Darwinian Reductionism: Or, How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology by University Of Chicago Press Title: Darwinian Reductionism: Or, How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology

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Darwinian Reductionism: Or, How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology by University Of Chicago Press

What Kim Sterelny and Elliot Sober say

They put it better than I can. From the back of the jacket:

Over the last twenty years and more, philosophers and theoretical biologists have built an antireductionist concensus about biology. We have thought that biology is an autonomous discipline without being spooky. While biological systems are built from chemical ones, biological facts are not just physical facts, and biological explanations cannot be replaced by physical and chemical ones. The most consistent, articulate, informed and lucid skeptic about this view has been Alex Rosenberg, and Darwinian Reductionism is the mature synthesis of his alternative vision. He argues that we can show the paradigm facts of biology--evolution and developnment--are built from the chemical and physical, and reduce to them. Moreover, he argues, unpleasantly plausably, that defenders of the consensus must slip one way or the other: into spookiness about the biological, or into a reduction program for the biological. People like me have no middle way.
Kim Sterelny

For most philosophers, reductionism is wrong becase it denies the facts of multiple realizability. For most biologists, reductionism is wrong because it involves a commitment to genertic determinism. In this stimulating new book, Rosenberg reconfigures the problem. His Darwinian reductionism denies genetic determinism, and it has no problem with multiple realizability. It captures what scientific materialism should have been all along.
Elliot Sober
Darwinian Reductionism: Or, How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology by University Of Chicago Press

Product Description

After the discovery of the structure of DNA in 1953, scientists working in molecular biology embraced reductionism—the theory that all complex systems can be understood in terms of their components. Reductionism, however, has been widely resisted by both nonmolecular biologists and scientists working outside the field of biology. Many of these antireductionists, nevertheless, embrace the notion of physicalism—the idea that all biological processes are physical in nature. How, Alexander Rosenberg asks, can these self-proclaimed physicalists also be antireductionists?

With clarity and wit, Darwinian Reductionism navigates this difficult and seemingly intractable dualism with convincing analysis and timely evidence. In the spirit of the few distinguished biologists who accept reductionism—E. O. Wilson, Francis Crick, Jacques Monod, James Watson, and Richard Dawkins—Rosenberg provides a philosophically sophisticated defense of reductionism and applies it to molecular developmental biology and the theory of natural selection, ultimately proving that the physicalist must also be a reductionist.


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