: Anton Markoš, Filip Grygar, László Hajnal, Karel Kleisner, Zdenek Kratochvíl, Zdenek Neubauer
: Life as Its Own Designer Darwin's Origin and Western Thought
: Springer-Verlag
: 9781402099700
: 1
: CHF 132.90
:
: Biologie
: English
: 212
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

It has been nearly 150 years since Darwin publishedOn the Origin of Species, and his theory of natural selection still ignites a forest of heated debate between scientific fundamentalists on the one hand and religious fundamentalists on the other. But both sides actually agree more than they disagree, and what has long been needed is a third way to view evolution, one that focuses more on the aspect of life and “being alive”, one that can guide us through, and perhaps out of, the fiery thicket. This book, a seminal work in the burgeoning field of Biosemiotics, provides that third way, by viewing living beings as genuine agents designing their communication pathways with, and in, the world.

Already hailed as the best account of biological hermeneutics,Life As Its Own Designer: Darwin’s Originand Western Thought is a wholly unique book divided into two parts. The first part is philosophical and explores the roots of rationality and the hermeneutics of the natural world with the overriding goal of discovering how narrative can help us to explain life. It analyzes why novelty is so hard to comprehend in the framework of Western thinking and confronts head-on the chasm between evolutionism and traditional rationalistic worldviews. The second part is scientific. It focuses on the life of living beings, treating them as co-creators of their world in the process of evolution. It draws on insights gleaned from the global activity of the Gaian biosphere, considers likeness as demonstrated on homology studies, and probes the problem of evo-devo science from the angle of life itself.

This book is both timely and vital. Past attempts at a third way to view evolution have failed because they were written either by scientists who lacked a philosophical grounding or New Age thinkers who lacked biological credibility. Markoš and his coworkers form an original group of thinkers supremely capable in both fields, and they havefashioned a book that is ideal for researchers and scholars from both the humanities and sciences who are interested in the history and philosophy of biology, biosemiotics, and the evolution of life.



Preface6
Acknowledgement10
Contents11
Part I Hermeneutic Nature of the World14
1 Roots of Rationality and Hermeneutics19
Hermeneutics of the Natural, or how Things Arise20
Religious Preconditions and Contexts in Comprehending Physis 22
Nature Loves to Hide Heraclitus B 123. 26
Product27
To Discriminate According to Physis 29
Generations30
Necessity and Chance, Destiny and Freedom30
Physis, Mathematics, and Moral32
Physis is Temporal and has a Memory33
Physis is Flesh35
Nature is Sufficient for All in All Heraclitus C 2, 15 (in Hippokrates, De alimento, ed. E. Littr0). 37
Species and Logical Ideals Possibility of Logical Articulation37
Platos Divided Line as a Map of Relations Between Archetypes and Imitations39
2 Co-creators of the World42
Singularities and Darwin44
The Sphere46
Appropriation49
Cosmic Dreams54
Complementarity of Scientific and Everyday Language56
Semiosphere57
Order for Free and the Expansion into Adjacent Possible61
3 Novelty Wherefrom?65
Science and Novelty65
The Grave of the Soul?67
Unde Novum in Philosophy69
Language71
Signification74
Body as a Sign Compared to Letter-Signs74
Self-Reference of Letter-Signs76
Likeness77
Likeness as a Totality of Features80
Genidentity and Entelechy81
To be Like Self83
Whence the New?84
Classification85
Clare et Distincte88
What is it Like to be Me?88
Abstractions90
Logos Incarnate91
Semiotic Coherence92
Becoming94
Speciation95
Every World has its Own Time97
Vestiges of Creation98
4 Aut Moses aut Darwin. Creation Versus Evolution100
The Questionnaire100
Answering the Poll101
The Controversy Around Darwin as a Symptom105
Things and Objects106
Contest of Likenesses as a Manifestation of will to Power, i.e. the Struggle for Life107
Genesis and Phylogenesis We are of course aware that the right English spelling is phylogeny. In the ongoing context we want, however, to point towards the meaning genesis that is hidden behind the current form of the word. 109
Empirical not Rational111
This is not Science111
The Return to Natural Understanding Evolutionary Nature of Science114
Logos as a Historical Contingency115
Evolutionism as Reformation and Renaissance116
Evolution as Religion By paraphrasing the famous book by Mary Midgley (1985), we pay homage to this extending philosopher117
The Turn of Evolutionism Towards Naturalness: Discovery of Corporeality and of History119
Nature as Narration122
History124
Being from the Beginning127
The Turn of Ages128
Ecological Order130
There is Only One Single Truth: Each Truth is Single131
The Archetypal Essence of the Clash132
The War of Giants135
Part II The Region Life137
5 The Living Planet144
Feedback and its Embodiment145
Neo-Darwinism and Gaia148
Gene pool, Communication, Body149
Communication Networks155
Multicellular and Multispecies Structures155
Small World of Complex Systems, and Their Modelling by Graphs157
Fitness Landscapes and Regioning161
6 What is the Source of Likeness?164
Short Glossary165
How the Terms Homology and Analogy Got Their Recent Meaning: A Brief History165
Troubles with Levels of Description167
Continuity of Information, Genes, and Structures169
Structures and Traits Ideas and IDs
Unity of Semantic Field174
External Appearances175
Back to Letter-Signs (ID) and Shapes (IDea)178
Biosemiotic Interpretation of Portmannian Biology182
7 Creation and Its Vestiges185
Species as a Cultural Phenomenon185
What is Passed Down?187
The Sheaf191
Cultural Parables193
The Ghosts of Common Ancestors194
Quaerendo Invenietis195
Epilogue: SnowWhite and the Seven Dwarfs or On Nature198
References207
Name Index212
Subject Index215