Organisms and artifacts : design in nature and elsewhere / Tim Lewens
Material type:
- 0262122618
- 9780262122610
- 0262621991
- 9780262621991
- ARCH YNDC 570.1 L671O 22
- QH331 .L533 2004
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 570.1 L671O (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 064935 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-176) and index
Meaning and the mean to an understanding of ends -- Why is an eye? -- Adaptationism and engineering -- On five "-Isms" -- Function, selection, and explanation -- Deflating function -- Artifacts and organisms
"In Organisms and Artifacts, Tim Lewens investigates the analogical use of the language of design in evolutionary biology. Uniquely among the natural sciences, biology uses descriptive and explanatory terms more suited to artifacts than organisms. When biologists discuss, for example, the purpose of the panda's thumb and look for functional explanations of organic traits, they borrow from a vocabulary of intelligent design that Darwin's findings could have made irrelevant over a hundred years ago. Lewens argues that examining the analogy between the processes of evolution and the processes by which artifacts are created - looking at organisms as analogical artifacts - sheds light on explanations of the form of both organic and inorganic objects
He argues further that understanding the analogy is important for what it can tell us not only about biology but about technology and philosophy."
"In the course of his argument Lewens discusses issues of interest to philosophers of biology, biologists, philosophers of mind, and students of technology. These issues include the pitfalls of the design-based thinking of adaptationism, the possible conflict between selection explanations and developmental explanations, a proposed explanation of biological function, and prospects for an informative evolutionary model of technological change. Emerging from these discussions is an explanation of the use of the vocabulary of intelligence and intention in biology that does not itself draw on the ideas of intelligent design, which will be of interest in the ongoing debate over intelligent design creationism."--Jacket
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