Harman Patil (Editor)

Evolution and the Humanities

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Publication date
  
1987

Originally published
  
1987

Page count
  
228

Pages
  
228

Author
  
David Holbrook

Subject
  
Evolution

Publisher
  
Gower Publishing Company

David Holbrook books
  
Flesh Wounds, English for maturity, Sex & dehumanization, Human hope and the death, English for the Rejected

Evolution and the Humanities is a 1987 book by David Holbrook that attacks Darwinian evolution. The book rejects reductionist biology and takes influence from Michael Polanyi and vitalist philosophy.

Reception

The book has been heavily criticized by academics. Martin Stuart-Fox noted that Holbrook's criticism of natural selection was a "cobble together, in a sort of scissors-and-paste criticism... the book contains no vigorous argument at all. Not only is Holbrook very obviously no scientist, he is no philosopher either."

Ecologist Arthur M. Shapiro in a review for the National Center for Science Education commented:

David Holbrook, Fellow of Downing College, Cambridge, has written a polemic not so much against evolution as against scientific reductionism (which he sees incarnate in neo-Darwinism). He proceeds from revulsion at the existentialist vision of "life as a 'scientific accident.' " He's no creationist but, rather, a from-the-gut free-form vitalist—just as preoccupied with the perceived moral consequences of the Darwinian revolution as any Bible-thumping moralist could be. As usual, he conflates science with scientism and evolution with evolutionism, materialism, and atheism."

The book is said to have been poorly edited and riddled with errors.

References

Evolution and the Humanities Wikipedia