The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

(Michael S) #1

1360 Bibliography


--------1993b. The inexorable logic of the punctuational paradigm: Hugo de Vries on species
selection. In Evolutionary Patterns and Processes. London: The Linnean Soc. of London,
pp. 3-18.
--------1993c. How to analyze Burgess Shale disparity—a reply to Ridley. Paleobiology 19:
522 - 523.
--------1993d. The Book of Life. Preface, pp. 6-21. N.Y.: W. W. Norton (S. J. Gould general
editor, 10 contributors).
--------1993e. Eight Little Piggies. N.Y.: W. W. Norton.
--------1994. Tempo and mode in the macroevolutionary reconstruction of Darwinism. Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91: 6764-6771.
--------1995. Dinosaur in a Haystack. N.Y.: Harmony Books.
--------1996a. Full House: The Spread of Excellence from Plato to Darwin. N.Y.: Harmony
Books.
--------1996b. A Lesson from the Old Masters. Nat. Hist. 105 (Aug.): 16-22, 58-59.
--------1997a. The taxonomy and geographic variation of Cerion on San Salvador (Bahama
Islands). Proceedings 8th Symposium on the Geology of the Bahamas and other
Carbonate Regions, James L. Carew, ed. San Salvador, Bahamas: Bahamian Field Station
Ltd., pp. 73-91.
--------1997b. Cope's rule as psychological artifact. Nature 385: 199-200.
--------1997c. As the worm turns. Nat. Hist. (Feb.) 106: 24-27, 68-73.
--------1997d. Darwinian Fundamentalism, part 1. The New York Review of Books, June 12, pp.
34 - 37. Evolution: The Pleasures of Pluralism, part 2. The New York Review of Books, June
26, pp. 47-52.
--------1997e. The exaptive excellence of spandrels as a term and prototype. Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. USA 94: 10750-10755.
--------1997f. The paradox of the visibly irrelevant. Nat. Hist. 106 (Dec): 12-18, 60 - 66.
--------1998a. The Great Asymmetry. Science 279: 812-813.
--------1998b. Leonardo's Mountain of Clams and The Diet of Worms. N.Y.: Harmony Books.
--------1999a. A Darwinian gentleman at Marx's funeral. Nat. Hist. 108 (Sept.): 32- 33, 56-66.
--------1999b. Rocks of Ages: Science and Religion in the Fullness of Life. N.Y.: Ballantine
Publ., 241 pp.
--------2000a. What does the dreaded "E" word mean anyway? Nat. Hist. 109 (Feb.): 28-44.
--------2000b. Beyond competition. Paleobiology 26: 1-6.
--------2000c. Linnaeus's Luck? Nat. Hist. 109 (Sept.): 18-25, 66-76.
--------2000d. A Tree Grows in Paris: Lamarck's division of Worms and Revision of Nature. In:
S. J. Gould, The Lying Stones of Marrakech: Penultimate Reflections in natural History.
N.Y.: Harmony Books, pp. 115-143.
--------2000e. Of coiled oysters and big brains: how to rescue the terminology of heterochrony,
now gone astray. Evolution and Development 2: 241-248.
--------2001. Humbled by the Genome's Mysteries. N.Y. Times Op-Ed. Feb 19.
Gould, S. J., and C. B. Calloway. 1980. Clams and brachiopods—ships that pass in the night?
Paleobiology 6: 383-396.
Gould, S. J., and N. Eldredge. 1971. Speciation and punctuated equilibria: an alternative to
phyletic gradualism. G. S. A. Ann. Meeting, Washington, DC, Abstracts with Programs,
pp. 584-585.
--------1977. Punctuated equilibria: the tempo and mode of evolution reconsidered.
Paleobiology: 3: 115-151.
--------1983. Darwin's gradualism. Systematic Zool. 32: 444-445.
--------1986. Punctuated equilibrium at the third stage. Systematic Zool. 35: 143-148.

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