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  1. (1 other version)Variation of animals and plants under domestication.Charles Darwin - 1896 - Washington Square, N.Y.: New York University Press. Edited by Harriet Ritvo.
    Are they needed? To be sure. The Darwinian industry, industrious though it is, has failed to provide texts of more than a handful of Darwin's books. If you want to know what Darwin said about barnacles (still an essential reference to cirripedists, apart from any historical importance) you are forced to search shelves, or wait while someone does it for you; some have been in print for a century; various reprints have appeared and since vanished." -Eric Korn,Times Literary Supplement Charles (...)
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  • On the origin of species.Charles Darwin - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Gillian Beer.
    The present edition provides a detailed and accessible discussion ofhis theories and adds an account of the immediate responses to the book on publication.
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  • The Logic of Rational Theism.Adolf Portmann - 1990 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    The Living Form and the Seeing Eye should be of interest not only to philosophers but also to marine biologists (Emperor Hirohito, a marine biologist, was a reader of Portmann), students of natural history, those involved in the life sciences, zoologists, zoo managers, wildlife preservationists, and ethicists. The essays are translated into English and the volume includes an interpretive essay.
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  • The Semantic Morphology of Adolf Portmann: A Starting Point for the Biosemiotics of Organic Form? [REVIEW]Karel Kleisner - 2008 - Biosemiotics 1 (2):207-219.
    This paper develops the ideas of the Swiss zoologist Adolf Portmann or, more precisely, his concept of organic self-representation, wherein Portmann considered the outer surface of living organisms as a specific organ that serves in a self-representational role. This idea is taken as a starting point from which to elaborate Portman’s ideas, so as to make them compatible with the theoretical framework of biosemiotics. Today, despite the many theories that help us understand aposematism, camouflage, deception and other phenomena related to (...)
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  • Catching Fire: How Cooking Made us Human.[author unknown] - 2009
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