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How relevant in modern era it is to apply the extreme views (Lucretian atomism, Cartesian dualiaty) that were required to free us from the shackles of religion aeons ago? And are these views applicable to our daily life, life which is not made of atoms, quarks but of love, hate, home, office, pollution...?
These questions are not ones that demand more "research" but ones that are indicative of what Mary calls conceptual emergencies. So when out of these emergencies scientists start claiming omnicompetence and give disturbing picture of human life and of this world, it is time to look at the thinking that governs scientists' (and philospohers') this view, and time to check if it is on the correct path.
This, in short, what Mary's attempt is.
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Midgley has a style of doing philosophy which is wonderfully engaged with ordinary life. Her fascination is with muddles in public thinking and she ably demonstrates the need for philosophical work to resolve these muddles. Importantly, she also shows just how important clearing up conceptual difficulties can be for society. Every page shows forth the conviction that the answers of philosophy matter, that this is not just idle musing but vital work. Turning her incisive mind on science, feminism, personhood and other topics, she shows the benefits of philosophy done well.
The book is readable, witty and thought-provoking. I would recommend it to everyone with an interest in philosophy, even the seasoned professional.
Rather than actually laying out in a strictly defined way the characteristics which make up the religious view, something which is very difficult given the vast differences in the previously mentioned cases, she approaches the subject by analysing some of the typical `literature' in the popular science press on evolution which express their views in a highly dogmatic fashion: for example Richard Dawkins, Edward O. Wilson, Jacques Monod and so on. Gradually she lays bare the inherent faults in each of these texts by noting how not only that in most cases they state views which are not supported by strict science but in fact express metaphysical views which have the ring of science with all of its evidential weight. At times she shows that these opinions portray the same faults as those they wish to get rid of eg: the religious, vitalistic, animistic or metaphysical view.
Midgley has the ability to analyse very carefully what is stated and see things the general public could easily skip past in their enthusiasm. This book demolishes all of these pseudoscientific fantasies although its writing style is sometimes heavy going and is not really suited to the lay public. This book is, I believe written more for the interested scientist who has already read some of the foregoing literature and wishes to get a deep analysis of these things to fathom their relevance. This she does does ably although one feels that throughout she does not express a clear and direct point of this analysis but rather a series of essays on several subjects which have some sort of coherent structure. This is the only problem with this book and one feels that no real definite conclusion has been reached.
Nevertheless, Midgley is worth reading for her truly impressive ability to seek out faults which often lie hidden in the material she analyses and are quite subtle and not at all obvious until she points them out. It's good someone has done this to provide a clear head in all the plethora of the popular science literature, which in general, is not up to any sort of serious study of the state of science as it is today. In this case there is no chance one can easily dismiss her analyses as the wafflings of creationists or vitalists.
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Now before I give the impression that Midgley's book is another sociobiology book in disguise, it is the farthest thing from it. The first thing Midgley does is to make it clear that phrases like "Man is JUST (substitute "merely", "only" or "simply") an animmal are not only unfair to animals, they are unfair to humans. Sociobiology even sadomasochistically revels in depressions like this. (after all, aren't we 'only' the 'third chimpanzee'?) Usually, the mistake made is to thihk that animals are 'humans that just haven't gotten there yet' or that humans are 'dressed up brutes that play at ratiionality'. Midgley spends many pages on tackling both of these assumptions, as tacit as they sometimes are.
From there, she tackles things like what it means to say 'instinct', why 'reductionism' doesn't explain much of anything, and intertwining them all with examples of why the 'lower animals' and humans have so much in common yet are so incredibly different.
In short, this book is not to be missed. It is informative, provocative, challenging and all the while written in a crisp and sensitive prose. Never has it felt so good to be called an animal.