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Evolutionary Ethics and the Search for Predecessors: Kant, Hume, and All the Way Back to Aristotle?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2009

Michael Ruse
Affiliation:
Philosophy and Zoology, University of Guelph

Extract

Hopes of applying the findings and speculations of evolutionary theorizing to the problems of ethics have yielded a program with a (deservedly) bad reputation. At the level of norms – substantival ethics – it has been a platform for some of the more grotesque socio-politico-economic suggestions of our times. At the level of justification – metaethics – it has opened the way to some of the more blatant fallacies in the undergraduate textbook. Recently, however, a number of people, philosophers and biologists, have sensed that a more adequate evolutionary ethics might be possible. United in the conviction that it simply has to matter that we humans are modified monkeys rather than the creation of a Good God, in His image, on the Sixth Day, they argue that recent developments in evolutionary biology, especially those dealing with the genetic basis of social behavior (“sociobiology”), open the way to a satisfactory biological understanding of morality.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Social Philosophy and Policy Foundation 1990

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References

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92 For full discussion of this point, see Ruse, Taking Darwin Seriously, esp. chs. 5 and 6.

93 See Lumsden and Wilson, Genes, Mind, and Culture.

94 Most expressly as found in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, reprinted in ed. Wollheim, R., Hume on Religion (London: Collins, 1963).Google Scholar

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