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E-grāmata: Narrow Roads of Gene Land - The Collected Papers of W. D. Hamilton: Volume 3 - Last Words

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(Royal Society Research Professor, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford), Edited by (Lecturer at Somerville College, and member of the Zoology Department at the University of Oxford)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Nov-2005
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191568633
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 10-Nov-2005
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191568633
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W. D. Hamilton (1936-2000) has been described by Richard Dawkins as 'a good candidate for the title of most distinguished Darwinian since Darwin'. His work on evolutionary biology continues to influence scientists working across a wide variety of disciplines, including evolution, population genetics, animal behaviour, genetics, anthropology, and ecology. This third and final volume of Narrow Roads of Gene Land contains Hamilton's key papers published between 1990 and 2000, a period in which he covered a great diversity of topics, often in collaboration with other scientists. Many of the papers in this volume continue his work on sex, and particularly its relation to parasitic disease, but other topics covered include the Gaia theory, the colours of autumn leaves, and the still-controversial hypothesis that the AIDS pandemic accidentally originated in a polio vaccination campaign in Africa.

Each of the co-authored papers in this volume is preceded by an introduction written by one of Hamilton's co-authors, following the model of the previous two volumes in this series, which brings the reader closer to Hamilton's extraordinary personality and intellect, providing the intellectual and physical contexts within which each piece of research was developed. Also included are a chapter by Jeremy Leighton John on the Hamilton archive - 'Bill's last great work' - complete with irresistible pictures, and Alan Grafen's biographical memoir, which presents an overview of Bill's life and work. Together, this unique collection of papers with their biographical introductions provides a profound portrait of one of the twentieth century's most innovative scientists.

Recenzijas

With Narrow Roads Volume 3, the editor and co-authors have ably complemented an orphaned autobiographic series, while simultaneously including relevant personal recollections. After these 'Last Words' of the closely involved, we now wait for the first independent Hamilton biography. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, Vol.21 No.12.

Editorial Preface ix
List of Contributors
xiii
Oku No Hosomichi: Roads to Hamilton's `Wrightian' Digital parasites in Geneland
1(56)
Brian Sumida
Genetic algorithms and evolution
10(27)
Sumida
Houston
McNamara
Hamilton
Both Wrightian and `parasite' peak shifts enhance genetic algorithm performance in the travelling salesman problem
37(20)
Sumida
Hamilton
Manipulating microbe proceedings: Cytoplasmic bacteria that cause parthenogenesis
57(16)
Richard Stouthamer
Antibiotics cause parthenogenetic Trichogramma (Hymenoptera/Trichogrammatidae) to revert to sex
64(9)
Stouthamer
Luck
Hamilton
My intended burial and why
73(16)
Hamilton
Sex, sexes and selfish elements
89(24)
Laurence D. Hurst
Cytoplasmic fusion and the nature of sexes
98(11)
Hurst
Hamilton
Covert sex
109(4)
Hurst
Hamilton
Ladle
Recurrent viruses and theories of sex
113(4)
Hamilton
Further Homage to Santa Rosalia: Discovery at last of the elusive females of a species of Myrmecolacidae (Strepsiptera: Insecta)
117(18)
Jeyaraney Kathirithamby
More covert sex: the elusive females of Myrmecolacidae
128(5)
Kathirithamby
Hamilton
Exotic pests and parasites
133(2)
Kathirithamby
Hamilton
Haploid dynamic polymorphism in a host with matching parasites: Effects of mutation/subdivision, linkage, and patterns of selection
135(26)
Hamilton
Inbreeding in Egypt and in this book: A childish perspective
161(22)
Hamilton
On first looking into a British Treasure
183(6)
Hamilton
How to catch the Red Queen?
189(16)
Dieter Ebert
Sex against virulence: the coevolution of parasitic diseases
195(10)
Ebert
Hamilton
Between Shoreham and Downe: Seeking the key to natural beauty
205(16)
Hamilton
Born slave to the Queen of Life
221(8)
Hamilton
Foreword to S. Turillazzi & M. J. West Eberhard (eds): Natural History and Evolution of Paper Wasps
229(2)
Hamilton
Bill Hamilton's involvement with the OPV theory: `Medical science's most hated hypothesis'
231(26)
Edward Hooper
1959 Manchester case of syndrome resembling AIDS
244(6)
Hooper
Hamilton
Foreword to E. Hooper, The River
250(7)
Hamilton
Hamilton and Gaia
257(50)
Tim Lenton
Ecology in the large: Gaia and Genghis Khan
265(6)
Hamilton
Spora and Gaia: how microbes fly with their clouds
271(19)
Hamilton
Lenton
Is DMSP synthesis in Chlorophycean macro-algae linked to aerial dispersal?
290(17)
Welsh
Viaroli
Hamilton
Lenton
Life, evolution and development in the Amazonian floodplain
307(42)
Peter Henderson
Evolution and diversity in Amazonian floodplain communities
315(34)
Henderson
Hamilton
Crampton
A view from Mars
349(20)
Sam P. Brown
Autumn tree colours as a handicap signal
357(12)
Hamilton
Brown
Tomato attractors on the wall of an abandoned church
369(30)
Akira Sasaki
Clone mixtures and a pacemaker: new facets of Red-Queen theory and ecology
376(23)
Sasaki
Hamilton
Ubeda
Because topics often fade: Letters, essays, notes, digital manuscripts and other unpublished works
399(24)
Jeremy Leighton John
William Donald Hamilton
423(36)
Alan Grafen
Name Index 459(4)
Subject Index 463


W. D. Hamilton (1936-2000) was a Royal Society Research Professor in the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford. He is known throughout the world for his work on social evolution and sexual selection. He was a fellow of the Royal Society and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Dr Mark Ridley is a Lecturer in the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford.