Samuel M. Scheiner is a theoretical biologist with work in various areas of evolution, ecology, and general biology. He is coeditor, most recently, of The Theory of Ecology, also published by the University of Chicago Press. David P. Mindell is an evolutionary biologist and visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. He is the author of The Evolving World: Evolution in Everyday Life.
"A hallmark of a maturing discipline of science is its conscious
articulation of theory--the conceptual, often mathematical,
framework within which research questions are formulated and
solved. This splendid volume lays out key elements of the theory of
evolutionary biology, which arguably is the theory that ultimately
ties together all the biological sciences. The chapters, with their
copious pointers to the literature, guide the reader through a wide
range of historical, philosophical, methodological, and conceptual
issues, ranging from thorny topics such as homology, the species
concept, and discerning process from pattern, to deft syntheses of
many subthemes in evolutionary biology, including models of natural
selection, phenotypic plasticity, sex and recombination,
evolutionary biogeography, and hierarchical models of evolution
across multiple scales. All biologists would profit from a careful
reading of this well-crafted volume, and students in particular
would benefit from grappling with its clear exposition of many core
issues in evolutionary biology."--Robert D. Holt, University of
Florida, coeditor of "Metacommunities: Spatial Dynamics and
Ecological Communities"
"Theory is of increasing interest among biologists and importance
in the field of biology. This multiauthored book explores the
nature of theory in evolutionary biology as a whole as well as in
subdisciplines. No such book exists presently. A major theme is the
pressing need to better integrate philosophical inquiry into
evolutionary biology. There are several subthemes with that. One of
these is the inference of process from pattern--a vital activity in
science, but one wherein one can easily be led astray."--Norman A.
Johnson, University of Massachusetts Amherst, author of "Darwinian
Detectives: Revealing the Natural History of Genes and Genomes"
"This is an excellent volume of essays that pro-vides a
comprehensive glimpse of the current state of understanding of the
conceptual aspects of the theory of evolution."-- "The Quarterly
Review of Biology"
"The volume will help scientists and philosophers of science
appreciate both the architecture of the present theory and how that
architecture might evolve."--R. M. Denome "Choice"
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