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Myth 17 - That Darwin’s Success Depended on Undermining “Aristotelian Essentialism”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2024

Kostas Kampourakis
Affiliation:
Université de Genève
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Summary

In the decades following the forging of the so-called Neo-Darwinian Synthesis in the 1940s, a number of its philosophical defenders created a myth about what Charles Darwin was up against, a viewpoint called “typological essentialism” often attributed to Aristotle. In this chapter I first sketch the history of how this myth was created. I then establish that it is a myth by providing an account of Aristotle’s essentialism as it is actually displayed in his philosophy of biology and in his biological practice. It has nothing to do with the ‘mythic’ version. We then turn to what Darwin was really up against—a creationist anti-evolutionary way of defining the species concept that was common in Darwin’s time (that owes nothing to Aristotle), and to his attempts to re-orient thinking about it. I will close by reconsidering Aristotle and Charles Darwin: Does it make any sense to think about the relationship between two thinkers separated by more than two millennia living in such vastly different cultures? What did Charles Darwin himself think about Aristotle?

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Chapter
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Darwin Mythology
Debunking Myths, Correcting Falsehoods
, pp. 193 - 203
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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