Theory of sexes by Geodakian as it is advanced by Iskrin
Boris D. Lubachevsky

TL;DR
This paper discusses Geodakian's 1960s theory of sexes as an evolutionary adaptation mechanism, further refined by Iskrin in 2001, explaining phenomena related to sex ratios and environmental adaptation.
Contribution
It synthesizes and clarifies Iskrin's advancements on Geodakian's original theory, including new concepts like the 'catastrophic sex ratio.'
Findings
Explains sex ratio variations during war years.
Introduces the concept of catastrophic sex ratio.
Provides a technical digest of Iskrin's refinements.
Abstract
In 1960s V.Geodakian proposed a theory that explains sexes as a mechanism for evolutionary adaptation of the species to changing environmental conditions. In 2001 V.Iskrin refined and augmented the concepts of Geodakian and gave a new and interesting explanation to several phenomena which involve sex, and sex ratio, including the war-years phenomena. He also introduced a new concept of the "catastrophic sex ratio." This note is an attempt to digest technical aspects of the new ideas by Iskrin.
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Environmental and Biological Research in Conflict Zones
