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The Metaphysics of Evolution

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Darwin, Evolution and Genetics series
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What conclusions do the facts of cosmic and organic evolution require or permit on the origin and destiny of the world and the individual?

From 1881 to 1925 Thomas Whittaker, an Oxford-trained scientist turned philosopher, grappled with this question, which he tried to answer by metaphysical interpretation of the sciences.

The majority of the essays in this volume first appeared in Mind, and a few in other journals, while three had not been previously published.

Whittaker ranges widely over some of the most daring theories of the past, from the early centuries of the common era (including Apollonius of Tyana and Origen), to the middle ages (including John Scotus Erigena and Nicholas of Cusa), the renaissance (Giordano Bruno, Shakespeare) and the early modern period.

Whittaker's own view is that hypothesis and imagination are legitimate aids in the search for truth in both science and philosophy in a new synthesis.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108004377 / 9781108004374
Paperback / softback
110
24/09/2009
United Kingdom
496 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
140 x 216 mm, 630 grams