Mystery of Mysteries : Is Evolution a Social Construction?
Michael Ruse
Find this book at buch7.de | eurobuch.com | buchhandel.de | books.google.com ASIN=0674005430, Category: Science, Language: E, cover: PB, pages: 320, year: 2001.
Book Description
With the recent Sokal hoax-the publication of a prominent physicist's pseudo-article
in a leading journal of cultural studies-the status of science moved sharply from debate
to dispute. Is science objective, a disinterested reflection of reality, as Karl Popper
and his followers believed? Or is it subjective, a social construction, as Thomas Kuhn
and his students maintained? Into the fray comes Mystery of Mysteries, an enlightening
inquiry into the nature of science, using evolutionary theory as a case study. Michael
Ruse begins with such colorful luminaries as Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles)
and Julian Huxley (brother of novelist Aldous and grandson of T. H. Huxley, Darwin's
bulldog') and ends with the work of the English game theorist Geoffrey Parker - a
microevolutionist who made his mark studying the mating strategies of dung flies -
and the American paleontologist Jack Sepkoski, whose computer-generated models
reconstruct mass extinctions and other macro events in life's history. Along the
way Ruse considers two great popularizers of evolution, Richard Dawkins and Stephen
Jay Gould, as well as two leaders in the field of evolutionary studies, Richard Lewontin
and Edward O. Wilson, paying close attention to these figures' cultural commitments:
Gould's transplanted Germanic idealism, Dawkins's male-dominated Oxbridge circle,
Lewontin's Jewish background, and Wilson's southern childhood. Ruse explicates the
role of metaphor and metavalues in evolutionary thought and draws significant
conclusions about the cultural impregnation of science. Identifying strengths and
weaknesses on both sides of the "science wars," he demonstrates that a resolution
of the objective and subjective debate is nonetheless possible.