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Category:

Biology

Jul 10, 2017

The Evolution of Darwinian Empathy

The Darwinian understanding of empathy consistently built from his initial hypothesis to establish an empirical framework by the mid-1960s.

Biology
History
Morality
Read
Jun 26, 2017

Evolution Is As Real As Gravity

Evolution by natural selection is much more than just a hypothesis, and is as much a valid and well-accepted scientific theory as the theory of gravitation.

Biology
Read
Jun 19, 2017

Deconstructing Niche Construction: A Conversation between Gordon Burghardt and Kevin Laland

The concept of niche construction stresses a dialectical relationship between organisms and their environments, rather than one being passively shaped by the other. It has deep roots in evolutionary thought but only now is resulting in a systematic research program. Join Gordon Burghardt and Kevin Laland as they take a deep dive into the subject.

Biology
Culture
Environment
Interview
Read
May 29, 2017

Constructing Our Niches: How Evolutionary Theory Is Useful for the Building Industry

Evolutionary theory is very applicable to contemporary humans and our social/cultural worlds, including the world of the building/construction industry.

Biology
Culture
Read
May 24, 2017

The Evolution of Language and its Speakers

What separates us from the apes is a sequence of social and technological revolutions, one major change after the other in the life experiences of human communities. The emergence of language was one such revolution, not the last and definitely not the first.

Biology
Read
May 22, 2017

Challenging Chomsky and his Challengers: Brian Boyd Interviews Daniel Dor

If you want to think about language and evolution, about language and experience, about language and almost anything, or about almost anything in language, then start, or start all over again, with Daniel Dor’s The Instruction of Imagination.

Biology
Read
May 16, 2017

Holding Hands is More Important Than You Think

It turns out that holding hands with a friend or loved one isn’t just comforting, it actually makes the pain from the shock less painful

Biology
Webinar
Read
May 8, 2017

How to Tame a Fox (and Build a Dog)

In 1959, Dmitri Belyaev and Lyudmila Trut began what would come to be one of the longest-running experiments in biology. For the last 58 years they have been domesticating silver foxes and studying evolution in real time. But in 1952, seven years before this experiment began, Belyaev initiated a pilot study to determine whether or not his audacious ideas about domestication merited a full-fledged experiment. Here we tell that story.

Biology
Read
May 1, 2017

Why Do Men Play and Watch Sports?

Men have evolved mechanisms that motivate them to engage in physical competitions with other men and to watch other men competing.

Biology
Sports
Read
Apr 20, 2017

Darwin’s Unfinished Symphony: How Culture Made the Human Mind

The logic of cultural evolution is identical to that of biological evolution, even if the details differ.

Arts
Biology
Culture
Read
Mar 16, 2017

Immigration Bans Handicap Science Globally

As a biologist, I know the importance of genetic diversity in evolution by natural selection. It is precisely because of our diversity as a nation that America leads the world in innovation.

Biology
Politics
Read
Mar 15, 2017

Our Assumptions Influence the "Facts" About Sexual Behavior: The Curious Case of Jerry Coyne, Holly Dunsworth, and Anolis Lizards

The hypotheses that get tested do not emerge from a vacuum. All hypotheses emerge from assumptions, whether we recognize them or not.

Biology
Read
Feb 27, 2017

Fear of Action

The application of provisional knowledge should also be provisional. But the wisdom of any course of action needs to be weighed against its alternatives.

Biology
Culture
Read
Feb 21, 2017

Why Humanist Values Will Prevail: A Cultural Evolutionary View

Our geopolitical world seems increasingly unstable, and some see this instability as a threat to Humanist values. But do not fear.

Biology
Philosophy
Read
Feb 14, 2017

What Does the Onlooker See? Observing the Religious Action of Others

Evidence that a person’s religious action shapes how others perceive him or her can help us better understand why we see such impressive forms of religious devotion the world over.

Biology
Religion
Read
Feb 1, 2017

Xenophobia in the Light of Evolution: On the Origins of Anti-Immigration Sentiment

Besides racial prejudice, what else are there behind xenophobia? Among the evolved human instincts, we can find at least two for the anti-immigration sentiment: territoriality and the endowment effect.

Biology
Politics
Read
Jan 25, 2017

The Freemasons: Prosocial Groups of the Enlightenment Era. A Conversation with Margaret C. Jacob

How can cooperative forms of governance overcome disruptive self-serving behaviors? The history of Freemasonry may hold the answer.

Biology
History
Read
Jan 17, 2017

Orchestrating the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis Research Project: An Interview with Tobias Uller

Tobias Uller's projects revolve around the idea that plasticity – that is, environmental effects on phenotypes – can initiate and direct evolutionary diversification.

Biology
Read
Jan 5, 2017

The Riddle—and the Range—of Art: Brian Boyd on the Evolution of the Arts from the Pleistocene to the Present

The celebrated literary scholar Brian Boyd takes us on a tour of an amazing museum exhibit and other happenings at the interface of art and evolution.

Arts
Biology
Read
Dec 19, 2016

A Conversation with Kim Sterelny about the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis

Biology
Read
Dec 5, 2016

Does God Exist? Actually, Yes

If an organism is a being, then so is a superorganism and the whole earth is certainly superhuman.

Biology
Religion
Read
Nov 28, 2016

Saved by Evolution: How A Prison Inmate Turned Science Into A Meaning System

Gary Shepherd is much more than a self-taught scholar. He has actually been saved by science, in the same way that many people are saved by religion.

Biology
Education
Read
Nov 23, 2016

Giving Business the Darwin: An Interview with Mark Van Vugt

Business and management can benefit from an evolutionary perspective. The benefits for the economy and quality of life in the workplace could be huge.

Biology
Business
Read
Nov 21, 2016

Going For It: When Risk Is Worth It, And When It’s Not

Throughout evolutionary history, humans have had to deal with risk. Risk-sensitivity theory offers an explanation about when some people take excessive risks, and why.

Biology
Sports
Read
Nov 15, 2016

Cooperation Trumps Selfishness in the Foundress's Dilemma

Aggressive queens may be the ‘winners’ within their groups, but purely cooperative groups outlast those containing aggressive queens.

Biology
Read
Nov 7, 2016

The Conversation About Trump Should Consider the Evolution of Men’s Political Psychology

Evolutionary psychologists find that people prefer political leaders who are physically dominant when they believe their group faces an existential threat.

Biology
Gender
Politics
Read
Nov 1, 2016

When Evolutionists Acquire Superhuman Powers: A Conversation with Peter and Rosemary Grant

Two developments helped Peter and Rosemary Grant to peer into the genomes of finches. The first was the invention of tools to measure microsatellite DNA. With more than a dozen genetic loci they were able to characterize each finch with a unique DNA signature.

Biology
Read
Oct 25, 2016

Toward A New Social Darwinism

The biggest victim of the stigmatized view of Social Darwinism has been all of us, by preventing the application of evolutionary theory to public policy until very recently.

Biology
Politics
Read
Oct 12, 2016

Memo To Amazon's Jeff Bezos: The Most Productive Workers Are Team Players, Not Selfish Individualists

‘Ruthless’ and ‘demanding’ are two descriptors of Amazon's working environment, sink or swim. But Amazon is not alone. Can evolutionary biology shed some light on why competition in the workplace does not alway produce the best outcomes?

Biology
Business
Sports
Read
Sep 20, 2016

Evolutionary Medicine Comes of Age: An Interview with Randolph Nesse

The evolutionary outlook expands the perspective of health professionals from that of mechanics to that of engineers.

Biology
Health
Read
Sep 12, 2016

Why Did Sociology Declare Independence From Biology (And Can They Be Reunited)? An Interview with Russell Schutt

Biology
Read
Jul 19, 2016

Revolutionary biology: Evolutionary biology and ecology of cancer summer school supports a growing field

The opportunities for applying formal tools from evolutionary biology and ecology to cancer are vast, a fact that was recognized by pioneers in the field of evolution and cancer, many of whom came together in at the Wellcome Genome Campus to teach at the EBEC summer school. And if this summer school is any indication, this initially very quiet evolution revolution in cancer biology is starting to get rowdy.

Biology
Read
Jul 11, 2016

When the Strong Outbreed the Weak: An Interview with William Muir

Muir’s experiments reveal a tremendous naiveté in the idea that creating a good society is merely a matter of selecting the “best” individuals. A good society requires members working together to create what cannot be produced alone, or at least to refrain from exploiting each other.

Biology
Read
Jun 29, 2016

The Origin of The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: An Interview with Massimo Pigliucci

Are we witnessing a new synthesis for evolutionary theory?

Biology
Read
May 30, 2016

Evolutionary Biology’s Master Craftsman: An Interview with Richard Lenski

An interview with Richard Lenski, who has become world renowned for presiding over the longest running evolutionary experiment of all time, on the bacterium E. coli, which has now exceeded 65,000 generations.

Biology
Read
Mar 2, 2016

When Democracy Meets the Ghost of Evolution: Why Short Presidents Have Vanished

Size matters in politics: America hasn’t seen a president shorter than 5’7” since William McKinley. A main culprit, unbeknownst to many, comes from voters’ cognitive biases—the work of evolution. And the conundrum took a theatrical turn early this year when Marco Rubio, a Republican presidential hopeful, was spotted wearing a pair of new boots. #bootgate

Biology
Mind
Politics
Read
Feb 22, 2016

Was Hitler a Darwinian? No! No! No!

Robert J. Richards examines the widely held view that Darwinian thinking was somehow responsible for the atrocities of the Hitler regime during World War II.

Biology
History
Read
Feb 19, 2016

The five most common misunderstandings about evolution

Given its huge success in describing the natural world for the past 150 years, the theory of evolution is remarkably misunderstood.

Biology
Religion
Read
Dec 28, 2015

Let’s find a compromise between group selection and the selfish gene

The sooner we begin to cooperate within the scientific discipline, the sooner the theory of evolution will be stronger than ever.

Biology
Culture
Read
Sep 2, 2015

Social Darwinism: Myth and Reality

Biology
Read
Jul 5, 2015

Truth and Reconciliation for Social Darwinism

Biology
History
Politics
Read
Jun 23, 2015

The Social Construction of Evolutionary Biology

Biology
Read
May 18, 2015

What Business Cycles Can Teach Us About Evolution

Biology
Business
Culture
Economy
Read
May 10, 2015

Evolutionary Biology’s Eagle Scout: E.O. Wilson

Biology
Read
Apr 27, 2015

Mopping Up Final Opposition To Group Selection

Biology
Read
Apr 9, 2015

Beyond Genetic Evolution. A Conversation With Eva Jablonka

Biology
Read
Feb 9, 2015

Using Evolution To Address Global Challenges. An Unfinished Synthesis

Biology
Read
Feb 9, 2015

On Darwin’s Birthday, We Appreciate Just How Radical Darwin’s Idea Was

Biology
Read
Feb 1, 2015

Challenge To Kin Selectionists. Explain This!

Biology
Read
Jan 4, 2015

Can Hermaphrodites Teach Us What It Means To Be Male?

If there is a simple lesson about sex that the vinegar worm can teach us, it's that sex is never simple.

Biology
Read
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