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Darwin without Malthus: the struggle for existence in Russian evolutionary thought

Part of the Monographs On the History and Philosophy of Biology series
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Nineteenth century Russian intellectuals perceived a Malthusian bias in Darwin's theory of evolution by means of natural selection.

They identified that bias with Darwin's concept of the "struggle for existence" and his emphasis upon the evolutionary role of overpopulation and intraspecific conflict.

In this book, Todes documents a historical Russian critique of Darwin's "Malthusian error", explores its relationship to such scientific work as Mechnikov's phagocytictheory, Korzhinskii's mutation theory and Kropotkin's theory of mutual aid, and finds its origins in Russia's political economy and in the very nature of its land and climate.

This is the first book in English to examine in detail the scientific work of nineteenth century Russian evolutionists, andthe first in any language to explore the relationship of Russian theories to the economic, political, and natural circumstances in which they were generated.

It combines a broad scope (dealing with political figures and cultural movements) with a close analysis of scientific work on a range of topics.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0195363272 / 9780195363272
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
13/07/1989
English
221 pages
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