书目名称 | Evolutionary Systems | 副标题 | Biological and Epist | 编辑 | Gertrudis Vijver,Stanley N. Salthe,Manuela Delpos | 视频video | | 图书封面 |  | 描述 | The three well known revolutions of the past centuries - the Copernican, the Darwinian and the Freudian - each in their own way had a deflating and mechanizing effect on the position of humans in nature. They opened up a richness of disillusion: earth acquired a more modest place in the universe, the human body and mind became products of a long material evolutionary history, and human reason, instead of being the central, immaterial, locus of understanding, was admitted into the theater of discourse only as a materialized and frequently out-of-control actor. Is there something objectionable to this picture? Formulated as such, probably not. Why should we resist the idea that we are in certain ways, and to some degree, physically, biologically or psychically determined? Why refuse to acknowledge the fact that we are materially situated in an ever evolving world? Why deny that the ways of inscription (traces of past events and processes) are co-determinative of further "evolutionary pathways"? Why minimize the idea that each intervention, of each natural being, is temporally and materially situated, and has, as such, the inevitable consequence of changing the world? The point is, ho | 出版日期 | Book 1998 | 关键词 | development; evolution; science; self-organization | 版次 | 1 | doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1510-2 | isbn_softcover | 978-90-481-5103-5 | isbn_ebook | 978-94-017-1510-2 | copyright | Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 1998 |
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