NOTE: If the above proves to be a "Dead link", – as the note attached since "August 2023" seems to be saying, then ... it might help to just go to https://books.google.com/books?id=NSpMDQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=o8jzWF7rD6oC#v=onepage&q&f=false , and scroll down for a few pages, (to the "Short Contents"), and then click on the hyperlink there – [right after the links to the first two chapters] – the one [hyperlink] that points to the third chapter, which is displayed as "3. On Viral Sentences and Self-Replicating Structures". It might have been simpler – that is, a better 'work-around' – to just include a direct URL here, that a reader could click on, but ... the [editor] author of this "NOTE" did not understand [how to figure out] how to do that (at least, ... not without following the 'suggestion' contained in the last 3 words of the legend
Dawkins, R. (1982) "Replicators and Vehicles"Archived 2021-02-26 at the Wayback Machine King's College Sociobiology Group, eds., Current Problems in Sociobiology, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp. 45–64. "A replicator may be defined as any entity in the universe of which copies are made."
Dawkins, R. (1982) "Replicators and Vehicles"Archived 2021-02-26 at the Wayback Machine King's College Sociobiology Group, eds., Current Problems in Sociobiology, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp. 45–64. "A replicator may be defined as any entity in the universe of which copies are made."