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W. D. Hamilton

William Donald Hamilton FRS (1 August 1936 – 7 March 2000) was a British evolutionary biologist, recognised as one of the most significant evolutionary theorists of the 20th century.[1][2] Hamilton became known for his theoretical work expounding a rigorous genetic basis for the existence of altruism, an insight that was a key part of the development of the gene-centered view of evolution. He is considered one of the forerunners of sociobiology. Hamilton published important work on sex ratios and the evolution of sex. From 1984 to his death in 2000, he was a Royal Society Research Professor at Oxford University.

W. D. Hamilton
Born
William Donald Hamilton

(1936-08-01)1 August 1936
Died7 March 2000(2000-03-07) (aged 63)
NationalityBritish
Alma materSt. John's College, Cambridge
London School of Economics
University College London
Known forKin selection, Hamilton's rule
SpouseChristine Friess
ChildrenThree daughters
Parent(s)Archibald Milne Hamilton and Bettina Matraves Hamilton née Collier
AwardsNewcomb Cleveland Prize (1981)
Linnean Medal (1989)
Kyoto Prize (1993)
Crafoord Prize (1993)
Sewall Wright Award (1998)
Scientific career
FieldsEvolutionary biology
Academic advisorsJohn Hajnal
Cedric Smith
Doctoral studentsLaurence Hurst
Olivia Judson

Richard Dawkins has written that Hamilton was "the greatest Darwinian of my lifetime".[3]

Early life edit

Hamilton was born in 1936 in Cairo, Egypt, the second of seven children. His parents were from New Zealand; his father A.M. Hamilton was an engineer, and his mother B.M. Hamilton was a physician. The Hamilton family settled in Kent. During the Second World War, Hamilton was evacuated to Edinburgh. He became interested in natural history at an early age and spent his spare time collecting butterflies and other insects. In 1946, he discovered E.B. Ford's New Naturalist book Butterflies, which introduced him to the principles of evolution by natural selection, genetics, and population genetics.

He was educated at Tonbridge School, where he was in Smythe House. As a 12-year-old, he was seriously injured while playing with explosives his father had that were left over from making hand grenades for the Home Guard during World War II. Hamilton had to have a thoracotomy and parts of fingers on his right hand had to be amputated in King's College Hospital to save his life. He was left with scarring and needed six months to recover.

Before going up to the University of Cambridge, he travelled in France and completed two years of national service. As an undergraduate at St. John's College in Biology, he was uninspired by the "many biologists [who] hardly seemed to believe in evolution".

Hamilton's rule edit

Hamilton enrolled in an MSc course in demography at the London School of Economics (LSE), under Norman Carrier, who helped secure grants for his studies. Later, when his work became more mathematical and genetical, he had his supervision transferred to John Hajnal of the LSE and Cedric Smith of University College London (UCL).

Both Fisher and J. B. S. Haldane had seen a problem in how organisms could increase the fitness of their own genes by aiding their close relatives, but not recognised its significance or properly formulated it. Hamilton worked through several examples, and eventually realised that the number that kept falling out of his calculations was Sewall Wright's coefficient of relationship. This became Hamilton's rule: in each behaviour-evoking situation, the individual assesses his neighbour's fitness against his own according to the coefficients of relationship appropriate to the situation. Algebraically, the rule posits that a costly action should be performed if:

 

where C is the cost in fitness to the actor, r the genetic relatedness between the actor and the recipient, and B is the fitness benefit to the recipient. Fitness costs and benefits are measured in fecundity. r is a number between 0 and 1. His two 1964 papers entitled The Genetical Evolution of Social Behaviour are now widely referenced.[4]

The proof and discussion of its consequences, however, involved detailed mathematics, and two reviewers passed over the paper. The third, John Maynard Smith, did not completely understand it either, but recognised its significance. Having his work passed over later led to friction between Hamilton and Maynard Smith, as Hamilton thought Maynard Smith had held his work back to claim credit for the idea (during the review period Maynard Smith published a paper that referred briefly to similar ideas). The Hamilton paper was printed in the Journal of Theoretical Biology and, when first published, was largely ignored. Recognition of its significance gradually increased to the point that it is now routinely cited in biology books.

Much of the discussion relates to the evolution of eusociality in insects of the order Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps) based on their unusual haplodiploid sex-determination system. This system means that females are more closely related to their sisters than to their own (potential) offspring. Thus, Hamilton reasoned, a "costly action" would be better spent in helping to raise their sisters, rather than reproducing themselves.

The supergenes notion (sometimes called the Green-beard effect) - that organisms may evolve genes that are able to identify identical copies in others and preferentially direct social behaviours towards them - was theoretically clarified and withdrawn by Hamilton in 1987.[5]

Spiteful behaviour edit

In his 1970 paper Selfish and Spiteful Behaviour in an Evolutionary Model Hamilton considers the question of whether harm inflicted upon an organism must inevitably be a byproduct of adaptations for survival. What of possible cases where an organism is deliberately harming others without apparent benefit to the self? Such behaviour Hamilton calls spiteful. It can be explained as the increase in the chance of an organism's genetic alleles to be passed to the next generations by harming those that are less closely related than relationship by chance.

Spite, however, is unlikely ever to be elaborated into any complex forms of adaptation. Targets of aggression are likely to act in revenge, and the majority of pairs of individuals (assuming a panmictic species) exhibit a roughly average level of genetic relatedness, making the selection of targets of spite problematic.

Extraordinary sex ratios edit

Between 1964 and 1977, Hamilton was a lecturer at Imperial College London.[6] Whilst there he published a paper in Science on "extraordinary sex ratios". Fisher (1930) had proposed a model as to why "ordinary" sex ratios were nearly always 1:1 (but see Edwards 1998), and likewise extraordinary sex ratios, particularly in wasps, needed explanations. Hamilton had been introduced to the idea and formulated its solution in 1960 when he had been assigned to help Fisher's pupil A.W.F. Edwards test the Fisherian sex ratio hypothesis. Hamilton combined his extensive knowledge of natural history with deep insight into the problem, opening up a whole new area of research.

The paper introduced the concept of the "unbeatable strategy", which John Maynard Smith and George R. Price were to develop into the evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS), a concept in game theory not limited to evolutionary biology. Price had originally come to Hamilton after deriving the Price equation, and thus rederiving Hamilton's rule. Maynard Smith later peer reviewed one of Price's papers, and drew inspiration from it. The paper was not published but Maynard Smith offered to make Price a co-author of his ESS paper, which helped to improve relations between the men. Price committed suicide in 1975, and Hamilton and Maynard Smith were among the few present at the funeral.[7]

Hamilton was a visiting professor at Harvard University and later spent nine months with the Royal Society's and the Royal Geographical Society's Xavantina-Cachimbo Expedition as a visiting professor at the University of São Paulo. From 1978 Hamilton was Professor of Evolutionary Biology at the University of Michigan. Simultaneously, he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[8] His arrival sparked protests and sit-ins from students who did not like his association with sociobiology. There he worked with the political scientist Robert Axelrod on the prisoner's dilemma, and was a member of the BACH group with original members Arthur Burks, Robert Axelrod, Michael Cohen, and John Holland.[9]

Hamilton was regarded as a poor lecturer. This shortcoming would not affect the recognition of his work, however, as it was popularised by Richard Dawkins in the book The Selfish Gene published in 1976.

Chasing the Red Queen edit

Hamilton was an early proponent of the Red Queen theory of the evolution of sex[10] (separate from the other theory of the same name previously proposed by Leigh Van Valen). This was named for a character in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, who is continuously running but never actually travels any distance:

"Well, in our country," said Alice, still panting a little, "you'd generally get to somewhere else—if you ran very fast for a long time, as we've been doing."
"A slow sort of country!" said the Queen. "Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!"

This theory hypothesizes that sex evolved because new and unfamiliar combinations of genes could be presented to parasites, preventing the parasite from preying on that organism: species with sex were able to continuously "run away" from their parasites. Likewise, parasites were able to evolve mechanisms to get around the organism's new set of genes, thus perpetuating an endless race.

Return to Britain edit

In 1980, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1984, he was invited by Richard Southwood to be the Royal Society Research Professor in the Department of Zoology at Oxford, and a fellow of New College, where he remained until his death.

His collected papers, entitled Narrow Roads of Gene Land, began to be published in 1996. The first volume was entitled Evolution of Social Behaviour.

Social evolution edit

The field of social evolution, of which Hamilton's Rule has central importance, is broadly defined as being the study of the evolution of social behaviours, i.e. those that impact on the fitness of individuals other than the actor. Social behaviours can be categorized according to the fitness consequences they entail for the actor and recipient. A behaviour that increases the direct fitness of the actor is mutually beneficial if the recipient also benefits, and selfish if the recipient suffers a loss. A behaviour that reduces the fitness of the actor is altruistic if the recipient benefits, and spiteful if the recipient suffers a loss. This classification was first proposed by Hamilton in 1964.[citation needed]

Hamilton also proposed the coevolution theory of autumn leaf color as an example of evolutionary signalling theory.[11]

Origin of HIV edit

During the 1990s, Hamilton became interested in the now-discredited hypothesis that the origin of HIV lay in Hilary Koprowski's oral polio vaccine trials in Africa during the 1950s. Hamilton's letter on the topic to Science journal was rejected in 1996. Despite this, he spoke to the BBC supporting the hypothesis,[12] and wrote the foreword of Edward Hooper's 1999 book The River. To look for evidence of the hypothesis, Hamilton went on a 2000 field trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to assess natural levels of simian immunodeficiency virus in primates.[13][14] None of the over 60 urine and faecal samples contained detectable SIV virus.[15]

Death edit

Hamilton returned to London from Africa on 29 January 2000. He was admitted to University College Hospital, London, on 30 January 2000. He was transferred to Middlesex Hospital on 5 February 2000 and died there on 7 March 2000. An inquest was held on 10 May 2000 at Westminster Coroner's Court to inquire into rumours about the cause of his death. The coroner concluded that his death was due to "multi-organ failure due to upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage due to a duodenal diverticulum and arterial bleed through a mucosal ulcer". Following reports attributing his death to complications arising from malaria, the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit's investigation established that he had contracted malaria during his final African expedition. However, the pathologist had suggested the possibility that the ulceration and consequent haemorrhage had resulted from a pill (which might have been taken because of malarial symptoms) lodging in the diverticulum; but, even if this suggestion were correct, the link between malaria and the observed causes of death would be entirely indirect.[16]

A secular memorial service (he was an agnostic[17]) was held at the chapel of New College, Oxford on 1 July 2000, organised by Richard Dawkins. He was buried near Wytham Woods. He, however, had written an essay on My intended burial and why in which he wrote:[18]

I will leave a sum in my last will for my body to be carried to Brazil and to these forests. It will be laid out in a manner secure against the possums and the vultures just as we make our chickens secure; and this great Coprophanaeus beetle will bury me. They will enter, will bury, will live on my flesh; and in the shape of their children and mine, I will escape death. No worm for me nor sordid fly, I will buzz in the dusk like a huge bumble bee. I will be many, buzz even as a swarm of motorbikes, be borne, body by flying body out into the Brazilian wilderness beneath the stars, lofted under those beautiful and un-fused elytra which we will all hold over our backs. So finally I too will shine like a violet ground beetle under a stone.

The second volume of his collected papers, Evolution of Sex, was published in 2002, and the third and final volume, Last Words, in 2005.

In 1966, he married Christine Friess; the couple had three daughters, Helen, Ruth, and Rowena.[19] They amicably separated 26 years later.[citation needed] From 1994, Hamilton found companionship with Maria Luisa Bozzi, an Italian science journalist and author.[19]

Awards edit

Biographies edit

  • Alan Grafen has written a biographical memoir for the Royal Society.[19]
  • A biographical book has also been published by Ullica Segerstråle : Segerstråle, U. 2013. Nature's oracle: the life and work of W. D. Hamilton. Oxford University Press.

Works edit

Collected papers edit

Hamilton started to publish his collected papers in 1996, along the lines of Fisher's collected papers, with short essays giving each paper context. He died after the preparation of the second volume, so the essays for the third volume come from his coauthors.

  • Hamilton W.D. (1996) Narrow Roads of Gene Land vol. 1: Evolution of Social Behaviour Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-7167-4530-5
  • Hamilton W.D. (2002) Narrow Roads of Gene Land vol. 2: Evolution of Sex Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-850336-9
  • Hamilton W.D. (2005) Narrow roads of Gene Land, vol. 3: Last Words (with essays by coauthors, ed. M. Ridley). Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-856690-5

Significant papers edit

  • Hamilton, W. (1964). "The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 7 (1): 1–16. Bibcode:1964JThBi...7....1H. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(64)90038-4. PMID 5875341.
  • Hamilton, W. (1964). "The genetical evolution of social behaviour. II". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 7 (1): 17–52. Bibcode:1964JThBi...7...17H. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(64)90039-6. PMID 5875340.
  • Hamilton, W. (1966). "The moulding of senescence by natural selection". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 12 (1): 12–45. Bibcode:1966JThBi..12...12H. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(66)90184-6. PMID 6015424.
  • Hamilton, W. (1967). "Extraordinary sex ratios. A sex-ratio theory for sex linkage and inbreeding has new implications in cytogenetics and entomology". Science. 156 (774): 477–488. Bibcode:1967Sci...156..477H. doi:10.1126/science.156.3774.477. PMID 6021675.
  • Hamilton, W. (1971). "Geometry for the selfish herd". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 31 (2): 295–311. Bibcode:1971JThBi..31..295H. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(71)90189-5. PMID 5104951.
  • Hamilton W. D. (1975). Innate social aptitudes of man: an approach from evolutionary genetics. in R. Fox (ed.), Biosocial Anthropology, Malaby Press, London, 133–53.
  • Axelrod, R.; Hamilton, W. (1981). "The evolution of cooperation". Science. 211 (4489): 1390–1396. Bibcode:1981Sci...211.1390A. doi:10.1126/science.7466396. PMID 7466396. with Robert Axelrod
  • Hamilton, W.; Zuk, M. (1982). "Heritable true fitness and bright birds: A role for parasites?". Science. 218 (4570): 384–387. Bibcode:1982Sci...218..384H. doi:10.1126/science.7123238. PMID 7123238. S2CID 17658568.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Obituary by Richard Dawkins 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine", The Independent, 10 March 2000. See also his eulogy by Richard Dawkins reprinted in his book A Devil's Chaplain (2003).
  2. ^ BBC Radio 4 – Great Lives – 2 Feb 2010
  3. ^ Dawkins, Richard (2022) [2021]. Flights of Fancy: Defying Gravity by Design and Evolution. London: Head of Zeus. p. 210. ISBN 978-1838937850.
  4. ^ Aaen-Stockdale, C. (2017), "Selfish Memes: An Update of Richard Dawkins' Bibliometric Analysis of Key Papers in Sociobiology", Publications, 5 (2): 12, doi:10.3390/publications5020012, hdl:11250/2443958
  5. ^ Hamilton, William D. 1987. Discriminating nepotism: expectable, common and overlooked. In Kin recognition in animals, edited by D. J. C. Fletcher and C. D. Michener. New York: Wiley.
  6. ^ "WD Hamilton". TheGuardian.com. 9 March 2000.
  7. ^ Brown, Andrew (2000). The Darwin Wars: The Scientific Battle for the Soul of Man. London: Touchstone. ISBN 978-0-684-85145-7.
  8. ^ a b "William Donald Hamilton". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  9. ^ "History".
  10. ^ The Red Queen Hypothesis at Indiana University. Quote: "W. D. Hamilton and John Jaenike were among the earliest pioneers of the idea."
  11. ^ Hamilton, WD; Brown, SP (July 2001). "Autumn tree colours as a handicap signal". Proc. R. Soc. B. 268 (1475): 1489–1493. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1672. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 1088768. PMID 11454293.
  12. ^ "'Scientists started Aids epidemic'". BBC News. 1 September 1999. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  13. ^ "The Politics of a Scientific Meeting: the Origin-of-AIDS Debate at the Royal Society". Politics and the Life Sciences. 20 (20). September 2001. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  14. ^ Allen, Kate (29 April 2023). "He nearly died pursuing HIV's origins. Then this Canadian scientist set his sights on the COVID lab leak theory. Here's what he found". Toronto Star. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  15. ^ Horton, Richard (2000). "New data challenge OPV theory of AIDS origin". The Lancet. 356 (9234): 1005. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)02698-2.
  16. ^ "ECU Ruling: Great Lives, BBC Radio 4, 2 February 2010". BBC. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  17. ^ Ullica Segerstrale (28 February 2013). Nature's Oracle: The Life and Work of W.D.Hamilton. OUP Oxford. pp. 383–. ISBN 978-0-19-164277-7.
  18. ^ Hamilton, W. D. (2000). "My intended burial and why". Ethology Ecology and Evolution. 12 (2): 111–122. doi:10.1080/08927014.2000.9522807. S2CID 84908650.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ a b c d Grafen, A. (2004). "William Donald Hamilton. 1 August 1936 -- 7 March 2000" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 50: 109–132. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2004.0009. S2CID 56905497.
  20. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2 December 2021.

References edit

External links edit

  • Royal Society citation
  • Non-mathematical excerpts from Hamilton 1964 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • "If you have a simple idea, state it simply" a 1996 interview with Hamilton
  • London Review of Books book review

hamilton, william, donald, hamilton, august, 1936, march, 2000, british, evolutionary, biologist, recognised, most, significant, evolutionary, theorists, 20th, century, hamilton, became, known, theoretical, work, expounding, rigorous, genetic, basis, existence. William Donald Hamilton FRS 1 August 1936 7 March 2000 was a British evolutionary biologist recognised as one of the most significant evolutionary theorists of the 20th century 1 2 Hamilton became known for his theoretical work expounding a rigorous genetic basis for the existence of altruism an insight that was a key part of the development of the gene centered view of evolution He is considered one of the forerunners of sociobiology Hamilton published important work on sex ratios and the evolution of sex From 1984 to his death in 2000 he was a Royal Society Research Professor at Oxford University W D HamiltonBornWilliam Donald Hamilton 1936 08 01 1 August 1936Cairo EgyptDied7 March 2000 2000 03 07 aged 63 Fitzrovia London United KingdomNationalityBritishAlma materSt John s College CambridgeLondon School of EconomicsUniversity College LondonKnown forKin selection Hamilton s ruleSpouseChristine FriessChildrenThree daughtersParent s Archibald Milne Hamilton and Bettina Matraves Hamilton nee CollierAwardsNewcomb Cleveland Prize 1981 Linnean Medal 1989 Kyoto Prize 1993 Crafoord Prize 1993 Sewall Wright Award 1998 Scientific careerFieldsEvolutionary biologyAcademic advisorsJohn HajnalCedric SmithDoctoral studentsLaurence HurstOlivia JudsonRichard Dawkins has written that Hamilton was the greatest Darwinian of my lifetime 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Hamilton s rule 3 Spiteful behaviour 4 Extraordinary sex ratios 5 Chasing the Red Queen 6 Return to Britain 7 Social evolution 8 Origin of HIV 9 Death 10 Awards 11 Biographies 12 Works 12 1 Collected papers 12 2 Significant papers 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEarly life editHamilton was born in 1936 in Cairo Egypt the second of seven children His parents were from New Zealand his father A M Hamilton was an engineer and his mother B M Hamilton was a physician The Hamilton family settled in Kent During the Second World War Hamilton was evacuated to Edinburgh He became interested in natural history at an early age and spent his spare time collecting butterflies and other insects In 1946 he discovered E B Ford s New Naturalist book Butterflies which introduced him to the principles of evolution by natural selection genetics and population genetics He was educated at Tonbridge School where he was in Smythe House As a 12 year old he was seriously injured while playing with explosives his father had that were left over from making hand grenades for the Home Guard during World War II Hamilton had to have a thoracotomy and parts of fingers on his right hand had to be amputated in King s College Hospital to save his life He was left with scarring and needed six months to recover Before going up to the University of Cambridge he travelled in France and completed two years of national service As an undergraduate at St John s College in Biology he was uninspired by the many biologists who hardly seemed to believe in evolution Hamilton s rule editMain articles Kin selection and Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship Evolutionary biology theory of social behavior Hamilton enrolled in an MSc course in demography at the London School of Economics LSE under Norman Carrier who helped secure grants for his studies Later when his work became more mathematical and genetical he had his supervision transferred to John Hajnal of the LSE and Cedric Smith of University College London UCL Both Fisher and J B S Haldane had seen a problem in how organisms could increase the fitness of their own genes by aiding their close relatives but not recognised its significance or properly formulated it Hamilton worked through several examples and eventually realised that the number that kept falling out of his calculations was Sewall Wright s coefficient of relationship This became Hamilton s rule in each behaviour evoking situation the individual assesses his neighbour s fitness against his own according to the coefficients of relationship appropriate to the situation Algebraically the rule posits that a costly action should be performed if C lt r B displaystyle C lt r times B nbsp where C is the cost in fitness to the actor r the genetic relatedness between the actor and the recipient and B is the fitness benefit to the recipient Fitness costs and benefits are measured in fecundity r is a number between 0 and 1 His two 1964 papers entitled The Genetical Evolution of Social Behaviour are now widely referenced 4 The proof and discussion of its consequences however involved detailed mathematics and two reviewers passed over the paper The third John Maynard Smith did not completely understand it either but recognised its significance Having his work passed over later led to friction between Hamilton and Maynard Smith as Hamilton thought Maynard Smith had held his work back to claim credit for the idea during the review period Maynard Smith published a paper that referred briefly to similar ideas The Hamilton paper was printed in the Journal of Theoretical Biology and when first published was largely ignored Recognition of its significance gradually increased to the point that it is now routinely cited in biology books Much of the discussion relates to the evolution of eusociality in insects of the order Hymenoptera ants bees and wasps based on their unusual haplodiploid sex determination system This system means that females are more closely related to their sisters than to their own potential offspring Thus Hamilton reasoned a costly action would be better spent in helping to raise their sisters rather than reproducing themselves The supergenes notion sometimes called the Green beard effect that organisms may evolve genes that are able to identify identical copies in others and preferentially direct social behaviours towards them was theoretically clarified and withdrawn by Hamilton in 1987 5 Spiteful behaviour editMain article Hamiltonian spite In his 1970 paper Selfish and Spiteful Behaviour in an Evolutionary Model Hamilton considers the question of whether harm inflicted upon an organism must inevitably be a byproduct of adaptations for survival What of possible cases where an organism is deliberately harming others without apparent benefit to the self Such behaviour Hamilton calls spiteful It can be explained as the increase in the chance of an organism s genetic alleles to be passed to the next generations by harming those that are less closely related than relationship by chance Spite however is unlikely ever to be elaborated into any complex forms of adaptation Targets of aggression are likely to act in revenge and the majority of pairs of individuals assuming a panmictic species exhibit a roughly average level of genetic relatedness making the selection of targets of spite problematic Extraordinary sex ratios editBetween 1964 and 1977 Hamilton was a lecturer at Imperial College London 6 Whilst there he published a paper in Science on extraordinary sex ratios Fisher 1930 had proposed a model as to why ordinary sex ratios were nearly always 1 1 but see Edwards 1998 and likewise extraordinary sex ratios particularly in wasps needed explanations Hamilton had been introduced to the idea and formulated its solution in 1960 when he had been assigned to help Fisher s pupil A W F Edwards test the Fisherian sex ratio hypothesis Hamilton combined his extensive knowledge of natural history with deep insight into the problem opening up a whole new area of research The paper introduced the concept of the unbeatable strategy which John Maynard Smith and George R Price were to develop into the evolutionarily stable strategy ESS a concept in game theory not limited to evolutionary biology Price had originally come to Hamilton after deriving the Price equation and thus rederiving Hamilton s rule Maynard Smith later peer reviewed one of Price s papers and drew inspiration from it The paper was not published but Maynard Smith offered to make Price a co author of his ESS paper which helped to improve relations between the men Price committed suicide in 1975 and Hamilton and Maynard Smith were among the few present at the funeral 7 Hamilton was a visiting professor at Harvard University and later spent nine months with the Royal Society s and the Royal Geographical Society s Xavantina Cachimbo Expedition as a visiting professor at the University of Sao Paulo From 1978 Hamilton was Professor of Evolutionary Biology at the University of Michigan Simultaneously he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences 8 His arrival sparked protests and sit ins from students who did not like his association with sociobiology There he worked with the political scientist Robert Axelrod on the prisoner s dilemma and was a member of the BACH group with original members Arthur Burks Robert Axelrod Michael Cohen and John Holland 9 Hamilton was regarded as a poor lecturer This shortcoming would not affect the recognition of his work however as it was popularised by Richard Dawkins in the book The Selfish Gene published in 1976 Chasing the Red Queen editHamilton was an early proponent of the Red Queen theory of the evolution of sex 10 separate from the other theory of the same name previously proposed by Leigh Van Valen This was named for a character in Lewis Carroll s Through the Looking Glass who is continuously running but never actually travels any distance Well in our country said Alice still panting a little you d generally get to somewhere else if you ran very fast for a long time as we ve been doing A slow sort of country said the Queen Now here you see it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place If you want to get somewhere else you must run at least twice as fast as that Carroll pp 46 This theory hypothesizes that sex evolved because new and unfamiliar combinations of genes could be presented to parasites preventing the parasite from preying on that organism species with sex were able to continuously run away from their parasites Likewise parasites were able to evolve mechanisms to get around the organism s new set of genes thus perpetuating an endless race Return to Britain editIn 1980 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and in 1984 he was invited by Richard Southwood to be the Royal Society Research Professor in the Department of Zoology at Oxford and a fellow of New College where he remained until his death His collected papers entitled Narrow Roads of Gene Land began to be published in 1996 The first volume was entitled Evolution of Social Behaviour Social evolution editThe field of social evolution of which Hamilton s Rule has central importance is broadly defined as being the study of the evolution of social behaviours i e those that impact on the fitness of individuals other than the actor Social behaviours can be categorized according to the fitness consequences they entail for the actor and recipient A behaviour that increases the direct fitness of the actor is mutually beneficial if the recipient also benefits and selfish if the recipient suffers a loss A behaviour that reduces the fitness of the actor is altruistic if the recipient benefits and spiteful if the recipient suffers a loss This classification was first proposed by Hamilton in 1964 citation needed Hamilton also proposed the coevolution theory of autumn leaf color as an example of evolutionary signalling theory 11 Origin of HIV editDuring the 1990s Hamilton became interested in the now discredited hypothesis that the origin of HIV lay in Hilary Koprowski s oral polio vaccine trials in Africa during the 1950s Hamilton s letter on the topic to Science journal was rejected in 1996 Despite this he spoke to the BBC supporting the hypothesis 12 and wrote the foreword of Edward Hooper s 1999 book The River To look for evidence of the hypothesis Hamilton went on a 2000 field trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to assess natural levels of simian immunodeficiency virus in primates 13 14 None of the over 60 urine and faecal samples contained detectable SIV virus 15 Death editHamilton returned to London from Africa on 29 January 2000 He was admitted to University College Hospital London on 30 January 2000 He was transferred to Middlesex Hospital on 5 February 2000 and died there on 7 March 2000 An inquest was held on 10 May 2000 at Westminster Coroner s Court to inquire into rumours about the cause of his death The coroner concluded that his death was due to multi organ failure due to upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage due to a duodenal diverticulum and arterial bleed through a mucosal ulcer Following reports attributing his death to complications arising from malaria the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit s investigation established that he had contracted malaria during his final African expedition However the pathologist had suggested the possibility that the ulceration and consequent haemorrhage had resulted from a pill which might have been taken because of malarial symptoms lodging in the diverticulum but even if this suggestion were correct the link between malaria and the observed causes of death would be entirely indirect 16 A secular memorial service he was an agnostic 17 was held at the chapel of New College Oxford on 1 July 2000 organised by Richard Dawkins He was buried near Wytham Woods He however had written an essay on My intended burial and why in which he wrote 18 I will leave a sum in my last will for my body to be carried to Brazil and to these forests It will be laid out in a manner secure against the possums and the vultures just as we make our chickens secure and this great Coprophanaeus beetle will bury me They will enter will bury will live on my flesh and in the shape of their children and mine I will escape death No worm for me nor sordid fly I will buzz in the dusk like a huge bumble bee I will be many buzz even as a swarm of motorbikes be borne body by flying body out into the Brazilian wilderness beneath the stars lofted under those beautiful and un fused elytra which we will all hold over our backs So finally I too will shine like a violet ground beetle under a stone The second volume of his collected papers Evolution of Sex was published in 2002 and the third and final volume Last Words in 2005 In 1966 he married Christine Friess the couple had three daughters Helen Ruth and Rowena 19 They amicably separated 26 years later citation needed From 1994 Hamilton found companionship with Maria Luisa Bozzi an Italian science journalist and author 19 Awards edit1978 Foreign Honorary Member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences 8 1980 Fellow of the Royal Society of London 19 1982 Newcomb Cleveland Prize of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 1988 Darwin Medal of the Royal Society of London 1989 Scientific Medal of the Linnean Society 1991 Frink Medal of Zoological Society of London 1992 3 Wander Prize of the University of Bern 1993 Crafoord Prize of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 1993 Kyoto Prize of the Inamori Foundation 1995 Fyssen Prize of the Fyssen Foundation 1997 Honorary title of Academician of Science in Finland 1999 Member of the American Philosophical Society 20 Biographies editAlan Grafen has written a biographical memoir for the Royal Society 19 A biographical book has also been published by Ullica Segerstrale Segerstrale U 2013 Nature s oracle the life and work of W D Hamilton Oxford University Press Works editCollected papers edit Hamilton started to publish his collected papers in 1996 along the lines of Fisher s collected papers with short essays giving each paper context He died after the preparation of the second volume so the essays for the third volume come from his coauthors Hamilton W D 1996 Narrow Roads of Gene Land vol 1 Evolution of Social Behaviour Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 7167 4530 5 Hamilton W D 2002 Narrow Roads of Gene Land vol 2 Evolution of Sex Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 850336 9 Hamilton W D 2005 Narrow roads of Gene Land vol 3 Last Words with essays by coauthors ed M Ridley Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 856690 5Significant papers edit Hamilton W 1964 The genetical evolution of social behaviour I Journal of Theoretical Biology 7 1 1 16 Bibcode 1964JThBi 7 1H doi 10 1016 0022 5193 64 90038 4 PMID 5875341 Hamilton W 1964 The genetical evolution of social behaviour II Journal of Theoretical Biology 7 1 17 52 Bibcode 1964JThBi 7 17H doi 10 1016 0022 5193 64 90039 6 PMID 5875340 Hamilton W 1966 The moulding of senescence by natural selection Journal of Theoretical Biology 12 1 12 45 Bibcode 1966JThBi 12 12H doi 10 1016 0022 5193 66 90184 6 PMID 6015424 Hamilton W 1967 Extraordinary sex ratios A sex ratio theory for sex linkage and inbreeding has new implications in cytogenetics and entomology Science 156 774 477 488 Bibcode 1967Sci 156 477H doi 10 1126 science 156 3774 477 PMID 6021675 Hamilton W 1971 Geometry for the selfish herd Journal of Theoretical Biology 31 2 295 311 Bibcode 1971JThBi 31 295H doi 10 1016 0022 5193 71 90189 5 PMID 5104951 Hamilton W D 1975 Innate social aptitudes of man an approach from evolutionary genetics in R Fox ed Biosocial Anthropology Malaby Press London 133 53 Axelrod R Hamilton W 1981 The evolution of cooperation Science 211 4489 1390 1396 Bibcode 1981Sci 211 1390A doi 10 1126 science 7466396 PMID 7466396 with Robert Axelrod Hamilton W Zuk M 1982 Heritable true fitness and bright birds A role for parasites Science 218 4570 384 387 Bibcode 1982Sci 218 384H doi 10 1126 science 7123238 PMID 7123238 S2CID 17658568 Notes edit Obituary by Richard Dawkins Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Independent 10 March 2000 See also his eulogy by Richard Dawkins reprinted in his book A Devil s Chaplain 2003 BBC Radio 4 Great Lives 2 Feb 2010 Dawkins Richard 2022 2021 Flights of Fancy Defying Gravity by Design and Evolution London Head of Zeus p 210 ISBN 978 1838937850 Aaen Stockdale C 2017 Selfish Memes An Update of Richard Dawkins Bibliometric Analysis of Key Papers in Sociobiology Publications 5 2 12 doi 10 3390 publications5020012 hdl 11250 2443958 Hamilton William D 1987 Discriminating nepotism expectable common and overlooked In Kin recognition in animals edited by D J C Fletcher and C D Michener New York Wiley WD Hamilton TheGuardian com 9 March 2000 Brown Andrew 2000 The Darwin Wars The Scientific Battle for the Soul of Man London Touchstone ISBN 978 0 684 85145 7 a b William Donald Hamilton American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2 December 2021 History The Red Queen Hypothesis at Indiana University Quote W D Hamilton and John Jaenike were among the earliest pioneers of the idea Hamilton WD Brown SP July 2001 Autumn tree colours as a handicap signal Proc R Soc B 268 1475 1489 1493 doi 10 1098 rspb 2001 1672 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 1088768 PMID 11454293 Scientists started Aids epidemic BBC News 1 September 1999 Retrieved 1 September 2020 The Politics of a Scientific Meeting the Origin of AIDS Debate at the Royal Society Politics and the Life Sciences 20 20 September 2001 Retrieved 1 September 2020 Allen Kate 29 April 2023 He nearly died pursuing HIV s origins Then this Canadian scientist set his sights on the COVID lab leak theory Here s what he found Toronto Star Retrieved 15 September 2023 Horton Richard 2000 New data challenge OPV theory of AIDS origin The Lancet 356 9234 1005 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 00 02698 2 ECU Ruling Great Lives BBC Radio 4 2 February 2010 BBC Retrieved 24 June 2011 Ullica Segerstrale 28 February 2013 Nature s Oracle The Life and Work of W D Hamilton OUP Oxford pp 383 ISBN 978 0 19 164277 7 Hamilton W D 2000 My intended burial and why Ethology Ecology and Evolution 12 2 111 122 doi 10 1080 08927014 2000 9522807 S2CID 84908650 permanent dead link a b c d Grafen A 2004 William Donald Hamilton 1 August 1936 7 March 2000 PDF Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 50 109 132 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2004 0009 S2CID 56905497 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2 December 2021 References editEdwards A W F 1998 Notes and Comments Edwards A W F 1998 Natural Selection and the Sex Ratio Fisher s Sources The American Naturalist 151 6 564 569 doi 10 1086 286141 PMID 18811377 S2CID 40540426 Fisher R A 1930 The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection Clarendon Press Oxford Ford E B 1945 New Naturalist 1 Butterflies Collins London Maynard Smith J Price G R 1973 The logic of animal conflict Nature 246 5427 15 18 Bibcode 1973Natur 246 15S doi 10 1038 246015a0 S2CID 4224989 Dawkins R 1989 The Selfish Gene 2nd ed Oxford University Press Madsen E A Tunney R Fieldman G Plotkin H C Robin Dunbar and J M Richardson and D McFarland 2006 Kinship and altruism a cross cultural experimental study British Journal of Psychology http www ingentaconnect com content bpsoc bjp pre prints 218320External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to W D Hamilton Obituaries and reminiscences Royal Society citation Centro Itinerante de Educacao Ambiental e Cientifica Bill Hamilton The Bill Hamilton Itinerant Centre for Environmental and Scientific Education in Portuguese Non mathematical excerpts from Hamilton 1964 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine If you have a simple idea state it simply a 1996 interview with Hamilton London Review of Books book review W D Hamilton s work in game theory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W D Hamilton amp oldid 1195805483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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