
The problem for Darwin and Wallace | 395 |
Incidental not endowed | 400 |
Incidental not selected | 402 |
Darwins adaptive interlude | 407 |
The power of natural selection | 416 |
Origins elusive | 425 |
EPILOGUE | 431 |
NOTE ON THE LETTERS OF DARWIN AND WALLACE | 433 |
439 | |
475 | |
Common terms and phrases
adaptive advantage altruism animals apparently argument assume beauty become behaviour benefit birds body called century changes characteristics choose claimed classical colours competition costs critics Darwin Darwinian display edition effects evidence evolution evolutionary example existence expect explain fact favour female choice forces genes genetic give human Huxley hybrid idea important individual insects interest isolation kind least less London look males mate Maynard means mechanisms merely mind moral natural selection Nevertheless offspring organisms Origin ornament parasites particular perhaps phenotypic plants population position preference Press principle problem protection question reason reproductive result rule seems seen sense Seward sexual selection side Smith social Society speciation species sterility structure struggle success suggested tail taste theory things thought turn University variations Wallace Wallace's whole
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