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CHAPTER XI - “DARWINISM IN MORALS”—MISS COBBE'S PROTEST

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

It is not necessary again to recapitulate the leading points of Darwinism. Nor is it desirable to pause at present in order to weigh some very grave metaphysical objections to the terminology and conceptions with which Mr. Darwin went to work. We are more concerned to ask how Darwinian ideas have affected the theories of morals or of society which follow biological lines.

Now plainly there is an ambiguity here. In the previous chapters, for the most part, we have been dealing with a scientific analogy,—consciously lifted out of one region of thought and introduced into another,—coming no doubt with a great deal of authority, but still presenting itself to view, and continuing to be regarded, as a foreign visitor. We shall still find such a course followed in some instances by writers who are employing Darwinian clues and modes of thought. The doctrine of struggle for existence may be applied to other things besides plants or animals,—to competing states, or types of society, or types of ethical thought. But there is a nearer way in which Darwinism may bear upon our problems. Man himself as an organism is brought within the range of Darwinian theories. In connection with the assertion of man's descent from brute races, fresh light—of a lurid kind, as many will think—is made to fall upon the problems of ethics; and questions as to social origins will run back into questions regarding human origin by process of evolution.

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From Comte to Benjamin Kidd
The Appeal to Biology or Evolution for Human Guidance
, pp. 110 - 114
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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