Fundamentalist Darwinian or Darwinian Fundamentalist?

January 16, 2008 · By Marsilio Facino

And I also thought, on rereading the book, that the late Steve Gould was really right when he called Richard and me Darwinian fundamentalists. And I want to say what a Darwinian fundamentalist is. A Darwinian fundamentalist is one who recognizes that either you shun Darwinian evolution altogether, or you turn the traditional universe upside down and you accept that mind, meaning, and purpose are not the cause but the fairly recent effects of the mechanistic mill of Darwinian algorithms. It is the unexceptioned view that mind, meaning, and purpose are not the original driving engines, but recent effects that marks, I think, the true Darwinian fundamentalist.

And Dawkins insists, and I agree wholeheartedly, that there aren’t any good compromise positions. Many have tried to find a compromise position, which salvages something of the traditional right-side-up view, where meaning and purpose rain down from on high. It cannot be done. And the recognition that it cannot be done is, I would say, the mark of sane Darwinian fundamentalism.

Daniel Dennett quoted via First Things via Amy Welborn 

Comments

2 Responses to “Fundamentalist Darwinian or Darwinian Fundamentalist?”

  1. anon on January 16th, 2008 11:56 pm [#]

    I hate to break it to you, doc, but your opinion on evolution is worth about a hamster’s turd.

    Thanks for coming out though. Nothing is cuter than a kid playing scientist. Now run off to bed and pray to the magic man.

  2. Aaron Unruh on January 17th, 2008 3:30 am [#]

    What a good fundamentalist anon is.

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