Search results for 'Otto H. Schindewolf' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Otto H. Schindewolf (1937). Beobachtungen Und Gedanken Zur Deszendenzlehre. Acta Biotheoretica 3 (3).score: 290.0
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  2. Otto H. Schindewolf (1968). Homologie Und Taxonomie. Acta Biotheoretica 18 (1-4).score: 290.0
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  3. Ernst Mayr, The Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive.score: 27.0
    Theories postulating saltational evolution are a necessary consequence of essentialism. If one believes in constant types, only the sudden production of a new type can lead to evolutionary change. That such saltations can occur and indeed that their occurrence is a necessity is an old belief. Almost all of the theories of evolution described by H. F. Osborn (1894) in his From the Greek s to Darwin were saltational theories, that is, theories of the sudden origin of new kinds. The (...)
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  4. Niles Eldredge (1992). Marjorie Grene, 'Ttwo Evolutionary Theories' and Modern Evolutionary Theory. Synthese 92 (1):135 - 149.score: 12.0
    Grene's Two Evolutionary Theories (1958), a philosophical analysis of the nature of scientific disputes, itself contributed directly to discourse in evolutionary theory. I conclude that Grene's descriptions of two rival theories of evolutionary paleontologists — those of George Gaylord Simpson, who stressed traditional Darwinian continuity, and of Otto Schindewolf, who stressed discontinuity in paleontological data — were entirely accurate. But I further argue that both Simpson, as well as Mayr and Dobzhansky, had incorporated notions of discontinuity into their (...)
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