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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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July 4, 2019

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Darwinizing the Federalist Papers: Preamble

The Federalist Papers argued for the creation of a more perfect UNION based on Enlightenment values that predated Darwin. Here we add 200+ years of scientifically refined thought.
Publius
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June 21, 2019

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A Blurred Future: How Our Eyes Are Changing To Meet Modern Visual Demands

Certain genetic makeups may predispose an individual to become nearsighted in a specific environment but it is not guaranteed. Myopia is not a destiny, it is an adaptation.
Steve Turpin
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June 13, 2019

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Is Shame a Bug or a Feature? An Applied Evolutionary Approach

Shame seems to have two separate components. One, the corrective feedback for us by which to monitor social behavior. The other, the more troublesome one, is putting oneself down as an incompetent person.
Nando Pelusi
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June 7, 2019

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What Bret Weinstein Gets Wrong About Group Selection

David Sloan Wilson
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May 22, 2019

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Public Health and Evolutionary Mismatch: The Tragedy of Unnecessary Suffering and Death

The current anti-vaccination movement is a result, in part, of the innate cognitive biases inherent in our nervous systems that evolved to deal with problems in a very different premodern world.
George Diggs
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May 16, 2019

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How to Eliminate Going to the Dentist

John Sorrentino
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May 10, 2019

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Group Selection in Every Way Except Using the Words: A Critique of "The Goodness Paradox" by Richard Wrangham

Wrangham's new book on the evolution of cooperation gets many things right. But he errs in thinking that he can develop his thesis without invoking group selection.
David Sloan Wilson
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April 25, 2019

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The Future of the Ancestral Health Movement

In the scarce environment of our ancestral past, having a preference for highly sweet and fatty foods had real survival and reproductive advantages.
Hamilton M. Stapell
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April 4, 2019

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The Potential Evolutionary Mismatches of Germicidal Ambient Lighting

Introducing germicidal blue light essentially creates a new environment that most bacteria appear to be mismatched to survive within. But we may be mismatched as well.
Marcel J. Harmon
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April 2, 2019

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Is Cancer a Disease of Civilization?

Our cancer suppression mechanisms evolved for a world that is not the world we live in today.
Athena Aktipis
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March 22, 2019

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The Darwinian Causes of Mental Illness

Why hasn’t natural selection eliminated -- or at least severely reduced the frequency of -- well-known risk alleles for major depression and other mental health conditions that compromise organismal fitness?
Eirik Garnas
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March 20, 2019

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(Mis-) Communication in Medicine: A Preventive Way for Doctors to Preserve Effective Communication in Technologically-Evolved Healthcare Environments

Cultural evolution created technologically-advanced contexts that make it difficult for doctors to communicate with patients in manners concordant with our evolved, ancestrally-familiar modes of communication.
Brent C. Pottenger
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Listen to the Podcast:

October 10, 2022

What Happened to Selfish Genes? with J. Arvid Agren

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January 14, 2021

Atlas Hugged and the Nature of Fiction, with Brian Boyd

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January 14, 2021

Atlas Hugged and Our Moment of Choice, with Kurt Johnson

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January 14, 2021

Atlas Hugged and Catalyzing Positive Change in the Real World, with David Korten

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November 2, 2020

Human Nature at Work with Andrew O'Keeffe

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November 2, 2020

The Study of Nature in Early America: A Conversation with Lee Dugatkin

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November 2, 2020

Managing the Human Animal, with Nigel Nicholson and Max Beilby

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September 2, 2020

Cultural Evolution with Alex Mesoudi

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September 2, 2020

[BONUS] Robert Kurzban On the Modular Mind

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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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