6 - The cost of continuing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
Summary
The search for a universally applicable account of the quality of life has, on its side, the promise of a greater power to stand up for the lives of those whom tradition has oppressed or marginalized. But it faces the epistemological difficulty of grounding such an account in an adequate way, saying where the norms come from and how they can be known to be the best.
Nussbaum and Sen (1993:4)Evolutionary Humanism is necessarily unitary instead of dualistic, affirming the unity of mind and body; universal instead of particularist, affirming the continuity of man with the rest of life, and of life with the rest of the universe; naturalistic instead of supernaturalist, affirming the unity of the spiritual and the material; and global instead of divisive, affirming the unity of all mankind.
Julian Huxley (1964:77)Now, as each of the parts of the body, like every other instrument, is for the sake of some purpose, viz., some action, it is evident that the body as a whole must exist for the sake of some complex action.
Aristotle (384 – 322 BCE)For evolutionists, the only candidate for Aristotle's “complex action” is reproduction. The complex action for the sake of which all bodies exist is fitness; fitness is the complex work that must be done to leave descendants. Like all complex adaptive systems, adaptation by natural selection is about R, continuance, staying in the “existential game of life” (Slobodkin and Rapoport 1974); it is about the “process of becoming, rather than the never-reached end point” (Holland 1992:20).
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- Death, Hope and SexSteps to an Evolutionary Ecology of Mind and Morality, pp. 203 - 238Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999