Reviews
Showcases the biologist's special talents for extrapolating global theories from arcane and detailed research... Enlightening and thought-provoking.
Nature Revealed demonstrates, again and again, Wilson's endless capacity to put scientific findings into a broader context and to bridge gaps between disciplines.
E.O. Wilson's many contributions to science can hardly be summarized in a newspaper column, but the highlights are well preserved in Nature Revealed.
This book captures the key elements in this gifted explorer's complex journey so far.
This book is a treasure trove of ideas... It always rewards.
Lucid and eminently readable... a valuable primer for those interested in the history of science.
A fascinating collection from one of the most influential thinkers of our time.
A wonderful sample of the writings of one of our most distinguished evolutionists and a great champion of biodiversity. Wilson is also one of the broadest thinkers on the intellectual stage today. This is an especially important book for a time when science in the United States is under attack by forces seeking to reverse the enlightenment.
Edward Wilson is among the great scientists, thinkers, and authors of my lifetime. In this book he gathers and places in context his own key writings from 1949 to the present. The result is both a moving book and a treasure for those interested in science and history.
Book Details
Preface
Part I: Ants and Sociobiology
1. Richteri, the fire ant
2. Variation and adaptation in the imported fire ant
3. The origin and evolution of polymorphism in ants
4. Quantitative studies of liquid
Preface
Part I: Ants and Sociobiology
1. Richteri, the fire ant
2. Variation and adaptation in the imported fire ant
3. The origin and evolution of polymorphism in ants
4. Quantitative studies of liquid food transmission in ants
5. The beginnings of nomadic and group-predatory behavior in the ponerine ants
6. Source and possible nature of the odor trail of fire ants
7. Chemical communication among workers of the fire ant Solenopsis saevissima (Fr. Smith), 1. The organization ofmass-foraging
8. Phermones
9. The first Mesozoic ants
10. The ergonomics of caste in the social insects
11. The prospect for a unified sociobiology
12. Slavery in ants
13. Sociobiology: The new synthesis
14. Sociobiology at century's end
15. Human decency is animal
16. Behavioral discretization and the number of castes in an antspecies
17. The organization of colony defense in the ant Pheidole dentataMayr
18. The number of queens: An important trait in ant evolution
19. The ethical implications of human sociobiology
20. Caste and division of labor in leaf-cutter ants
21. Précis of Genes, Mind, and Culture
22. The relation between caste ratios and division of labor in theant genus Pheidole
23. The sociogenesis of insect colonies
24. Between-caste aversion as a basis for division of labor in the ant Pheidole pubiventris
25. The earliest known ants: An analysis of the Cretaceous species and an inference concerning their social organization
26. The dominance of social insects
27. The effects of complex social life on evolution and biodiversity
28. Pheidole nasutoides, a new species of Costa Rican ant that apparently mimics termites
29. In memory of William Louis Brown
30. Ant plagues: A centuries-old mystery solved
Part II: Biodiversity Studies: Systematics and Biogeography
31. The subspecies concept and its taxonomic application
32. Character displacement
33. Patchy distributions of ant species in New Guinea rain forests
34. The nature of the taxon cycle in the Melanesian ant fauna
35. An equilibrium theory of island biogeography
36. A consistency test for phylogenies based on contemporaneous species
37. The challenge from related species
38. An estimate of the potential evolutionary increase in species density in the Polynesian ant fauna
39. The species equilibrium
40. The plight of taxonomy
41. The biogeography of the West Indian ants
42. Editor's foreword (from Biodiversity)
43. The current state of biological diversity
44. Threats to biodiversity
45. The high frontier
46. The origins of hyperdiversity
47. A global biodiversity map
48. On the future of conservation biology
49. The encyclopedia of life
50. Taxonomy as a fundamental discipline
Part III: Conservation and the Human Condition
51. The conservation of life
52. Applied biogeography
53. Resolutions for the 80s
54. The biological diversity crisis: A challenge to science
55. Outcry from a world of wounds
56. The little things that run the world
57. The coming pluralization of biology and the stewardship of systematics
58. Biophilia and the conservation ethic
59. Is humanity suicidal?
60. Consilience among the great branches of learning
61. Integrated science and the coming century of the environment
Appendix: The Published Works of Edward O. Wilson
Index