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Philosophical Darwinism: On the Origin of Knowledge by Means of Natural Selection
 
 

Philosophical Darwinism: On the Origin of Knowledge by Means of Natural Selection [Library Binding]

Peter Munz (Author)

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Book Description

0415086027 978-0415086028 April 19, 1993 1
Philosophers have not taken the evolution of human beings seriously enough. If they did, argues Peter Munz, many long standing philosophical problems would be resolved. One of philosophical concequences of biology is that all the knowledge produced in evolution is a priori , i.e., established hypothetically by chance mutation and selective retention, not by observation and intelligent induction. For organisms as embodied theories, selection is natural and for theories as disembodied organisms, it is artificial. Following Popper, the growth of knowledge is seen to be continuous from the amoeba to Einstein'. Philosophical Darwinism throws a whole new light on many contemporary debates. It has damaging implications for cognitive science and artificial intelligence, and questions attempts from within biology to reduce mental events to neural processes. More importantly, it provides a rational postmodern alternative to what the author argues are the unreasonable postmodern fashions of Kuhn, Lyotard and Rorty.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Peter Munz is a genuinely interdisciplinary thinker, bridging history, philosophy, biology and more. As such, he manages to irritate staid practitioners in many fields. He manages also to combine separate insights into a unified attack on the fundamental problems of knowledge. I am not sure that he is right. I am sure that he should be heard. Critic and friend alike will come away wiser.
–Michael Ruse, University of Guelph

Original and thought-provoking . . . it is well-written but not over-technical, and the subject matter will be of interest to people interested in the topics of evolution and consciousness in themselves, as well as to philosophers.
–Anthony O'Hear, University of Bradford

About the Author

Peter Munz is Professor Emeritus of History at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
true, wishing it to be true, doubting it, etc. is not itself a mental event at all, but merely a mode of the mental event. A mental event can be pin-pointed as being 'thoughtful' or as being 'hopeful', and so forth. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
disembodied organisms, slapdash assumption, inchoate consciousness, minimal ontology, neuronal events, detection chains, embodied theory, embodied theories, cognitive relationship, meager input, evolutionary epistemology, ontological anxiety, continuity thesis, developmental law, bonding principle, false knowledge, semantic intentions, primal sketch, inchoate state, verbal identification, generic argument, selective retention
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Second Law, Konrad Lorenz, Karl Popper, Vienna Circle, Donald Campbell, Thomas Kuhn, Gerhard Vollmer, Hilary Putnam, Michel Foucault, Richard Rorty, Anthropic Principle, Ruth Benedict, Snell's Law, Daniel Dennett, First World War, Nancy Cartwright, Thomas Nagel
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