There are huge primary and secondary literatures on evolution and society. Required reading will be kept to an acceptable level by combining the use of a single survey textbook with short extracts from relevant (mainly primary) sources.
Course textbook:
[Bowler] = Bowler, Peter J. Evolution: The History of An Idea. 25th Anniversary ed. University of California Press, 2009. ISBN: 9780520261280.
Two other general texts that are also extremely useful are:
Larson, Edward J. Evolution: The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory. Modern Library, 2004. ISBN: 9780679642886.
Miller, Kenneth R. Finding Darwin's God: A Scientist's Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution. HarperCollins, 1999. ISBN: 9780060175931.
SES # | TOPICS | READINGS |
---|---|---|
1 | Introduction and Course Overview | |
2 | The Nature and Scope of the Historical Sciences | Chapter 1 in [Bowler]. |
3 | Natural History and Natural Theology |
Chapter 2 in [Bowler].
|
4 | The Birth of Historical Geology |
Chapter 2 in [Bowler]. pp. 35–8. Chapter 3 in [Bowler]. pp. 57–62. Chapter 4 in [Bowler]. pp. 108–14. Required Reading
|
5 | Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism |
Chapter 4 in [Bowler]. pp. 115–34.
|
6 | "Victorian Sensation" – Chambers' Vestiges |
Chapter 4 in [Bowler]. pp. 134–40. Vestiges, available online at: Project Gutenberg [Dip in here and there, to get a feel for the text; don't try to read it all!] |
7 | Voyages of Exploration, Part I: Darwin |
Chapter 5 in [Bowler]. pp. 141–55.
|
8 | Voyages of Exploration, Part II: Wallace and Bates | Wallace, Alfred Russel. "On the Law Which Has Regulated the Introduction of New Species." (1855) [This is available online at: TopSCHOLAR at Western Kentucky University.] |
9 | The Path to The Origin of Species |
Chapter 5 in [Bowler]. pp. 155–76. The Darwin-Wallace papers (1858); available at: The Dispersal of Darwin. |
10 | "Mr Darwin's Hypotheses" |
[Bowler]. pp. 177–83.
|
11 | Guest Lecture: Andrew Berry | |
12 | The Reception of Darwinism |
Chapter 6 in [Bowler]. pp. 177–223. Mini-biographies of key figures (to be circulated in class) |
13 | The "Gospel of Evolution" in the Late-19th Century |
Chapter 8 in [Bowler]. pp. 274–324.
|
14 | Evolution and Eugenics |
[Bowler]. pp. 256–9, and 308–13. Galton, Francis. "Hereditary Talent and Character." Macmillan's Magazine 12 (1865): 157–66, and 318–27. Available online at: Galton.org |
15 | The "Eclipse of Darwinism" in Biology Around 1900 | Chapter 7 in [Bowler]. pp. 224–60. |
16 | The "Eclipse of Darwinism" in the Social Sciences After 1900 |
|
17 | Evolution and the Rise of Christian Fundamentalism |
Scopes Trial, Darrow cross-examines Bryan; online at: http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/scopes/day7.htm |
18 | Movie: Inherit the Wind | |
19 | Darwinism, Mendelism and the Birth of the "Modern Synthesis" | Chapter 9 in [Bowler]. pp. 325–46. |
20 | Changing Understand of Human Origins |
Chapter 10 in [Bowler]. pp. 347–55. Landau, Misia. "Human Evolution as Narrative." ( |
21 | Darwinism and Behavior: From Ethology to Sociobiology |
Chapter 10 in [Bowler]. pp. 353–66. Wilson, E. O. "What is Sociobiology?" Sociobiology and Human Nature: An Interdisciplinary Critique and Defense (1978): 1–12. Available online at: Pfeiffer University. |
22 | The Creation Controversies: From "Scientific Creationism" to "Intelligent Design" |
Chapter 10 in [Bowler]. pp. 375–81. McLean versus Arkansas Board of Education (1982), available on-line at: talkorigins.org. Kitzmiller versus Dover Area School District, Decision of the Court, 31 December 2005; available on-line at:talkorigins.org.
|
23 | Guest Lecture | |
24 | Reclaiming Evolution for the Social Sciences: the New Evolutionary Psychology | Cosmides, Leda, and John Tooby. "Evolutionary Psychology: A Primer." 1997. Available online at: UC Santa Barbara: Center for Evolutionary Psychology. |
25 | Evolutionary Humanism, from Julian Huxley to E.O. Wilson | Ira Flatow interview with E. O. Wilson about his book, The Creation, on NPR (8th September 2006), available on-line at: npr.org. |
26 | Stocktaking: What Makes Evolutionary Biology Special? |