Nesse and Williams have written a lively discourse on the application of the principles of evolutionary biology to the dilemmas of modern medicine. Nesse, a physician and an associate professor of psychiatry, and Williams, a professor of ecology and evolution, provide a primer on Darwin's theory of natural selection. They explain that the functional design of organisms-e.g., our bodies-may suggest new ways of addressing illness. The book begins with a look at the causes of disease and their evolutionary influences. But the book mainly assesses the concept of adaptation by natural selection, and illustrates the ways Darwinian thinking can be applied to medical problems. As one example, the authors examine the use of penicillin over the past 60 years against bacterial infections. The book's quirky information may speak to a broad audience: researchers, for instance, have found that relatives of schizophrenics have an unusually high frequency of inclusion in Who's Who-which may counterbalance drawbacks of the disorder in evolutionary terms. The tendency toward child abuse, too, may be influenced, the authors say, by evolution and the passing on of genes. And there may well be an evolutionary reason to welcome morning sickness, they argue: nausea and food aversions during pregnancy apparently evolved to impose dietary restrictions on the mother so as to correspond with fetal vulnerability and, thereby, minimize fetal exposure to food toxins.
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R.M.尼斯,密锡根大学医学院精神病学教授,曾任该校教育及学术事务副主任。他组建了人类行为和进化学会,并曾任主席,在进化心理学和达尔文医学研究领域享有盛名。
G.C.威廉斯,纽约州州立大学生态学和进化论荣休教授,美国科学院院士,曾任进化研究学会主席。他以对群体选择论的有力批判而闻名,在性别进化研究领域也有杰出成就。1999年他获得了有生物科学界“诺贝尔奖”之称的克拉福德奖。
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有时我以为它有一半是罪孽, 我觉得我难以用语言去描述它; 语言,好像自然,有一半是真实的, 另一半却失去了灵魂。 但是,面对这个不能停下来的大脑, 怎样运用有分寸的语言去欺骗它呢; 这个糟糕的机器在运转, 好像会令人迟钝的麻醉剂, 使它不感到疼痛。 ——亚尔弗德·顿尼逊《回忆录》
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