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The Panda's Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : W.W.Norton & Company, ©1980.Description: 343 pages : illustrations ; 18 cmISBN:
  • 9780393300239
  • 0393300234
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 575.0162 GOU
Contents:
Prologue -- [Part] 1 : Perfection and imperfection : a trilogy on a panda's thumb -- The panda's thumb -- Senseless signs of history -- Double trouble -- [Part] 2 : Darwiniana -- Natural selection and the human brain : Darwin vs. Wallace -- Darwin's middle road -- Death before birth, or a mite's nunc dimittis -- Shades of Lamarck -- Caring groups and selfish genes -- [Part] 3 : Human evolution -- A biological homage to Mickey Mouse -- Piltdown revisited -- Our greatest evolutionary step -- In the midst of life -- [Part] 4 : Science and politics of human differences -- Wide hats and narrow minds -- Women's brains -- Dr. Down's syndrome -- Flaws in a Victorian veil -- [Part] 5 : The pace of change -- The episodic nature of evolutionary change -- Return of the hopeful monster -- The Great Scablands debate -- A quahog is a quahog -- [Part] 6 : Early life -- An early start -- Crazy old Randolph Kirkpatrick -- Bathybius and Eozoon -- Might we fit inside a sponge's cell -- [Part] 7 : They were despised and rejected -- Were dinosaurs dumb? -- The telltale wishbone -- Nature's odd couples -- Sticking up for marsupials -- [Part] 8 : Size and time -- Our allotted lifetimes -- Natural attraction : bacteria, the birds and the bees -- Time's vastness.
Summary: A collection of essays by reknown scientist Jay Stephen Gould drawn from his columns in Natural History. The essays deal with topics such as: evolutionary opportunism (nature is a tinkerer, making the most of what's available in the course of adapting to the environment); new information on Darwin and his contemporaries; racism and cultural relativism; the evolutionary pattern of sudden rapid change; the origin of birds or the warm-bloodedness of dinosaurs; and, Teilhard de Chardin as a co-conspirator in the Piltdown hoax.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Books Reference Books Main Library Reference Reference 575.0162 GOU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 006840
Total holds: 0

Included Bibliography & Index

Prologue --
[Part] 1 : Perfection and imperfection : a trilogy on a panda's thumb --
The panda's thumb --
Senseless signs of history --
Double trouble --
[Part] 2 : Darwiniana --
Natural selection and the human brain : Darwin vs. Wallace --
Darwin's middle road --
Death before birth, or a mite's nunc dimittis --
Shades of Lamarck --
Caring groups and selfish genes --
[Part] 3 : Human evolution --
A biological homage to Mickey Mouse --
Piltdown revisited --
Our greatest evolutionary step --
In the midst of life --
[Part] 4 : Science and politics of human differences --
Wide hats and narrow minds --
Women's brains --
Dr. Down's syndrome --
Flaws in a Victorian veil --
[Part] 5 : The pace of change --
The episodic nature of evolutionary change --
Return of the hopeful monster --
The Great Scablands debate --
A quahog is a quahog --
[Part] 6 : Early life --
An early start --
Crazy old Randolph Kirkpatrick --
Bathybius and Eozoon --
Might we fit inside a sponge's cell --
[Part] 7 : They were despised and rejected --
Were dinosaurs dumb? --
The telltale wishbone --
Nature's odd couples --
Sticking up for marsupials --
[Part] 8 : Size and time --
Our allotted lifetimes --
Natural attraction : bacteria, the birds and the bees --
Time's vastness.

A collection of essays by reknown scientist Jay Stephen Gould drawn from his columns in Natural History. The essays deal with topics such as: evolutionary opportunism (nature is a tinkerer, making the most of what's available in the course of adapting to the environment); new information on Darwin and his contemporaries; racism and cultural relativism; the evolutionary pattern of sudden rapid change; the origin of birds or the warm-bloodedness of dinosaurs; and, Teilhard de Chardin as a co-conspirator in the Piltdown hoax.

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