书目详情:
CoverHalf-titleTitleCopyrightDedicationContentsPrefaceAcknowledgements1 New rules for old gamesWhy genes are not enoughWhy culture is not enoughGenes and culture: new studies and new problemsSelective and instructive processes in evolution – Darwinian LamarckismAre there animal cultures?Memes and reproducers: the ‘unit’ problemBack to DarwinSummaryNotes2 What is pulling the strings of behaviour?Genes: fate or challenge?The problem of informationNatural selection of what?SummaryNotes3 Learning and the behavioural inheritance systemWhat is learning?Ways of learningConditions and constraintsRemembrance of things pastThe social transmission of learnt behaviourHabits and traditionsSummaryNotes4 Parental care – the highroad to family traditionsParental effectsThe information lacunaChannels of transmissionThe parental heritageThe transmission of foraging behaviourThe transmission of anti-predator behaviourChoosing a homeChoosing a mate – the transmission of sexual tastesThe transmission of the transmission mechanismEvolving family traditionsSummaryNotes5 Achieving harmony between mates – the learning routeMale–female conflictMate choice – the use of learningCourtship feedingThe colours of the natal environmentThe sounds of homeFamiliarity as a basis for co-operation between matesThe parental team – co-ordination and division of labour between matesAge, experience and breeding successCo-ordination between mates – duettingInformation sharing and the evolution of co-operation between matesSummaryNotes6 Parents and offspring – too much conflict?Conflicts, quarrels, and the co-evolution of parent–offspring relationshipsFrom just-so stories to just-so strategies?Weaning conflicts or parentally guided maturation?Conflicts in the womb and beyondParental control: ‘From each according to [its] abilities, to each according to [its] needs’Daughters and sonsThe family unitSummaryNotes7 Alloparental care – an additional channel of information transferSelf–interested helpingHelp thy kin and spread thy genesHelping is good for all – delayed benefits, reciprocity and mutualismThe benefits of adoptionPhenotypic cloning through alloparentingSummaryNotes8 The origins and persistence of group legaciesSocial cohesion and social deathMechanisms of cohesion: transfer, rituals and ritesMore about group cohesion: contagion and reproductive suppressionThe benefits of sharing informationSocial deathThe evolutionary origin and maintenance of groupsGroup selection and selection for interactions within groupsGroups over time – learnt habits and traditionsHabits and the origin of speciesSummaryNotes9 Darwin meets Lamarck – the co-evolution of genes and learningThe ecology of learningThe ecology and evolution of instinctive behaviour: evolution in constant environmentsThe ecology and evolution of social and individual learning: evolution in rapidly varying environmentsThe ecology and evolution of transgenerational transmission: evolution in environments with intermediate-length cyclesThe receding horizon: the evolution of altered and enhanced learningLengthening the behavioural sequence – the assimilate–stretch principleThe evolution of new ways of learning: switching modalitiesThe evolution of the rules of learningSelection through habits: the co-adaptation of genes and traditionsSome evolutionary effects of maternally transmitted learnt behavioursSummaryNotes10 The free phenotypeSocial transmission of information in insects, and early learning in manBetween development and evolution: beyond the replicatorCultural construction and cultural selectionLanguage: a new inheritance systemBeyond cultural determinism: freedom and the hope of reasonNotesReferencesIndex of speciesIndex of subjects
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