The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

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by Stephen Jay Gould


  --------1822. Considerations generates sur la vertebre. Memoires du Museum na­tional d'histoire naturelle 9: 88-119.

  --------1830. Principes de philosophie zoologique discutes en Mars 1830 au sein de L’Academie Royale des Sciences. Paris: Pichon et Didier.

  --------1831. Sur des ecrits de Goethe lui donnant les droits au titre de savant naturaliste. Ann. sci. nat. 22: 188-193.

  Gerhart, J. 2000. Inversion of the chordate body axis: are there alternatives? Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97: 4445-4448.

  Gerhart, J., and M. Kirschner. 1997. Cells, Embryos and Evolution. Oxford UK: Blackwell Scientific.

  Gersick, C. J. G. 1988. Time and transition in work teams: toward a new model of group development. Acad. Management]our. 31: 9-41.

  --------1991. Revolutionary change theories: a multi-level exploration of the punctu­ated equilibrium paradigm. Acad. Management Rev., Jan., pp. 10-35.

  Ghiselin, M. T. 1969. The Triumph of the Darwinian Method. Berkeley CA: Univ. of California Press.

  --------1974a. The Economy of Nature and the Evolution of Sex. Berkeley CA: Univ. of California Press.

  --------1974b. A radical solution to the species problem. Syst. Zool. 23: 536-544.

  --------1987. Species concepts, individuality, and objectivity. Biol. Philos. 2: 127-144.

  Gilinsky, N.L. 1981. Stabilizing species selection in the Archaeogastropoda.Paleobiol.7:316-331.

  --------1986. Species selection as a causal process. Evol. Biol. 20: 248-273.

  --------1994. Volatility and the Phanerozoic decline of background extinction inten­sity. Paleobiology 20: 445-458.

  Gillispie, C. C. 1959. Lamarck and Darwin in the History of Science. In B. Glass, O. Temkin, and W. L. Strauss, eds., Forerunners of Darwin: 1745-1859. Baltimore MD: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, pp. 265-291.

  Gilluly, J. 1949. Distribution of mountain building in geological time. Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer. 60: 561-590.

  Gilluly, J., A. C. Waters, and A. O. Woodford. 1959. Principles of Geology. 2nd ed. 1968. San [Page 1357] Francisco: W. H. Freeman.

  Gingerich, P. D. 1974. Stratigraphic record of early Eocene Hyopsodus and the ge­ometry of mammalian phylogeny. Nature 248: 107-109.

  --------1976. Paleontology and phylogeny: patterns of evolution at the species level in early Tertiary mammals. Am. Jour. Sci. 276: 1-28.

  --------1978. Evolutionary transition from the ammonite Subprionocyclus to Reedsites — punctuated or gradual? Evolution 32: 454-456.

  --------1980. Evolutionary patterns in early Cenozoic mammals. Ann. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 8: 407-424.

  --------1984a. Punctuated equilibria — where is the evidence? Syst. Zool. 33: 335-338.

  --------1984b. Darwin's gradualism and empiricism: discussion and reply. Nature 309: 116.

  --------(with reply by F. H. T. Rhodes) 1985. Darwin's gradualism and empiricism.

  --------1987. Evolution and the fossil record: patterns, rates, and processes. Can. Jour. Zool. 65: 1053-1060.

  --------1989. New earliest Wasatchian mammalian fauna from the Eocene of north-western Wyoming. Univ. Mich. Pap. Paleontology 28: 1-27.

  Glaubrecht, M. 1995. Der lange Atem der Schopfung. Was Darwin gem gewusst hatte. Berlin: Rasch und Rohring.

  Gleick, J. 1987. The pace of evolution: a fossil creature moves to center of debate. New York Times, December 22.

  Glen, W. 1982. The Road to Jaramillo. Stanford CA: Stanford Univ. Press.

  --------1994. The Mass Extinction Debates: How Science Works in a Crisis. Stan­ford CA: Stanford Univ. Press.

  Glennon, L. (ed.) 1995. Our Times. Atlanta GA: Turner Publishing.

  Godinot, M. 1985. Evolutionary implications of morphological changes in Palaeogene primates. In J. C. W. Cope and P. W. Skelton, eds., Evolutionary Case Histories From The Fossil Record. Special Papers in Paleontology 33, pp. 39-47.

  Goethe, J. W. von. 1790. Versuch der Metamorphose der Pflanzen zu Erkla'ren. Gotha: Etting.

  --------1831. Reflexions de Goethe sur les debats scientifiques de mars 1830 dans le sein de l'Academie des Sciences. Ann. sci. nat. 22:179-188.

  --------1832. Derniers pages de Goethe expliquant a l'Allemagne les sujets de philosophie naturelle controversies au sein de l'Acadamie des Sciences de Paris. Rev. encyc. 53: 563-573 and 54: 54-68.

  Gold, T. 1999. The Deep Hot Biosphere. N.Y.: Copernicus.

  Goldschmidt, R. 1933. Some aspects of evolution. Science 78: 539-547.

  --------1940. The Material Basis of Evolution. New Haven CT: Yale Univ. Press.

  --------1955. Theoretical Genetics. Berkeley CA: Univ. of California Press.

  --------1960. In and Out of the Ivory Tower: The Autobiography of Richard B. Goldschmidt. Seattle WA: Univ. of Washington Press.

  Golub, R., and E. Brus. 1990. The Almanac of Science and Technology. N.Y.: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

  Goodfriend, G. A., and S. J. Gould. 1996. Paleontology and chronology of two evo­lutionary transitions by hybridization in the Bahamian land snail Cerion. Science 274: 1894-1897.

  Goodwin, B. 1994. How the Leopard Changed Its Spots: The Evolution of Com­plexity. N.Y.: Simon & Schuster.

  Gould, J. L., and C. G. Gould. 1989. Sexual Selection. N.Y.: W. H. Freeman, Scientific American Library.

  Gould, J. L., and W. T. Keeton. 1996. Biological Science. N.Y.: W. W. Norton. [Page 1358]

  Gould, S. J. 1965. Is uniformitarianism necessary? Amer. Jour. Sci. 263: 223-228.

  --------1966. Allometry and size in ontogeny and phylogeny. Biol. Rev. 41: 587-640.

  --------1967. Evolutionary patterns in pelycosaurian reptiles: a factor-analytic study. Evolution 21: 385-401.

  --------1969. An evolutionary microcosm: Pleistocene and Recent history of the land snail P. (Poecilozonites) in Bermuda. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 138: 407-532.

  --------1970a. Evolutionary paleontology and the science of form. Earth-Sci. Rev. 6: 77-119.

  --------1970b. Dollo on Dollo's law: irreversibility and the status of evolutionary laws. Jour. Hist. Biol. 3: 189-212.

  --------1971a. The paleontology and evolution of Cerion, II: age and fauna of Indian shell middens on Curasao and Aruba. Mus. Comp. Zool., Breviora 372: 1-26.

  --------1971b. D'Arcy Thompson and the science of form. New Literary Hist. 2: 229-258.

  --------1971c. Precise but fortuitous convergence in Pleistocene land snails from Ber­muda. Jour. Paleont. 45: 409-418.

  --------1972. Allometric fallacies and the evolution of Gryphaea: a new interpreta­tion based on White's criterion of geometric similarity. In Th. Dobzhansky et al., eds., Evolutionary Biology, vol. 6, pp. 91-118.

  --------1974. The origin and function of “bizarre” structures: antler size and skull size in the “Irish Elk,” Megaloceros giganteus. Evolution 28: 191-220.

  --------1976. In defense of the analog: a commentary to N. Hotton. In R. B. Masterton, E. Hodos, and H. Jerison, eds., Evolution, Brain and Behavior. Hillsdale N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc, pp. 175-179.

  --------1977a. Eternal metaphors of paleontology. In A. Hallam, ed., Patterns of Evolution. Amsterdam: Elsevier Sci. Publ. Co., pp. 1-26.

  --------1977b. Ontogeny and Phylogeny. Cambridge MA: Harvard Univ. Press.

  --------1977c. Ever Since Darwin. N.Y.: W. W. Norton.

  --------1980a. The promise of paleobiology as a nomothetic, evolutionary discipline. Paleobiology 6: 96-118.

  --------1980b. Is a new and general theory of evolution emerging? Paleobiology 6: 119-130.

  --------1980c. The evolutionary biology of constraint. Daedalus 109: 39-52.

  --------1980d. The Panda's Thumb. N.Y.: W. W. Norton.

  --------1980e. G. G. Simpson, Paleontology, and the Modern Synthesis. In E. Mayr and W. B. Provine, eds., The Evolutionary Synthesis. Cambridge MA: Harvard Univ. Press, pp. 153-172.

  --------(ed.) 1980f. The Evolution of Gryphaea. N.Y.: Arno Press.

  --------1981a. The Mismeasure of Man. N.Y.: W. W. Norton.

  --------1981b. The rise of Neo-Lamarckism in Americ
a. Internatl. Colloquium on Lamarck. Paris: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin, pp. 81-91.

  --------1981c. The Titular Bishop of Titiopolis. Nat. Hist. 90 May: 20-24.

  --------1982a. The uses of heresy: an introduction to Richard Goldschmidt's “The Material Basis of Evolution,” pp. xiii-xlii. New Haven CT and London: Yale Univ. Press.

  --------1982b. Darwinism and the expansion of evolutionary theory. Science 216: 380-387.

  --------1982c. The meaning of punctuated equilibrium and its role in validating a hi­erarchical approach to macroevolution. In R. Milkman, ed., Perspectives on Evolution. Sunderland MA: Sinauer Associates, pp. 83-104.

  --------1982d. Introduction to Th. Dobzhansky, “Genetics and the Origin of Spe­cies.” In N. Eldredge and S. J. Gould, eds., The Columbia Classics in Evolution Series. N.Y.: Columbia Univ. Press, pp. xvii-xli. [Page 1359]

  --------1983a. Unorthodoxies in the first formulation of natural selection. Evolution 37: 856-858.

  --------1983b. The hardening of the Modern Synthesis. In: Marjorie Grene, ed., Di­mensions of Darwinism. Cambridge UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.

  --------1983c. Irrelevance, submission, and partnership: the changing role of paleontology in Darwin's three centennials, and a modest proposal for macroevolution. In D. S. Bendall, ed., Evolution from Molecules to Men. Cam­bridge UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.

  --------1984a. Toward the vindication of punctuational change. In W. W. Berggren and J. A. Van Couvering, eds., Catastrophes and Earth History. Princeton NJ: Princeton Univ. Press, pp. 9-34.

  --------1984b. Covariance sets and ordered geographic variation in Cerion from Aruba, Bonaire, and Curasao: a way of studying nonadaptation. Syst. Zool. 33: 217-237.

  --------1984c. Morphological channeling by structural constraint: convergence in styles of dwarfing and gigantism in Cerion, with a description of two new fossil species and a report on the discovery of the largest Cerion. Paleobiology 10: 172-194.

  --------1984d. A most ingenious paradox. Nat. Hist. 93, Dec: pp. 20-29.

  --------1985a. The paradox of the first tier: an agenda for paleobiology. Paleobiology 11: 2-12.

  --------1985b. All the news that's fit to print and some opinions that aren't. Dis­cover, November: 86-91.

  --------1985c. The Flamingo's Smile. N.Y.: W. W. Norton, 476 pp.

  --------1986. Evolution and the triumph of homology, or why history matters. Amer. Scientist, Jan.-Feb.: 60-69.

  --------1987a. Freudian Slip. Nat. Hist. 96 (Feb.): 14-21.

  --------1987b. Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle. Cambridge MA: Harvard Univ. Press.

  --------1987c. An Urchin in the Storm. N.Y.: W. W. Norton, 255 pp.

  --------1988a. The case of the creeping fox terrier clone. Nat. Hist. 91 (Jan.): 16-24.

  --------1988b. Trends as changes in variance: a new slant on progress and directionality in evolution (Presidential Address). Jour. Paleont. 62: 319-329.

  --------1988c. Prolonged stability in local populations of Cerion agassizi (Pleisto­cene-Recent) on Great Bahama Bank. Paleobiology 14: 1-18.

  --------1989a. A developmental constraint in Cerion, with comments on the defini­tion and interpretation of constraint in evolution. Evolution 43: 516-539.

  --------1989b. Full of Hot Air. Nat. Hist. 98 (Oct.): 28-38.

  --------1989c. Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History. N.Y.: W. W. Norton, 347 pp.

  --------1989d. The wheel of fortune and the wedge of progress. Nat. Hist. 98 (March): 14-21.

  --------1989e. Punctuated equilibrium in fact and theory. /. Social Biol. Struct. 12: 117-136.

  --------1991a. The disparity of the Burgess Shale arthropod fauna and the limits of cladistic analysis: why we must strive to quantify morphospace. Paleobiology 17:411-423.

  --------1991b. Bully for Brontosaurus. N.Y.: W. W. Norton, 540 pp.

  --------1991c. The smoking gun of eugenics. Nat. Hist. 100 (Dec): 8-17.

  --------1992a. “Red in Tooth and Claw.” Nat. Hist. 101 (Nov.): 14-23.

  --------1992b. Constraint and the square snail: life at the limits of a covariance set. The normal teratology of Cerion disforme. Biological Jour. Linnean Soc. 47: 407-437.

  ----1993a. A special fondness for beetles. Nat. Hist. 102 (Jan.): 4-12. [Page 1360]

  --------1993b. The inexorable logic of the punctuational paradigm: Hugo de Vries on species selection. In Evolutionary Patterns and Processes. London: The Linnean Soc. of London, pp. 3-18.

  --------1993c. How to analyze Burgess Shale disparity — a reply to Ridley. Paleobiology 19: 522-523.

  --------1993d. The Book of Life. Preface, pp. 6-21. N.Y.: W. W. Norton (S. J. Gould general editor, 10 contributors).

  --------1993e. Eight Little Piggies. N.Y.: W. W. Norton.

  --------1994. Tempo and mode in the macroevolutionary reconstruction of Darwin­ism. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91: 6764-6771.

  --------1995. Dinosaur in a Haystack. N.Y.: Harmony Books.

  --------1996a. Full House: The Spread of Excellence from Plato to Darwin. N.Y.: Harmony Books.

  --------1996b. A Lesson from the Old Masters. Nat. Hist. 105 (Aug.): 16-22, 58-59.

  --------1997a. The taxonomy and geographic variation of Cerion on San Salvador (Bahama Islands). Proceedings 8th Symposium on the Geology of the Bahamas and other Carbonate Regions, James L. Carew, ed. San Salvador, Bahamas: Ba­hamian Field Station Ltd., pp. 73-91.

  --------1997b. Cope's rule as psychological artifact. Nature 385: 199-200.

  --------1997c. As the worm turns. Nat. Hist. (Feb.) 106: 24-27, 68-73.

  --------1997d. Darwinian Fundamentalism, part 1. The New York Review of Books, June 12, pp. 34-37. Evolution: The Pleasures of Pluralism, part 2. The New York Review of Books, June 26, pp. 47-52.

  --------1997e. The exaptive excellence of spandrels as a term and prototype. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94: 10750-10755.

  --------1997f. The paradox of the visibly irrelevant. Nat. Hist. 106 (Dec): 12-18, 60-66.

  --------1998a. The Great Asymmetry. Science 279: 812-813.

  --------1998b. Leonardo's Mountain of Clams and The Diet of Worms. N.Y.: Har­mony Books.

  --------1999a. A Darwinian gentleman at Marx's funeral. Nat. Hist. 108 (Sept.): 32-33, 56-66.

  --------1999b. Rocks of Ages: Science and Religion in the Fullness of Life. N.Y.: Ballantine Publ., 241 pp.

  --------2000a. What does the dreaded “E” word mean anyway? Nat. Hist. 109 (Feb.): 28-44.

  --------2000b. Beyond competition. Paleobiology 26: 1-6.

  --------2000c. Linnaeus's Luck? Nat. Hist. 109 (Sept.): 18-25, 66-76.

  --------2000d. A Tree Grows in Paris: Lamarck's division of Worms and Revision of Nature. In: S. J. Gould, The Lying Stones of Marrakech: Penultimate Reflections in natural History. N.Y.: Harmony Books, pp. 115-143.

  --------2000e. Of coiled oysters and big brains: how to rescue the terminology of heterochrony, now gone astray. Evolution and Development 2: 241-248.

  --------2001. Humbled by the Genome's Mysteries. N.Y. Times Op-Ed. Feb 19.

  Gould, S. J., and C. B. Calloway. 1980. Clams and brachiopods — ships that pass in the night? Paleobiology 6: 383-396.

  Gould, S. J., and N. Eldredge. 1971. Speciation and punctuated equilibria: an alter­native to phyletic gradualism. G. S. A. Ann. Meeting, Washington, DC, Ab­stracts with Programs, pp. 584-585.

  --------1977. Punctuated equilibria: the tempo and mode of evolution reconsidered. Paleobiology: 3: 115-151.

  --------1983. Darwin's gradualism. Systematic Zool. 32: 444-445.

  --------1986. Punctuated equilibrium at the third stage. Systematic Zool. 35: 143-148. [Page 1361]

  --------1988. Species selection: its range and power. Nature 334: 19.

  --------1993. Punctuated equilibrium comes of age. Nature 366: 223-227.

  Gould, S. J., N. L. Gilinsky, and R. Z. German. 1987. Asymmetry of lineages and the direction of evolutionary time. Science 236: 1437-1441.

  Gould, S. J., and R. C. Lewontin. 1979.
The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 205: 581-598.

  Gould, S. J., and E. A. Lloyd. 1999. Individuality and adaptation across levels of se­lection: how shall we name and generalize the unit of Darwinism? Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96: 11904-11909.

  Gould, S. J., D. M. Raup, J. J. Sepkoski, Jr., T. J. M. Schopf, and D. S. Simberloff. 1977. The shape of evolution: a comparison of real and random clades. Paleobiology 3: 23-40.

  Gould, S. J., and S. Vrba, 1982. Exaptation — a missing term in the science of form. Paleobiology 8:4-15.

  Gould, S. J., and D. S. Woodruff. 1986. Evolution and systematics of Cerion (Mollusca: Pulmonata) on New Providence Island: a radical revision. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 182: 389-490.

  --------1987. Systematics and levels of covariation in Cerion from the Turks and Caicos. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 151: 321-363.

  --------1990. History as a cause of area effects: an illustration from Cerion on Great Inagua, Bahamas. Biol. Jour. Linn. Soc. 40: 67-98.

  Gould, S. J., N. D. Young, and Bill Kasson. 1985. The consequences of being differ­ent: sinistral coiling in Cerion. Evolution 39: 1364-1379.

  Gorman, J. 1980. The tortoise or the hare? Discover, October.

  Grant, P. 1986. Ecology and Evolution of Darwin's Finches. N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press.

  Grant, V. 1983. The Synthetic Theory strikes back. Biol. Zentralblatt 102: 149-158.

  Grantham, T. A. 1995. Hierarchical approaches to macroevolution: Recent work on species selection and the “effect hypothesis.” Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 26: 301-321.

  Greiner, G. O. G. 1974. Environmental factors controlling the distribution of Recent benthic Foraminifera. Breviora Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard Univ. Number 420.

  Grenier, J. K., T. L. Garber, R. Warren, P. M. Whitington, and S. Carroll. 1997. Evo­lution of the entire arthropod Hox gene set predated the origin and radiation of the onychophoran/arthropod clade. Current Biology 7: 547-553.

  Griffis, K., and D. J. Chapman. 1988. Survival of phytoplankton under prolonged darkness. Implications for the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary darkness hypothe­sis. Palaeogeog. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 67: 305-314.

 

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