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Darwin's world-wide web

A brief introduction to this album.

An episode of the Darwin's world-wide web - Audio podcast, hosted by The Open University, titled "Darwin's world-wide web" was published on November 4, 2009 and runs 1 minutes.

November 4, 2009 ·1m · Darwin's world-wide web - Audio

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A brief introduction to this album.

A brief introduction to this album.
Darin Gosling ( Darin G ) Darin Gosling ( Darin G ) I Love my soul music !Live on Cruise FM every Friday at 6-8pm UK time.Website - CruiseFM.co.ukEmail: [email protected] live: stream.CruiseFM.co.uk Live .Get The Cruise FM App from the usual stores or on the TuneIn Radio � App on the Pure Radio � Network, on iTunes Radio. 93.4 & 107.5 across the Costa's and CruiseFM.co.uk � Worldwide Darwin and language diversity - Audio The Open University Can Darwin's theory of evolution be applied to languages? If so what are the analogues for natural selection and species diversification? What truths does this approach reveal and what problems does it throw up? In this album Professor Mark Pagel of Reading University and Quentin Atkinson, an evolutionary biologist at Oxford, discuss the pitfalls and the up-sides to approaching language through a Darwinian model. Focussing on Indo-European languages, they show how mathematical and statistical models can be used to study the development of both particular words and of grammatical terms. Looking to the future they speculate on how language will develop in the new globalised culture. The tracks on this album were produced by The Open University in collaboration with the British Council. They form part of Darwin Now, a global initiative celebrating the life and work of Charles Darwin and the impact his ideas about evolution continue to have on today’s world. © British Council 2009. Evolution and the human family - Audio The Open University Can Darwin's theory of evolution be applied to cultural institutions like the family? If so, how can it help us to understand how family structures have evolved? If not, what are the limitations of a Darwinian approach? In this album, Ruth Mace, Professor of Evolutionary Biology at UCL in London, reveals how she uses a Darwinian approach to study diverse human populations. In particular, she focuses her discussion on family size, exploring how Darwinian concepts such as evolutionary trade-offs can help explain why modern families are getting smaller and smaller. The tracks on this album were produced by The Open University in collaboration with the British Council. They form part of Darwin Now, a global initiative celebrating the life and work of Charles Darwin and the impact his ideas about evolution continue to have on today’s world. © The British Council 2009. Genetic revolutions - Audio The Open University How have discoveries in modern genetics vindicated Darwin's theories? Does the study of DNA reveal the process of evolution? And how is the modern science of genetics evolving? In this album, Sean Carroll, Professor of Molecular Biology and Genetics at the University of Wisconsin, reveals how discoveries in contemporary genetics both endorse Darwin's theory of evolution and enable scientists to mount complex investigations into the development of humankind and many other species. He discusses the genetic similarities between many different forms of life and looks forward to further advances in the future. The tracks on this album were produced by The Open University in collaboration with the British Council. They form part of Darwin Now, a global initiative celebrating the life and work of Charles Darwin and the impact his ideas about evolution continue to have on today’s world. © The British Council 2009.
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