Edward Osborne Wilson (born June 10, 1929) is an American biologist, researcher (sociobiology, biodiversity), theorist (consilience, biophilia), naturalist (conservationist) and author. His biological specialty is myrmecology, the study of ants.
Wilson is a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction. He is known for his career as a scientist, his advocacy for environmentalism, and his secular-humanist and deist ideas pertaining to religious and ethical matters.
As of 2007, he is Pellegrino University Research Professor in Entomology for the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University and a Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. He is a Humanist Laureate of the International Academy of Humanism.
E.O. Wilson defines sociobiology as "the systematic study of the biological basis of all social behavior," the central theoretical problem of which is the question of how behaviors that seemingly contradict the principles of natural selection, such as altruism, can develop. Sociobiology: A New Synthesis, Wilson's first attempt to outline the new field of study, was first published in 1975 and called for a fairly revolutionary update to the so-called Modern Synthesis of evolutionary biology. Sociobiology as a new field of study demanded the active inclusion of sociology, the social sciences, and the humanities in evolutionary theory. Often criticized for its apparent message of "biological destiny," Sociobiology set the stage for such controversial works as Richard Dawkins's The Selfish Gene and Wilson's own Consilience.
Sociobiology defines such concepts as society, individual, population, communication, and regulation. It attempts to explain, biologically, why groups of animals behave the way they do when finding food or shelter, confronting enemies, or getting along with one another. Wilson seeks to explain how group selection, altruism, hierarchies, and sexual selection work in populations of animals, and to identify evolutionary trends and sociobiological characteristics of all animal groups, up to and including man. The insect sections of the books are particularly interesting, given Wilson's status as the world's most famous entomologist.
It is fair to say that as an ecological strategy eusociality has been overwhelmingly successful. It is useful to think of an insect colony as a diffuse organism, weighing anywhere from less than a gram to as much as a kilogram and possessing from about a hundred to a million or more tiny mouths.
It's when Wilson starts talking about human beings that the furor starts. Feminists have been among the strongest critics of the work, arguing that humans are not slaves to a biological destiny, forever locked in "primitive" behavior patterns without the ability to reason past our biochemical nature. Like The Origin of Species, Sociobiology has forced many biologists and social scientists to reassess their most cherished notions of how life works.
It's been 25 years since E. O. Wilson wrote Sociobiology, naming a new science and starting it off with a bang--and a firestorm of protest. "Nurture!" and "Nature!" came the cries from every corner of the academic world, as the book became a causus belli for sociologists, feminists, human geneticists, and psychologists.
--Mary Ellen Curtin (amazon.com )
This book enthralls and enchants...If you have this book...you can begin getting your mind ready for the illuminations about human society.
--Lewis Thomas (Harper's )
Rarely has the world been provided with such a splendid stepping stone for an exciting future of a new science.
--John Tyler Bonner (Scientific American )
Its contents do indeed provide a new synthesis, of wide perspective and great authority...Wilson's plain uncluttered prose is a treat to read, his logic is rigorous, his arguments are lucid.
--V. C. Wymne-Edwards (Nature )
This book will stand as a landmark in the comparative study of social behavior. (Quarterly Review of Biology )
Sociobiology is an excellent book, full of extraordinary insights, and replete with the beauty and poetry of the animal kingdom. (Times Literary Supplement )
It is impossible to leave Wilson's book without having one's sense of life permanently and dramatically widened.
--Fred Hapgood (The Atlantic )
發表於2025-01-03
Sociobiology 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
一般都認為本書是威爾遜《社會生物學:新的綜閤》的縮寫本,其實不然,這隻是它的一個來源,其他還有道金斯的《自私的基因》、其他社會生物學資料。因此準確地講是一本編譯書,很有趣的是書的扉頁寫的是“陽河清編”,但這前言和後記中都說是“李昆峰”編的,不知何故。整本書...
評分人的一切觀點其實都脫不開他的價值觀,人對一切材料的處理都受其價值觀的影響,況且,人對生物學的事實材料真的占有瞭多少呢?人有沒有瞭解生物界方方麵麵所有狀況的1%呢? 愛德華威爾遜身為生物學傢,直接跳齣來在前言裏說,他贊同保守主義(在當代西方社會的語境中,大約就是...
評分人的一切觀點其實都脫不開他的價值觀,人對一切材料的處理都受其價值觀的影響,況且,人對生物學的事實材料真的占有瞭多少呢?人有沒有瞭解生物界方方麵麵所有狀況的1%呢? 愛德華威爾遜身為生物學傢,直接跳齣來在前言裏說,他贊同保守主義(在當代西方社會的語境中,大約就是...
評分【兒時最想讀的書係列】:重讀《社會生物學:新的綜閤》亂感 這本漢譯齣版不久就第一時間閱讀。後來又有瞭電子版,放在筆記本裏也好多年瞭。 很入迷地閱讀。從齣版到現在,一晃竟然八年過去瞭。二〇〇八年還是很入迷地讀書的啊!現在無目的碎片化閱讀占用瞭太多時間,很久沒有...
評分愛德華.威爾遜的故事 一、 塑形歲月 如果一個小男孩在7歲的時候瞎瞭一隻眼睛,8歲時父母離異,然後被送入一個嚴厲而乏味的寄宿軍校,稍大瞭一點,發現自己比身邊的夥伴都要矮小瘦弱,並且不得不跟著父親與繼母滿美國亂跑,以至於無法在短時間內融入當地孩子群中,被迫忍受...
圖書標籤: Edward.O.Wilson 社會生物學 Sociobiology 生物 社會學 基因決定論 心理 非小說類
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Sociobiology 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載