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Book
Author Cronin, Helena.

Title The ant and the peacock : altruism and sexual selection from Darwin to today / Helena Cronin
Published Cambridge ; New York : Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge, 1991

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'BOOL  576.82 Cro/Aat  AVAILABLE
Description xiv, 490 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Contents Machine derived contents note: Foreword -- Preface -- Part I. Darwinism, Its Rivals and Its Renegades: 1. Walking archives -- 2. A world without Darwin -- 3. Darwinism old and new -- Part II. The Peacock: 4. The sting in the peacock's tail -- 5. Nothing but natural selection? -- 6. Can females shape males? -- 7. Do sensible females prefer sexy males? -- 8. 'Until careful experiments are made ' -- 9. Ghosts of Darwinism surpassed -- Part III. The Ant: 10. Altruism now -- 11. Altruism then -- 12. The social insects: kind kin -- 13. Make dove, not war: conventional forces -- 14. Human altruism: a natural kind? -- 15. Breeding between the lines -- Epilogue -- Notes on the letters of Darwin and Wallace -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary Cronin named her book after two organisms that gave Charles Darwin some difficult moments as he struggled with his theory of natural selection. The vast majority of ants are sterile workers, never reproducing, each always ready to engage in potential sacrifice of self for colony. How can natural selection, a theory based on self-preservation, explain the curious altruism of the ant? The peacock carries with it an immense and gaudy tail, far more than would seem a necessity for survival. If anything, this ornamentation reduces survival potential, another problem for such a utilitarian theory as natural selection. Darwin developed evolutionary insights into both altruism and sexual ornamentation, and Cronin has skillfully traced Darwin's explanations from 1859 to the present. The book is divided into three parts: a historical introduction to Darwinism, a discussion of sexual selection, and a discussion of altruism and kin selection. The text is particularly strong in its use of historical context, including a liberal sprinkling of quotations. Complex ideas are well explained in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Richard Dawkins's style, and his influence on Cronin is felt throughout the book. Anyone seriously interested in Darwinism, sexual selection, and altruism should read this book. Strongly recommended. General; undergraduate; graduate. J. C. Kricher; Wheaton College (MA)--Choice Review
The "ant" and the "peacock" stand for two puzzles in Darwinism--altruism and sexual selection. How can natural selection favor those, such as the worker ant, that renounce tooth and claw in favor of the public-spirited ways of the commune? And how can "peacocks"--flamboyant, ornamental and apparently useless--be tolerated by the grimly economical Darwinian reaper? Helena Cronin has a deep understanding of today's answers to these riddles and their roots in the nineteenth century; the analysis is new and exciting and the explanations lucid and compelling. Annotation Published: April 2014
Analysis Altruistic behavior in animals
Animals Evolution
Courtship in animals
Natural selection
Sexual selection in animals
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [439]-474) and index
Subject Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882.
Wallace, Alfred Russel, 1823-1913.
Altruistic behavior in animals.
Courtship in animals.
Natural selection.
Sexual selection in animals.
Adaptation (Biology)
Altruism in animals
Altruistic behavior in animals.
Courtship in animals.
Evolution (Biology)
Natural selection.
Sexual selection in animals.
Altruism [MESH]
Altruism.
Evolution [MESH]
Evolution
Selection (Genetics)
Selection (Genetics) [MESH]
Sex Preselection [MESH]
Sex Preselection.
Altruism.
Selection, Genetic.
Sexual Behavior, Animal.
LC no. 91007887
ISBN 052132937X (hardback)
0521457653 (paperback)