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199634499Somerset New Jersey U.S.A.: John Wiley & Son Ltd. New. 1996. Hardcover. 0471957194 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- clean and crisp tight and bright pages with no writing or markings to the text. -- TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction: concepts of antisocial behaviour of cause and of genetic influences 1 Issues in the search for candidate genes in mice as potential animal models of human aggression 21 Aggression from a developmental perspective: genes environments and interactions 45 A twin study of self-reported criminal behaviour 61 Heterogeneity among juvenile antisocial behaviours: findings from the Virginia Twin Study of Adolescent Behavioural Development 76 Predisposition to criminality: Swedish adoption studies in retrospect 99 Assessing the role of genetics in crime using adoption cohorts 115 Direct analysis of candidate genes in impulsive behaviours 139 MAOA deficiency and abnormal behaviour: perspectives on an association 155 Serotonin in alcoholic violent offenders 168 Evolutionary adaptationism: another biological approach to criminal and antisocial behaviour 183 Chronic problems in understanding tribal violence and warfare 202 The implications for responsibility of possible genetic factors in the explanation of violence 237 Legal implications of genetics and crime research 248 Concluding remarks 265 Index of contributors 272 Subject index 274. -- DESCRIPTION: -- Univ. Of Maryland. An explanation of the debate concerning behavioral genetics in particular the practice of genetic research into criminal behavior. Examines the broader issues surrounding the debate such as causation and moral responsibility. For scholars philosophers and scientists. -- This volume brings together a group of essays by leading philosophers of science ethicists and legal scholars commissioned for an important and controversial conference on genetics and crime. The essays address basic conceptual methodological and ethical issues raised by genetic research on criminal behavior but largely ignored in the public debate. They explore the complexities in tracing any genetic influence on criminal violent or antisocial behavior the varieties of interpretation to which evidence of such influences is subject and the relevance of such influences to the moral and legal appraisal of criminal conduct. The volume provides a critical overview of the assumptions methods and findings of recent behavioral genetics. -- with a bonus offer-- . John Wiley & Son Ltd hardcover
199623495Somerset New Jersey U.S.A.: John Wiley & Son Ltd. New. 1996. Hardcover. 0471957194 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY AVOID WEEKS OF DELAY ELSEWHERE. -- clean and crisp tight and bright pages with no writing or markings to the text. -- with a bonus offer-- . John Wiley & Son Ltd hardcover
18820159981882 - 1898: Various Publishers 1882. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good. The Author's Personal Copies No Duplicates Of His Nineteenth Century Works On Paleontology And Related Areas Of Biology 127 Of His Published Writings Including Original Offprints Extracts Title Pages Manuscripts And Notes In German Or English With A Few Clippings And Photographs Laid In Loosely. Three Volumes Dark Brown Pebbled Cloth Over Brown Patterned Boards. Bindings Worn And Frayed Material Should Be Professionally Rebound With Archival Materials. His Obituary In The American Naturalist Sept 1898 Pp 717-718 Refers To A Total Output Of 143 Papers Being Reported By His Brother Which Possibly Includes Reprints And Translations As He Wrote In Both German And English And This Collection Appears Complete. Baur Was Last A Professor At The University Of Chicago 1892 -1898. Baur Wrote Extensively On Various Paleontological Topics. He Also Built On The Late Nineteenth Century Theory Of Evolution And Wrote Extensively On His Idea That Changes In Morphology Might Be Brought Out By A Change In Environment Including Nutrition Etc. Such That These Changed Characteristics Would Persist In Successive Generations So Long As The Changed Conditions Persisted For Which There Is Now Some Evidence For At Least Three Generations. He Cited Extensively To Personal Observations And Reports From Others. His Work Differs From Weizmann Etc. In That He Maintained That Changes In Environment Could Bring Out Changes In Morphology Without Changes In The Genetic Material Such Changes Persisting In Successive Generations When The Environmental Changes Also Persisted. In One Such 1891 Paper He Concludes With A Citation To Darwin's Letter To Wagner: "In My Opinion The Greatest Error Which I Have Committed Has Been Not Allowing Sufficient Weight To The Direct Action Of The Environment - I.E. Food Climate Etc. -Independently Of Natural Selection." Although Now Dismissed Some Because Of His Neo-Lamarckian Ideas His Departures From Rigorous Scientific Evidence In Genetics Is Perhaps Less Serious Than The Acceptance And Promotion Of The Ideas Of "Phlogiston" By Important Earlier Chemists And Of "Ether" By His Contemporaries Among Important Physicists; And The Emphasis Of The Neo-Lamarckians On Environmental Nutritional And Physiological Factors Is More In Keeping With Modern Understanding Of Individual Development Than The Emphasis Upon Purely Genetic Evolution Which Treats Only Classes Of Individuals By Arbitrary Groupings Into Classes Of Individuals . Complete Collections Of Original Manuscripts And Scientific Offprints From This Period Are Increasingly Uncommon In The Market. All Material In Excellent Condition Bound Into Three Volumes Bindings Very Worn. <br/> <br/> Various Publishers hardcover
1492A collection of original offprints in the fields of genetics heredity and evolution. From the library of Alfred Henry Sturtevant 1891-1970 renowned American geneticist. All items unless stated bear Sturtevant's signature and/or stamp and many are presentation copies. Included are works by Bateson Boveri Calvin Bridges Julian Huxley Jacques Loeb Raymond Pearl Reginald Punnett and Edmund Wilson. unknown
1835037486London: Longman Rees Orme Brown Green And Longmans 1835. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Fine. Frontispiece Illustrated Title Page Illustrations In Text. Viii 688 Pp. Full Year With "Corrections" On Last Page. Recent Full Green Cloth Red Morocco Spine Label Retaining Original Preliminary And Final Blanks. Articles By Edward Blyth At Pp 40 "An Attempt To Classify The 'Varities' Of Animals." P. 198 "A Few Remarks On Hybrids." P. 325 "Observations On The Cuckoo" P. 364 " A Notice Of A Very Remarkable Individual Of The Common Shrike."; Charles Waterton P. 166 251 322 361 453 451 663; W. J. Clarke P. 1 "On Certain Meteoric Phenomena"; Etc. The Blyth Article Is The First Extended Discussion Of The Basic Principles Of Natural Selection; Darwin Read Blyth's Work Carefully And Was A Friend Of Blyth; Loren Eiseley's "Darwin And The Mysterious Mr. X" Is An Account Of Their Relationship With Some Errors But Generally Correct. Binding As New; Preliminary And Final Blanks With Browning And Light Chipping At Corners; Contents Fine Clean Square Unworn. No Names Or Marks. <br/> <br/> Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, And Longmans hardcover