Authors
Kevin N Laland, Tobias Uller, Marcus W Feldman, Kim Sterelny, Gerd B Müller, Armin Moczek, Eva Jablonka, John Odling-Smee
Publication date
2015/8/22
Source
Proceedings of the royal society B: biological sciences
Volume
282
Issue
1813
Pages
20151019
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Scientific activities take place within the structured sets of ideas and assumptions that define a field and its practices. The conceptual framework of evolutionary biology emerged with the Modern Synthesis in the early twentieth century and has since expanded into a highly successful research program to explore the processes of diversification and adaptation. Nonetheless, the ability of that framework satisfactorily to accommodate the rapid advances in developmental biology, genomics and ecology has been questioned. We review some of these arguments, focusing on literatures (evo-devo, developmental plasticity, inclusive inheritance and niche construction) whose implications for evolution can be interpreted in two ways—one that preserves the internal structure of contemporary evolutionary theory and one that points towards an alternative conceptual framework. The latter, which we label the ‘extended …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KN Laland, T Uller, MW Feldman, K Sterelny, GB Müller… - Proceedings of the royal society B: biological sciences, 2015