This View of Life
Magazine
This View of Life is an interdisciplinary magazine and academic journal dedicated to exploring the application of evolutionary science across all aspects of human life.

Designing effective organizations using Darwinian selection.The key [to designing an effective organization] is not to strike some (inefficient) compromise between the interests of individuals and their group, but to work with the grain of human nature to bring individual and group interests into alignment.

Is the infamous <em>T. rex</em> really the most popular dinosaur in America?Is the infamous <em>T. rex</em> really the most popular dinosaur in America?

Helping students understand the evolution of our human sense of purpose should be the central purpose of evolution education.

The world lost a great human being in the passing of Elinor Ostrom.

Why are humans such a cooperative species, and what does the answer to this question mean for our understanding of the organization of modern firms and societies?

Lorna O’Brien, a paleontologist at the University of Toronto, has been studying an ancient animal that bears an uncanny resemblance to the flower that we associate with springtime.

Are we stuck with war? ETVOL reviews select contributions to the Science special issue on Human Conflict.Warfare and human nature seem inextricably linked. But what do we mean by “human nature,” and what evidence would we require as proof that warfare is an indelible feature of the human condition?

"evolution of intelligence can be driven by the need to deal with the mechanical environment, rather than the prevailing orthodoxy that it’s only the social environment that’s important"

Capitalism, neoliberalism, and state communism have intensified inequalities and increased global impoverishment. How can we do better?

A flurry of recent activity indicates that evolution is beginning to occupy center stage in economic debates—and not a moment too soon.A flurry of recent activity indicates that evolution is beginning to occupy center stage in economic debates—and not a moment too soon.

Modern medicine tells us that too much meat is bad for us, so what's a consumer to do?

In this four-article series, Dr. Jonathan Hendricks from San Jose State University writes about a new approach to looking at trends in popular literature; applying this fascinating new method to paleontology, geology, and evolution. In this four-article series, Dr. Jonathan Hendricks from San Jose State University writes about a new approach to looking at trends in popular literature; applying this fascinating new method to paleontology, geology, and evolution.
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