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Featured Article:

The Case for Adding Darwin to Behavioral Economics

As behavioral economics continues to evolve, it would profit from adopting an even broader interdisciplinary perspective.

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Read the latest articles:

January 31, 2013

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Young Bonobos Offer Comforting Hugs and Sex

Young bonobos console their fellow apes with hugs and sex, say scientists.
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January 31, 2013

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Babies Start ‘Mind Reading’ Earlier Than Thought

Even babies as young as a year-and-a-half can guess what other people are thinking, new research suggests.
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January 30, 2013

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Rhabdopleurids: 500 Million Years and Counting

Evolution doesn’t always end in success for every organism. In fact, for some, it seems to result in exactly what a species most fears: extinction.
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January 30, 2013

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Bigger Isn’t Necessarily Smarter: An Enormous Dino With a Tiny Brain

The biggest creatures to ever walk the Earth had brains smaller than ours.
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January 30, 2013

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Cultural Evolution Changes Bird Song

Thanks to cultural evolution, male Savannah sparrows are changing their tune, partly to attract “the ladies.”
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January 30, 2013

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Researchers Simulate 25,000 Generations of Evolution, Boost Artificial Intelligence

Engineers and robotics researchers have solved a biological mystery and boosted artificial intelligence.
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January 30, 2013

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How Childhood Let Modern Humans Conquer The Planet

Is curiosity what saved the humans?
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January 29, 2013

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Come Into My Parlour

A strange example of co-operative behaviour in arachnids.
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January 28, 2013

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Dung beetles guided by Milky Way

Beatles that navigate by using the stars.
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January 28, 2013

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Snagging a Date 125 Million Years Ago: the Avian Way

Sexual dimorphism, an essential piece of many species’ survival, is the difference in morphological appearance between males and females of the same species. Think Lion King: Simba’s father sported a big bushy orange mane, whereas his mother, also a lion, had no showy neck fur to speak of.
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January 28, 2013

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How To Celebrate Darwin Day

Happy Darwin Day and Evolution Weekend.
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January 26, 2013

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Patients and Evolutionary History

What evolutionary insights are there for clinical medicine?
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Listen to the Podcast:

August 16, 2020

Positive Deviance as the Third Way: A Conversation with David K. Hurst

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August 16, 2020

A Tale of Two Evolutionary Processes, with Rita Colwell

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August 10, 2020

The Third Way of Entrepreneurship with Victor Hwang

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August 9, 2020

Peter J. Richerson: Morality from an Evolutionary Perspective

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August 4, 2020

[BONUS EPISODE] Geoffrey Hodgson on Evolutionary Thinking and Its Policy Implications for Modern Capitalism

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August 2, 2020

Morality from an Evolutionary Perspective with Simon Blackburn

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July 30, 2020

The Nordic Third Way with Nina Witoszek and Atle Midttun

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July 13, 2020

Ecosystems are Probably Not What You Think: A Conversation with Tom Whitham

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July 6, 2020

Development and the Third Way with Scott Peters

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There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

- Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species (1859)
Special Collection

Evolutionary Science in Joyce’s Ulysses

James Joyce developed a writing technique that mirrored advances in the evolutionary science of his day and these insights are present in his novel. To explore this link, we can begin by looking at the most direct references to evolution science. Amidst the range of references to cultural figures in Ulysses, Charles Darwin makes a number of appearances, most notably in the fourteenth chapter, Oxen of the Sun.

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