The Darwinian Revolution as a knowledge
... these individual contributions in their historical and social context. The goal of this embedding is not to deny the role of individuals but to assess how much individuals were rooted in the social context of their time and how this context nourished and shaped their contributions. Previous studies ...
... these individual contributions in their historical and social context. The goal of this embedding is not to deny the role of individuals but to assess how much individuals were rooted in the social context of their time and how this context nourished and shaped their contributions. Previous studies ...
Plxdc2/TEM7R of the mouse
... In both hind and fore limb buds, Plxdc2-geo was expressed in broad domains of distal mesenchyme, extending more proximally on the posterior side (Fig. 2a and d) with a reduced level at the extreme distal tip (Fig. 2f and h). Expression is also seen in the apical ectodermal ridge, a major signalling ...
... In both hind and fore limb buds, Plxdc2-geo was expressed in broad domains of distal mesenchyme, extending more proximally on the posterior side (Fig. 2a and d) with a reduced level at the extreme distal tip (Fig. 2f and h). Expression is also seen in the apical ectodermal ridge, a major signalling ...
Bully for Brontosaurus - A Website About Stephen Jay Gould`s
... A few years earlier, in 1809, Canning and Castlereagh had fought a duel. Canning was wounded in the buttock (and not the “thigh,” as is commonly reported), while Castlereagh was unscathed. Had Castlereagh been killed in this duel, Gould argues, not only might British-US relations have taken a differ ...
... A few years earlier, in 1809, Canning and Castlereagh had fought a duel. Canning was wounded in the buttock (and not the “thigh,” as is commonly reported), while Castlereagh was unscathed. Had Castlereagh been killed in this duel, Gould argues, not only might British-US relations have taken a differ ...
Haeckel: legacy of fraud to popularise evolution
... completed it. Almost all the conclusions at which I have arrived I find confirmed by this naturalist, whose knowledge on many points is much fuller than mine.’ The dogmatic demagogue of the continental Europe ...
... completed it. Almost all the conclusions at which I have arrived I find confirmed by this naturalist, whose knowledge on many points is much fuller than mine.’ The dogmatic demagogue of the continental Europe ...
Development of emotional facial recognition in late
... facial expressions aids in an individual’s ability to understand and appropriately adapt to the social environment and thus is a crucial part of social interactions. Gaining a greater understanding of the normal developmental trajectory of emotional facial recognition may help in the early identific ...
... facial expressions aids in an individual’s ability to understand and appropriately adapt to the social environment and thus is a crucial part of social interactions. Gaining a greater understanding of the normal developmental trajectory of emotional facial recognition may help in the early identific ...
Darwin`s Finches and Natural Selection in the Galapagos
... in fact, anyone who is trying to test anything out should be using it. In this experiment, we used the Scientific Method to make an educated guess on what beak would me the most or least effective for picking up seeds. We then got to test it out and see the results for ourselves. After, we got to ma ...
... in fact, anyone who is trying to test anything out should be using it. In this experiment, we used the Scientific Method to make an educated guess on what beak would me the most or least effective for picking up seeds. We then got to test it out and see the results for ourselves. After, we got to ma ...
Evolutionism : present approaches
... These disputes lie beyond the scope of this philosophical-methodological paper. In addition, these “cultural wars” are only partially philosophical in their origins and have led to a huge number of publications, many of them frequently laden with ideological claims. ...
... These disputes lie beyond the scope of this philosophical-methodological paper. In addition, these “cultural wars” are only partially philosophical in their origins and have led to a huge number of publications, many of them frequently laden with ideological claims. ...
A Split-LexA-based Concatenate Expression System for
... expression of the yeast transcription factor Gal4, which binds to the "Upstream Activating Sequence" (UAS) through its DNA binding domain (DBD) activating transcription of a downstream transgene through its activation domain (AD). In the LexA::VP16/LexAop system, a promoter/enhancer (P) drives the e ...
... expression of the yeast transcription factor Gal4, which binds to the "Upstream Activating Sequence" (UAS) through its DNA binding domain (DBD) activating transcription of a downstream transgene through its activation domain (AD). In the LexA::VP16/LexAop system, a promoter/enhancer (P) drives the e ...
Onychophoran head segmentation
... 1922; Eriksson et al., 2005), lack of engrailed and wingless expression in neuroectoderm (Eriksson et al., 2009), nerve tracts initially not part of or connected to ventral nerve cord (Eriksson et al., 2003; Mayer and Whitington, 2009). Hence, based on morphological and molecular characters the onyc ...
... 1922; Eriksson et al., 2005), lack of engrailed and wingless expression in neuroectoderm (Eriksson et al., 2009), nerve tracts initially not part of or connected to ventral nerve cord (Eriksson et al., 2003; Mayer and Whitington, 2009). Hence, based on morphological and molecular characters the onyc ...
Darwin - Fleming College
... Famously noted fourteen different types of finch, notably with different beaks In each instance particular beak seemed to best suite the capture of the bird’s prevalent food source, whether it be seeds, insects or fish Surmised that the birds had descended from a single parent species, rather than e ...
... Famously noted fourteen different types of finch, notably with different beaks In each instance particular beak seemed to best suite the capture of the bird’s prevalent food source, whether it be seeds, insects or fish Surmised that the birds had descended from a single parent species, rather than e ...
Nietzsche`s Aesthetic Critique of Darwin Charles H. Pence
... to Darwin’s theory. One of Nietzsche’s critiques of Darwinian evolution argues not that it leaves too much to randomness, chance, or disorder (pace today’s New Creationists), but that it places an over-intellectualized view of life – an over-Apollonian view of life, in the terminology of Nietzsche’s ...
... to Darwin’s theory. One of Nietzsche’s critiques of Darwinian evolution argues not that it leaves too much to randomness, chance, or disorder (pace today’s New Creationists), but that it places an over-intellectualized view of life – an over-Apollonian view of life, in the terminology of Nietzsche’s ...
Evolution of Ethics in the Island of Doctor Moreau and Heart of
... Prendick also imagines himself moored by conventions contingent on his upper-class social position, although early in his narrative he experiences his removal from the network of social obligations as a loss of freedom. The tendency to establish a false binary of lone creative genius versus stagnant ...
... Prendick also imagines himself moored by conventions contingent on his upper-class social position, although early in his narrative he experiences his removal from the network of social obligations as a loss of freedom. The tendency to establish a false binary of lone creative genius versus stagnant ...
Alfred Russel Wallace
... or years Alfred Russel Wallace was little more than an obscure adjunct to Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. Remembered only for prompting Darwin to write On the Origin of Species in 1859 by sending Darwin his own letter proposing a theory of natural selection, Wallace was rightly dubbed by one b ...
... or years Alfred Russel Wallace was little more than an obscure adjunct to Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. Remembered only for prompting Darwin to write On the Origin of Species in 1859 by sending Darwin his own letter proposing a theory of natural selection, Wallace was rightly dubbed by one b ...
Darwin, Galton and the Statistical Enlightenment
... Most readers of Darwin’s Origin of Species come to the book with an eye expectantly looking for his understanding of the idea of evolution by natural selection, and they find what they are looking for. To a statistician it can present a different picture. To a statistical eye, the structure of the ar ...
... Most readers of Darwin’s Origin of Species come to the book with an eye expectantly looking for his understanding of the idea of evolution by natural selection, and they find what they are looking for. To a statistician it can present a different picture. To a statistical eye, the structure of the ar ...
02_whole - Massey Research Online
... life, and restricted his analysis to other species exclusively.7 However this was not enough to avoid disparagement from theologians, many of whom made the very move of extrapolation to humans that Darwin had avoided. An advance review in the Athenaeum complained that “man, in *Darwin’s+ view, was b ...
... life, and restricted his analysis to other species exclusively.7 However this was not enough to avoid disparagement from theologians, many of whom made the very move of extrapolation to humans that Darwin had avoided. An advance review in the Athenaeum complained that “man, in *Darwin’s+ view, was b ...
Descended from Darwin
... evolutionary theory after Darwin have gone as far as simply ignoring an entire generation of biologists. For example, Ruse’s “really big book” (600+ pages), Monad to Man (1996), on the two-and-a-half-century history of evolutionary theory ignores nearly every American biologist of the early twentiet ...
... evolutionary theory after Darwin have gone as far as simply ignoring an entire generation of biologists. For example, Ruse’s “really big book” (600+ pages), Monad to Man (1996), on the two-and-a-half-century history of evolutionary theory ignores nearly every American biologist of the early twentiet ...
TronEtal EMBC2016
... on their intensity level and temporal segments [5]. The advantage of the coding system is that it does not interpret the emotional value of specific features, and allows for a detailed and quantitative facial activity analysis. In this study we used a structured light camera in order to record schiz ...
... on their intensity level and temporal segments [5]. The advantage of the coding system is that it does not interpret the emotional value of specific features, and allows for a detailed and quantitative facial activity analysis. In this study we used a structured light camera in order to record schiz ...
Tom Gilovich, Dacher Keltner, Richard E. Nisbett-Social
... to brain regions involved in emotion, including the amygdala (see Chapter 9), and it helps us rely on our emotions to make decisions and act appropriately in different ...
... to brain regions involved in emotion, including the amygdala (see Chapter 9), and it helps us rely on our emotions to make decisions and act appropriately in different ...
Descent with Modification
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life (Ch 22)
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
22_Lecture_Presentation
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
... • In 1844, Darwin wrote an essay on the origin of species and natural selection but did not introduce his theory publicly, anticipating an uproar • In June 1858, Darwin received a manuscript from Alfred Russell Wallace, who had developed a theory of natural selection similar to Darwin’s (c) Seed-eat ...
... • In 1844, Darwin wrote an essay on the origin of species and natural selection but did not introduce his theory publicly, anticipating an uproar • In June 1858, Darwin received a manuscript from Alfred Russell Wallace, who had developed a theory of natural selection similar to Darwin’s (c) Seed-eat ...
A Darwinian View of Life
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
... Concept 22.2: Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of organisms and the unity and diversity of life • As the 19th century dawned, it was generally believed that species had remained unchanged since their creation • However, a few doubts about the permanence of spe ...
2011 - Anthony Herrel
... 2008). We suggest that speciation reversal resulting from humaninduced changes in the adaptive landscape (the last mechanism in the previous paragraph) would be most likely under three conditions. The first is when sympatric forms show adaptive divergence and reproductive isolation that is due to ec ...
... 2008). We suggest that speciation reversal resulting from humaninduced changes in the adaptive landscape (the last mechanism in the previous paragraph) would be most likely under three conditions. The first is when sympatric forms show adaptive divergence and reproductive isolation that is due to ec ...
Evolution 65:2258-2272
... 2008). We suggest that speciation reversal resulting from humaninduced changes in the adaptive landscape (the last mechanism in the previous paragraph) would be most likely under three conditions. The first is when sympatric forms show adaptive divergence and reproductive isolation that is due to ec ...
... 2008). We suggest that speciation reversal resulting from humaninduced changes in the adaptive landscape (the last mechanism in the previous paragraph) would be most likely under three conditions. The first is when sympatric forms show adaptive divergence and reproductive isolation that is due to ec ...
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals is a book by Charles Darwin, published in 1872, concerning genetically determined aspects of behaviour. It was published thirteen years after On the Origin of Species and alongside his 1871 book The Descent of Man, it is Darwin's main consideration of human origins. In this book, Darwin seeks to trace the animal origins of human characteristics, such as the pursing of the lips in concentration and the tightening of the muscles around the eyes in anger and efforts of memory. Darwin sought out the opinions of some eminent British psychiatrists, notably James Crichton-Browne, in the preparation of the book which forms Darwin's main contribution to psychology.The Expression of the Emotions is also an important landmark in the history of book illustration.