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Genes, Genesis, and God: Values and Their Origins in Natural and Human History

Genes, Genesis, and God: Values and Their Origins in Natural and Human History
By Holmes Rolston

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Product Description

Holmes Rolston challenges the sociobiological orthodoxy that would naturalize science, ethics, and religion. The book argues that genetic processes are not blind, selfish, and contingent, and that nature is therefore not value-free. The author examines the emergence of complex biodiversity through evolutionary history. Especially remarkable in this narrative is the genesis of human beings with their capacities for science, ethics, and religion. A major conceptual task of the book is to relate cultural genesis to natural genesis. There is also a general account of how values are created and transmitted in both natural and human cultural history. The book is thoroughly up-to-date on current biological thought and is written by one of the most well-respected figures in the philosophy of biology and religion.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1072573 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-02-13
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 420 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
If you're going to draw together genetics, science in general, ethics, and religion, it's not going to be a simple read. Having said that, Genes, Genesis and God is so well written that the intelligent lay person can grasp the author's arguments.

Holmes Rolston III is a Professor of Philosophy at Colorado State University. This book is based on his Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh in 1997. What role, he asks, do genes play in the evolution of mankind? For Rolston, man is not seen just as a superior animal, but as both a creator and creature of culture; this is what distinguishes us from the beasts.

He examines carefully recent evolutionary theories, including Richard Dawkins' "selfish gene" concept, which he finds not only misnamed but misleading. The first couple of chapters look at genes, what they are and how they work, what they do and don't do. From this he moves onto the genesis of human culture, and then to the "evolution" of scientific ideas, ethics, and finally religion. Religion, he concludes in his final deeply-thoughtful and clearly-argued chapter, which will annoy atheist evolution advocates and fundamentalist creationists alike, does have a survival value for mankind, and is not in any way incompatible with genetics or evolutionary theory.

This book is a valuable contribution to the philosophy of science. A single criticism would be that there is no reference to the recent work of Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart, who pursue a very similar path of enquiry into the "evolution of the curious mind" in their Figments of Reality. --David V Barrett

Review
‘This book … is a full and fair natural theological attempt to understand modern biology and its relevance for social, ethical and religious thought.’ The Philosophical Quarterly