HUXLEY'S EVOLUTION AND ETHICS IN SOCIOBIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE |
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Authors: | George C. Williams |
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Affiliation: | George C. Williams is professor of biology at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6. |
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Abstract: | Abstract. T. H. Huxley's essay and prolegomena of 1894 argued that the process and products of evolution are morally unacceptable and act in opposition to the ethical progress of humanity. Modern sociobiological insights and studies of organisms in natural settings support Huxley and justify an even more extreme condemnation of nature and an antithesis of the naturalistic fallacy: what is, in the biological world, normally ought not. Modern biology also provides suggestions on the origin of the human moral impulse and on tactics likely to be effective in the combat against nature urged by Huxley. |
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Keywords: | Darwinism morality natural selection philosophy selfishness |
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