Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
n
otes
Preface
1
See “Understanding Evolution for Teachers,” University of California,
Berkeley, http://evolution.erkeley.edu/evosite/misconceps/IIIBmight.shtml.
Accessed December 15, 2008. Image used with permission of the UC Museum
of Paleontology's Understanding Evolution.
2
“Understanding Evolution for Teachers,” http://evolution.berkeley.edu/
evosite/nature/I3basicquestions.shtml. Accessed December 15, 2008.
3
This definition of culture draws upon the work of Peter Berger,
The Sacred
Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion
(Garden City, N.Y.: Double-
day, 1967), 6.
4
Michael Ruse,
Monad to Man
:
The Concept of Progress in Evolutionary Biology
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1996).
5
John Angus Campbell, “Scientific Revolution and the Grammar of Culture:
The Case of Darwin's
Origin
,”
Quarterly Journal of Speech
72 (1986): 351-76.
Chapter 1
Epigraph: Mary Midgley,
Evolution as a Religion
:
Strange Hopes and Stranger Fears
(Lon-
don: Methuen, 1985), 3-4.
1
Stephen Jay Gould,
Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History
(New York: Norton, 1989), 28-34.
2
Jeanne Fahnestock,
Rhetorical Figures in Science
(New York: Oxford University
Press, 1999), 95-98.
3
Jeffrey Walker, “Dionysio de Halicarnaso y la Idea de Crítica de la Retórica,”
Anuario Filosófico
31, no. 2 (1998): 581-601; the original English version of
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