Contents
List of Contributors
Preface
PART I
The Nature of Selection
1 The nature of selection: An overview
Tim Lewens
2 Multilevel selection and units of selection up and down the biological hierarchy
Elisabeth A. Lloyd
3 Adaptation, multilevel selection, and organismality: A clash of perspectives
Ellen Clarke
4 Fitness maximization
Jonathan Birch
5 Does biology need teleology?
Karen Neander
PART II
Evolution and Information
6 Evolution and information: An overview
Ulrich Stegmann
7 The construction of learned information through selection processes
Nir Fresco, Eva Jablonka, and Simona Ginsburg
8 Genetic, epigenetic, and exogenetic information
Karola Stotz and Paul Griffiths
9 Language: From how-possibly to how-probably?
Kim Sterelny
10 Acquiring knowledge on species-specific biorealities: The applied evolutionary epistemological approach
Nathalie Gontier and Michael Bradie
PART III
Human Nature
11 Human Nature: An overview
Stephen Downes
12 The reality of species: Real phenomena not theoretical objects
John Wilkins
13 Modern essentialism for species and its animadversions
Joseph LaPorte
14 What is human nature (if it is anything at all?)
Louise Barrett
15 The right to ignore: An epistemic defense of the nature/culture divide
Maria Kronfeldner
PART IV
Evolution and Mind
16 Evolution and mind: An overview
Valerie Hardcastle
17 Routes to the convergent evolution of cognition
Edward Legg, Ljerka Ostojic, and Nicola Clayton
18 Is consciousness an adaptation?
Kari Theurer and Thomas Polger
19 Plasticity and modularity
Edouard Machery
20 The prospects for teleosemantics: Can biological functions fix mental content?
Justine Kingsbury
PART V
Evolution and Ethics
21 Evolution and ethics: An overview
Catherine Wilson
22 The evolution of moral intuitions and their feeling of rightness
Christine Clavien and Chloë FitzGerald
23 Are we losing it? Darwin's moral sense and the importance of early experience
Darcia Narvaez
24 The evolution of morality and the prospects for moral realism
Ben Fraser
25 Moral cheesecake, evolved psychology, and the debunking impulse
Daniel Kelly
PART VI
Evolution, Aesthetics, and Art
26 Evolution, aesthetics, and art: An overview
Stephen Davies
27 Music and human evolution: Philosophical aspects
Anton Killin
28 Emotional responses to fiction: An evolutionary perspective
Helen De Cruz and Johan De Smedt
29 Evolution and literature: Theory and example
Brian Boyd
30 Play and evolution
Patrick Bateson
Thirty chapters written by international leaders in the field on the connections between contemporary academic philosophy and evolutionary theory.
Richard Joyce is Professor of Philosophy at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. He is author of The Myth of Morality (2001), The Evolution of Morality (2006), and Essays in Moral Skepticism (2016), as well as many articles on metaethics and moral psychology. He has co-edited A World Without Values (2010) and Cooperation and its Evolution (2013).