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Suzanne Cunningham - Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy

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Two of the dominant traditions in twentieth-century philosophy, analytic philosophy (founded by G.E. Moore and Bertrand Russell) and phenomenology (founded by Edmund Husserl), explicitly excluded Charles Darwins account of evolution, not because they saw it as mistaken, but because they saw it as irrelevant. These two traditions set the stage for a great deal of subsequent philosophy, and Professor Cunningham argues that the non-Darwinian framework they constructed continues to constrain significant portions of the field, in particular theories of perception and mind.In tracing the major reasons for this exclusion of Darwin and evolutionary considerations, and the consequences for philosophy, Professor Cunningham criticises purely cognitivist theories of perception and Machine Functionalist theories of mind, and offers proposals on how these theories should be amended to take account of the adaptive role that perception and mind play on behalf of a living organisms struggle for survival and well-being.

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title Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy author Cunningham - photo 1

title:Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy
author:Cunningham, Suzanne.
publisher:University of Rochester
isbn10 | asin:1878822616
print isbn13:9781878822611
ebook isbn13:9780585246253
language:English
subjectEvolution, Philosophy, Modern--20th century, Darwin, Charles,--1809-1882--Influence.
publication date:1996
lcc:B818.C89 1996eb
ddc:116
subject:Evolution, Philosophy, Modern--20th century, Darwin, Charles,--1809-1882--Influence.
Page iii
Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy
Suzanne Cunningham
Page iv Copyright 1996 University of Rochester Press All Rights - photo 2
Page iv
Copyright 1996 University of Rochester Press
All Rights Reserved. Except as permitted under current legislation, no part of this work may be photocopied, stored in a retrieval system, published, performed in public, adapted, broadcast, transmitted, recorded or reproduced in any form or by any means, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
First published 1996
University of Rochester Press
3436 Administration Building, University of Rochester
Rochester, New York, 14627, USA
and at P.O. Box 9, Woodbridge, Suffolk IP12 3DF, UK
ISBN 1 878822 61 6
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy / Suzanne Cunningham.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).
ISBN 1-878822-61-6 (hbk. : alk. paper)
1. Evolution. 2. Philosophy, Modern20th century.
3. Darkwin, Charles, 18091882Influence. I. Title.
B818.C89 1996
116dc20
95-46560
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book
is available from the British Library
This publication is printed on acid-free paper
Printed in the United States of America
Page v
For
George
Page vii
Contents
Acknowledgements
ix
Introduction
1
1. Darwin's Relevance to Philosophy
7
2. G.E. Moore and Evolutionary Ethics
31
3. Bertrand Russell and Evolutionism
59
4. Perception and Mind in the Analytic Tradition
97
5. Edmund Husserl, Phenomenology, and Evolution
145
6. Husserl on Perception and Mind
177
7. Perception and Mind: A Darwinian Approach
199
Notes
235
Bibliography
269
Index
285

Page ix
Acknowledgments
This book was begun in 1985, during my term as a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Edinburgh. Since that time, colleagues and students too numerous to mention by name, have contributed to it in various ways. Some of them suggested materials I ought to look at, some offered encouragement, some proposed objections that I ought to consider. My thanks to each of them.
I owe a special debt of gratitude, however, to those professional colleagues who read all or part of earlier versions of the manuscript and provided me with enormously helpful comments and suggestions: Elizabeth Eames, Garth Hallett, Mark Johnson, William Rowe, and Tom Carson. Whatever problems remain in the text, they are of course mine.
Portions of the manuscript have been presented at meetings or colloquia of various sorts: at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Edinburgh; the Philosophy departments at the University of Helsinki; Seoul National University; Ewha Women's University in Seoul, Purdue University; and the University of Florida; a Symposium on the Philosophy of Mind at Rochester Institute of Technology; the Illinois Philosophical Association; the Indiana Philosophical Association; the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy; and the Philosophy Colloquium at Loyola University of Chicago. I am grateful for the many helpful comments I received at each of those sessions.
My thanks to Kenneth Blackwell and the staff at the Bertrand Russell Archives at McMaster University for their assistance while I worked at the Archives and for their generosity in providing me with copies of the correspondence between Russell and Julian Huxley. Thanks, too, to Nancy Boothe, Director of the Woodson Research Center at Rice University, for giving me access to portions of the Russell-Huxley correspondence. I am indebted as well to Michael Ruse who generously provided me with a copy of his manuscript, Monad to Man.
Special thanks to my own Philosophy department and to the administration at Loyola University of Chicago, who supported my work on this project during two research leaves of absence.
Page x
Portions of the manuscript have been previously published elsewhere. Part of Chapter Five, on Husserl and Classical Modern Philosophy, first appeared as "Modern Philosophy," in the Encyclopedia of Phenomenology
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