Buch, Englisch, 616 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 1092 g
Reihe: Evolutionary Biology – New Perspectives on Its Development
From "Nature's War" to Darwin's "Struggle for Life"
Buch, Englisch, 616 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 1092 g
Reihe: Evolutionary Biology – New Perspectives on Its Development
ISBN: 978-3-031-31022-5
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Written by a historian, this book really gives new, multidisciplinary perspectives on the "Darwinian Revolution."
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Naturwissenschaften Biowissenschaften Biowissenschaften Evolutionsbiologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Naturphilosophie, Philosophie und Evolution
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Geschichtliche Themen Wissenschafts- und Universitätsgeschichte
- Naturwissenschaften Biowissenschaften Biowissenschaften Ökologie
- Naturwissenschaften Biowissenschaften Entwicklungsbiologie
Weitere Infos & Material
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Abundance and Variety
2.1 Natural theology
2.2 Teleology2.3 Evil
2.4 The Economy of Nature
2.5 Abundance
2.6 Variety2.7 Contrivances
2.8 Evil Justified
2.9 The Usefulness of Destruction
2.10 Checks to Overmultiplication2.11 Linnaeus: Order Through Destruction
2.12 Buffon: Balances and Counterbalances in a Newtonian Universe
2.13 A Pious Pharmacien’s Hymn to Nature
2.14 Competition Among “Sperm Worms”
2.15 Discord and Compensation
2.16 Consolation in the Slaughterhouse
2.17 Concluding Remarks
NotesReferences
3. Evil in Nature
3.1 “You Shout ‘All Is well’ in a Lamenting Voice”3.2 “A Mixture of Good and Evil”
3.3 “Truly Philosophical and Christian Consolations”
3.4 “Tout est bien pour le tout”
3.5 Compensation, and Some of its Uses
3.6 Compensation and Perversion
3.7 Pessimism as an Antidote to Misanthropy, or, Nature as a Stepmother3.8 “Blind Will”
Notes
References
4. Carnivores, Extinctions, and the Beast
4.1 Predators
4.2 The Death of Species
4.3 Death and Happiness4.4 Carnivores and Evil
4.5 Geology and Evil
4.6 Sin Securalised, or the “Beast Within”…
4.7 … and the “Beast Without”4.8 Conclusion
Notes
References
5. Struggle for Life vs Evolution
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Transformation and Order
5.3 Competing for Space
5.4 “Equilibrium in the Number of Species, how Preserved”
5.5 “Where Is the Balance?”
5.6 Naval Timber and Colonial Expansion
5.7 The “Conservative Aspect of the Struggle for Existence”
5.8 Louis Agassiz’s Version of Design
5.9 Hardship and Luxuriance
5.10 Struggle in a Southern Hemisphere Perspective
5.11 “Creation by Law” and “Type Forms” 5.12 ConclusionNotes
References
6. The Struggle for Existence, or, What’s in a Metaphor?
6.1. A Multi-Metaphor, or “Struggle Within Struggle”
6.2. A Look at Darwin’s Files6.3 Why Metaphors?
6.4 Constructing a Metaphor
6.5 Death of Species and Death of Tribes
6.6 The “War of Organic Beings”6.7 Darwin and Malthus
6.8 Energy and Improvement
6.9 The Last Natural Theologian? Or, Darwin on Good and Evil
6.10 Conclusion
Notes
References
7. New Places in the Economy of Nature
7.1 Darwin the Humboldtian7.2 Measuring and Contemplating
7.3 Botanical Arithmetic
7.4 Divergence
7.5 Advantages of Diversity
7.6 Spontaneous Variability
7.7 “An Inextricable Net-Work of Relations”
7.8 The Relativity of Adaptation
7.9 “Place in the Economy of Nature”
7.10 Can the Quantity of Life Increase Indefinitely?
7.11 Concluding Remarks
NotesReferences
8. Survival of the Fittest and Cosmical Evolution
8.1 Change Through Struggle and Exertion8.2 “Nothing in Nature that Is Not Useful”
8.3 A Philosopher for all Seasons
8.4 Human Nature
8.5 Progress and Adaptation
8.6 The “Stern Discipline of Nature” 8.7 The Physical Principles of Evolution8.8 A Digression: Struggle for Life Among Atoms
8.9 Direct and Indirect Equilibration
8.10 Concluding Remarks
NotesReferences
9. Struggles for Existence
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Is There a Struggle for Existence as Darwin Describes It? 9.3 Yes, There Is a Struggle, but…9.4 Mechanism and Teleology
9.5 “Struggle” Taken Literally
9.6 Warlike Images
9.7 Different Moral Messages
9.8 Mutual Aid vs Struggle
9.9 The “Struggle Against Struggle” and the “Association for the Struggle”9.10 Strife, Endeavour, and Effort
9.11 Ascent Through Struggle
9.12. Competition, Progress, and Compensation
9.13 “Endeavour after Well-being”9.14 Translating, Disentangling, Subdividing, Qualifying, and Going Deeper
9.15 Struggle Without and Struggle Within
9.16 Selections
9.17 From Bloody Struggle to the Struggle of Ideas
9.18 Concluding RemarksNotes
References
10. Another Now, or a Vindication of a “Historical History of Science” 10.1. Struggle Discharged10.2 Revolution or Eclipse?
10.3 Has Moralizing About Nature Ceased?
Notes
References



