Processes of Life
Essays in the Philosophy of Biology
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 26 January 2012
- ISBN 9780199691982
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages362 pages
- Size 241x163x25 mm
- Weight 698 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
John Dupr-- explores recent revolutionary developments in biology and considers their relevance for our understanding of human nature and society. He reveals how the advance of genetic science is changing our view of the constituents of life, and shows how an understanding of microbiology will overturn standard assumptions about the living world.
MoreLong description:
John Dupr-- explores recent revolutionary developments in biology and considers their relevance for our understanding of human nature and human society. Epigenetics and related areas of molecular biology have eroded the exceptional status of the gene and presented the genome as fully interactive with the rest of the cell. Developmental systems theory provides a space for a vision of evolution that takes full account of the fundamental importance of developmental processes. Dupr-- shows the importance of microbiology for a proper understanding of the living world, and reveals how it subverts such basic biological assumptions as the organisation of biological kinds on a branching tree of life, and the simple traditional conception of the biological organism.
These topics are considered in the context of a view of science as realistically grounded in the natural order, but at the same time as pluralistic and inextricably integrated within a social and normative context. The volume includes a section that recapitulates and expands some of the author's general views on science; a section addressing a range of topics in biology, including the significance of genomics, the nature of the organism and the current status of evolutionary theory; and a section exploring some implications of contemporary biology for humans, for example on the reality or unreality of human races, and the plasticity of human nature.
There is much of interest in this collection of sixteen of John Dupr--s most recently published papers
Table of Contents:
Introduction
I. Science
The Miracle of Monism
What's the Fuss about Social Constructivism?
The Inseparability of Science and Values
II. Biology
The Constituents of Life 1: Species, Microbes and Genes
The Constituents of Life 2: Organisms and Systems
Understanding Contemporary Genomics
The Polygenomic Organism
It is not Possible to Reduce Biological Explanations to Explanations in Chemistry and/or Physics
Postgenomic Darwinism
III. Microbes
Size Doesn't Matter: Towards a More Inclusive Philosophy of Biology
Metagenomics and Biological Ontology
Varieties of living things: Life at the intersection of lineage and metabolism
Emerging Sciences and New Conceptions of Disease: Or, Beyond the Monogenomic Differentiated Cell Lineage
IV. Humans
Against Maladaptationism: or What's Wrong with Evolutionary Psychology
What Genes Are, and Why There Are No Genes for Race
Causality and Human Nature in the Social Sciences