This essay at Edge touches on a few possible meanings for the term "group selection." Pinker argues that as a form of memetic theory it has no explanatory power, and that group selection for genes does not fit the evidence. He focuses on humans with some mention of insects that live in hives. So the essay doesn't seem surprising, but it does seem rather Hansonian.
His definition of group selection may exclude that from 'group selection' and include it within what he approves of - 'gene selection'.
It seems to me he's hacking away at the bone when he should be cutting at the joints - evolution can act on first-order effects (I'm faster, so I escape a predator or catch my prey) where you only need to consider yourself to see the benefit, or second-order effects (I cooperate on the hunt so we can all eat), where you only need to consider yourself and those with the same relevant genes, or third order effects (pea-hens preferring peacocks with big plumes), where you need to consider yourself and those with certain other relevant genes and those without...
But by considering group selection to be this separate thing, he's denying that ultimate role, and thus defines it out of existence.
He just says:
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