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The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection 1st Edition
Purchase options and add-ons
- ISBN-100198504403
- ISBN-13978-0198504405
- Edition1st
- PublisherOxford University Press
- Publication dateApril 20, 2000
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions9.52 x 6.42 x 1.13 inches
- Print length360 pages
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Customers find the book's math content scientific and packed with good information. They describe it as a masterpiece in mathematical theory of evolution and a classic in the history of biology. However, opinions differ on readability - some find it easily readable and understandable, while others say the edition is scrambled and unreadable.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's math content insightful and scientific. They say it's packed with good information about mathematical theory of evolution and a must-read for statisticians.
"...and I don't remember what he said exactly but this book was very important in some of the topics he was/is studying." Read more
"...This is very statistical in it's concepts and thus very scientific." Read more
"Spectacular review of Natural Selection and Evolution: math and genetic...." Read more
"...the concepts that interest you, this digital edition is packed with good information." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and full of insights. They describe it as a classic in the history of biology and Fisher's most influential work. The kindle version is considered perfect by readers.
"..."The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" is a stupendous book, full of marvels and insights that ought to be available and understandable..." Read more
"This is perhaps Fisher's most influential books, a classic in the history of biology...." Read more
"One of the 20th century’s most important books." Read more
"It was a seminal work, so loved reading it. Also my kindle version was perfect unlike some people." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readableness. Some find it easily understandable and well-reproduced, while others report issues like scrambled editions, unclear writing style, and difficult to follow content. There are also mentions of misspellings, poor digital rendering, and folds that obscure parts of the text.
"...written in a slightly intangible-to-layman style, it gets easier the more one reads along..." Read more
"...consecutive pages, it shows "folded" results which obscure bits of the text, but these are small and can be easily recovered by recourse to..." Read more
"...It is mostly readily readable and clearly reproduced, and offers much-needed margins for the serious reader...." Read more
"...Though written in a slightly intangible-to-layman style, it gets easier the more one reads along..." Read more
Reviews with images
A classic book, but the Kindle edition need serious editing
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2017Copy details --- My copy is the HardPress Publishing ("January 28, 2013" Paperback, facsimile reproduction) of the original Oxford U. Press (1930) edition. It is mostly readily readable and clearly reproduced, and offers much-needed margins for the serious reader. It contains significant underlining, but that is not bothersome; it pales in comparison to my own underlining and notes (unprecedented for me!), needed in following and digesting Fisher's terse development. On two consecutive pages, it shows "folded" results which obscure bits of the text, but these are small and can be easily recovered by recourse to an online source. Also, a couple of bar graphs are missing their bars (Chapter 4), and Plate 1 of the two "butterfly" plates has a blank "description" page, both of which can also be easily remedied via an online source.
The Book --- I came to "The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" by way of Richard Dawkins' "The Selfish Gene". Not a biologist myself, but fascinated by evolution ever since "dinosaurs" and my "first love" in science, high-school biology, I had been vaguely aware of "The Selfish Gene" since its initial wave of rave reviews many years ago, but never bothered to read it because, as it was advertised, its main theme(s) and results seemed pretty obvious. But, being "retired", something recently piqued my curiosity again, not sure what that was now, but I finally decided to take a look. It turned out to be a wonderful book, provocative, seminal, and entertaining, but left some basic issues too enticingly enigmatic to resist. So, following Dawkins' references to Fisher ...
"The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" is a stupendous book, full of marvels and insights that ought to be available and understandable to all. Including such seminal results and insights as the so-called "Modern Synthesis" (Darwin + Mendel, Darwin rendered mathematical!); Fisher's "Fundamental theorem of Natural Selection" (a stupendously seminal and revelatory discovery in and of itself); "Fisher's Principle" (the explanation of the surprisingly uniform 50:50 the sex ratio, "probably the most celebrated argument in Evolutionary Biology"); the many fruits of Mimicry (Theory & Exp't); MANY beautifully-reasoned arguments (a feast for the mind for the sheer beauty of the logic itself); and much, much more; but Fisher doesn't stop there, he goes on, in the final 5 chapters, on Mankind, to pose the historical enigma of the universal decay and demise of human civilizations, and to develop, with painstaking support, what is surely the only credible explanation ever offered. "The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" is one of the most mind-expanding and satisfying books I have ever "read".
That said, I put quotes around 'read' because to get all, or at least most, of what this book has to offer, one cannot simple read it. One must work one's way through it. Fisher is often incredibly terse, difficult to follow, opaque, even enigmatic. One can be terse if one is clear, otherwise saying a thing only once, and in one way, is fraught with peril: Fisher often left me confounded. His development often proceeds by leaps and bounds, where step-by-step is needed. A little math can often be more confusing than none at all, for it sucks you in to try and understand more fully. I spent several months, on and off, on "The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" and in the end "got" most of it, with the exception of a couple of asides from beyond far "right field" in Chapter 4. But this requires considerable math, not so much in terms of a high level, but enough facility to invent derivations of his assertions on one's own, without much in the way of a hint. [I felt better about this when I read, in a "side trip", that a contemporary researcher of Fisher's once said of his works (paraphrased): "Whenever I encounter the word "evidently", I blanche, knowing I am in for at least two hours of trying to figure out how he got that"!]
At times it is not so much the derivations that are mysterious, but the logic: How the reasoning goes, and from what starting assumption(s); indeed, there are several instances where cause and effect seem reversed. Partly, I think, this is because Fisher was the truly "synthetic" member of the founders of "the modern synthesis", the others being mostly analytic. In school we are pretty much used to following the logical "analysis" shown to us by our teachers, who start from general principles and derive their consequences. Synthesis is more unusual; it is "putting known things together" to infer the source principle(s) from which they (and much more) follow. Synthesis (unlike analysis) relies greatly on "intuition", and in large part it doesn't matter how you get to that flash of inspiration, only that you DO get there.
Finally, in fairness, I must make one negative remark. I wish Fisher had stopped at the end of Chapter 11, and left the "political ideas" of Chapter 12 un-detailed, or implicit. Chapter 12 treats rudimentary eugenic possibilities to solve human civilizations' (his, in particular) "decay problem", and although there is nothing wrong with the idea of eugenics (other than its being fraught with moral and historical perils) and much that is right, and in fact we engage in eugenics or dysgenics whatever course we choose, Fisher's Chapter 12 is, for him, as a remarkable scientist, and as a thinker of the highest caliber, certainly infra dig.
"The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" is worth whatever time, effort, basis, and objectivity which you are able to bring to it; it will reward you in kind. You wouldn't be reading this review if you didn't have the most important ingredients: interest and a desire to think and understand. It will expand your thinking and your understanding.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2012To my belief no study on evolutionary biology could be complete without mention of this text. Though written in a slightly intangible-to-layman style, it gets easier the more one reads along...
- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2024This is perhaps Fisher's most influential books, a classic in the history of biology. The Kindle edition, however, is a seriously flawed case of a scanning images from the original and converting to text, full of multiple errors on nearly every page. The image I posted is just a small sample. This electronic edition should have been edited and corrected before posting for sale through Amazon.
1.0 out of 5 stars A classic book, but the Kindle edition need serious editingThis is perhaps Fisher's most influential books, a classic in the history of biology. The Kindle edition, however, is a seriously flawed case of a scanning images from the original and converting to text, full of multiple errors on nearly every page. The image I posted is just a small sample. This electronic edition should have been edited and corrected before posting for sale through Amazon.
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2024
Images in this review
- Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2015This was a present for one of my best friends and he was so excited. He loves science and I don't remember what he said exactly but this book was very important in some of the topics he was/is studying.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2022It is very necessary in my view to read "The Origin of the Species " before you read this book. This is very statistical in it's concepts and thus very scientific.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2021One of the 20th century’s most important books.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2013Spectacular review of Natural Selection and Evolution: math and genetic. I didn't read it all, but together with the theory, history can be seen, Evolution concepts and reasoning in Fischer's perspective.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2016It was a seminal work, so loved reading it. Also my kindle version was perfect unlike some people.
Top reviews from other countries
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- Paul -Reviewed in Germany on July 29, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Harter Tobak, wenn man darüber nachdenkt
Hier geht es um die natürliche Selektion durch Gen Veränderung und man lernt auf mathematischer Basis viel über die Auswahl und Voraussagungen.....
Ist auf Studierenden Level geschrieben und für einen normalen Bürger schwer zu lesen.
Ansonsten ein sehr informatives Buch.
FalkReviewed in Germany on December 9, 20184.0 out of 5 stars Good reprint, but of a already used book
When I got the book into my hands I was really excited as the "The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection" was on my wish list for a while now.
The reprint is ok. BUT! It seems like they just scanned an already existing book, which lead to some markings and notes of the previous owner to be included in the book.
This is a no brainer for me, but I am sure that some people will now think twice about buying (hint: for the price it is really ok and the markings are not distracting)
Mr Brian LivingstoneReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 20153.0 out of 5 stars Still as difficult as ever
This was always a difficult book because of the mathematical approach. It is a classic of the "Modern Synthesis" of Darwin/Wallace natural selection and Mendelian genetics so I thought I should give it another go. Sadly my O-level maths 1964 vintage is still not enough to cope with it and the non-mathematical part is not easy to read. Much cleverer people than me spent up to a month at a time on some chapters.The variorum elements i.e.the footnotes added and the introduction by Prof Bennett (who is very qualified to understand the maths) are well worth reading but, for the non-mathematical biologist, this is still a trial, leaving a slight feeling of guilt that you cannot really get into it.





