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151. Herbert Spencer: The Tripartite Model

152. Concluding Reflection

153. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck: La marche de la nature

154. John Hughlings Jackson: A Clinical Scientist

155. Emergence, Downward Causation, and Interlevel Integrative Explanations

156. Fundamental Physics and (New-)Mechanistic Ontologies

157. Different Types of Mechanistic Explanation and Their Ontological Implications

158. Searching for Protein Folding Mechanisms: On the Insoluble Contrast Between Thermodynamic and Kinetic Explanatory Approaches

159. Organisms Need Mechanisms; Mechanisms Need Organisms

160. Mechanisms in Chemistry

161. The Metabolic Theory of Ecology as a Mechanistic Approach

162. A Commentary on Robin Hendry’s Views on Molecular Structure, Emergence and Chemical Bonding

163. Causing and Composing Evolution: Lessons from Evo-Devo Mechanisms

164. The Mechanisms of Emergence

165. A Framework for Mapping Mechanistic Perspectives

166. Mechanistic Explanations in Physics: History, Scope, and Limits

167. Judging Organization: A Plea for Transcendental Logic in Philosophy of Biology

168. On the Evolutionary Development of Biological Organization from Complex Prebiotic Chemistry

169. 'Organization': Its Conceptual History and Its Relationship to Other Fundamental Biological Concepts

170. Does Organicism Really Need Organization?

171. The Fourth Perspective: Evolution and Organismal Agency

172. Organisms: Between a Kantian Approach and a Liberal Approach

173. On the Organizational Roots of Bio-cognition

174. Introduction: Organization as a Scientific Blind Spot

175. Varieties of Organicism: A Critical Analysis

176. From the Organizational Theory of Ecological Functions to a New Notion of Sustainability

177. Organization and Inheritance in Twenty-First-Century Evolutionary Biology

178. There Are No Intermediate Stages: An Organizational View on Development

179. Modeling Organogenesis from Biological First Principles

184. Correction to: Origin’s Chapter VIII: Darwin for and Against Hybridism

185. Debates About Life’s Origin and Adaptive Powers in the Early Nineteenth Century

186. From the Modern Synthesis to the Other (Extended, Super, Postmodern…) Syntheses

187. You Too Can Find 'Grandeur in This View of Life': A Linguistic Remedy for Resisting the Desire to Abandon Darwin’s Origin of Species

188. Continuities and Ruptures: Comparing Darwin’s 'On the Origin of Species' and the Modern Synthesis

189. There Have Been Few Such Naturalists Before, but Still…: Darwin’s Public Account of Predecessors

190. Origins’ Chapter XIV: The Good Old Habit of Summarizing

191. Origin’s Chapter XIII. The Meaning of Classification, Morphology, Embryology, and Rudimentary Organs to the Theory of Descent with Modifications

192. Origin’s Chapter VI: The Initial Difficulties of Darwin’s Theory

193. Origin’s Chapter XI and XII: 'Seed! Seed! Seed!': Geographical Distribution in on the Origin of Species

194. Origin’s Chapter VII. Darwin and the Instinct: Why Study Collective Behaviors Performed Without Knowledge of Their Purposes?

195. Origin’s Chapter IX and X: From Old Objections to Novel Explanations: Darwin on the Fossil Record

196. Origin’s Chapter I: How Breeders Work Their Magic

197. The Development of Darwin’s Theory: From Natural Theology to Natural Selection

198. Origin’s Chapter II: Darwin’s Ideas on Variation Under the Lens of Current Evolutionary Genetics

199. Origin’s Chapter VIII: Darwin for and Against Hybridism

200. Origin’s Chapter V: How 'Random' Is Evolutionary Change?

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