Teacher(s)
Language
English
Main themes
The famous quote of Theodosius Dobzhansky « Nothing makes sense in biology, except in the light of evolution » (referring to his essay published in 1973) is well known among students in biology.
However, the significance of evolutionary thinking is by no means limited to pure biology. Evolution played no significant role in psychology, sociology, agriculture, natural resource management and medicine for the better part of a century or so. But the intellectual times are changing. There are now new handbooks on evolutionary psychology, evolutionary medicine, Darwinian agriculture, etc.
"Evolutionary Applications" is also the title of a young scientific journal. Hence, students who are well trained in evolutionary thinking should be well armed for making significant contributions to several applied fields that are highly relevant for our society and current and future environment.
In this course we will train evolutionary thinking within the context of several applications covering fields including agriculture, aquaculture, biomedicine, climate change, conservation biology, disease biology, forestry, invasion biology, fisheries, wildlife management, psychology and sociology.
There is no syllabus or textbook, but we will use a number of papers and book chapters as study material (will be available on Moodle).
I will lecture about different concepts and their application, and we will frequently discuss about case studies in the different fields of the natural and human sciences.
However, the significance of evolutionary thinking is by no means limited to pure biology. Evolution played no significant role in psychology, sociology, agriculture, natural resource management and medicine for the better part of a century or so. But the intellectual times are changing. There are now new handbooks on evolutionary psychology, evolutionary medicine, Darwinian agriculture, etc.
"Evolutionary Applications" is also the title of a young scientific journal. Hence, students who are well trained in evolutionary thinking should be well armed for making significant contributions to several applied fields that are highly relevant for our society and current and future environment.
In this course we will train evolutionary thinking within the context of several applications covering fields including agriculture, aquaculture, biomedicine, climate change, conservation biology, disease biology, forestry, invasion biology, fisheries, wildlife management, psychology and sociology.
There is no syllabus or textbook, but we will use a number of papers and book chapters as study material (will be available on Moodle).
I will lecture about different concepts and their application, and we will frequently discuss about case studies in the different fields of the natural and human sciences.
Learning outcomes
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 | 1. Demonstrate mastery of the long and short term processes of evolution of living things. 2. Confront the application of knowledge gained in evolutionary biology in a range of areas within and outside of biology in the strict sense. |
Content
This teaching unit focuses on the analysis, understanding and application of evolutionary thinking (so based on evolutionary biology) to other applied fields (e.g. agriculture, human health, psychology, fisheries, etc.).
Teaching methods
This cours includes a series of lectures and interactive discussions with the students on the principles of biological evolution, the many misconceptions about this key framework of basic and applied ecology and how to apply them in real world applications (biodiversity conservation, agriculture, medicine, etc.).
Lectures are in english.
Lectures are in english.
Evaluation methods
The knowledge and particularly the understanding of the field covered by this course is evaluated by a written exam.
Online resources
Moodle web site
Teaching materials
- Diapositives et articles scientifiques (sur Moodle)
Faculty or entity