The conviction that Charles Darwin got rid of teleology and replaced it with a new way of thinking about adaptation, concentrating predominantly on the notion of chance, is most likely still a predominant view among both biologists and philosophers of biology. At the same time, a declared Darwinian naturalist and agnostic, Thomas Huxley, stated already in 1887 that “Perhaps the most remarkable service to the philosophy of biology rendered by Mr. Darwin is the reconciliation of Teleology and Morphology." Hence, a number of researchers claim Darwin was in fact a "teleologist," who re-invented teleology (i.e. goal-directedness of living creatures). This lecture defines and explains the differences between teleology, design and function, and vitalism, in Darwin's time and later. It analyzes Darwin's attitude towards teleology and traces the role of this metaphysical category both in the twentieth-century evolutionary synthesis and its most current developments.
The musings and meandering thoughts of a crotchety old man as he observes life in the world and in a small, rural town in South East Nebraska. My Pledge-Nulla dies sine linea-Not a day with out a line.
31 December 2024
Evolution and Goal-Directedness: How Darwin Re-Invented Teleology
With Fr Mariusz Tabaczek, OP, Licentiate of Theology, PhD, Professor of Theology, The Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas.
The conviction that Charles Darwin got rid of teleology and replaced it with a new way of thinking about adaptation, concentrating predominantly on the notion of chance, is most likely still a predominant view among both biologists and philosophers of biology. At the same time, a declared Darwinian naturalist and agnostic, Thomas Huxley, stated already in 1887 that “Perhaps the most remarkable service to the philosophy of biology rendered by Mr. Darwin is the reconciliation of Teleology and Morphology." Hence, a number of researchers claim Darwin was in fact a "teleologist," who re-invented teleology (i.e. goal-directedness of living creatures). This lecture defines and explains the differences between teleology, design and function, and vitalism, in Darwin's time and later. It analyzes Darwin's attitude towards teleology and traces the role of this metaphysical category both in the twentieth-century evolutionary synthesis and its most current developments.
The conviction that Charles Darwin got rid of teleology and replaced it with a new way of thinking about adaptation, concentrating predominantly on the notion of chance, is most likely still a predominant view among both biologists and philosophers of biology. At the same time, a declared Darwinian naturalist and agnostic, Thomas Huxley, stated already in 1887 that “Perhaps the most remarkable service to the philosophy of biology rendered by Mr. Darwin is the reconciliation of Teleology and Morphology." Hence, a number of researchers claim Darwin was in fact a "teleologist," who re-invented teleology (i.e. goal-directedness of living creatures). This lecture defines and explains the differences between teleology, design and function, and vitalism, in Darwin's time and later. It analyzes Darwin's attitude towards teleology and traces the role of this metaphysical category both in the twentieth-century evolutionary synthesis and its most current developments.
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