W.D. Hamilton is considered by many the most important theoretical biologist of the 20th century. He has made major discoveries in evolutionary biology, genetics, and social behavior, and his essays continue to exert tremendous influence throughout the discipline. This second volume of his collected papers focuses on his groundbreaking work on sex and sexual selection. It contains the 18 papers he published between 1980 and 1991, many of them examining the role of parasites and disease in promoting genetic diversity. For each paper, Hamilton has written an accessible introduction describing why the work was done, how the paper came to be written, and its eventual fate. An invaluable collection for biologists, this book also provides general readers with deep insights into the sometimes surprising mechanics of evolutionary processes.
The second volume of the collected papers of W D Hamilton, each one introduced by an autobiographical essay. Hamilton is the most important theoretical biologist of the 20th century and his papers, not especially numerous, have had, and continue to exert, an enormous influence. Many were originally published in obscure and inaccessible places. Volume 1 (OUP, still in print) was devoted mainly to selection for social behaviour, the first half of Hamilton's life's work; Volume 2 is on the other half, on sex and sexual selection, and it includes the 18 papers published between 1980 and 1991. Each paper is accompanied by a specially written introduction describing why the work was done, how the paper came to be written, and its eventual fate. The introductions, written in an accessible, non-technical style, include history, opinion, and excerpts from Hamilton's life.
Author(s): W. D. Hamilton
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2001
Language: English
Tags: W.D. Hamilton, collected papers, evolutionary biology, evolution, sexual selection, sex, two-fold cost, parasitism, signaling, game theory, plumage, sociobiology, obituary, inclusive fitness, cooperation, Robert Axelrod, Richard Dawkins, Red Queen hypothesis, Black Queen hypothesis, infectious diseases, eugenics, mutation load
- Publisher’s Note
- Foreword
- Preface
1. "Ghosts of the Museum: Fluctuation of environment and coevolved antagonist polymorphism as factors in the maintenance of sex
2. "Messing the Plotter: Sex versus non-sex versus parasite"
3. "Unequal Cousins: Coefficients of relatedness in sociobiology"
4. "Best and Worst Hotels: The evolution of co-operation
5. "‘Sex Itself’: Pathogens as causes of genetic diversity in their host populations"
6. "Bright Birds Heritable true fitness and bright birds: a role for parasites?"
7. "Man of the Sand-dune Tel: Parent—offspring correlation in fitness underfluctuating selection"
8. "At the World’s Crossroads Instability and cycling of two competing hosts with two parasites"
9. "Bishop Wykeham on Evolution Discriminating nepotism: expectable, common, overlooked"
10. "Land of the Rising Sun Kinship, recognition, disease, and intelligence: constraints of social evolution"
11. "Being Rare and Successful Parasites and sex"
12. "The Hospitals are Coming: Sex and disease"
13. "Cited but Little Read: This week’s citation classic"
14. "Wind in the Baobabs: Selfishness re-examined: no man is an island"
15. "Time Like a Dripping Tap: Memesof Haldane and Jayakar in a theory of sex"
16. "The Three Queens: Sexual reproduction as an adaptation to resist parasites (a review)"
17. "Uccello/Othello: Mate choice near or far"
18. "Health and Horsemen: The seething genetics of health and the evolution of sex"
APPENDICES
- "Our Paper Then and Now: Appendix to Chapter six"
- "Further Evidence: Appendix to Chapter sixteen"
- Credits
- Name Index
- Subject Index