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Triumph of Sociobiology [Kietas viršelis]

3.81/5 (92 ratings by Goodreads)
(Regents' Professor of Biology, Arizona State University)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 244x164x24 mm, weight: 558 g, numerous halftones and line figures
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2001
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0195143833
  • ISBN-13: 9780195143836
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 244x164x24 mm, weight: 558 g, numerous halftones and line figures
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2001
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0195143833
  • ISBN-13: 9780195143836
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Alcock (biology, Arizona State U.), a specialist in the study of animal behavior for over 30 years, examines the field of sociobiology, defined in 1975 by E. O. Wilson as a systematic study of the biological basis of social behavior in all species. Alcock explains what sociobiology is, what sociobiologists study, and what they have discovered in their studies. He discusses misconceptions about this field, including controversies over the use of sociobiology to explain human behaviors such as sexual jealousy, genocide, and rape. He presents practical applications of sociobiology, and the contributions sociobiologists have made in adding to an understanding of human behavior. The book is technical but accessible to the general reader interested in issues of human behavior. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

In The Triumph of Sociobiology, John Alcock reviews the controversy that has surrounded evolutionary studies of human social behavior following the 1975 publication of E.O. Wilson's classic, Sociobiology, The New Synthesis. Denounced vehemently as an "ideology" that has justified social evils and inequalities, sociobiology has survived the assault. Twenty-five years after the field was named by Wilson, the approach he championed has successfully demonstrated its value in the study of animal behavior, including the behavior of our own species. Yet, misconceptions remain--to our disadvantage.
In this straight-forward, objective approach to the sociobiology debate, noted animal behaviorist John Alcock illuminates how sociobiologists study behavior in all species. He confronts the chief scientific and ideological objections head on, with a compelling analysis of case histories that involve such topics as sexual jealousy, beauty, gender difference, parent-offspring relations, and rape. In so doing, he shows that sociobiology provides the most satisfactory scientific analysis of social behavior available today.
Alcock challenges the notion that sociobiology depends on genetic determinism while showing the shortcoming of competing approaches that rely on cultural or environmental determinism. He also presents the practical applications of sociobiology and the progress sociobiological research has made in the search for a more complete understanding of human activities. His reminder that "natural" behavior is not "moral" behavior should quiet opponents fearing misapplication of evolutionary theory to our species. The key misconceptions about this evolutionary field are dissected one by one as the author shows why sociobiologists have had so much success in explaining the puzzling and fascinating social behavior of nonhuman animals and humans alike.

Recenzijos

It doesn"t matter whether you call it sociobiology, behavioral ecology, evolutionary psychology or even selfish genery, John Alcock shows that triumph is exactly the right word. It is a field of research in its mature growing season, with new young scientists flocking to join in. Alcock captures the active spirit of this once-controversial subject perfectly. * Richard Dawkins * I can"t wait to show this to my sociologist colleagues ... Alcock's text is a triumph in itself. * ISBE Newsletter * The Triumph of Sociobiology is a rather different book, which can be read profitably by interested laypersons, students, and experts alike, * Human Nature * The Triumph of Sociobiology is a clear, evocative, and accurate account of the history and content on the subject and the general reader alike * Edward O. Wilson *

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3(4)
What Is Sociobiology?
7(16)
Defining the Discipline
7(3)
Refining the Definition
10(6)
Sociobiology before Wilson
16(3)
So What's All the Fuss About?
19(4)
What Sociobiologists Study
23(18)
What Is the Purpose of Behavior?
23(2)
On Anthropomorphism
25(3)
Not All Evolutionary Biologists Are the Same
28(1)
Evolved Traits Need Not Help Preserve Species
28(4)
How to Identify Darwinian Puzzles Worth Solving
32(9)
Sociobiology and Genes
41(16)
The Myth of the Genetic Determinist
41(5)
The Gene-Behavior Connection
46(6)
``No Genes Have Been Found `for' Social Behaviors''
52(5)
Sociobiology and Science
57(24)
What Scientists Do
57(2)
Opposing the Adaptationist Program
59(5)
The Art of Name-Calling
64(4)
How to Test Sociobiological Hypotheses
68(5)
Critics' Corner: The ``Flawed Comparison'' Argument
73(8)
Science and Reality
81(12)
Cultural Relativism and Airplanes
81(4)
Science and Politics
85(8)
What Have Sociobiologists Discovered?
93(36)
The Value of Counting Genes
93(6)
Gene Counting and Biased Altruism
99(4)
Gene Counting and Sexual Behavior
103(6)
Genetic Conflicts between the Sexes
109(9)
Parents and Offspring
118(4)
The Sociobiology of the Seychelles Warbler
122(7)
The Problem with Cultural Determinism
129(20)
A Distaste for Biology
129(5)
The Shortcomings of Blank Slate Theory
134(2)
Blank Slates and Beauty
136(7)
Blank Slates and Genocide
143(6)
Sociobiology and Human Culture
149(40)
Natural Selection and the Evolution of Behavioral Flexibility
149(5)
Targeted Flexibility of Behavior in an Insect
154(7)
The Evolution of Learning
161(2)
Adaptive Design in the Song Learning of Songbirds
163(3)
The Adaptive Design of Human Learning Mechanisms
166(5)
Selection and Remembering Faces
171(3)
Learning, Cultural Change, and Genetic Success
174(6)
Sociobiology and Apparently Maladaptive Behavior
180(2)
The Demographic Transition
182(7)
The Practical Applications of Sociobiology
189(28)
A Danger to Society?
189(4)
``Natural'' Does Not Mean ``Moral''
193(2)
Know Thyself?
195(5)
Cooperation and Conflict in Human Families and Stepfamilies
200(3)
The Practical Applications of Sociobiology
203(1)
Men and Women
204(13)
The Triumph of Sociobiology
217(8)
Outlasting the Critics
217(3)
The Cost of the Continuing Controversy
220(5)
Appendix 225(6)
Citations 231(14)
Selected References 245(2)
Illustration Credits 247(2)
Index 249
John Alcock is Professor of Biology at Arizona State University. A researcher in animal behavior, he is the author of the leading book in the field, Animal Behavor: An Evolutionary Approach, as well as several other books on behavior. He lives in Tempe, Arizona.