From Darwin to Derrida
Selfish Genes, Social Selves, and the Meanings of Life
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- €27.99
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- €27.99
Publisher Description
How the meaningless process of natural selection produces purposeful beings who find meaning in the world . . .
“A challenging though rewarding exploration of the meaning and purpose of life” that blends evolutionary biology and philosophy (Kirkus Reviews).
Evolutionary biologist David Haig explains how a physical world of matter in motion gave rise to a living world of purpose and meaning. Natural selection, a process without purpose, gives rise to purposeful beings who find meaning in the world. The key to this, Haig proposes, is the origin of mutable “texts”—genes—that preserve a record of what has worked in the world. These texts become the specifications for the intricate mechanisms of living beings.
Haig draws on a wide range of sources—from Laurence Sterne and Immanuel Kant’s to Jacques Derrida and the latest findings on gene transmission, duplication, and expression—to make his argument. Genes and their effects are like eggs and chickens. Eggs exist for the sake of becoming chickens and chickens for the sake of laying eggs. A gene’s effects have a causal role in determining which genes are copied—and a gene persists if its lineage has been consistently associated with survival and reproduction. Organisms can be understood as interpreters that link information from the environment to meaningful action in the environment.
Meaning, Haig argues, is the output of a process of interpretation; there is a continuum from the very simplest forms of interpretation, instantiated in single RNA molecules near the origins of life, to the most sophisticated. Life is interpretation—the use of information in choice.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Haig, a Harvard biology professor, debuts with an expansive, if sometimes impenetrable, exploration of deep questions about the meaning of life. His main goal "is to explain how a physical world of matter in motion, of material and efficient causes, gave rise to a living world of purpose and meaning." Along the way, he argues that meaning arises from interpretation of data, regardless of whether the data resides in DNA or a line of poetry, and that "an appreciation of this continuum of meaningful interpretation will help to reunite the humanities and sciences in a continuum of intellectual endeavor." This conciliation depends upon his likely to be contentious assertion that biologists must "incorporate subjectivity into their objective understanding of living things." To discuss biology, Haig focuses on research into natural selection and provides details of cutting-edge work which, unfortunately, only specialists will fully understand. His discussions of philosophy and literature are similarly forbidding. Haig does evince, however, an inviting sense of wit in his writing (a footnote to his reference to Plato's Allegory of the Cave reads simply "This is my footnote to Plato"). Nonetheless, the audience for a book of this breadth and depth will not be vast.