•  33
    Author’s reply
    Metascience 7 (1): 65-69. 1998.
  •  173
  •  108
    Robert Boyle and the Machine Metaphor
    Zygon 37 (3): 581-596. 2002.
    The seventeenth–century chemist and philosopher Robert Boyle argued that the world is like a clockwork machine. This led to the problems of the place of a Creator and of how one can explain the directed, “final–cause” nature of organisms. Boyle thought that he could wrap everything up in one neat package, with a clear place for a designing God, but of course the coming of Darwinism casts doubt on this. Nevertheless, Boyle's thinking does have some very interesting implications for the way in whi…Read more
  •  69
    Evolutionary Biology and Cultural Values: Is It Irremediably Corrupt?
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 20 (sup1): 43-68. 1994.
    In recent years, philosophers have come to realize that the relationship between science and values raises questions which are both important and not readily answered. It is true that the major figures in that tradition known as ‘logical empiricism’ appreciated that science always exceeds its empirical grasp and that it is necessary for scientists to be guided and constrained by so-called ‘epistemic values,’ these being values (in the words of one supporter) ‘presumed to promote the truth-like c…Read more
  •  97
    The evolution of the philosophy of biology
    Biology and Philosophy 21 (3): 437-442. 2006.
  •  3
    John Madge, "The Tools of Social Science" (review)
    Theory and Decision 2 (3): 299. 1972.
  •  66
    Cultural evolution
    Theory 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
  •  65
    Philosophy of Biology (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 30 (4): 150-151. 1998.
  •  52
    Darwin versus the Liberals: The third assault of the intelligent designers
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 46 (1): 89-92. 2014.
  •  106
    Book Review:Towards a Theoretical Biology C. H. Waddington (review)
    Philosophy of Science 39 (1): 105-. 1972.
  • Teleology and the Biological Sciences
    In Nicholas Rescher (ed.), Current Issues in Teleology, University Press of America. pp. 61. 1986.
  •  191
    Is sociobiology a new paradigm?
    Philosophy of Science 54 (1): 98-104. 1987.
    Is sociobiology a new paradigm? A number of people have claimed that it is. I argue that, sociologically speaking, it may well be. But epistemologically, it is not. The case rests on one's interpretation of the major Darwinian evolutionary mechanism, natural selection. In this note, it is shown that sociobiology relies on an orthodox understanding of selection. Thus, in crucial epistemological respects, sociobiology is continuous with the rest of Darwinian evolutionary theory
  •  74
    Can a Darwinian be a Christian? Ethical Issues
    Zygon 35 (2): 287-298. 2000.
    A brief historical overview shows the main Christian claims aboutmorality and proper conduct, looking at questions about both prescriptions and foundations . Jesus did not leave a fully articulated ethical system, and hence it fell to his followers to tease out such a system from hism sayings and actions. Particularly important for Catholic thinking has been the natural law theory of St. Thomas Aquinas. Particularly important for Protestant thinking have been the directives of the Gospel stories…Read more
  •  119
    William Whewell and The Argument from Design
    The 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