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84 pages 2 hours read

Richard Dawkins

The Selfish Gene

Richard DawkinsNonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1976

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Key Figures

Richard Dawkins

Richard Dawkins is the author of The Selfish Gene. At the time of writing, Dawkins was a zoology lecturer, not widely known to the public. Since then, he has become a public intellectual, in part due to the success of The Selfish Gene, his debut book.

Dawkins is an ethologist, researching animal behavior. Through the study of animals, Dawkins has realized that biological organisms—including humans—act as robotic servants to genes. His perspective on evolution as occurring primarily at the level of genes, rather than of individuals or populations, separates Dawkins from other practicing biologists and the general public. However, his gene selection view has grown in favor.

Charles Darwin

Charles Darwin is considered the father of evolution. He developed the theory from his observations of animals. Dawkins often refers to Darwin.

John Maynard Smith

John Maynard Smith developed the theory of evolutionarily stable strategies. This game theory can explain aggression in animals. Dawkins also applies the ideas extensively to explain how genes evolve.

V.C. Wynne-Edwards

Wynne-Edwards is a proponent of group selection. According to this theory of evolution, organisms such as animals can develop for the “common good” (3) of the species, rather than for the gene or individual. Dawkins often disagrees with Wynne-Edwards, arguing for alternative explanations on the basis of the selfish gene.

David Lack

Lack proposes a theoretical explanation for why certain birds have the number of offspring that they do. It has a genetic rather than group selection basis and forms the template for further arguments. Dawkins claims that a generalization can refute group selectionist arguments for any aspect of reproduction.

R.L. Trivers

Trivers develops evolutionary theory. Dawkins mentions Trivers for the development of the Parental Investment theory. This theory measures how much effort a parent puts into each child at the expense of siblings. Trivers illustrates how selfish genes can evolve different strategies for males versus females. For example, because females have to commit more resources to their offspring, females are less likely than males to abandon mate and baby.

R.A. Fisher

Fisher is an influential biologist. He contributed to evolutionary theory in the twentieth century. Dawkins mentions Fisher’s explanation of the one to one sex ratio as deriving from the selfish gene.

A. Zahavi

Zahavi is an evolutionary biologist. He proposes counter-intuitive theories. For example, sexual selection may favor males with weak traits, to signal that these males are strong enough to survive anyway.

W.D. Hamilton

Hamilton is a biologist. He describes how animals herd to protect their selfish genes. Along with Robert Axelrod, Hamilton wrote an important paper that showed the relevance of game theory such as evolutionarily stable strategies for biology.

Robert Axelrod

Robert Axelrod is a political scientist. In collaboration with Hamilton, he applies the Iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma to behaviors. Axelrod runs a tournament of computer programs competing. The simpler, nicer strategies wind up winning.

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