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Immunity in natural history

Date

1996

Authors

Rolston, Holmes, 1932-, author
University of Chicago Press, publisher

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Immunity, involving a struggle for health, is also the defense of biological identity, and, in advanced species, of an idiographic self. The identity of any such "self," though protected by immunity, is enlarged by kin selection, sexuality, reproduction, and caring for offspring. The environment "foreign" from the perspective of immunity is "home" from the perspective of ecology. Immunity makes evolution possible. Immunity, in which an organism acquires information during its biography, is the evolution of ordered control and results in values shared as well as selves defended. Errors here are intrinsic to trial and error learning, a process with analogies in the science of immunology.

Description

Nobel Conference XXVIII. Lecture at Gustavus Adolphus College, October 1992.
Includes bibliographical references (page 372).

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Subject

kin selection
selfish
self
immunity
ecology
natural history

Citation

Associated Publications