Theory concerning the evolution of life history (the schedule of reproduction and survival) focuses on
describing the life history which maximises fitness. Although there is an intuitive link between life history and
fitness, there are in fact several measures of the ‘black box’ concept of fitness. There has been a debate in
the bio-mathematical literature on the predictive difference between the two most commonly used measures;
intrinsic rate of increase r and net reproductive ratio R0. Although both measures aim to describe fitness,
models using one of the measures may predict the opposite of similar models using the other measure, which
is clearly undesirable. Here, I review the evolution of these fitness measures over the last four decades, the
predictive differences between these measures and the resulting shift of the fitness concept. I focus in
particular on some recent developments, which have solved the dilemma of predictive differences between
these fitness measures by explicitly acknowledging the game-theoretical nature of life-history evolution.