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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:

February 1, 2015

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Meant To Be. Seeing Purpose Behind Life Events

Bethany Heywood
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February 1, 2015

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Challenge To Kin Selectionists. Explain This!

David Sloan Wilson
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February 1, 2015

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How To Get Credible Knowledge In A Myth-Filled World

Joe Brewer
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January 25, 2015

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Are We Hard-Wired To Believe In Gendered Differences?

Janet D. Stemwedel
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January 25, 2015

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Hobbled by Hobbes. How Chimpanzees Became Nasty, Brutish And Short

Christopher Ryan
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January 25, 2015

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An End To The Battles Of The Sexes?

Patricia Adair Gowaty
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January 25, 2015

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No Room For A Gentle Ape

Frans de Waal
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January 19, 2015

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We Like To Think People Vote Against Their Self-Interest. Research Shows It’s Not True.

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January 19, 2015

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Genocidal Altruists. How Do We Make Sense Of Human Nature?

Patrick F. Clarkin
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January 19, 2015

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Dealing With Psychopaths In The Internet Age

Joe Brewer
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January 18, 2015

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Evolution Makes Forgiving Hard

Forgiveness is emotionally difficult for one very good evolutionary reason.
Anthony Lopez
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January 12, 2015

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How To Create A Cooperative Darwinian Economy In 23 Steps

Economics is in our nature. But it is not, as most economists promote, the narrowly self-interested kind.
Jag Bhalla
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Listen to the Podcast:

April 26, 2020

Finding Purpose in Evolution Education: A Conversation with Susan Hanisch and Dustin Eirdosh

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March 28, 2020

Evolutionary Mismatch in the Workplace with Mark van Vugt and Max Beilby

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March 6, 2020

PsychTable.org: A Digital Classification Table of Human Evolved Psychological Adaptations. A Conversation with Niruban Balachandran and Daniel Glass

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February 26, 2020

Evolution Doesn't Make Everything Nice: A Conversation About Primate Societies with Joan Silk

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January 29, 2020

Dugnad as Part of Norway's Culture of Cooperation: A Conversation with Carsta Simon and Hilde Mobekk

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October 21, 2019

Peter Gray on Education as a Biological Phenomenon, Learning from Hunter-Gatherers, and Letting Children Lead

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October 21, 2019

Lynette Shaw on Social Constructionism and Finding Academic Common Ground

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October 21, 2019

Elliott Sober on the Origins of Multilevel Selection

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October 20, 2019

Michele Gelfand on Tight and Loose Cultures

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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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