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How Biology Shapes Philosophy

How Biology Shapes Philosophy

How Biology Shapes Philosophy

New Foundations for Naturalism
David Livingstone Smith, University of New England, Maine
January 2019
Available
Paperback
9781107628205

    How Biology Shapes Philosophy is a seminal contribution to the emerging field of biophilosophy. It brings together work by philosophers who draw on biology to address traditional and not so traditional philosophical questions and concerns. Thirteen essays by leading figures in the field explore the biological dimensions of ethics, metaphysics, epistemology, gender, semantics, rationality, representation, and consciousness, as well as the misappropriation of biology by philosophers, allowing the reader to critically interrogate the relevance of biology for philosophy. Both rigorous and accessible, the essays illuminate philosophy and help us to acquire a deeper understanding of the human condition. This volume will be of interest to philosophers, biologists, social scientists, and other readers with an interest in bringing science and the humanities together.

    • A one-stop source for the best contemporary work on how biology shapes philosophy
    • Allows the reader to critically interrogate the relevance of biology for philosophy
    • Will appeal to those who want to bring science and the humanities together

    Reviews & endorsements

    'The essays cover a wide and felicitous range of topics … The contributors are a virtual Who's Who of contemporary philosophers working in the field: Daniel C. Dennett, Philip Kitcher, Patricia Churchland, Samir Okasha, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Karen Neander, and others … Highly recommended.' Choice

    'I was excited to receive and read this book with its stellar cast of contributors. The book is worth the read - many chapters are indeed interesting and informative as standalone pieces and some will prove to be helpful introductions … [It] should serve the profession well as a stimulating and often enthusiastic foray into the overlap between biology and philosophy.' Anton Killin, The Philosophical Quarterly

    '… it's a volume that … will surely provide something of interest for nearly every philosophical reader.' Shane N. Glackin, History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 2019
    Paperback
    9781107628205
    365 pages
    230 × 153 × 20 mm
    0.5kg
    3 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Biophilosophy David Livingstone Smith
    • 2. Darwin and the overdue demise of essentialism Daniel C. Dennett
    • 3. Darwinism as philosophy: can the universal acid be contained? Alexander Rosenberg
    • 4. Animal evolution and the origins of experience Peter Godfrey-Smith
    • 5. Neurophilosophy Patricia Churchland
    • 6. Teleosemantics David Papineau
    • 7. The methodological argument for informational teleosemantics Karen Neander
    • 8. Nature's purposes and mine Ronald De Sousa
    • 9. Biology and the theory of rationality Samir Okasha
    • 10. Evolution and ethical life Philip Kitcher
    • 11. Human nature Edouard Machery
    • 12. A postgenomic perspective on sex and gender John Dupré
    • 13. Biophilosophy of race Luc Faucher
    • 14. How philosophers 'learn' from biology: reductionist and anti-reductionist 'lessons' Richard N. Boyd.
      Contributors
    • David Livingstone Smith, Daniel C. Dennett, Alexander Rosenberg, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Patricia Churchland, David Papineau, Karen Neander, Ronald De Sousa, Samir Okasha, Philip Kitcher, Edouard Machery, John Dupré, Luc Faucher, Richard N. Boyd

    • Editor
    • David Livingstone Smith , University of New England, Maine

      David Livingstone Smith is Professor of Philosophy at the University of New England, Maine. His most recent book is Less than Human: Why We Demean, Enslave and Exterminate Others (2011).