Abstract
Evolutionary developmental biology is an emerging new research area that explores the links between two fundamental processes of life: development of individual organisms (ontogeny) and evolutionary transformation in the course of the history of life (phylogeny). For some of its more ardent proponents evolutionary developmental biology, or evo-devo for short, represents a new paradigm that completes the ``Modern Synthesis'' of the 1930s and 1940s, while others, often those with a more astute sense of the history of biology, have emphasized the long-standing connections between these two areas of study. But all agree that evo-devo offers some of the most promising theoretical perspectives in evolutionary biology at the beginning of the twenty-first century (see for example Amundson 2005, Carroll 2005, Carroll et al. 2005, Hall 1998, Kirschner and Gerhart 2005, Laubichler 2005, M{ü}ller 2005, Wagner et al. 2000). In this essay I will first sketch the emergence of presentday evolutionary developmental biology during the last decades of the twentieth century followed by a brief overview of the central questions and research programs of evo-devo. I will conclude with a discussion of the one problem - the issue of how to explain evolutionary innovations and novelties - that has the most profound implications for the philosophy of biology.
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CITATION STYLE
Charbonneau, M. (2016). Evo-Devo and Culture. In Evolutionary Developmental Biology (pp. 1–13). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33038-9_47-1
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