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Darwin

Darwin

Darwin

William Brown, University of Cambridge
Andrew C. Fabian, University of Cambridge
July 2010
Available
Paperback
9780521131957
£19.99
GBP
Paperback

    Charles Darwin can easily be considered one of the most influential scholars of his time. His thoughts, ideas, research and writings have had a far reaching impact and influence on modern thought in the arts, on society, and in science. With contributions from leading scholars, this collection of essays explores how Darwin's work grew out of the ideas of his time, and how its influence spread to contemporary thinking about creationism, the limits of human evolution and the diversification of living species and their conservation. A full account of the legacy of Darwin in contemporary scholarship and thought. With contributions from Janet Browne, Jim Secord, Rebecca Stott, Paul Seabright, Steve Jones, Sean Carroll, Craig Moritz and John Dupré. This book derives from a highly successful series of public lectures, revised and illustrated for publication under the editorship of Professor William Brown and Professor Andrew Fabian of the University of Cambridge.

    • A multi-disciplinary overview of the influence of the legacy of Charles Darwin, with contributions from the history of science, economics, philosophy and English literature as well as the biological sciences, appealing to a number of interests
    • Contributors are internationally-famed leading authorities from their fields, providing the most current research findings
    • The authors write for the general reader from the standpoint of the leading researcher, making it thoroughly accessible to the non-specialist reader

    Awards

    A Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2011

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    Product details

    July 2010
    Paperback
    9780521131957
    226 pages
    248 × 174 × 10 mm
    0.45kg
    38 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Darwin's intellectual development: biography, history, and commemoration Janet Browne
    • 2. Global Darwin James A. Secord
    • 3. Darwin in the literary world Rebecca Stott
    • 4. Darwin and human society Paul Seabright
    • 5. The evolution of utopia Steve Jones
    • 6. The making of the fittest: the DNA record of evolution Sean B. Carroll
    • 7. Evolutionary biogeography and conservation on a rapidly changing planet: building on Darwin's vision Craig Moritz and Ana Carolina Carnaval
    • 8. Postgenomic Darwinism John Dupré.
      Contributors
    • Janet Browne, James A. Secord, Rebecca Stott, Paul Seabright, Steve Jones, Sean B. Carroll, Craig Moritz, Ana Carolina Carnaval, John Dupré

    • Editors
    • William Brown , University of Cambridge

      William Brown is the Master of Darwin College and Professor of Industrial Relations in the Economics Faculty at Cambridge University. He was previously Director of the ESRC's Industrial Relations Research Unit at the University of Warwick. His research has been concerned with collective bargaining, pay determination, incomes policy, payment systems, arbitration, minimum wages, and the impact of legislative change. His publications include Piecework Bargaining (1973), The Changing Contours of British Industrial Relations (1981), The Individualisation of Employment Contracts in Britain (1998) and The Evolution of the Modern Workplace (2009). He was a foundation member of the Low Pay Commission, which fixes the UK's National Minimum Wage and is now a member of the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS) Panel of Arbitrators, the Union Modernisation Fund Advisory Board. In 2002 he was awarded a CBE for services to employment relations.

    • Andrew C. Fabian , University of Cambridge

      Andrew Fabian is the Vice-Master of Darwin College and Royal Society Professor of Astronomy at the Institute of Astronomy in the University of Cambridge. His research interests centre on black holes and clusters of galaxies. He has organised several previous Darwin Lecture Series (Origins in 1986, Evolution in 1995 and Conflict, with Martin Jones, in 2005). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society and was awarded an OBE in 2006.