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23Darwinism and AtheismIn J. B. Stump & Alan G. Padgett (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to Science and Christianity, Wiley-blackwell. 2012.This chapter contains sections titled: Biblical Literalism Miracles Design Morality Original Sin Natural Evil Contingency Conclusion References Further Reading.
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21Moral Philosophy as Applied ScienceIn Philosophy After Darwin: Classic and Contemporary Readings, Princeton University Press. pp. 365-379. 2009.
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16The View from Somewhere: A Critical Defense of Evolutionary EpistemologyIn Philosophy After Darwin: Classic and Contemporary Readings, Princeton University Press. pp. 247-275. 2009.
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47The Darwinian revolution: science red in tooth and clawUniversity of Chicago Press. 1979.Originally published in 1979, The Darwinian Revolution was the first comprehensive and readable synthesis of the history of evolutionary thought. Though the years since have seen an enormous flowering of research on Darwin and other nineteenth-century scientists concerned with evolution, as well as the larger social and cultural responses to their work, The Darwinian Revolution remains remarkably current and stimulating. For this edition Michael Ruse has written a new afterword that takes into a…Read more
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119William Whewell and The Argument from DesignThe Monist 60 (2): 244-268. 1977.The section on the Argument from Design in collections of readings in the philosophy of religion usually begins with an expository selection drawn from Archdeacon William Paley’s Natural Theology, and follows with a critical selection drawn from David Hume’s Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. Only from the footnotes does the student learn that Hume’s Dialogues was published over twenty years before Paley’s Natural Theology. Probably the student will feel that Hume’s devastating critique of t…Read more
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50Woodger on genetics a critical evaluationActa Biotheoretica 24 (1-2): 1-13. 1975.A critical analysis of Woodger's work on formal logic in biology, especially genetics, reveals that the claim for the value of such methods in genetics is misplaced
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200The species problem: A reply to HullBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 22 (4): 369-371. 1971.
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113The nature of scientific models : Formal V material analogyPhilosophy of the Social Sciences 3 (1): 63-80. 1973.
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81Philosophy of biology today: No grounds for complacency (review)Philosophia 8 (4): 785-796. 1979.
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81Natural Selection in "The Origin of Species"Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 1 (4): 311. 1971.
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260Karl Popper's philosophy of biologyPhilosophy of Science 44 (4): 638-661. 1977.In recent years Sir Karl Popper has been turning his attention more and more towards philosophical problems arising from biology, particularly evolutionary biology. Popper suggests that perhaps neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory is better categorized as a metaphysical research program than as a scientific theory. In this paper it is argued that Popper can draw his conclusions only because he is abysmally ignorant of the current status of biological thought and that Popper's criticisms of biology …Read more
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79Kant's Concept of Teleology. By J. D. McFarland. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, 1970, Pp. ix, 150. £2Dialogue 13 (1): 192-195. 1974.
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214Definitions of species in biologyBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (2): 97-119. 1969.
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222Darwin's debt to philosophy: An examination of the influence of the philosophical ideas of John F.W. Herschel and William Whewell on the development of Charles Darwin's theory of evolutionStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 6 (2): 159-181. 1975.
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190Charles Darwin's Theory of Evolution: An AnalysisJournal of the History of Biology 8 (2). 1975.
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66Cultural evolutionTheory and Decision 5 (4): 413-440. 1974.In this paper I consider the problem of man's evolution - in particular the evolutionary problems raised when we consider man as a cultural animal as well as a biological one. I argue that any adequate cultural evolutionary theory must have the notion of ‘adaptation’ as a central concept, where this must be construed in a fairly literal (biological) sense, that is as something which aids its possessors (i.e. men) to survive and reproduce. I argue against theories which treat adaptation in a meta…Read more
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136Biological adaptationPhilosophy of Science 39 (4): 525-528. 1972.In successive issues of this journal Ronald Munson [2] and I [4] have made, quite independently, conflicting claims about the relationship between biological adaptation and biological function. I state, admittedly without proof, that “a functional statement in biology draws attention to the fact that what is under consideration is an adaptation or something which confers an ‘adaptive advantage’ on its possessor”. This was an identity claim. Munson claims, with proof, that “adaptation and functio…Read more
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139Are there laws in biology?Australasian Journal of Philosophy 48 (2). 1970.This Article does not have an abstract
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112A reply to Wright's analysis of functional statementsPhilosophy of Science 40 (2): 277-280. 1973.
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138Anomalies and Scientific Theories. Willard C. Humphreys (review)Philosophy of Science 38 (4): 614-616. 1971.
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87Book Review:The Young Darwin and His Cultural Circle Edward Manier (review)Philosophy of Science 46 (1): 165-. 1979.
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106Book Review:Towards a Theoretical Biology C. H. Waddington (review)Philosophy of Science 39 (1): 105-. 1972.
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