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Director, Peace Games Institute Boston MARY UTNE O'BRIEN, Vice President, CASEL (Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning) Chicago As a scientist who has studied revenge for 15 years, I think the language of evolutionary biology is more accurate than that of disease in depicting what revenge is all about.
An exhibition on evolution serves as a translation between the language of evolutionary biologists and the everyday language of the lay person.
As these linkages become clearer, it is perhaps surprising how little the biomedical field explicitly uses the language of evolutionary science, even in areas like the evolution of antibiotic resistance in microbes (Antonovics et al. 2007; Nesse and Stearns 2008).
Indeed, even in the most obvious cases of evolutionary processes at work, such as antibiotic resistance, the language of evolutionary biology has been generally avoided (Antonovics et al. 2007).
By describing the process of bone remodeling in the language of evolutionary game theory, they developed and analyzed a three-dimensional model of the interactions between bone tissue and the cells responsible for its maintenance.
Do you agree with Denis Noble that the language of evolutionary science needs clarity, redefinition?
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Meanwhile, Moore et al. (2002) strongly points out that languages of evolutionary theory should be an integral part of the evolution curriculum.
In his "Song of the Human" compositions, Wyer emphasizes "what we share in music when we abandon words, and the connections we can rediscover when we move past the labels we attach to ourselves and others". Miyagawa's work likewise causes us to think of the universality of language in evolutionary terms.
Whatever we find in this song, we find in all people — the song of the human". "In his 'Song of the Human' compositions, Wyer emphasizes what we 'share in music when we abandon words, and the connections we can rediscover when we move past the labels we attach to ourselves and others.' Miyagawa's work likewise causes us to think of the universality of language in evolutionary terms.
Careful scrutiny of evolutionary language and content and analyses of their relationships to evolutionary thinking hold great promise for elucidating how discourse practices may facilitate or constrain student mental models of biological causation.
"Select," "adapt," and "fit"—so-called multivalent terms or homonyms are ubiquitous elements of evolutionary language as a consequence of their recruitment from ordinary discourse (Goudge 1967; Ryan 1985; Wandersee 1988).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com