Acknowledgments
Introduction: Chance in Evolution from Darwin to Contemporary Biology
Grant Ramsey and Charles H. Pence
Part I. The Historical Development and Implications of Chance in Evolution
1. Contingency, Chance, and Randomness in Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Biology
David J. Depew
2. Chance and Chances in Darwin’s Early Theorizing and in Darwinian Theory Today
Jonathan Hodge
3. Chance in the Modern Synthesis
Anya Plutynski, Kenneth Blake Vernon, Lucas John Matthews, and Daniel Molter
4. Is it Providential, by Chance? Christian Objections to the Role of Chance in Darwinian Evolution
J. Matthew Ashley
5. Does Darwinian Evolution Mean We Are Here by Chance?
Michael Ruse
Part II. Chance in the Processes of Evolution
6. The Reference Class Problem in Evolutionary Biology: Distinguishing Selection from Drift
Michael Strevens
7. Weak Randomness at the Origin of Biological Variation: The Case of Genetic Mutations
Francesca Merlin
8. Parallel Evolution: What Does It (Not) Tell Us and Why Is It (Still) Interesting?
Thomas Lenormand, Luis-Miguel Chevin, and Thomas Bataillon
Part III. Chance and Contingency in the History of Life
9. Contingent Evolution: Not by Chance Alone
Eric Desjardins
10. History’s Windings in a Flask: Microbial Experiments into Evolutionary Contingency
Zachary D. Blount
11. Rolling the Dice Twice: Evolving Reconstructed Ancient Proteins in Extant Organisms
Betul Kacar
12. Wonderful Life Revisited: Chance and Contingency in the Ediacaran-Cambrian Radiation
Douglas H. Erwin
References
Contributors
Index