Abstract
A perspective on (neo-)Darwinism first of all has to account for those assumptions derived from the humanities, causing neo-Darwinism not to be a purely special scientific or natural scientific theory. A discussion of the many-sidedness of living entities highlights the difficulties surrounding a definition of biology. Attention is briefly given to the physicalism of Darwin’s 1859 work before the quest for origins is discussed. These considerations pave the way for an assessment of striking shortcomings in the thought of Darwin and his followers. In particular, modern nominalism is identified as an important source for neo-Darwinism, especially manifest in the idea that organisms are not types and do not have types (Simpson). Darwin’s idea of incremental (continuous) change both in respect of the genesis of a complex organ (or the origination of the first living entity) and of successive fossil forms contradict the current state of affairs – and the same applies to his own radical idea that “injurious” variations will be eliminated immediately by natural selection, for it cannot be reconciled to the role of mutations in neo-Darwinian theory. In addition neo-Darwinian paleontologists pointed out that evolution requires intermediate forms and paleontology does not provide them (Kitts) and explicitly confessed that they have paid lip-service to the idea of change while they knew all the time that it was not true (Eldredge): the dominant theme of the paleontological record is stasis, constancy – a type appears and remains constant for millions of years before it disappears (Gould). The supposition of incremental continuity received a further blow from the “Cambrian explosion”, the “nasty fact” that most “major animal groups appeared simultaneously” about 530 million years ago. A few aspects of the uniqueness of humankind are treated as well as the confused picture found in an attempt to synthesise neo-Darwinism and Christianity. In an appendix a brief assessment is added concerning the pretentions of neo-Darwinism.
Highlights
Supposition of incremental continuity received a further blow from the “Cambrian explosion”, the “nasty fact” that most “major animal groups appeared simultaneously” about 530 million years ago
A perspective onDarwinism first of all has to account for those assumptions derived from the humanities, causing neoDarwinism not to be a purely special scientific or natural scientific theory
Darwin’s idea of incremental change both in respect of the genesis of a complex organ and of successive fossil forms contradict the current state of affairs – and the same applies to his own radical idea that “injurious” variations will be eliminated immediately by natural selection, for it cannot be reconciled to the role of mutations in neo-Darwinian theory
Summary
Highlighting shortcomings and problems within the Darwinian and neo-Darwinian legacy naturally has to cover a wide range of issues and perspectives that are not always necessarily directly connected to each other. In this article they are integrated within the overall aim to obtain a critical perspective on this intellectual legacy within the West. Darwin’s place within the intellectual tradition of the West will have to be explained as well. This entails that we will have to assess whether or not the (neo-)Darwinian theory of evolution is a special scientific theory, that is to say. In the first instance we shall reflect on the inevitable pre-scientific awareness of the diversity within reality as a foundational condition for a discipline such as biology. Many-sidedness of living entities the idea of a diversity of functional aspects will be further substantiated
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