The Selfish GeneThe Selfish Gene is a controversial book by Richard Dawkins published in 1976. The phrase "selfish gene" in the title of the book was coined by Dawkins as a provocative way of expressing a particular point of view\nfrom which to look at the processes of evolution: that of imagining genes\n(rather than organisms or species) as the primary drivers and beneficiaries\nof the evolutionary process. More precisely, an organism is expected to evolve to maximise its inclusive fitness--the number of copies of its genes passed on globally\n(rather than by a particular individual). Describing genes with the term "selfish" is not meant to imply that they have actual motives or will--only that their effects can be described as if they do. A crude analogy can be found in the old joke "A chicken is just an egg's way\nof making more eggs."\nLikewise, Dawkins describes biological organisms as "vehicles" used by their\ngenes for making more copies of those genes, regardless of the effect they might\nhave on individuals or species.\nObviously, genes that tend to help the organisms they are in to survive and\nreproduce also help themselves; so most of the time the gene and the organism\nshare common goals.\nBut there are exceptions: segregation distortion genes, for example, that\nare detrimental to their host nonetheless propagate themselves at its expense.\nLikewise, the existence of junk DNA that provides no benefit to its host,\nonce a puzzle, can be more easily explained. Proponents argue that the central point of the idea, that the gene is the unit of selection, is a more accurate recasting of evolution than Darwin's (who couldn't\nhave explained natural selection in these terms because the basic mechanisms\nof genetics weren't understood at the time). Critics argue that this view oversimplifies the relationship between genes and the organism. Proponents argue that when looked at from the point of view of gene-selection, many biological phenomena that were difficult to explain in terms of prior models of evolution\nbecome easier to understand and explain. In particular, phenomena such as kin selection and eusociality, where organisms act against their individual interests (in the sense of health, safety or personal reproduction) to help related organisms reproduce, can be explained as genes helping copies of themselves in other bodies to replicate. In other words, genes act "selfishly" to increase the number of copies of\nthemselves and for no other reason. The idea is sometimes mistakenly believed to support genetic determinism.\nDawkins is quick to point out that although we may be influenced by our genes,\nwe are not controlled by them. Even further from Dawkins's conception is the misunderstanding of the idea as predicting (or even prescribing or justifying) that human behaviour must be "selfish" in some sense.Bibliography\n* The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins Oxford University Press, 1976; 2nd edition, December 1989, hardcover, 352 pages, ISBN 0192177737; April 1992, ISBN 019857519X; trade paperback, September, 1990, 352 pages, ISBN 0192860925 \n Selfish Gene, TheSelfish Gene, The\n\n\n |
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"It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid." - George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) |
